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All
of a sudden, on my way out to the lobby, I got old Jane Gallagher on the brain
again. I got her on, and I couldn't get her off. I sat down in this vomity-looking
chair in the lobby and thought about her and Stradlater sitting in that goddam
Ed Banky's car, and though I was pretty damn sure old Stradlater hadn't given
her the time--I know old Jane like a book--I still couldn't get her off my brain.
I knew her like a book. I really did. I mean, besides checkers, she was quite
fond of all athletic sports, and after I got to know her, the whole summer long
we played tennis together almost every morning and golf almost every afternoon.
I really got to know her quite intimately. I don't mean it was anything physical
or anything--it wasn't--but we saw each other all the time. You don't always
have to get too sexy to get to know a girl.
The way I met her, this Doberman pinscher she had used to come over and
relieve himself on our lawn, and my mother got very irritated about it. She
called up Jane's mother and made a big stink about it. My mother can make a
very big stink about that kind of stuff. Then what happened, a couple of days
later I saw Jane laying on her stomach next to the swimming pool, at the club,
and I said hello to her. I knew she lived in the house next to ours, but I'd
never conversed with her before or anything. She gave me the big freeze when
I said hello that day, though. I had a helluva time convincing her that I didn't
give a good goddam where her dog relieved himself. He could do it in the living
room, for all I cared. Anyway, after that, Jane and I got to be friends and
all. I played golf with her that same afternoon. She lost eight balls, I remember.
Eight. I had a terrible time getting her to at least open her eyes when she
took a swing at the ball. I improved her game immensely, though. I'm a very
good golfer. If I told you what I go around in, you probably wouldn't believe
me. I almost was once in a movie short, but I changed my mind at the last minute.
I figured that anybody that hates the movies as much as I do, I'd be a phony
if I let them stick me in a movie short.
She was a funny girl, old Jane. I wouldn't exactly describe her as strictly
beautiful. She knocked me out, though. She was sort of muckle-mouthed. I mean
when she was talking and she got excited about something, her mouth sort of
went in about fifty directions, her lips and all. That killed me. And she never
really closed it all the way, her mouth. It was always just a little bit open,
especially when she got in her golf stance, or when she was reading a book.
She was always reading, and she read very good books. She read a lot of poetry
and all. She was the only one, outside my family, that I ever showed Allie's
baseball mitt to, with all the poems written on it. She'd never met Allie or
anything, because that was her first summer in Maine--before that, she went
to Cape Cod--but I told her quite a lot about him. She was interested in that
kind of stuff.
My mother didn't like her too much. I mean my mother always thought Jane
and her mother were sort of snubbing her or something when they didn't say hello.
My mother saw them in the village a lot, because Jane used to drive to market
with her mother in this LaSalle convertible they had. My mother didn't think
Jane was pretty, even. I did, though. I just liked the way she looked, that's
all.
I remember this one afternoon. It was the only time old Jane and I ever
got close to necking, even. It was a Saturday and it was raining like a bastard
out, and I was over at her house, on the porch--they had this big screened-in
porch. We were playing checkers. I used to kid her once in a while because she
wouldn't take her kings out of the back row. But I didn't kid her much, though.
You never wanted to kid Jane too much. I think I really like it best when you
can kid the pants off a girl when the opportunity arises, but it's a funny thing.
The girls I like best are the ones I never feel much like kidding. Sometimes
I think they'd like it if you kidded them--in fact, I know they would--but it's
hard to get started, once you've known them a pretty long time and never kidded
them. Anyway, I was telling you about that afternoon Jane and I came close to
necking. It was raining like hell and we were out on her porch, and all of a
sudden this booze hound her mother was married to came out on the porch and
asked Jane if there were any cigarettes in the house. I didn't know him too
well or anything, but he looked like the kind of guy that wouldn't talk to you
much unless he wanted something off you. He had a lousy personality. Anyway,
old Jane wouldn't answer him when he asked her if she knew where there was any
cigarettes. So the guy asked her again, but she still wouldn't answer him. She
didn't even look up from the game. Finally the guy went inside the house. When
he did, I asked Jane what the hell was going on. She wouldn't even answer me,
then. She made out like she was concentrating on her next move in the game and
all. Then all of a sudden, this tear plopped down on the checkerboard. On one
of the red squares--boy, I can still see it. She just rubbed it into the board
with her finger. I don't know why, but it bothered hell out of me. So what I
did was, I went over and made her move over on the glider so that I could sit
down next to her--I practically sat down in her lap, as a matter of fact. Then
she really started to cry, and the next thing I knew, I was kissing her all
over--anywhere--her eyes, her nose, her forehead, her eyebrows and all, her
ears--her whole face except her mouth and all. She sort of wouldn't let me get
to her mouth. Anyway, it was the closest we ever got to necking. After a while,
she got up and went in and put on this red and white sweater she had, that knocked
me out, and we went to a goddam movie. I asked her, on the way, if Mr. Cudahy--that
was the booze hound's name--had ever tried to get wise with her. She was pretty
young, but she had this terrific figure, and I wouldn't've put it past that
Cudahy bastard. She said no, though. I never did find out what the hell was
the matter. Some girls you practically never find out what's the matter.
I don't want you to get the idea she was a goddam icicle or something,
just because we never necked or horsed around much. She wasn't. I held hands
with her all the time, for instance. That doesn't sound like much, I realize,
but she was terrific to hold hands with. Most girls if you hold hands with them,
their goddam hand dies on you, or else they think they have to keep moving their
hand all the time, as if they were afraid they'd bore you or something. Jane
was different. We'd get into a goddam movie or something, and right away we'd
start holding hands, and we wouldn't quit till the movie was over. And without
changing the position or making a big deal out of it. You never even worried,
with Jane, whether your hand was sweaty or not. All you knew was, you were happy.
You really were.
One other thing I just thought of. One time, in this movie, Jane did something
that just about knocked me out. The newsreel was on or something, and all of
a sudden I felt this hand on the back of my neck, and it was Jane's. It was
a funny thing to do. I mean she was quite young and all, and most girls if you
see them putting their hand on the back of somebody's neck, they're around twenty-five
or thirty and usually they're doing it to their husband or their little kid--I
do it to my kid sister Phoebe once in a while, for instance. But if a girl's
quite young and all and she does it, it's so pretty it just about kills you.
Anyway, that's what I was thinking about while I sat in that vomity-looking
chair in the lobby. Old Jane. Every time I got to the part about her out with
Stradlater in that damn Ed Banky's car, it almost drove me crazy. I knew she
wouldn't let him get to first base with her, but it drove me crazy anyway. I
don't even like to talk about it, if you want to know the truth.
There was hardly anybody in the lobby any more. Even all the whory-looking
blondes weren't around any more, and all of a sudden I felt like getting the
hell out of the place. It was too depressing. And I wasn't tired or anything.
So I went up to my room and put on my coat. I also took a look out the window
to see if all the perverts were still in action, but the lights and all were
out now. I went down in the elevator again and got a cab and told the driver
to take me down to Ernie's. Ernie's is this night club in Greenwich Village
that my brother D.B. used to go to quite frequently before he went out to Hollywood
and prostituted himself. He used to take me with him once in a while. Ernie's
a big fat colored guy that plays the piano. He's a terrific snob and he won't
hardly even talk to you unless you're a big shot or a celebrity or something,
but he can really play the piano. He's so good he's almost corny, in fact. I
don't exactly know what I mean by that, but I mean it. I certainly like to hear
him play, but sometimes you feel like turning his goddam piano over. I think
it's because sometimes when he plays, he sounds like the kind of guy that won't
talk to you unless you're a big shot.
12
The
cab I had was a real old one that smelled like someone'd just tossed his cookies
in it. I always get those vomity kind of cabs if I go anywhere late at night.
What made it worse, it was so quiet and lonesome out, even though it was Saturday
night. I didn't see hardly anybody on the street. Now and then you just saw
a man and a girl crossing a street, with their arms around each other's waists
and all, or a bunch of hoodlumy-looking guys and their dates, all of them laughing
like hyenas at something you could bet wasn't funny. New York's terrible when
somebody laughs on the street very late at night. You can hear it for miles.
It makes you feel so lonesome and depressed. I kept wishing I could go home
and shoot the bull for a while with old Phoebe. But finally, after I was riding
a while, the cab driver and I sort of struck up a conversation. His name was
Horwitz. He was a much better guy than the other driver I'd had. Anyway, I thought
maybe he might know about the ducks.
"Hey, Horwitz," I said. "You ever pass by the lagoon in Central Park?
Down by Central Park South?"
"The what?"
"The lagoon. That little lake, like, there. Where the ducks are. You know."
"Yeah, what about it?"
"Well, you know the ducks that swim around in it? In the springtime and
all? Do you happen to know where they go in the wintertime, by any chance?"
"Where who goes?"
"The ducks. Do you know, by any chance? I mean does somebody come around
in a truck or something and take them away, or do they fly away by themselves--go
south or something?"
Old Horwitz turned all the way around and looked at me. He was a very
impatient-type guy. He wasn't a bad guy, though. "How the hell should I know?"
he said. "How the hell should I know a stupid thing like that?"
"Well, don't get sore about it," I said. He was sore about it or something.
"Who's sore? Nobody's sore."
I stopped having a conversation with him, if he was going to get so damn
touchy about it. But he started it up again himself. He turned all the way around
again, and said, "The fish don't go no place. They stay right where they are,
the fish. Right in the goddam lake."
"The fish--that's different. The fish is different. I'm talking about
the ducks," I said.
"What's different about it? Nothin's different about it," Horwitz said.
Everything he said, he sounded sore about something. "It's tougher for the fish,
the winter and all, than it is for the ducks, for Chrissake. Use your head,
for Chrissake."
I didn't say anything for about a minute. Then I said, "All right. What
do they do, the fish and all, when that whole little lake's a solid block of
ice, people skating on it and all?"
Old Horwitz turned around again. "What the hellaya mean what do they do?"
he yelled at me. "They stay right where they are, for Chrissake."
"They can't just ignore the ice. They can't just ignore it."
"Who's ignoring it? Nobody's ignoring it!" Horwitz said. He got so damn
excited and all, I was afraid he was going to drive the cab right into a lamppost
or something. "They live right in the goddam ice. It's their nature, for Chrissake.
They get frozen right in one position for the whole winter."
"Yeah? What do they eat, then? I mean if they're frozen solid, they can't
swim around looking for food and all."
"Their bodies, for Chrissake--what'sa matter with ya? Their bodies take
in nutrition and all, right through the goddam seaweed and crap that's in the
ice. They got their pores open the whole time. That's their nature, for Chrissake.
See what I mean?" He turned way the hell around again to look at me.
