CHAPTER ONE
I WONDER how many other people have looked at a face they knew or
thought they knew, and seen fixed on it the tight, still smile that meant death
was near. Sylvia did, I know that; or Sylvia and probably old Hector too; for
Sylvia and for Hector there weren't any afterthoughts—or maybe there were;
maybe the little instant they had was enough; maybe they too, in their instant,
saw the world turn over, revealing its underside.
That, I think, is what's happened to me; I don't understand it, entirely; I
don't yet, entirely, know what I feel. Other people—people I read about,
especially—seem always to know what they're thinking or feeling; they're
exasperated or happy or loving or sad, just the one thing at a time, and so
clearly. For me, it's almost never that way; I'm more apt to be unclear and
mixed. Sylvia, for instance. I know too much now about Sylvia; I know things
about Sylvia I wish I had never needed to know about anyone. But even then—even
then—I don't know. Maybe what I feel toward Sylvia is the dislike and
resentment the people of Long Meadow have for so long taken it for granted I
felt. Maybe I hold her in abhorrence—if the codes I've lived by are right,
that's what I'm supposed to do. Or maybe—in the night when I wake up I feel it—maybe
in spite of what Sylvia was and what Sylvia did I'm still linked to her; maybe
in some way she's part of myself.
Of course I had known my cousin Sylvia was home from New York for the summer;
in a town the size of Long Meadow—even when it's swelled by resorters—you
can scarcely miss a circumstance so whetting to the local tongues. But my path
and Sylvia’s didn’t cross often—not of late, anyway; it wasn’t until a
night toward the middle of August that I so much as saw her, and then only
passingly, at the distance of sidewalk to street.
I was, I remember, coming out of Pete’s Kitchen—not a circumstance at all
remarkable; I drop in at Pete’s for coffee half the nights of my life. The
only thing at all out of the ordinary, that night, was that Russ Bennert was
with me. It was, perhaps, nine then, or shortly before it, because that’s the
routine—around eight-thirty when we’re through with admissions and the rush
of evening visitors is over I push back my books in the hospital office for a
ten-minute break, while the night nurse on main peels an ear for the phone.
Often Doris Orfelt drops in to go with me, but that night she’d been busy; as
I went down the side corridor past the common room Russ Bennert had lifted his
head from the building plans spread on the common-room table; he’d said,
"Alone tonight, Cathy? Then I’m going too."
I’d answered as shortly as possible, "That’s not the least
necessary," but he had unfolded his big body anyway; he’d said, "I’ve
known you since you were seven, Cathy; there’s no reason—is there?—why we
can’t be friends."
And so I had let him come with me, humiliated because being near him was at
once a pain and its opposite, wishing—as I so often had wished—that he was
away again as he’d been during the war, wishing I could be anywhere but in
Long Meadow, where I couldn’t escape seeing him. Carefully speaking of nothing
but the weather and the proposed new hospital, we walked the half block to the
Kitchen; still carefully distant, we sat at the long counter served by Mrs.
Haushofer, having some of Pete’s spring-water coffee and his freshly fried
doughnuts. While we were doing so Hector LeClerque ambled in; Hector, as usual
by that time of evening, was well in need of a sobering snack, and Russ bought
him one. I was taking coffee back for Dr. Diebuhr too; I remember my hands were
full as Russ opened the door for me, and I stepped through to the side porch
which used to give entry to a country-style house but which now takes the
traffic of Pete’s bouncing young enterprise.
It was then that the car came by, drifting lazily up from the darkness behind
it—a long gray convertible with its top, down, announced not so much by its
whispering motor as by the shafts of its lights and the swell of its radio.
During the moment it passed under the nearest street light the four people in it
were framed in an obscure and leaf-edged relief—Sylvia driving, her head a
little forward, her long light hair loose on the shoulders of a misty white
blouse, her hands high on the wheel. At her side, arm along her back and dark
head bent toward her, sat Pete Fenrood, his long young body holding something of
the poise and balance of a ready leopard; in the back seat—bald head
surmounting thick shoulders in a much too young plaid sport shirt—Clint Boyce
slouched beside his red-haired wife.
Abreast of Pete’s place of business they all, except Sylvia, turned; Pete,
straightening a little, called, "Hi, you!"; Clint Boyce, too, lifted a
careless hand. Then they were past us, the car floating forward into darkness
the same way it had floated up from it, trailing the receding wink of its
taillights, the receding drift of its music, the echo of Sylvia’s husky low
laugh.
Beside me, Russ spoke quietly. "They must have left Ada with Lucy. . . .
It looks as if Sylvia’s making a play for Pete Fenrood. I wondered, when she
loaned him that money. I’m sorry, Cathy."
I said, "There’s nothing at all to be sorry about."
