AT 6:03 ON A MONDAY morning late in September 1957, with an hour and a half to sleep before I had to get ready for work, a virgin set of tires squished to a stop in my driveway and a pair of horns tuned deliberately off-key, B-sharp and E-flat, tore me out of some damn dream in which I was running in slow motion toward an appointment I was late for with someone I didn’t know in some location I’d forgotten. I’d had the dream the first time shortly after I started at Ford, and it had recurred just enough since for me to recognize it and have some control over it, which was why the interruption annoyed me. I made a face at the alarm clock, untangled myself from the sheets and blanket, and lurched to the window overlooking the corner of the porch roof. It was Indian summer and the sunlight lay in a brazen trapezoidal patch on the grass and asphalt in front of the house.
It was emerald-green with a white top and elliptical white cutouts along the rear fenders. The tires were whitewalled, and the chrome plate on the divided front bumper and around the tandem sealed-beam headlights and all over the fish-mouth grille glowed with silver fire in the damp morning light. It was the top-of-the-line Citation, and its 124-inch Mercury chassis filled the driveway almost to the curb. While I was looking at it from the window, Israel Zed, who was standing next to it on the driver’s side, leaned in through the open window and whomped the horn a second time. In spite of my grogginess that was the thing I most liked about the car at that moment, that virile horn. It was a clarion, an audio erection that managed to capture the youth and audacity of a Klaxon while filtering out the schleppy comedy and pushing its essence through the brass section of the New York Philharmonic. It was the end product of 10,000 years of evolution, conception, invention, revolution, and celebration, but its provenance was as old as the first full-throated bellow of a tree-dwelling half-ape over the body of his vanquished foe.
I hurried into some clothes and went down unshaven and -showered to accept Zed’s meaty hand, a gesture that had lost all significance for me more than a year since my private meeting with John Bugas. In the same movement he transferred the keys to my possession. They were shiny steel and attached to a plastic tag bearing the Ford logo.
“Registration’s in the glove compartment,” he said. “We can transfer the plates after we get back.”
“Back?”
“Well, let’s take it for a spin. Make sure you like it. I’ll drive the Merc back to Dearborn. We can’t have our number-one Edsel salesman driving a two-year-old wreck all over town.” He laughed his booming laugh. “Didn’t that sound familiar? Seems to me I said something just like it at the end of our first conversation at the Glass House. Of course, it wasn’t the Glass House then. Hard to look at the old barn now and picture it as empty girders. A lot’s happened in three years. Incidentally, Hank’s considering a name change. No more Ford Administration Center. He wants to call it Ford World Headquarters. We’re planning plants in Germany and Japan, show ’em how to make cars instead of plastic hula girls.”
“A lot’s happened,” I agreed.
I had to kick tires and things. The trunk was big enough for the spare and a small piano. There was an acre of engine—410 cubic inches, actually, with an air cleaner the size of a charcoal grill—under a hood that opened in reverse, tilting forward from the windshield with the hinges up front. It was a design feature predicated on the theory that a faulty latch could cause the slipstream to lift a conventionally mounted hood at high speed, obstructing the driver’s vision and causing an accident. I had never heard of a thing like that happening, but mechanical duffer that I was I saw a hundred potential headaches for the garageman in the arrangement, most of the things that required regular maintenance being located near the front, where the clearance was zero. Every new model has its bugs.
The green-and-white interior smelled like chewing gum. The Teletouch transmission buttons mounted in the steering-wheel hub, which cleverly didn’t rotate, took some getting used to—I kept reaching for a phantom shifting-cane—and the self-adjusting brakes seemed to have been adjusted with some other self in mind, snatching at the pavement before I was ready and catapulting both of us toward the dashboard at the first several red lights we came to, but the suspension was woven from clouds; I took deliberate aim at a pothole that had broken one of the Montclair’s shock-absorbers back in February and we might have run over a rubber hose for all the effect it had on us in the front seat.