"Oh," I said. I let it drop. I was afraid he was going to crack the damn
taxi up or something. Besides, he was such a touchy guy, it wasn't any pleasure
discussing anything with him. "Would you care to stop off and have a drink with
me somewhere?" I said.
He didn't answer me, though. I guess he was still thinking. I asked him
again, though. He was a pretty good guy. Quite amusing and all.
"I ain't got no time for no liquor, bud," he said. "How the hell old are
you, anyways? Why ain'tcha home in bed?"
"I'm not tired."
When I got out in front of Ernie's and paid the fare, old Horwitz brought
up the fish again. He certainly had it on his mind. "Listen," he said. "If you
was a fish, Mother Nature'd take care of you, wouldn't she? Right? You don't
think them fish just die when it gets to be winter, do ya?"
"No, but--"
"You're goddam right they don't," Horwitz said, and drove off like a bat
out of hell. He was about the touchiest guy I ever met. Everything you said
made him sore.
Even though it was so late, old Ernie's was jampacked. Mostly with prep
school jerks and college jerks. Almost every damn school in the world gets out
earlier for Christmas vacation than the schools I go to. You could hardly check
your coat, it was so crowded. It was pretty quiet, though, because Ernie was
playing the piano. It was supposed to be something holy, for God's sake, when
he sat down at the piano. Nobody's that good. About three couples, besides me,
were waiting for tables, and they were all shoving and standing on tiptoes to
get a look at old Ernie while he played. He had a big damn mirror in front of
the piano, with this big spotlight on him, so that everybody could watch his
face while he played. You couldn't see his fingers while he played--just his
big old face. Big deal. I'm not too sure what the name of the song was that
he was playing when I came in, but whatever it was, he was really stinking it
up. He was putting all these dumb, show-offy ripples in the high notes, and
a lot of other very tricky stuff that gives me a pain in the ass. You should've
heard the crowd, though, when he was finished. You would've puked. They went
mad. They were exactly the same morons that laugh like hyenas in the movies
at stuff that isn't funny. I swear to God, if I were a piano player or an actor
or something and all those dopes thought I was terrific, I'd hate it. I wouldn't
even want them to clap for me. People always clap for the wrong things. If I
were a piano player, I'd play it in the goddam closet. Anyway, when he was finished,
and everybody was clapping their heads off, old Ernie turned around on his stool
and gave this very phony, humble bow. Like as if he was a helluva humble guy,
besides being a terrific piano player. It was very phony--I mean him being such
a big snob and all. In a funny way, though, I felt sort of sorry for him when
he was finished. I don't even think he knows any more when he's playing right
or not. It isn't all his fault. I partly blame all those dopes that clap their
heads off--they'd foul up anybody, if you gave them a chance. Anyway, it made
me feel depressed and lousy again, and I damn near got my coat back and went
back to the hotel, but it was too early and I didn't feel much like being all
alone.
They finally got me this stinking table, right up against a wall and behind
a goddam post, where you couldn't see anything. It was one of those tiny little
tables that if the people at the next table don't get up to let you by--and
they never do, the bastards--you practically have to climb into your chair.
I ordered a Scotch and soda, which is my favorite drink, next to frozen Daiquiris.
If you were only around six years old, you could get liquor at Ernie's, the
place was so dark and all, and besides, nobody cared how old you were. You could
even be a dope fiend and nobody'd care.
I was surrounded by jerks. I'm not kidding. At this other tiny table,
right to my left, practically on top of me, there was this funny-looking guy
and this funny-looking girl. They were around my age, or maybe just a little
older. It was funny. You could see they were being careful as hell not to drink
up the minimum too fast. I listened to their conversation for a while, because
I didn't have anything else to do. He was telling her about some pro football
game he'd seen that afternoon. He gave her every single goddam play in the whole
game--I'm not kidding. He was the most boring guy I ever listened to. And you
could tell his date wasn't even interested in the goddam game, but she was even
funnier-looking than he was, so I guess she had to listen. Real ugly girls have
it tough. I feel so sorry for them sometimes. Sometimes I can't even look at
them, especially if they're with some dopey guy that's telling them all about
a goddam football game. On my right, the conversation was even worse, though.
On my right there was this very Joe Yale-looking guy, in a gray flannel suit
and one of those flitty-looking Tattersall vests. All those Ivy League bastards
look alike. My father wants me to go to Yale, or maybe Princeton, but I swear,
I wouldn't go to one of those Ivy League colleges, if I was dying, for God's
sake. Anyway, this Joe Yale-looking guy had a terrific-looking girl with him.
Boy, she was good-looking. But you should've heard the conversation they were
having. In the first place, they were both slightly crocked. What he was doing,
he was giving her a feel under the table, and at the same time telling her all
about some guy in his dorm that had eaten a whole bottle of aspirin and nearly
committed suicide. His date kept saying to him, "How horrible . . . Don't, darling.
Please, don't. Not here." Imagine giving somebody a feel and telling them about
a guy committing suicide at the same time! They killed me.
I certainly began to feel like a prize horse's ass, though, sitting there
all by myself. There wasn't anything to do except smoke and drink. What I did
do, though, I told the waiter to ask old Ernie if he'd care to join me for a
drink. I told him to tell him I was D.B.'s brother. I don't think he ever even
gave him my message, though. Those bastards never give your message to anybody.
All of a sudden, this girl came up to me and said, "Holden Caulfield!"
Her name was Lillian Simmons. My brother D.B. used to go around with her for
a while. She had very big knockers.
"Hi," I said. I tried to get up, naturally, but it was some job getting
up, in a place like that. She had some Navy officer with her that looked like
he had a poker up his ass.
"How marvelous to see you!" old Lillian Simmons said. Strictly a phony.
"How's your big brother?" That's all she really wanted to know.
"He's fine. He's in Hollywood."
"In Hollywood! How marvelous! What's he doing?"
"I don't know. Writing," I said. I didn't feel like discussing it. You
could tell she thought it was a big deal, his being in Hollywood. Almost everybody
does. Mostly people who've never read any of his stories. It drives me crazy,
though.
"How exciting," old Lillian said. Then she introduced me to the Navy guy.
His name was Commander Blop or something. He was one of those guys that think
they're being a pansy if they don't break around forty of your fingers when
they shake hands with you. God, I hate that stuff. "Are you all alone, baby?"
old Lillian asked me. She was blocking up the whole goddam traffic in the aisle.
You could tell she liked to block up a lot of traffic. This waiter was waiting
for her to move out of the way, but she didn't even notice him. It was funny.
You could tell the waiter didn't like her much, you could tell even the Navy
guy didn't like her much, even though he was dating her. And I didn't like her
much. Nobody did. You had to feel sort of sorry for her, in a way. "Don't you
have a date, baby?" she asked me. I was standing up now, and she didn't even
tell me to sit down. She was the type that keeps you standing up for hours.
"Isn't he handsome?" she said to the Navy guy. "Holden, you're getting handsomer
by the minute." The Navy guy told her to come on. He told her they were blocking
up the whole aisle. "Holden, come join us," old Lillian said. "Bring your drink."
"I was just leaving," I told her. "I have to meet somebody." You could
tell she was just trying to get in good with me. So that I'd tell old D.B. about
it.
"Well, you little so-and-so. All right for you. Tell your big brother
I hate him, when you see him."
Then she left. The Navy guy and I told each other we were glad to've met
each other. Which always kills me. I'm always saying "Glad to've met you" to
somebody I'm not at all glad I met. If you want to stay alive, you have to say
that stuff, though.
After I'd told her I had to meet somebody, I didn't have any goddam choice
except to leave. I couldn't even stick around to hear old Ernie play something
halfway decent. But I certainly wasn't going to sit down at a table with old
Lillian Simmons and that Navy guy and be bored to death. So I left. It made
me mad, though, when I was getting my coat. People are always ruining things
for you.
13
I
walked all the way back to the hotel. Forty-one gorgeous blocks. I didn't do
it because I felt like walking or anything. It was more because I didn't feel
like getting in and out of another taxicab. Sometimes you get tired of riding
in taxicabs the same way you get tired riding in elevators. All of a sudden,
you have to walk, no matter how far or how high up. When I was a kid, I used
to walk all the way up to our apartment very frequently. Twelve stories.
You wouldn't even have known it had snowed at all. There was hardly any
snow on the sidewalks. But it was freezing cold, and I took my red hunting hat
out of my pocket and put it on--I didn't give a damn how I looked. I even put
the earlaps down. I wished I knew who'd swiped my gloves at Pencey, because
my hands were freezing. Not that I'd have done much about it even if I had known.
I'm one of these very yellow guys. I try not to show it, but I am. For instance,
if I'd found out at Pencey who'd stolen my gloves, I probably would've gone
down to the crook's room and said, "Okay. How 'bout handing over those gloves?"
Then the crook that had stolen them probably would've said, his voice very innocent
and all, "What gloves?" Then what I probably would've done, I'd have gone in
his closet and found the gloves somewhere. Hidden in his goddam galoshes or
something, for instance. I'd have taken them out and showed them to the guy
and said, "I suppose these are your goddam gloves?" Then the crook probably
would've given me this very phony, innocent look, and said, "I never saw those
gloves before in my life. If they're yours, take 'em. I don't want the goddam
things." Then I probably would've just stood there for about five minutes. I'd
have the damn gloves right in my hand and all, but I'd feel I ought to sock
the guy in the jaw or something--break his goddam jaw. Only, I wouldn't have
the guts to do it. I'd just stand there, trying to look tough. What I might
do, I might say something very cutting and snotty, to rile him up--instead of
socking him in the jaw. Anyway if I did say something very cutting and snotty,
he'd probably get up and come over to me and say, "Listen, Caulfield. Are you
calling me a crook?" Then, instead of saying, "You're goddam right I am, you
dirty crooked bastard!" all I probably would've said would be, "All I know is
my goddam gloves were in your goddam galoshes." Right away then, the guy would
know for sure that I wasn't going to take a sock at him, and he probably would've
said, "Listen. Let's get this straight. Are you calling me a thief?" Then I
probably would've said, "Nobody's calling anybody a thief. All I know is my
gloves were in your goddam galoshes." It could go on like that for hours. Finally,
though, I'd leave his room without even taking a sock at him. I'd probably go
down to the can and sneak a cigarette and watch myself getting tough in the
mirror. Anyway, that's what I thought about the whole way back to the hotel.