He answered, "There ought to be, Cathy. Sooner or later I’ve got to be
sorry about someone."
Of the replies to that there were none I could make, not without too much
betrayal. I went on down the walk, but as I did so—willy-nilly and fight as I
would—I was shaken by compulsions I seldom allow myself, not when I’m
waking. I couldn’t envy Sylvia, I couldn’t let myself be covetous, but there
she went in this town she so fitfully visited only because the spirit moved her,
there she went in a car that for me would be ransom, there she went
pleasure-bent, there she went, free. While here on the walk in front of Pete’s
Kitchen was I, one hand bearing a wax container of coffee, the other a brown
paper bag with two doughnuts, caged in a town I despaired to be gone from,
mortgaged to a job with no past and no future, bound by debt, bound by duty,
bound—most unbreakably of all—by my own doubts and incapacities; no door
ever opened for me. Here I was, beside the man who had begun blinding me to all
other men when I was in pigtails and he seventeen—out on a basketball floor in
a kind of blaze, big even then, so tall he could tip the ball into the basket,
streaking down the middle with his blond head back and the ball slapping up to
his hand, meeting interference or ignoring it with the same sure power. A man
different from anyone else in Long Meadow—strong and quick and authoritative,
openhanded and ambitious, getting a start in state politics, making his mark as
a construction engineer.
A man I couldn’t so much as think of loving, because he was married to
somebody else. Married to Sylvia’s sister and my one other cousin, Ada.
The thrust of that rebellion washed up, washed over me, and then washed away,
leaving an ebb that was older and drearier. When I came back to the night and
the ordinary we were still only halfway to the hospital, and a murmur was
sounding behind me.
"That M’selle Gainer, she is of the rich who do not care for the
poor."
Hector. I hadn’t heard him come after us, but when I turned he was right in
back of me, padding along in his moccasins, his black French-Canadian eyes
plaintive, even his long mustache drooping.
"Oh, go along, Hector," Russ told him indulgently. "You’ve
had three too many; get back to that shack of yours."
Hector persisted. "My friend John Gainer, he does not forget. Always he
has for Hector a little money for bread, a little money for wine. But this Ma’amselle,
nothing."
"Applesauce," Russ told him more rudely. "She’s slipped you
a fistful more times than you can count—if she hasn’t, why are you always
out trailing her? Cut along now, sleep it off."
For still a few steps the old man kept after us. What he had in mind, all too
probably, was following me to the office, where he would have sat by my desk in
the new-patient’s chair for the rest of the evening, retelling his wrongs. But
Russ was a major of engineers during the war and his tone carries authority; at
the edge of the hospital grounds the seedy old lumberjack came to a halt,
rocking gently as he stood to watch us go.
"Poor bastard," Russ muttered as we edged past Dr. Diebuhr’s red
Studebaker—parked, as usual, head on toward the side entrance—"it’s
too bad your grandfather didn’t leave him a little. Too bad your grandfather
didn’t do a few other things too. I’ll have to hunt Hector a job somewhere——"
He fell silent, after that, as I remained; at the door of the common room he
said good night a trifle absently; I went on to my desk alone.
And that was all there was, then, to that brief glance of Sylvia; all that
there was to the circumstances surrounding it. Perhaps, as I walked on up the
corridor, my neck should have prickled; perhaps I should have felt some sixth
sense of prescience, perhaps I should have been touched by my nearness to that
other dread presence which even then must have been riding hooded and cloaked in
the car I had seen. But I was too self-absorbed; what filled the center of my
mind, as I went on up that hall, was the coffee I must get to Dr. Diebuhr, the
tedious last hour I must put in on the hospital books, the peppermint ice cream
I mustn’t forget to pick up on the way home, because Mother had phoned to say
Agatha Pence and Rose Gamble had dropped in. And if my other thoughts were taken
up it wasn’t by anything concerning Sylvia, or Hector, or even, directly,
Russ. It was, instead, by the dreary old question concerning myself. "Will
I ever get away from this? Will I ever get away?"
The next time I saw Sylvia, though, it was different. Not enough different so
I could possibly have guessed what was ripening, but enough so that I was, at
least, taken aback. Because Sylvia, that time, came to see me, and Sylvia’s
coming to my house to see me was very nearly in a category with the Duchess of
Windsor hopping a ride in a freight car.
The hour she chose for her descent was two o’clock, on a day toward the end
of August. Since my worktime begins at three I was doing what I most regularly
do about then—I was upstairs dressing. Maybe Sylvia knocked before she opened
the front door of our small forty-year-old house, or maybe, as I was later on to
believe, she moved quietly through the rooms downstairs, looking for me or for
something else. At any rate my first hint of her presence came when she called
from the front hall.