A row of chromed, pedal-shaped switches operated all four power windows from the driver’s side. After a bit of comedy I got the sequence figured out and hummed down the glass beside me to let in fresh air and compromise that Spearmint odor. I missed the aroma of virgin leather and oiled wood that accompanied the new cars of my youth. I located the speedometer and gas gauge and the radio controls, which included push-buttons for calibrating my favorite stations and knobs for shunting the sound around the recessed speakers at each end of the dash and inside the rear window ledge. The pull-out light switch was on the left where it belonged, the stomp-button that operated the dimmer on the floor beside the brake. The windshield wipers worked, the washers squirted blue-green liquid at the glass without apparent prostate trouble, the cigar lighter popped out fifteen seconds after I punched it in and sizzled at the touch of a wettened finger. That had always been important to me, although I had never smoked. I could figure out the rest of the buttons and gauges later. Much later, as it turned out; the purpose of a tachometer still eludes me, yet I’ve never felt diminished by my ignorance.
The big V-8 was almost silent when the car was rolling, a tribute to both its exhaust system and the soundproof insulation inside the hood and firewall. When the car was stopped I could feel the vibration of its three-hundred forty-five horses through the steering wheel, like the deep somnolent rumbling of a lion at rest. I’d driven more powerful vehicles, but none so modest about it.
“Well, what’s the verdict?” asked Zed after we’d been cruising for ten minutes. I hadn’t been through some of those neighborhoods in years and hardly recognized them for the new construction. Here and there the tall peak of a 1920s clapboard or the complicated roofline of a turn-of-the-century Queen Anne poked above the ground-hugging tract miracles like a blue-veined nose at a sock hop.
“It rides nice and smooth.”
I left it at that. There were times since the talk with Bugas when I could carry on a normal conversation with the man who hired me, but it required more concentration than I could manage when I was driving. Afterward I always felt even guiltier than I knew he was. It was one thing to be a party to an attempted murder, another to behave in the presence of that party as if nothing were wrong. Somehow the extra remove from the crime in question had cast me in deeper shadow.
“You should’ve ordered the convertible,” he said. “If any day was made to ride around with the top down, this is it”
“Ragtops are for kids.” In fact I’d been planning to ask for one almost until the time I placed the order. All my life, the open car had represented a world of hand-rolled cigars, easily rolled women, winters in Miami, and hundred-dollar tips. Tom Mix had driven a white Auburn with curved horns on the radiator and the top down to make room for his ten-gallon hat, Clark Gable and Carole Lombard had roared off to their honeymoon in a red Bentley convertible, and James Dean had hurtled a black Porsche bareheaded off a desert road into the Milky Way of immortality, two years dead now and still climbing. It was something that, offered the opportunity, you didn’t even have to think about. But approaching my fifty-seventh birthday I was starting to have trouble keeping my head warm, even in summer. The choice was clear: Either drive everywhere with the top down and hat on, a visual oxymoron, or keep inventing answers for the same old question about leaving the roof up on a beautiful day. I put in for the hardtop; and sold yet another share in my own mortality.
I was afraid the silence was turning moody. “How are the figures?” I asked.
“A little slow, but I’m not worried about it. Some of the older dealers have been with us since the Tin Lizzie. The new paperwork was bound to bollix them up at first. Also it’s this damn recession. Things will pick up by Christmas.”
“The new Fairlane’s doing well, I heard.”
“Hank shouldn’t have let McNamara beef it up. I told him it would draw attention from the new division. It’s bad enough GM goosed up Pontiac, Olds, and Buick to meet us head on, but anyone could have foreseen that. More competition from the other side of our own building we didn’t need. So what does McNamara do when I call him on it? Slap a two-hundred-dollar price hike across the board, starting with Edsel. You’re driving a thirty-six-hundred-dollar automobile.”
“Jesus.”
“I think the son of a bitch is out to sink us, Connie. He told me himself we can’t expect to outsell his Ford. His Ford! But we’ll show him.”
“Someone told me Drew Pearson’s going to write up the Edsel in his column,” I said hopefully.
“Write it down, you mean. He told Winchell we ought to call it the Ethel, on account of the grille looking like the, uh, female sexual organ.”