It's no fun to he yellow. Maybe I'm not all yellow. I don't know. I think maybe
I'm just partly yellow and partly the type that doesn't give much of a damn
if they lose their gloves. One of my troubles is, I never care too much when
I lose something--it used to drive my mother crazy when I was a kid. Some guys
spend days looking for something they lost. I never seem to have anything that
if I lost it I'd care too much. Maybe that's why I'm partly yellow. It's no
excuse, though. It really isn't. What you should be is not yellow at all. If
you're supposed to sock somebody in the jaw, and you sort of feel like doing
it, you should do it. I'm just no good at it, though. I'd rather push a guy
out the window or chop his head off with an ax than sock him in the jaw. I hate
fist fights. I don't mind getting hit so much--although I'm not crazy about
it, naturally--but what scares me most in a fist fight is the guy's face. I
can't stand looking at the other guy's face, is my trouble. It wouldn't be so
bad if you could both be blindfolded or something. It's a funny kind of yellowness,
when you come to think of it, but it's yellowness, all right. I'm not kidding
myself.
The more I thought about my gloves and my yellowness, the more depressed
I got, and I decided, while I was walking and all, to stop off and have a drink
somewhere. I'd only had three drinks at Ernie's, and I didn't even finish the
last one. One thing I have, it's a terrific capacity. I can drink all night
and not even show it, if I'm in the mood. Once, at the Whooton School, this
other boy, Raymond Goldfarb, and I bought a pint of Scotch and drank it in the
chapel one Saturday night, where nobody'd see us. He got stinking, but I hardly
didn't even show it. I just got very cool and nonchalant. I puked before I went
to bed, but I didn't really have to--I forced myself.
Anyway, before I got to the hotel, I started to go in this dumpy-looking
bar, but two guys came out, drunk as hell, and wanted to know where the subway
was. One of them was this very Cuban-looking guy, and he kept breathing his
stinking breath in my face while I gave him directions. I ended up not even
going in the damn bar. I just went back to the hotel.
The whole lobby was empty. It smelled like fifty million dead cigars.
It really did. I wasn't sleepy or anything, but I was feeling sort of lousy.
Depressed and all. I almost wished I was dead.
Then, all of a sudden, I got in this big mess.
The first thing when I got in the elevator, the elevator guy said to me,
"Innarested in having a good time, fella? Or is it too late for you?"
"How do you mean?" I said. I didn't know what he was driving at or anything.
"Innarested in a little tail t'night?"
"Me?" I said. Which was a very dumb answer, but it's quite embarrassing
when somebody comes right up and asks you a question like that.
"How old are you, chief?" the elevator guy said.
"Why?" I said. "Twenty-two."
"Uh huh. Well, how 'bout it? Y'innarested? Five bucks a throw. Fifteen
bucks the whole night." He looked at his wrist watch. "Till noon. Five bucks
a throw, fifteen bucks till noon."
"Okay," I said. It was against my principles and all, but I was feeling
so depressed I didn't even think. That's the whole trouble. When you're feeling
very depressed, you can't even think.
"Okay what? A throw, or till noon? I gotta know."
"Just a throw."
"Okay, what room ya in?"
I looked at the red thing with my number on it, on my key. "Twelve twenty-two,"
I said. I was already sort of sorry I'd let the thing start rolling, but it
was too late now.
"Okay. I'll send a girl up in about fifteen minutes." He opened the doors
and I got out.
"Hey, is she good-looking?" I asked him. "I don't want any old bag."
"No old bag. Don't worry about it, chief."
"Who do I pay?"
"Her," he said. "Let's go, chief." He shut the doors, practically right
in my face.
I went to my room and put some water on my hair, but you can't really
comb a crew cut or anything. Then I tested to see if my breath stank from so
many cigarettes and the Scotch and sodas I drank at Ernie's. All you do is hold
your hand under your mouth and blow your breath up toward the old nostrils.
It didn't seem to stink much, but I brushed my teeth anyway. Then I put on another
clean shirt. I knew I didn't have to get all dolled up for a prostitute or anything,
but it sort of gave me something to do. I was a little nervous. I was starting
to feel pretty sexy and all, but I was a little nervous anyway. If you want
to know the truth, I'm a virgin. I really am. I've had quite a few opportunities
to lose my virginity and all, but I've never got around to it yet. Something
always happens. For instance, if you're at a girl's house, her parents always
come home at the wrong time--or you're afraid they will. Or if you're in the
back seat of somebody's car, there's always somebody's date in the front seat--some
girl, I mean--that always wants to know what's going on all over the whole goddam
car. I mean some girl in front keeps turning around to see what the hell's going
on. Anyway, something always happens. I came quite close to doing it a couple
of times, though. One time in particular, I remember. Something went wrong,
though --I don't even remember what any more. The thing is, most of the time
when you're coming pretty close to doing it with a girl--a girl that isn't a
prostitute or anything, I mean--she keeps telling you to stop. The trouble with
me is, I stop. Most guys don't. I can't help it. You never know whether they
really want you to stop, or whether they're just scared as hell, or whether
they're just telling you to stop so that if you do go through with it, the blame'll
be on you, not them. Anyway, I keep stopping. The trouble is, I get to feeling
sorry for them. I mean most girls are so dumb and all. After you neck them for
a while, you can really watch them losing their brains. You take a girl when
she really gets passionate, she just hasn't any brains. I don't know. They tell
me to stop, so I stop. I always wish I hadn't, after I take them home, but I
keep doing it anyway.
Anyway, while I was putting on another clean shirt, I sort of figured
this was my big chance, in a way. I figured if she was a prostitute and all,
I could get in some practice on her, in case I ever get married or anything.
I worry about that stuff sometimes. I read this book once, at the Whooton School,
that had this very sophisticated, suave, sexy guy in it. Monsieur Blanchard
was his name, I can still remember. It was a lousy book, but this Blanchard
guy was pretty good. He had this big château and all on the Riviera, in
Europe, and all he did in his spare time was beat women off with a club. He
was a real rake and all, but he knocked women out. He said, in this one part,
that a woman's body is like a violin and all, and that it takes a terrific musician
to play it right. It was a very corny book--I realize that--but I couldn't get
that violin stuff out of my mind anyway. In a way, that's why I sort of wanted
to get some practice in, in case I ever get married. Caulfield and his Magic
Violin, boy. It's corny, I realize, but it isn't too corny. I wouldn't mind
being pretty good at that stuff. Half the time, if you really want to know the
truth, when I'm horsing around with a girl, I have a helluva lot of trouble
just finding what I'm looking for, for God's sake, if you know what I mean.
Take this girl that I just missed having sexual intercourse with, that I told
you about. It took me about an hour to just get her goddam brassiere off. By
the time I did get it off, she was about ready to spit in my eye.
Anyway, I kept walking around the room, waiting for this prostitute to
show up. I kept hoping she'd be good-looking. I didn't care too much, though.
I sort of just wanted to get it over with. Finally, somebody knocked on the
door, and when I went to open it, I had my suitcase right in the way and I fell
over it and damn near broke my knee. I always pick a gorgeous time to fall over
a suitcase or something.
When I opened the door, this prostitute was standing there. She had a
polo coat on, and no hat. She was sort of a blonde, but you could tell she dyed
her hair. She wasn't any old bag, though. "How do you do," I said. Suave as
hell, boy.
"You the guy Maurice said?" she asked me. She didn't seem too goddam friendly.
"Is he the elevator boy?"
"Yeah," she said.
"Yes, I am. Come in, won't you?" I said. I was getting more and more nonchalant
as it went along. I really was.
She came in and took her coat off right away and sort of chucked it on
the bed. She had on a green dress underneath. Then she sort of sat down sideways
on the chair that went with the desk in the room and started jiggling her foot
up and down. She crossed her legs and started jiggling this one foot up and
down. She was very nervous, for a prostitute. She really was. I think it was
because she was young as hell. She was around my age. I sat down in the big
chair, next to her, and offered her a cigarette. "I don't smoke," she said.
She had a tiny little wheeny-whiny voice. You could hardly hear her. She never
said thank you, either, when you offered her something. She just didn't know
any better.
"Allow me to introduce myself. My name is Jim Steele," I said.
"Ya got a watch on ya?" she said. She didn't care what the hell my name
was, naturally. "Hey, how old are you, anyways?"
"Me? Twenty-two."
"Like fun you are."
It was a funny thing to say. It sounded like a real kid. You'd think a
prostitute and all would say "Like hell you are" or "Cut the crap" instead of
"Like fun you are."
"How old are you?" I asked her.
"Old enough to know better," she said. She was really witty. "Ya got a
watch on ya?" she asked me again, and then she stood up and pulled her dress
over her head.
I certainly felt peculiar when she did that. I mean she did it so sudden
and all. I know you're supposed to feel pretty sexy when somebody gets up and
pulls their dress over their head, but I didn't. Sexy was about the last thing
I was feeling. I felt much more depressed than sexy.
"Ya got a watch on ya, hey?"
"No. No, I don't," I said. Boy, was I feeling peculiar. "What's your name?"
I asked her. All she had on was this pink slip. It was really quite embarrassing.
It really was.
"Sunny," she said. "Let's go, hey."
"Don't you feel like talking for a while?" I asked her. It was a childish
thing to say, but I was feeling so damn peculiar. "Are you in a very big hurry?"
She looked at me like I was a madman. "What the heck ya wanna talk about?"
she said.
"I don't know. Nothing special. I just thought perhaps you might care
to chat for a while."
She sat down in the chair next to the desk again. She didn't like it,
though, you could tell. She started jiggling her foot again--boy, she was a
nervous girl.
"Would you care for a cigarette now?" I said. I forgot she didn't smoke.
"I don't smoke. Listen, if you're gonna talk, do it. I got things to do."
I couldn't think of anything to talk about, though. I thought of asking
her how she got to be a prostitute and all, but I was scared to ask her. She
probably wouldn't've told me anyway.
"You don't come from New York, do you?" I said finally. That's all I could
think of.
"Hollywood," she said. Then she got up and went over to where she'd put
her dress down, on the bed. "Ya got a hanger? I don't want to get my dress all
wrinkly. It's brand-clean."
"Sure," I said right away. I was only too glad to get up and do something.
I took her dress over to the closet and hung it up for her. It was funny. It
made me feel sort of sad when I hung it up. I thought of her going in a store
and buying it, and nobody in the store knowing she was a prostitute and all.
The salesman probably just thought she was a regular girl when she bought it.
It made me feel sad as hell--I don't know why exactly.
I sat down again and tried to keep the old conversation going. She was
a lousy conversationalist. "Do you work every night?" I asked her--it sounded
sort of awful, after I'd said it.
"Yeah." She was walking all around the room. She picked up the menu off
the desk and read it.
"What do you do during the day?"
She sort of shrugged her shoulders. She was pretty skinny. "Sleep. Go
to the show." She put down the menu and looked at me. "Let's go, hey. I haven't
got all--"
"Look," I said. "I don't feel very much like myself tonight. I've had
a rough night. Honest to God. I'll pay you and all, but do you mind very much
if we don't do it? Do you mind very much?" The trouble was, I just didn't want
to do it. I felt more depressed than sexy, if you want to know the truth. She
was depressing. Her green dress hanging in the closet and all. And besides,
I don't think I could ever do it with somebody that sits in a stupid movie all
day long. I really don't think I could.