"Cathy, you around here?" The voice drifted up, casual, scarcely
raised, so much at home yet so out of place that for a while I could scarcely
believe my ears. Mother, that day, was away at a Methodist bazaar; I’d thought
myself not only alone in the house but certain to stay that way. Probably I met
my own eyes incredulously in the mirror for as long as a minute before I even
reached for the seersucker robe I had thrown on the bed. It was hot that
afternoon, dry hot, the way August in Minnesota can be even as far north as we
were, and I wasn’t wearing much.
"Cathy, aren’t you home?"
After that second call I managed an answer, and got out through my bedroom
door. Hall windows don’t come in local houses of the size and vintage of ours,
but there was light enough in the well below for me to verify, from the
stairhead, that she actually stood there.
"Sylvia." I was stupid about it. "What’re you——"
because that, of course, was what I thought first: she’d never have been there
without some reason.
She laughed, throwing my own broken-off query back at me. "What am I
doing here? Sweet, aren’t you my only cousin?" That hazy, husky, slightly
jerky drawl wasn’t any native way of speech, but she could make it be
mesmerizing.
I started forward. "I’ll be right——"
"Oh, why bother? I can join you up there." The fronts of my
housecoat, as I discovered by that time, had gotten rolled in the belt; I was
still tugging at them, trying to get myself decently covered, when she came
level with me, rising lithely up through the dim well of the stairs, hands
out-stretched and lips smiling, as if she truly were moved by an eagerness to
see me.
"M-m-m," she continued. "You should play up those curves of
yours, Cathy; too bad you ever wear clothes. Why haven’t you been up to see
me? There I’ve been, all alone in my piece of the old Gainer homestead—can’t
you even say anything welcoming? You needn’t mean it."
Hands light on my elbows, she rocked me a little, affectionate, ironical as
if I were a loved younger sister. Under the circumstances I couldn’t very well
produce the obvious, which was that I had never in my life entered her home, any
more than she had previously entered mine.
"It’s nice of you to be so unorthodox," I managed instead.
"It ought to set at least some of Long Meadow by the ears. If you’ll wait
till I——"
I’ll watch while you dress."
I began resisting, but opposition to her highhandedness was one thing and
getting anywhere was another; she stood waiting, cool, brows sweetly lifted,
and after another quick glance at her I gave in over a point that couldn’t
be worth struggling about anyway and led the way back to my room. Once
there, while I went on with my hair, she immediately and airily flopped on
the bed. I was by that time a little wary, or maybe—along with my other
responses—I had been wary from the first; you never quite knew, with
Sylvia, whether good was going to pop from her or ill. She was gotten up,
that afternoon, in an ankle-long velveteen, not beige, not orange, but
somewhere between the two. Probably the dress was a Dior; her head, her
shoulders, and most of her bosom rose out of the low roll of collar; the
bodice hugged, the skirt artfully flared. The hat that went with this was
wide, very wide, in the same velveteen, the front brim folding back to be
held by a staggering three-foot-long quill. On the night I had seen her in
the car, with her hair down, she might, in the darkness, have been
seventeen; today for the incongruous setting of my angle-ceiled bedroom she
had chosen to look what she was, twenty-nine, a schooled cosmopolite who
could enjoy the full irony of sitting dressed as she was on a worn chenille
bedspread, sables loose on her lap, brown suéde gloves and handbag thrown
beside her, one long leg carelessly swinging. Not beautiful maybe—the
cheekbones were a little too high and angular, the gray eyes a little too
small for beauty. But beauty wasn’t important in Sylvia, any more than it
would have been in a timber wolf.
"Say it, darling," she urged me. "How nice for me that I’ve
got Long Meadow to startle, when it’s so hard to stand New York on its head
with mere clothes. I’ve been at the bazaar."
Mockery for me, because she was reading me. But mockery too for herself.
For as far back as I could remember, I had been supposed to detest and hate
her. "Your cousin Sylvia, the one with the money." It wasn’t from
Mother or Father I had gotten that whisper, but surely it had come from most of
the rest of Long Meadow. So long ago that my feet in yellow socks and black
slippers still stuck straight out in front of me in a church pew, I was already
aware of that whisper; across from me in another pew had been that other child,
four years older and four years bigger, who had been Sylvia Gainer, and always
around me the whisper was sibilant. Not "That’s her grandfather Gainer,
who disowned her mother for marrying Carl Kingman’s son." Not "That’s
her cousin Ada"—Ada was so much older than I that there wasn’t any
comparison; when I was four Ada must have been thirteen. Just always "That’s
her cousin Sylvia." Around me, tight and pressing, had crowded all the
angers and animosities I had been supposed to feel; I had felt myself home along
on the current, but at the same time, curiously, I had felt a kind of linking—the
gray eyes under the blond hair and the slightly knobby forehead had looked at me
as if they knew me.