He blushed, saying it; and for some reason I thought of Janet Sherman. Despite his size and bluff appearance there was an almost womanish reticence about Zed that made him seem out of place in the men’s locker-room atmosphere of the Glass House. In fact the anatomical possibilities of the car’s front-end design had already made the rounds of the Ford Engineering Department, and it had been suggested that if the phallic taillights of the 1957 Cadillac were to back into an Edsel, the result in nine months would be the 1,400-pound Crosley.
I’d thought of Janet Sherman when Zed brought up the reference because an office complex, even one as hermetically sealed as Ford’s, was a breeding ground for gossip, and it had been known there for some time that the two were pursuing a relationship beyond the professional. When the story reached me I had thought of warning her about him, but in the end I’d decided it would be a violation of John Bugas’s confidence, which I saw in animated form as a tiny version of its owner with the same disconcertingly mild and all-seeing eyes. It was a good excuse for not approaching Janet. I congratulated myself on it whenever I felt like being smug. I had several more excuses just as good, going back to the one I had used to run away from her and hide in my safe empty bachelor’s house.
I refrained from reminding Zed about my early reservations concerning the Edsel’s grille. I had not, in truth, mentioned them in more than a year. It had begun to grow on me. I only hoped the car’s more obvious merits would capture and hold the consumers’ fickle affections long enough for it to grow on them as well.
Something else had been absent for more than a year. As suddenly as the scrawny spectre of J. W. Pierpont had appeared in my life, it had just as suddenly left. I had neither seen nor heard from him since that night at the Bel-Air Drive-In when I had sicced him on Carlo Ballista in full view of God and Spencer Tracy. For months after that I had expected him to pop up any time. I was certain he’d come around after Anthony’s obituary ran in all three Detroit papers—SYNDICATE KINGPIN DIES WITH HIS BOOTS OFF, blared Hearst’s Times, characteristically mixing its gangster and cowboy metaphors while promoting the little street-level hood far above his station—and wondered from which corner he’d spring this time, giving me pause to contemplate the ingenuity of an aging private snooper in never using the same approach twice. But Tony Balls’s embalmed remains had been taking up space in the family plot at Sacred Heart Cemetery for six months and my days remained sans Pierpont. I had begun to ponder whether Bugas had outbid the UAW for his retainer, in spite of his insistence that I deal with the detective as I saw fit. In any case I’d never ask him about it. Quite apart from the fact that the old FBI bureau chief was not the kind of man who answered questions put to him by simpler cells in the corporate culture, the thought of raising the Devil by speaking his name kept me silent. I didn’t care to tempt fate.
Zed looked at his big gold watch, bringing me up from the depths with the movement. “I guess we’d better get back. Hank is expecting us in his office at nine.”
“Us?”
“It’s fairly unprecedented. He doesn’t call many informal meetings at the store. It probably has something to do with Jack Reith.”
Jack Reith, head of the Mercury Division and the man who had come back from Europe with his head full of daring new designs that would eventually come together in the E-car—the father, if ever there was one, of the Edsel—had resigned from Ford at the end of August, the loser in a three-year struggle with president Robert McNamara, the mildest-looking of the pale tigers Henry II had brought in during the Harry Bennett years, all of whom struck without snarling. Reith’s departure on the eve of his brainchild’s birth seemed to have caused no ripples at all in the company lagoon, a circumstance that chilled me to my shoes. Where do the peasants stand when the gods begin to fall?
I wasn’t thinking of Reith just then, though. He wasn’t the reason for the meeting or I wouldn’t have been invited. I’d rather not know, Bugas had said, a little over a year ago. Not for another year, anyway. Until the Edsel’s off the proving ground. Why I had thought I would be spared the final act was one for Mr. Wizard.
I remember nothing of the drive home to pick up the Mercury. I only came out of my thoughts when I stopped in the driveway, leaving the room for Zed to wheel the other car around the Edsel, and went inside to get the keys and clean up. My neighbor next door, a retired bus driver with a hearing aid, stopped raking leaves and cupped one hand around his mouth.
“Hey, Meaner! Tell your car to cover up when it yawns. It’s spreading germs.”