She came over to me, with this funny look on her face, like as if she
didn't believe me. "What'sa matter?" she said.
"Nothing's the matter." Boy, was I getting nervous. "The thing is, I had
an operation very recently."
"Yeah? Where?"
"On my wuddayacallit--my clavichord."
"Yeah? Where the hell's that?"
"The clavichord?" I said. "Well, actually, it's in the spinal canal. I
mean it's quite a ways down in the spinal canal."
"Yeah?" she said. "That's tough." Then she sat down on my goddam lap.
"You're cute."
She made me so nervous, I just kept on lying my head off. "I'm still recuperating,"
I told her.
"You look like a guy in the movies. You know. Whosis. You know who I mean.
What the heck's his name?"
"I don't know," I said. She wouldn't get off my goddam lap.
"Sure you know. He was in that pitcher with Mel-vine Douglas? The one
that was Mel-vine Douglas's kid brother? That falls off this boat? You know
who I mean."
"No, I don't. I go to the movies as seldom as I can."
Then she started getting funny. Crude and all.
"Do you mind cutting it out?" I said. "I'm not in the mood, I just told
you. I just had an operation."
She didn't get up from my lap or anything, but she gave me this terrifically
dirty look. "Listen," she said. "I was sleepin' when that crazy Maurice woke
me up. If you think I'm--"
"I said I'd pay you for coming and all. I really will. I have plenty of
dough. It's just that I'm practically just recovering from a very serious--"
"What the heck did you tell that crazy Maurice you wanted a girl for,
then? If you just had a goddam operation on your goddam wuddayacallit. Huh?"
"I thought I'd be feeling a lot better than I do. I was a little premature
in my calculations. No kidding. I'm sorry. If you'll just get up a second, I'll
get my wallet. I mean it."
She was sore as hell, but she got up off my goddam lap so that I could
go over and get my wallet off the chiffonier. I took out a five-dollar bill
and handed it to her. "Thanks a lot," I told her. "Thanks a million."
"This is a five. It costs ten."
She was getting funny, you could tell. I was afraid something like that
would happen--I really was.
"Maurice said five," I told her. "He said fifteen till noon and only five
for a throw."
"Ten for a throw."
"He said five. I'm sorry--I really am--but that's all I'm gonna shell
out."
She sort of shrugged her shoulders, the way she did before, and then she
said, very cold, "Do you mind getting me my frock? Or would it be too much trouble?"
She was a pretty spooky kid. Even with that little bitty voice she had, she
could sort of scare you a little bit. If she'd been a big old prostitute, with
a lot of makeup on her face and all, she wouldn't have been half as spooky.
I went and got her dress for her. She put it on and all, and then she
picked up her polo coat off the bed. "So long, crumb-bum," she said.
"So long," I said. I didn't thank her or anything. I'm glad I didn't.
14
After
Old Sunny was gone, I sat in the chair for a while and smoked a couple of cigarettes.
It was getting daylight outside. Boy, I felt miserable. I felt so depressed,
you can't imagine. What I did, I started talking, sort of out loud, to Allie.
I do that sometimes when I get very depressed. I keep telling him to go home
and get his bike and meet me in front of Bobby Fallon's house. Bobby Fallon
used to live quite near us in Maine--this is, years ago. Anyway, what happened
was, one day Bobby and I were going over to Lake Sedebego on our bikes. We were
going to take our lunches and all, and our BB guns--we were kids and all, and
we thought we could shoot something with our BB guns. Anyway, Allie heard us
talking about it, and he wanted to go, and I wouldn't let him. I told him he
was a child. So once in a while, now, when I get very depressed, I keep saying
to him, "Okay. Go home and get your bike and meet me in front of Bobby's house.
Hurry up." It wasn't that I didn't use to take him with me when I went somewhere.
I did. But that one day, I didn't. He didn't get sore about it--he never got
sore about anything-- but I keep thinking about it anyway, when I get very depressed.
Finally, though, I got undressed and got in bed. I felt like praying or
something, when I was in bed, but I couldn't do it. I can't always pray when
I feel like it. In the first place, I'm sort of an atheist. I like Jesus and
all, but I don't care too much for most of the other stuff in the Bible. Take
the Disciples, for instance. They annoy the hell out of me, if you want to know
the truth. They were all right after Jesus was dead and all, but while He was
alive, they were about as much use to Him as a hole in the head. All they did
was keep letting Him down. I like almost anybody in the Bible better than the
Disciples. If you want to know the truth, the guy I like best in the Bible,
next to Jesus, was that lunatic and all, that lived in the tombs and kept cutting
himself with stones. I like him ten times as much as the Disciples, that poor
bastard. I used to get in quite a few arguments about it, when I was at Whooton
School, with this boy that lived down the corridor, Arthur Childs. Old Childs
was a Quaker and all, and he read the Bible all the time. He was a very nice
kid, and I liked him, but I could never see eye to eye with him on a lot of
stuff in the Bible, especially the Disciples. He kept telling me if I didn't
like the Disciples, then I didn't like Jesus and all. He said that because Jesus
picked the Disciples, you were supposed to like them. I said I knew He picked
them, but that He picked them at random. I said He didn't have time to go around
analyzing everybody. I said I wasn't blaming Jesus or anything. It wasn't His
fault that He didn't have any time. I remember I asked old Childs if he thought
Judas, the one that betrayed Jesus and all, went to Hell after he committed
suicide. Childs said certainly. That's exactly where I disagreed with him. I
said I'd bet a thousand bucks that Jesus never sent old Judas to Hell. I still
would, too, if I had a thousand bucks. I think any one of the Disciples would've
sent him to Hell and all--and fast, too--but I'll bet anything Jesus didn't
do it. Old Childs said the trouble with me was that I didn't go to church or
anything. He was right about that, in a way. I don't. In the first place, my
parents are different religions, and all the children in our family are atheists.
If you want to know the truth, I can't even stand ministers. The ones they've
had at every school I've gone to, they all have these Holy Joe voices when they
start giving their sermons. God, I hate that. I don't see why the hell they
can't talk in their natural voice. They sound so phony when they talk.
Anyway, when I was in bed, I couldn't pray worth a damn. Every time I
got started, I kept picturing old Sunny calling me a crumb-bum. Finally, I sat
up in bed and smoked another cigarette. It tasted lousy. I must've smoked around
two packs since I left Pencey.
All of a sudden, while I was laying there smoking, somebody knocked on
the door. I kept hoping it wasn't my door they were knocking on, but I knew
damn well it was. I don't know how I knew, but I knew. I knew who it was, too.
I'm psychic.
"Who's there?" I said. I was pretty scared. I'm very yellow about those
things.
They just knocked again, though. Louder.
Finally I got out of bed, with just my pajamas on, and opened the door.
I didn't even have to turn the light on in the room, because it was already
daylight. Old Sunny and Maurice, the pimpy elevator guy, were standing there.
"What's the matter? Wuddaya want?" I said. Boy, my voice was shaking like
hell.
"Nothin' much," old Maurice said. "Just five bucks." He did all the talking
for the two of them. Old Sunny just stood there next to him, with her mouth
open and all.
"I paid her already. I gave her five bucks. Ask her," I said. Boy, was
my voice shaking.
"It's ten bucks, chief. I tole ya that. Ten bucks for a throw, fifteen
bucks till noon. I tole ya that."
"You did not tell me that. You said five bucks a throw. You said fifteen
bucks till noon, all right, but I distinctly heard you--"
"Open up, chief."
"What for?" I said. God, my old heart was damn near beating me out of
the room. I wished I was dressed at least. It's terrible to be just in your
pajamas when something like that happens.
"Let's go, chief," old Maurice said. Then he gave me a big shove with
his crumby hand. I damn near fell over on my can--he was a huge sonuvabitch.
The next thing I knew, he and old Sunny were both in the room. They acted like
they owned the damn place. Old Sunny sat down on the window sill. Old Maurice
sat down in the big chair and loosened his collar and all--he was wearing this
elevator operator's uniform. Boy, was I nervous.
"All right, chief, let's have it. I gotta get back to work."
"I told you about ten times, I don't owe you a cent. I already gave her
the five--"
"Cut the crap, now. Let's have it."
"Why should I give her another five bucks?" I said. My voice was cracking
all over the place. "You're trying to chisel me."
Old Maurice unbuttoned his whole uniform coat. All he had on underneath
was a phony shirt collar, but no shirt or anything. He had a big fat hairy stomach.
"Nobody's tryna chisel nobody," he said. "Let's have it, chief."
"No."
When I said that, he got up from his chair and started walking towards
me and all. He looked like he was very, very tired or very, very bored. God,
was I scared. I sort of had my arms folded, I remember. It wouldn't have been
so bad, I don't think, if I hadn't had just my goddam pajamas on.
"Let's have it, chief." He came right up to where I was standing. That's
all he could say. "Let's have it, chief." He was a real moron.
"No."
"Chief, you're gonna force me inna roughin' ya up a little bit. I don't
wanna do it, but that's the way it looks," he said. "You owe us five bucks."
"I don't owe you five bucks," I said. "If you rough me up, I'll yell like
hell. I'll wake up everybody in the hotel. The police and all." My voice was
shaking like a bastard.
"Go ahead. Yell your goddam head off. Fine," old Maurice said. "Want your
parents to know you spent the night with a whore? High-class kid like you?"
He was pretty sharp, in his crumby way. He really was.
"Leave me alone. If you'd said ten, it'd be different. But you distinctly--"
"Are ya gonna let us have it?" He had me right up against the damn door.
He was almost standing on top of me, his crumby old hairy stomach and all.
"Leave me alone. Get the hell out of my room," I said. I still had my
arms folded and all. God, what a jerk I was.
Then Sunny said something for the first time. "Hey, Maurice. Want me to
get his wallet?" she said. "It's right on the wutchamacallit."
"Yeah, get it."
"Leave my wallet alone!"
"I awreddy got it," Sunny said. She waved five bucks at me. "See? All
I'm takin' is the five you owe me. I'm no crook."
All of a sudden I started to cry. I'd give anything if I hadn't, but I
did. "No, you're no crooks," I said. "You're just stealing five--"
"Shut up," old Maurice said, and gave me a shove.
"Leave him alone, hey," Sunny said. "C'mon, hey. We got the dough he owes
us. Let's go. C'mon, hey."
"I'm comin'," old Maurice said. But he didn't.
"I mean it, Maurice, hey. Leave him alone."