Later on, too, in spite of the bad fortune that so often seemed to result
from her sporadic offers of friendship, things had stayed the same way. There’d
been the time when I was six or so, and she had suddenly appeared beside me in a
neighbor’s yard. "Here, you can have these," she had said, thrusting
at me a large bag of marbles. "I won ’em off Lucy Hague, and I’ll show
how you play." For the rest of that June afternoon she had squatted beside
me, painstakingly drawing out lines in the dust, painstakingly guiding my
inexpert fingers. Lucy Hague’s mother, afterward, had turned up to storm at me
frighteningly, saying I’d stolen the marbles and wrenching them back, but I
had always believed it was Lucy, not Sylvia, who lied. There’d been the time I
almost ran away with her. There’d been the time I was a high school freshman
and she got me elected to a society I had wretchedly had to turn down because I
couldn’t afford it. Always the eyes with which she met mine had held the same
look—detached, perhaps, but keeping their sure inner knowledge. They’d met
mine that way the day she walked down a church aisle as a bridesmaid behind her
sister Ada and Russ Bennett, and that gaze was the one she turned on me now.
Against it I might continue to be wary, but I couldn’t be wholly hostile.
"Oh," I replied to what she had just said, "the bazaar. When I
thought you’d been fishing,"
The wriggle she gave in return to my tartness was one of pure pleasure.
"See?" she asked, and she was, then, entirely smiling. "I love
you, Cathy. I love you, I love you. All those years, Grandfather Gainer
threatening to disinherit me too if I so much as spoke to you, but—you’re
like your mother. She just read my palm for me, at the bazaar."
Abrupt change of subject, but abruptness was what you tuned yourself to,
around Sylvia.
"Mother can’t sew much any more, not with her hands." I was
careful, an increase of wariness telling me that Sylvia might be approaching
what she’d come for. "So she’s taken up palmistry. In Long Meadow you’ve
got to have some talent to offer up at bazaars."
"Oh, don’t apologize." It was light but, I thought, temporizing.
"Aunt Julia’s good at it. Too good. She told me I was inconstant and
ruthless. She said I was erratically selfish and erratically generous, and she
didn’t know which was worse. She said I should have been spanked——"
I laughed. "Old residents usually come away from Mother’s booth
looking a bit strained."
"So I should think. She can be—well, she hits close." This was
much less airy, and I thought, "Here it comes." "She told me I’d
meet a tall man with dark hair and blue eyes. Well, I’ve met him. Anyway, I
think I’ve met him. Cathy, last winter—this spring until I got home—how
much did you see of Pete Fenrood?"
Back toward her, I let myself pull a cotton dress over my head before I
answered, thinking, "That’s it, that’s why she’s come." I was
visited by a little, relaxing relief. Ever since her arrival I had—hadn’t I?—half
expected it might be something else, and here it was only Pete Fenrood. I
repeated cautiously after her—Sylvia like Mother can hit close, and when you’re
most at ease with her may be just the time to be most on your guard—"Pete
Fenrood? Oh, I used to see him around town; I rather liked him awhile——"
"Until he began seeing me, until he got a reputation for being a hothead
and turning up drunk on your porch."
"All right, until he got into the fight with Clint Boyce, even if they
do seem to have made up. And until he started drinking too much. In Long Meadow——"
"You’re provincial."
Maybe it wasn’t supercilious; maybe it was thrown at me as a flat statement
and nothing more, but resentment flared.
"All right, I’m provincial." I wouldn’t add to it.
"Let’s not fight. I’m sorry I said that. You were seeing him quite
often, though, weren’t you? He took you out——"
"A dance or two; a few movies."
"That’s not what I heard." She was sitting up straight by that
time, not being airy any more. And I wasn’t fiddling with clothes, either; we
were facing each other as belligerents.
"From confessions?"
"He calls you Miss Glacier of ’49. He’d scarcely do that if he hadn’t
made tries."
"I’d imagine that Pete’s always trying. You can’t have missed
hearing about his womanless stretch on Saipan."
"Now you’re being flip, Cathy."
"Why not? If he’s your dark tall man, quick take him. For a wolf he’s
not too bad. A little easygoing——"
She said, "I’m twenty-nine." And then suddenly she wasn’t an
antagonist any longer; not in the same way; she didn’t slump either; it was
impossible for Sylvia to slump. She just sat there looking cool, shrewd, and
sober in her elegant clothes, the foot in the brown platform pump no longer
swinging. "As your mother would so brutally say, it’s time I cut such
losses as I may have and settled down." Then, in another quick shift,
"Cathy, what about you? You needn’t stick around here in this town any
longer, now that your father’s gone—why are you? Is it Russ Bennert?"
That was what I had shrunk from; that was what I had been afraid she might
ask.
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