"Who's hurtin' anybody?" he said, innocent as hell. Then what he did,
he snapped his finger very hard on my pajamas. I won't tell you where he snapped
it, but it hurt like hell. I told him he was a goddam dirty moron. "What's that?"
he said. He put his hand behind his ear, like a deaf guy. "What's that? What
am I?"
I was still sort of crying. I was so damn mad and nervous and all. "You're
a dirty moron," I said. "You're a stupid chiseling moron, and in about two years
you'll be one of those scraggy guys that come up to you on the street and ask
for a dime for coffee. You'll have snot all over your dirty filthy overcoat,
and you'll be--"
Then he smacked me. I didn't even try to get out of the way or duck or
anything. All I felt was this terrific punch in my stomach.
I wasn't knocked out or anything, though, because I remember looking up
from the floor and seeing them both go out the door and shut it. Then I stayed
on the floor a fairly long time, sort of the way I did with Stradlater. Only,
this time I thought I was dying. I really did. I thought I was drowning or something.
The trouble was, I could hardly breathe. When I did finally get up, I had to
walk to the bathroom all doubled up and holding onto my stomach and all.
But I'm crazy. I swear to God I am. About halfway to the bathroom, I sort
of started pretending I had a bullet in my guts. Old 'Maurice had plugged me.
Now I was on the way to the bathroom to get a good shot of bourbon or something
to steady my nerves and help me really go into action. I pictured myself coming
out of the goddam bathroom, dressed and all, with my automatic in my pocket,
and staggering around a little bit. Then I'd walk downstairs, instead of using
the elevator. I'd hold onto the banister and all, with this blood trickling
out of the side of my mouth a little at a time. What I'd do, I'd walk down a
few floors--holding onto my guts, blood leaking all over the place-- and then
I'd ring the elevator bell. As soon as old Maurice opened the doors, he'd see
me with the automatic in my hand and he'd start screaming at me, in this very
high-pitched, yellow-belly voice, to leave him alone. But I'd plug him anyway.
Six shots right through his fat hairy belly. Then I'd throw my automatic down
the elevator shaft--after I'd wiped off all the finger prints and all. Then
I'd crawl back to my room and call up Jane and have her come over and bandage
up my guts. I pictured her holding a cigarette for me to smoke while I was bleeding
and all.
The goddam movies. They can ruin you. I'm not kidding.
I stayed in the bathroom for about an hour, taking a bath and all. Then
I got back in bed. It took me quite a while to get to sleep--I wasn't even tired--but
finally I did. What I really felt like, though, was committing suicide. I felt
like jumping out the window. I probably would've done it, too, if I'd been sure
somebody'd cover me up as soon as I landed. I didn't want a bunch of stupid
rubbernecks looking at me when I was all gory.
15
I
didn't sleep too long, because I think it was only around ten o'clock when I
woke up. I felt pretty hungry as soon as I had a cigarette. The last time I'd
eaten was those two hamburgers I had with Brossard and Ackley when we went in
to Agerstown to the movies. That was a long time ago. It seemed like fifty years
ago. The phone was right next to me, and I started to call down and have them
send up some breakfast, but I was sort of afraid they might send it up with
old Maurice. If you think I was dying to see him again, you're crazy. So I just
laid around in bed for a while and smoked another cigarette. I thought of giving
old Jane a buzz, to see if she was home yet and all, but I wasn't in the mood.
What I did do, I gave old Sally Hayes a buzz. She went to Mary A. Woodruff,
and I knew she was home because I'd had this letter from her a couple of weeks
ago. I wasn't too crazy about her, but I'd known her for years. I used to think
she was quite intelligent, in my stupidity. The reason I did was because she
knew quite a lot about the theater and plays and literature and all that stuff.
If somebody knows quite a lot about those things, it takes you quite a while
to find out whether they're really stupid or not. It took me years to find it
out, in old Sally's case. I think I'd have found it out a lot sooner if we hadn't
necked so damn much. My big trouble is, I always sort of think whoever I'm necking
is a pretty intelligent person. It hasn't got a goddam thing to do with it,
but I keep thinking it anyway.
Anyway, I gave her a buzz. First the maid answered. Then her father. Then
she got on. "Sally?" I said.
"Yes--who is this?" she said. She was quite a little phony. I'd already
told her father who it was.
"Holden Caulfield. How are ya?"
"Holden! I'm fine! How are you?"
"Swell. Listen. How are ya, anyway? I mean how's school?"
"Fine," she said. "I mean--you know."
"Swell. Well, listen. I was wondering if you were busy today. It's Sunday,
but there's always one or two matinees going on Sunday. Benefits and that stuff.
Would you care to go?"
"I'd love to. Grand."
Grand. If there's one word I hate, it's grand. It's so phony. For a second,
I was tempted to tell her to forget about the matinee. But we chewed the fat
for a while. That is, she chewed it. You couldn't get a word in edgewise. First
she told me about some Harvard guy-- it probably was a freshman, but she didn't
say, naturally--that was rushing hell out of her. Calling her up night and day.
Night and day--that killed me. Then she told me about some other guy, some West
Point cadet, that was cutting his throat over her too. Big deal. I told her
to meet me under the clock at the Biltmore at two o'clock, and not to be late,
because the show probably started at two-thirty. She was always late. Then I
hung up. She gave me a pain in the ass, but she was very good-looking.
After I made the date with old Sally, I got out of bed and got dressed
and packed my bag. I took a look out the window before I left the room, though,
to see how all the perverts were doing, but they all had their shades down.
They were the heighth of modesty in the morning. Then I went down in the elevator
and checked out. I didn't see old Maurice around anywhere. I didn't break my
neck looking for him, naturally, the bastard.
I got a cab outside the hotel, but I didn't have the faintest damn idea
where I was going. I had no place to go. It was only Sunday, and I couldn't
go home till Wednesday--or Tuesday the soonest. And I certainly didn't feel
like going to another hotel and getting my brains beat out. So what I did, I
told the driver to take me to Grand Central Station. It was right near the Biltmore,
where I was meeting Sally later, and I figured what I'd do, I'd check my bags
in one of those strong boxes that they give you a key to, then get some breakfast.
I was sort of hungry. While I was in the cab, I took out my wallet and sort
of counted my money. I don't remember exactly what I had left, but it was no
fortune or anything. I'd spent a king's ransom in about two lousy weeks. I really
had. I'm a goddam spendthrift at heart. What I don't spend, I lose. Half the
time I sort of even forget to pick up my change, at restaurants and night clubs
and all. It drives my parents crazy. You can't blame them. My father's quite
wealthy, though. I don't know how much he makes--he's never discussed that stuff
with me--but I imagine quite a lot. He's a corporation lawyer. Those boys really
haul it in. Another reason I know he's quite well off, he's always investing
money in shows on Broadway. They always flop, though, and it drives my mother
crazy when he does it. She hasn't felt too healthy since my brother Allie died.
She's very nervous. That's another reason why I hated like hell for her to know
I got the ax again.
After I put my bags in one of those strong boxes at the station, I went
into this little sandwich bar and bad breakfast. I had quite a large breakfast,
for me--orange juice, bacon and eggs, toast and coffee. Usually I just drink
some orange juice. I'm a very light eater. I really am. That's why I'm so damn
skinny. I was supposed to be on this diet where you eat a lot of starches and
crap, to gain weight and all, but I didn't ever do it. When I'm out somewhere,
I generally just eat a Swiss cheese sandwich and a malted milk. It isn't much,
but you get quite a lot of vitamins in the malted milk. H. V. Caulfield. Holden
Vitamin Caulfield.
While I was eating my eggs, these two nuns with suitcases and all--I guessed
they were moving to another convent or something and were waiting for a train--came
in and sat down next to me at the counter. They didn't seem to know what the
hell to do with their suitcases, so I gave them a hand. They were these very
inexpensive-looking suitcases--the ones that aren't genuine leather or anything.
It isn't important, I know, but I hate it when somebody has cheap suitcases.
It sounds terrible to say it, but I can even get to hate somebody, just looking
at them, if they have cheap suitcases with them. Something happened once. For
a while when I was at Elkton Hills, I roomed with this boy, Dick Slagle, that
had these very inexpensive suitcases. He used to keep them under the bed, instead
of on the rack, so that nobody'd see them standing next to mine. It depressed
holy hell out of me, and I kept wanting to throw mine out or something, or even
trade with him. Mine came from Mark Cross, and they were genuine cowhide and
all that crap, and I guess they cost quite a pretty penny. But it was a funny
thing. Here's what happened. What I did, I finally put my suitcases under my
bed, instead of on the rack, so that old Slagle wouldn't get a goddam inferiority
complex about it. But here's what he did. The day after I put mine under my
bed, he took them out and put them back on the rack. The reason he did it, it
took me a while to find out, was because he wanted people to think my bags were
his. He really did. He was a very funny guy, that way. He was always saying
snotty things about them, my suitcases, for instance. He kept saying they were
too new and bourgeois. That was his favorite goddam word. He read it somewhere
or heard it somewhere. Everything I had was bourgeois as hell. Even my fountain
pen was bourgeois. He borrowed it off me all the time, but it was bourgeois
anyway. We only roomed together about two months. Then we both asked to be moved.
And the funny thing was, I sort of missed him after we moved, because he had
a helluva good sense of humor and we had a lot of fun sometimes. I wouldn't
be surprised if he missed me, too. At first he only used to be kidding when
he called my stuff bourgeois, and I didn't give a damn--it was sort of funny,
in fact. Then, after a while, you could tell he wasn't kidding any more. The
thing is, it's really hard to be roommates with people if your suitcases are
much better than theirs--if yours are really good ones and theirs aren't. You
think if they're intelligent and all, the other person, and have a good sense
of humor, that they don't give a damn whose suitcases are better, but they do.
They really do. It's one of the reasons why I roomed with a stupid bastard like
Stradlater. At least his suitcases were as good as mine.
Anyway, these two nuns were sitting next to me, and we sort of struck
up a conversation. The one right next to me had one of those straw baskets that
you see nuns and Salvation Army babes collecting dough with around Christmas
time. You see them standing on corners, especially on Fifth Avenue, in front
of the big department stores and all. Anyway, the one next to me dropped hers
on the floor and I reached down and picked it up for her. I asked her if she
was out collecting money for charity and all. She said no. She said she couldn't
get it in her suitcase when she was packing it and she was just carrying it.
She had a pretty nice smile when she looked at you. She had a big nose, and
she had on those glasses with sort of iron rims that aren't too attractive,
but she had a helluva kind face. "I thought if you were taking up a collection,"
I told her, "I could make a small contribution. You could keep the money for
when you do take up a collection."
"Oh, how very kind of you," she said, and the other one, her friend, looked
over at me. The other one was reading a little black book while she drank her
coffee. It looked like a Bible, but it was too skinny. It was a Bible-type book,
though. All the two of them were eating for breakfast was toast and coffee.
That depressed me. I hate it if I'm eating bacon and eggs or something and somebody
else is only eating toast and coffee.
They let me give them ten bucks as a contribution. They kept asking me
if I was sure I could afford it and all. I told them I had quite a bit of money
with me, but they didn't seem to believe me. They took it, though, finally.
The both of them kept thanking me so much it was embarrassing. I swung the conversation
around to general topics and asked them where they were going. They said they
were schoolteachers and that they'd just come from Chicago and that they were
going to start teaching at some convent on 168th Street or 186th Street or one
of those streets way the hell uptown. The one next to me, with the iron glasses,
said she taught English and her friend taught history and American government.
Then I started wondering like a bastard what the one sitting next to me, that
taught English, thought about, being a nun and all, when she read certain books
for English. Books not necessarily with a lot of sexy stuff in them, but books
with lovers and all in them. Take old Eustacia Vye, in The Return of the Native
by Thomas Hardy. She wasn't too sexy or anything, but even so you can't help
wondering what a nun maybe thinks about when she reads about old Eustacia. I
didn't say anything, though, naturally. All I said was English was my best subject.
"Oh, really? Oh, I'm so glad!" the one with the glasses, that taught English,
said. "What have you read this year? I'd be very interested to know." She was
really nice.
"Well, most of the time we were on the Anglo-Saxons. Beowulf, and old
Grendel, and Lord Randal My Son, and all those things. But we had to read outside
books for extra credit once in a while. I read The Return of the Native by Thomas
Hardy, and Romeo and Juliet and Julius--"
"Oh, Romeo and Juliet! Lovely! Didn't you just love it?" She certainly
didn't sound much like a nun.
"Yes. I did. I liked it a lot. There were a few things I didn't like about
it, but it was quite moving, on the whole."
"What didn't you like about it? Can you remember?" To tell you the truth,
it was sort of embarrassing, in a way, to be talking about Romeo and Juliet
with her. I mean that play gets pretty sexy in some parts, and she was a nun
and all, but she asked me, so I discussed it with her for a while. "Well, I'm
not too crazy about Romeo and Juliet," I said. "I mean I like them, but--I don't
know. They get pretty annoying sometimes. I mean I felt much sorrier when old
Mercutio got killed than when Romeo and Juliet did. The think is, I never liked
Romeo too much after Mercutio gets stabbed by that other man--Juliet's cousin--what's
his name?"
"Tybalt."
"That's right. Tybalt," I said--I always forget that guy's name. "It was
Romeo's fault. I mean I liked him the best in the play, old Mercutio. I don't
know. All those Montagues and Capulets, they're all right--especially Juliet--but
Mercutio, he was--it's hard to explain. He was very smart and entertaining and
all. The thing is, it drives me crazy if somebody gets killed-- especially somebody
very smart and entertaining and all--and it's somebody else's fault. Romeo and
Juliet, at least it was their own fault."
"What school do you go to?" she asked me. She probably wanted to get off
the subject of Romeo and Juliet.
I told her Pencey, and she'd heard of it. She said it was a very good
school. I let it pass, though. Then the other one, the one that taught history
and government, said they'd better be running along. I took their check off
them, but they wouldn't let me pay it. The one with the glasses made me give
it back to her.
"You've been more than generous," she said. "You're a very sweet boy."
She certainly was nice. She reminded me a little bit of old Ernest Morrow's
mother, the one I met on the train. When she smiled, mostly. "We've enjoyed
talking to you so much," she said.
I said I'd enjoyed talking to them a lot, too. I meant it, too. I'd have
enjoyed it even more though, I think, if I hadn't been sort of afraid, the whole
time I was talking to them, that they'd all of a sudden try to find out if I
was a Catholic. Catholics are always trying to find out if you're a Catholic.
It happens to me a lot, I know, partly because my last name is Irish, and most
people of Irish descent are Catholics. As a matter of fact, my father was a
Catholic once. He quit, though, when he married my mother. But Catholics are
always trying to find out if you're a Catholic even if they don't know your
last name. I knew this one Catholic boy, Louis Shaney, when I was at the Whooton
School. He was the first boy I ever met there. He and I were sitting in the
first two chairs outside the goddam infirmary, the day school opened, waiting
for our physicals, and we sort of struck up this conversation about tennis.
He was quite interested in tennis, and so was I. He told me he went to the Nationals
at Forest Hills every summer, and I told him I did too, and then we talked about
certain hot-shot tennis players for quite a while. He knew quite a lot about
tennis, for a kid his age. He really did. Then, after a while, right in the
middle of the goddam conversation, he asked me, "Did you happen to notice where
the Catholic church is in town, by any chance?" The thing was, you could tell
by the way he asked me that he was trying to find out if I was a Catholic. He
really was. Not that he was prejudiced or anything, but he just wanted to know.
He was enjoying the conversation about tennis and all, but you could tell he
would've enjoyed it more if I was a Catholic and all. That kind of stuff drives
me crazy. I'm not saying it ruined our conversation or anything--it didn't--but
it sure as hell didn't do it any good. That's why I was glad those two nuns
didn't ask me if I was a Catholic. It wouldn't have spoiled the conversation
if they had, but it would've been different, probably. I'm not saying I blame
Catholics. I don't. I'd be the same way, probably, if I was a Catholic. It's
just like those suitcases I was telling you about, in a way. All I'm saying
is that it's no good for a nice conversation. That's all I'm saying.
When they got up to go, the two nuns, I did something very stupid and
embarrassing. I was smoking a cigarette, and when I stood up to say good-by
to them, by mistake I blew some smoke in their face. I didn't mean to, but I
did it. I apologized like a madman, and they were very polite and nice about
it, but it was very embarrassing anyway.
After they left, I started getting sorry that I'd only given them ten
bucks for their collection. But the thing was, I'd made that date to go to a
matinee with old Sally Hayes, and I needed to keep some dough for the tickets
and stuff. I was sorry anyway, though. Goddam money. It always ends up making
you blue as hell.
16
After
I had my breakfast, it was only around noon, and I wasn't meeting old Sally
till two o'clock, so I started taking this long walk. I couldn't stop thinking
about those two nuns. I kept thinking about that beatup old straw basket they
went around collecting money with when they weren't teaching school. I kept
trying to picture my mother or somebody, or my aunt, or Sally Hayes's crazy
mother, standing outside some department store and collecting dough for poor
people in a beat-up old straw basket. It was hard to picture. Not so much my
mother, but those other two. My aunt's pretty charitable--she does a lot of
Red Cross work and all--but she's very well-dressed and all, and when she does
anything charitable she's always very well-dressed and has lipstick on and all
that crap. I couldn't picture her doing anything for charity if she had to wear
black clothes and no lipstick while she was doing it. And old Sally Hayes's
mother. Jesus Christ. The only way she could go around with a basket collecting
dough would be if everybody kissed her ass for her when they made a contribution.
If they just dropped their dough in her basket, then walked away without saying
anything to her, ignoring her and all, she'd quit in about an hour. She'd get
bored. She'd hand in her basket and then go someplace swanky for lunch. That's
what I liked about those nuns. You could tell, for one thing, that they never
went anywhere swanky for lunch. It made me so damn sad when I thought about
it, their never going anywhere swanky for lunch or anything. I knew it wasn't
too important, but it made me sad anyway.
I started walking over toward Broadway, just for the hell of it, because
I hadn't been over there in years. Besides, I wanted to find a record store
that was open on Sunday. There was this record I wanted to get for Phoebe, called
"Little Shirley Beans." It was a very hard record to get. It was about a little
kid that wouldn't go out of the house because two of her front teeth were out
and she was ashamed to. I heard it at Pencey. A boy that lived on the next floor
had it, and I tried to buy it off him because I knew it would knock old Phoebe
out, but he wouldn't sell it. It was a very old, terrific record that this colored
girl singer, Estelle Fletcher, made about twenty years ago. She sings it very
Dixieland and whorehouse, and it doesn't sound at all mushy. If a white girl
was singing it, she'd make it sound cute as hell, but old Estelle Fletcher knew
what the hell she was doing, and it was one of the best records I ever heard.
I figured I'd buy it in some store that was open on Sunday and then I'd take
it up to the park with me. It was Sunday and Phoebe goes rollerskating in the
park on Sundays quite frequently. I knew where she hung out mostly.
It wasn't as cold as it was the day before, but the sun still wasn't out,
and it wasn't too nice for walking. But there was one nice thing. This family
that you could tell just came out of some church were walking right in front
of me--a father, a mother, and a little kid about six years old. They looked
sort of poor. The father had on one of those pearl-gray hats that poor guys
wear a lot when they want to look sharp. He and his wife were just walking along,
talking, not paying any attention to their kid. The kid was swell. He was walking
in the street, instead of on the sidewalk, but right next to the curb. He was
making out like he was walking a very straight line, the way kids do, and the
whole time he kept singing and humming. I got up closer so I could hear what
he was singing. He was singing that song, "If a body catch a body coming through
the rye." He had a pretty little voice, too. He was just singing for the hell
of it, you could tell. The cars zoomed by, brakes screeched all over the place,
his parents paid no attention to him, and he kept on walking next to the curb
and singing "If a body catch a body coming through the rye." It made me feel
better. It made me feel not so depressed any more.
Broadway was mobbed and messy. It was Sunday, and only about twelve o'clock,
but it was mobbed anyway. Everybody was on their way to the movies--the Paramount
or the Astor or the Strand or the Capitol or one of those crazy places. Everybody
was all dressed up, because it was Sunday, and that made it worse. But the worst
part was that you could tell they all wanted to go to the movies. I couldn't
stand looking at them. I can understand somebody going to the movies because
there's nothing else to do, but when somebody really wants to go, and even walks
fast so as to get there quicker, then it depresses hell out of me. Especially
if I see millions of people standing in one of those long, terrible lines, all
the way down the block, waiting with this terrific patience for seats and all.
Boy, I couldn't get off that goddam Broadway fast enough. I was lucky. The first
record store I went into had a copy of "Little Shirley Beans." They charged
me five bucks for it, because it was so hard to get, but I didn't care. Boy,
it made me so happy all of a sudden. I could hardly wait to get to the park
to see if old Phoebe was around so that I could give it to her.
When I came out of the record store, I passed this drugstore, and I went
in. I figured maybe I'd give old Jane a buzz and see if she was home for vacation
yet. So I went in a phone booth and called her up. The only trouble was, her
mother answered the phone, so I had to hang up. I didn't feel like getting involved
in a long conversation and all with her. I'm not crazy about talking to girls'
mothers on the phone anyway. I should've at least asked her if Jane was home
yet, though. It wouldn't have killed me. But I didn't feel like it. You really
have to be in the mood for that stuff.
I still had to get those damn theater tickets, so I bought a paper and
looked up to see what shows were playing. On account of it was Sunday, there
were only about three shows playing. So what I did was, I went over and bought
two orchestra seats for I Know My Love. It was a benefit performance or something.
I didn't much want to see it, but I knew old Sally, the queen of the phonies,
would start drooling all over the place when I told her I had tickets for that,
because the Lunts were in it and all. She liked shows that are supposed to be
very sophisticated and dry and all, with the Lunts and all. I don't. I don't
like any shows very much, if you want to know the truth. They're not as bad
as movies, but they're certainly nothing to rave about. In the first place,
I hate actors. They never act like people. They just think they do. Some of
the good ones do, in a very slight way, but not in a way that's fun to watch.
And if any actor's really good, you can always tell he knows he's good, and
that spoils it. You take Sir Laurence Olivier, for example. I saw him in Hamlet.
D.B. took Phoebe and I to see it last year. He treated us to lunch first, and
then he took us. He'd already seen it, and the way he talked about it at lunch,
I was anxious as hell to see it, too. But I didn't enjoy it much. I just don't
see what's so marvelous about Sir Laurence Olivier, that's all. He has a terrific
voice, and he's a helluva handsome guy, and he's very nice to watch when he's
walking or dueling or something, but he wasn't at all the way D.B. said Hamlet
was. He was too much like a goddam general, instead of a sad, screwed-up type
guy. The best part in the whole picture was when old Ophelia's brother--the
one that gets in the duel with Hamlet at the very end--was going away and his
father was giving him a lot of advice. While the father kept giving him a lot
of advice, old Ophelia was sort of horsing around with her brother, taking his
dagger out of the holster, and teasing him and all while he was trying to look
interested in the bull his father was shooting. That was nice. I got a big bang
out of that. But you don't see that kind of stuff much. The only thing old Phoebe
liked was when Hamlet patted this dog on the head. She thought that was funny
and nice, and it was. What I'll have to do is, I'll have to read that play.
The trouble with me is, I always have to read that stuff by myself. If an actor
acts it out, I hardly listen. I keep worrying about whether he's going to do
something phony every minute.
After I got the tickets to the Lunts' show, I took a cab up to the park.
I should've taken a subway or something, because I was getting slightly low
on dough, but I wanted to get off that damn Broadway as fast as I could.
It was lousy in the park. It wasn't too cold, but the sun still wasn't
out, and there didn't look like there was anything in the park except dog crap
and globs of spit and cigar butts from old men, and the benches all looked like
they'd be wet if you sat down on them. It made you depressed, and every once
in a while, for no reason, you got goose flesh while you walked. It didn't seem
at all like Christmas was coming soon. It didn't seem like anything was coming.
But I kept walking over to the Mall anyway, because that's where Phoebe usually
goes when she's in the park. She likes to skate near the bandstand. It's funny.
That's the same place I used to like to skate when I was a kid.
When I got there, though, I didn't see her around anywhere. There were
a few kids around, skating and all, and two boys were playing Flys Up with a
soft ball, but no Phoebe. I saw one kid about her age, though, sitting on a
bench all by herself, tightening her skate. I thought maybe she might know Phoebe
and could tell me where she was or something, so I went over and sat down next
to her and asked her, "Do you know Phoebe Caulfield, by any chance?"
"Who?" she said. All she had on was jeans and about twenty sweaters. You
could tell her mother made them for her, because they were lumpy as hell.
"Phoebe Caulfield. She lives on Seventy-first Street. She's in the fourth
grade, over at--"
"You know Phoebe?"
"Yeah, I'm her brother. You know where she is?"
"She's in Miss Callon's class, isn't she?" the kid said.
"I don't know. Yes, I think she is."
"She's prob'ly in the museum, then. We went last Saturday," the kid said.
"Which museum?" I asked her.
She shrugged her shoulders, sort of. "I don't know," she said. "The museum."
"I know, but the one where the pictures are, or the one where the Indians
are?"
"The one where the Indians."
"Thanks a lot," I said. I got up and started to go, but then I suddenly
remembered it was Sunday. "This is Sunday," I told the kid.
She looked up at me. "Oh. Then she isn't."
She was having a helluva time tightening her skate. She didn't have any
gloves on or anything and her hands were all red and cold. I gave her a hand
with it. Boy, I hadn't had a skate key in my hand for years. It didn't feel
funny, though. You could put a skate key in my hand fifty years from now, in
pitch dark, and I'd still know what it is. She thanked me and all when I had
it tightened for her. She was a very nice, polite little kid. God, I love it
when a kid's nice and polite when you tighten their skate for them or something.
Most kids are. They really are. I asked her if she'd care to have a hot chocolate
or something with me, but she said no, thank you. She said she had to meet her
friend. Kids always have to meet their friend. That kills me.
Even though it was Sunday and Phoebe wouldn't be there with her class
or anything, and even though it was so damp and lousy out, I walked all the
way through the park over to the Museum of Natural History. I knew that was
the museum the kid with the skate key meant. I knew that whole museum routine
like a book. Phoebe went to the same school I went to when I was a kid, and
we used to go there all the time. We had this teacher, Miss Aigletinger, that
took us there damn near every Saturday. Sometimes we looked at the animals and
sometimes we looked at the stuff the Indians had made in ancient times. Pottery
and straw baskets and all stuff like that. I get very happy when I think about
it. Even now. I remember after we looked at all the Indian stuff, usually we
went to see some movie in this big auditorium. Columbus. They were always showing
Columbus discovering America, having one helluva time getting old Ferdinand
and Isabella to lend him the dough to buy ships with, and then the sailors mutinying
on him and all. Nobody gave too much of a damn about old Columbus, but you always
had a lot of candy and gum and stuff with you, and the inside of that auditorium
had such a nice smell. It always smelled like it was raining outside, even if
it wasn't, and you were in the only nice, dry, cosy place in the world. I loved
that damn museum. I remember you had to go through the Indian Room to get to
the auditorium. It was a long, long room, and you were only supposed to whisper.
The teacher would go first, then the class. You'd be two rows of kids, and you'd
have a partner. Most of the time my partner was this girl named Gertrude Levine.
She always wanted to hold your hand, and her hand was always sticky or sweaty
or something. The floor was all stone, and if you had some marbles in your hand
and you dropped them, they bounced like madmen all over the floor and made a
helluva racket, and the teacher would hold up the class and go back and see
what the hell was going on. She never got sore, though, Miss Aigletinger. Then
you'd pass by this long, long Indian war canoe, about as long as three goddam
Cadillacs in a row, with about twenty Indians in it, some of them paddling,
some of them just standing around looking tough, and they all had war paint
all over their faces. There was one very spooky guy in the back of the canoe,
with a mask on. He was the witch doctor. He gave me the creeps, but I liked
him anyway. Another thing, if you touched one of the paddles or anything while
you were passing, one of the guards would say to you, "Don't touch anything,
children," but he always said it in a nice voice, not like a goddam cop or anything.
Then you'd pass by this big glass case, with Indians inside it rubbing sticks
together to make a fire, and a squaw weaving a blanket. The squaw that was weaving
the blanket was sort of bending over, and you could see her bosom and all. We
all used to sneak a good look at it, even the girls, because they were only
little kids and they didn't have any more bosom than we did. Then, just before
you went inside the auditorium, right near the doors, you passed this Eskimo.
He was sitting over a hole in this icy lake, and he was fishing through it.
He had about two fish right next to the hole, that he'd already caught. Boy,
that museum was full of glass cases. There were even more upstairs, with deer
inside them drinking at water holes, and birds flying south for the winter.
The birds nearest you were all stuffed and hung up on wires, and the ones in
back were just painted on the wall, but they all looked like they were really
flying south, and if you bent your head down and sort of looked at them upside
down, they looked in an even bigger hurry to fly south. The best thing, though,
in that museum was that everything always stayed right where it was. Nobody'd
move. You could go there a hundred thousand times, and that Eskimo would still
be just finished catching those two fish, the birds would still be on their
way south, the deers would still be drinking out of that water hole, with their
pretty antlers and their pretty, skinny legs, and that squaw with the naked
bosom would still be weaving that same blanket. Nobody'd be different. The only
thing that would be different would be you. Not that you'd be so much older
or anything. It wouldn't be that, exactly. You'd just be different, that's all.
You'd have an overcoat on this time. Or the kid that was your partner in line
the last time had got scarlet fever and you'd have a new partner. Or you'd have
a substitute taking the class, instead of Miss Aigletinger. Or you'd heard your
mother and father having a terrific fight in the bathroom. Or you'd just passed
by one of those puddles in the street with gasoline rainbows in them. I mean
you'd be different in some way--I can't explain what I mean. And even if I could,
I'm not sure I'd feel like it.
I took my old hunting hat out of my pocket while I walked, and put it
on. I knew I wouldn't meet anybody that knew me, and it was pretty damp out.
I kept walking and walking, and I kept thinking about old Phoebe going to that
museum on Saturdays the way I used to. I thought how she'd see the same stuff
I used to see, and how she'd be different every time she saw it. It didn't exactly
depress me to think about it, but it didn't make me feel gay as hell, either.
Certain things they should stay the way they are. You ought to be able to stick
them in one of those big glass cases and just leave them alone. I know that's
impossible, but it's too bad anyway. Anyway, I kept thinking about all that
while I walked.
I passed by this playground and stopped and watched a couple of very tiny
kids on a seesaw. One of them was sort of fat, and I put my hand on the skinny
kid's end, to sort of even up the weight, but you could tell they didn't want
me around, so I let them alone.
Then a funny thing happened. When I got to the museum, all of a sudden
I wouldn't have gone inside for a million bucks. It just didn't appeal to me--and
here I'd walked through the whole goddam park and looked forward to it and all.
If Phoebe'd been there, I probably would have, but she wasn't. So all I did,
in front of the museum, was get a cab and go down to the Biltmore. I didn't
feel much like going. I'd made that damn date with Sally, though.
17
I
was way early when I got there, so I just sat down on one of those leather couches
right near the clock in the lobby and watched the girls. A lot of schools were
home for vacation already, and there were about a million girls sitting and
standing around waiting for their dates to show up. Girls with their legs crossed,
girls with their legs not crossed, girls with terrific legs, girls with lousy
legs, girls that looked like swell girls, girls that looked like they'd be bitches
if you knew them. It was really nice sightseeing, if you know what I mean. In
a way, it was sort of depressing, too, because you kept wondering what the hell
would happen to all of them. When they got out of school and college, I mean.
You figured most of them would probably marry dopey guys. Guys that always talk
about how many miles they get to a gallon in their goddam cars. Guys that get
sore and childish as hell if you beat them at golf, or even just some stupid
game like ping-pong. Guys that are very mean. Guys that never read books. Guys
that are very boring--But I have to be careful about that. I mean about calling
certain guys bores. I don't understand boring guys. I really don't. When I was
at Elkton Hills, I roomed for about two months with this boy, Harris Mackim.
He was very intelligent and all, but he was one of the biggest bores I ever
met. He had one of these very raspy voices, and he never stopped talking, practically.
He never stopped talking, and what was awful was, he never said anything you
wanted to hear in the first place. But he could do one thing. The sonuvabitch
could whistle better than anybody I ever heard. He'd be making his bed, or hanging
up stuff in the closet--he was always hanging up stuff in the closet--it drove
me crazy--and he'd be whistling while he did it, if he wasn't talking in this
raspy voice. He could even whistle classical stuff, but most of the time he
just whistled jazz. He could take something very jazzy, like "Tin Roof Blues,"
and whistle it so nice and easy--right while he was hanging stuff up in the
closet--that it could kill you. Naturally, I never told him I thought
he was a terrific whistler. I mean you don't just go up to somebody and say,
"You're a terrific whistler." But I roomed with him for about two whole months,
even though he bored me till I was half crazy, just because he was such a terrific
whistler, the best I ever heard. So I don't know about bores. Maybe you shouldn't
feel too sorry if you see some swell girl getting married to them. They don't
hurt anybody, most of them, and maybe they're secretly all terrific whistlers
or something. Who the hell knows? Not me.
Finally, old Sally started coming up the stairs, and I started down to
meet her. She looked terrific. She really did. She had on this black coat and
sort of a black beret. She hardly ever wore a hat, but that beret looked nice.
The funny part is, I felt like marrying her the minute I saw her. I'm crazy.
I didn't even like her much, and yet all of a sudden I felt like I was in love
with her and wanted to marry her. I swear to God I'm crazy. I admit it.
"Holden!" she said. "It's marvelous to see you! It's been ages." She had
one of these very loud, embarrassing voices when you met her somewhere. She
got away with it because she was so damn good-looking, but it always gave me
a pain in the ass.
"Swell to see you," I said. I meant it, too. "How are ya, anyway?"
"Absolutely marvelous. Am I late?"
I told her no, but she was around ten minutes late, as a matter of fact.
I didn't give a damn, though. All that crap they have in cartoons in the Saturday
Evening Post and all, showing guys on street corners looking sore as hell because
their dates are late--that's bunk. If a girl looks swell when she meets you,
who gives a damn if she's late? Nobody. "We better hurry," I said. "The show
starts at two-forty." We started going down the stairs to where the taxis are.
"What are we going to see?" she said.
"I don't know. The Lunts. It's all I could get tickets for."
"The Lunts! Oh, marvelous!" I told you she'd go mad when she heard it
was for the Lunts.
We horsed around a little bit in the cab on the way over to the theater.
At first she didn't want to, because she had her lipstick on and all, but I
was being seductive as hell and she didn't have any alternative. Twice, when
the goddam cab stopped short in traffic, I damn near fell off the seat. Those
damn drivers never even look where they're going, I swear they don't. Then,
just to show you how crazy I am, when we were coming out of this big clinch,
I told her I loved her and all. It was a lie, of course, but the thing is, I
meant it when I said it. I'm crazy. I swear to God I am.
"Oh, darling, I love you too," she said. Then, right in the same damn
breath, she said, "Promise me you'll let your hair grow. Crew cuts are getting
corny. And your hair's so lovely."
Lovely my ass.
The show wasn't as bad as some I've seen. It was on the crappy side, though.
It was about five hundred thousand years in the life of this one old couple.
It starts out when they're young and all, and the girl's parents don't want
her to marry the boy, but she marries him anyway. Then they keep getting older
and older. The husband goes to war, and the wife has this brother that's a drunkard.
I couldn't get very interested. I mean I didn't care too much when anybody in
the family died or anything. They were all just a bunch of actors. The husband
and wife were a pretty nice old couple--very witty and all--but I couldn't get
too interested in them. For one thing, they kept drinking tea or some goddam
thing all through the play. Every time you saw them, some butler was shoving
some tea in front of them, or the wife was pouring it for somebody. And everybody
kept coming in and going out all the time--you got dizzy watching people sit
down and stand up. Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne were the old couple, and they
were very good, but I didn't like them much. They were different, though, I'll
say that. They didn't act like people and they didn't act like actors. It's
hard to explain. They acted more like they knew they were celebrities and all.
I mean they were good, but they were too good. When one of them got finished
making a speech, the other one said something very fast right after it. It was
supposed to be like people really talking and interrupting each other and all.
The trouble was, it was too much like people talking and interrupting each other.
They acted a little bit the way old Ernie, down in the Village, plays the piano.
If you do something too good, then, after a while, if you don't watch it, you
start showing off. And then you're not as good any more. But anyway, they were
the only ones in the show--the Lunts, I mean--that looked like they had any
real brains. I have to admit it.
At the end of the first act we went out with all the other jerks for a
cigarette. What a deal that was. You never saw so many phonies in all your life,
everybody smoking their ears off and talking about the play so that everybody
could hear and know how sharp they were. Some dopey movie actor was standing
near us, having a cigarette. I don't know his name, but he always plays the
part of a guy in a war movie that gets yellow before it's time to go over the
top. He was with some gorgeous blonde, and the two of them were trying to be
very blasé and all, like as if he didn't even know people were looking
at him. Modest as hell. I got a big bang out of it. Old Sally didn't talk much,
except to rave about the Lunts, because she was busy rubbering and being charming.
Then all of a sudden, she saw some jerk she knew on the other side of the lobby.
Some guy in one of those very dark gray flannel suits and one of those checkered
vests. Strictly Ivy League. Big deal. He was standing next to the wall, smoking
himself to death and looking bored as hell. Old Sally kept saying, "I know that
boy from somewhere." She always knew somebody, any place you took her, or thought
she did. She kept saying that till I got bored as hell, and I said to her, "Why
don't you go on over and give him a big soul kiss, if you know him? He'll enjoy
it." She got sore when I said that. Finally, though, the jerk noticed her and
came over and said hello. You should've seen the way they said hello. You'd
have thought they hadn't seen each other in twenty years. You'd have thought
they'd taken baths in the same bathtub or something when they were little kids.
Old buddyroos. It was nauseating. The funny part was, they probably met each
other just once, at some phony party. Finally, when they were all done slobbering
around, old Sally introduced us. His name was George something--I don't even
remember--and he went to Andover. Big, big deal. You should've seen him when
old Sally asked him how he liked the play. He was the kind of a phony that have
to give themselves room when they answer somebody's question. He stepped back,
and stepped right on the lady's foot behind him. He probably broke every toe
in her body. He said the play itself was no masterpiece, but that the Lunts,
of course, were absolute angels. Angels. For Chrissake. Angels. That killed
me. Then he and old Sally started talking about a lot of people they both knew.
It was the phoniest conversation you ever heard in your life. They both kept
thinking of places as fast as they could, then they'd think of somebody that
lived there and mention their name. I was all set to puke when it was time to
go sit down again. I really was. And then, when the next act was over, they
continued their goddam boring conversation. They kept thinking of more places
and more names of people that lived there. The worst part was, the jerk had
one of those very phony, Ivy League voices, one of those very tired, snobby
voices. He sounded just like a girl. He didn't hesitate to horn in on my date,
the bastard. I even thought for a minute that he was going to get in the goddam
cab with us when the show was over, because he walked about two blocks with
us, but he had to meet a bunch of phonies for cocktails, he said. I could see
them all sitting around in some bar, with their goddam checkered vests, criticizing
shows and books and women in those tired, snobby voices. They kill me, those
guys.
I sort of hated old Sally by the time we got in the cab, after listening
to that phony Andover bastard for about ten hours. I was all set to take her
home and all--I really was--but she said, "I have a marvelous idea!" She was
always having a marvelous idea. "Listen," she said. "What time do you have to
be home for dinner? I mean are you in a terrible hurry or anything? Do you have
to be home any special time?"
"Me? No. No special time," I said. Truer word was never spoken, boy. "Why?"
"Let's go ice-skating at Radio City!"
That's the kind of ideas she always had.
"Ice-skating at Radio City? You mean right now?"
"Just for an hour or so. Don't you want to? If you don't want to--"
"I didn't say I didn't want to," I said. "Sure. If you want to."
"Do you mean it? Don't just say it if you don't mean it. I mean I don't
give a darn, one way or the other."
Not much she didn't.
"You can rent those darling little skating skirts," old Sally said. "Jeannette
Cultz did it last week."
That's why she was so hot to go. She wanted to see herself in one of those
little skirts that just come down over their butt and all.
So we went, and after they gave us our skates, they gave Sally this little
blue butt-twitcher of a dress to wear. She really did look damn good in it,
though. I save to admit it. And don't think she didn't know it. The kept walking
ahead of me, so that I'd see how cute her little ass looked. It did look pretty
cute, too. I have to admit it.
The funny part was, though, we were the worst skaters on the whole goddam
rink. I mean the worst. And there were some lulus, too. Old Sally's ankles kept
bending in till they were practically on the ice. They not only looked stupid
as hell, but they probably hurt like hell, too. I know mine did. Mine were killing
me. We must've looked gorgeous. And what made it worse, there were at least
a couple of hundred rubbernecks that didn't have anything better to do than
stand around and watch everybody falling all over themselves.
"Do you want to get a table inside and have a drink or something?" I said
to her finally.
"That's the most marvelous idea you've had all day," the said. She was
killing herself. It was brutal. I really felt sorry for her.
We took off our goddam skates and went inside this bar where you can get
drinks and watch the skaters in just your stocking feet. As soon as we sat down,
old Sally took off her gloves, and I gave her a cigarette. She wasn't looking
too happy. The waiter came up, and I ordered a Coke for her--she didn't drink--and
a Scotch and soda for myself, but the sonuvabitch wouldn't bring me one, so
I had a Coke, too. Then I sort of started lighting matches. I do that quite
a lot when I'm in a certain mood. I sort of let them burn down till I can't
hold them any more, then I drop them in the ashtray. It's a nervous habit.
Then all of a sudden, out of a clear blue sky, old Sally said, "Look.
I have to know. Are you or aren't you coming over to help me trim the tree Christmas
Eve? I have to know." She was still being snotty on account of her ankles when
she was skating.
"I wrote you I would. You've asked me that about twenty times. Sure, I
am."
"I mean I have to know," she said. She started looking all around the
goddam room.
All of a sudden I quit lighting matches, and sort of leaned nearer to
her over the table. I had quite a few topics on my mind. "Hey, Sally," I said.
"What?" she said. She was looking at some girl on the other side of the
room.
"Did you ever get fed up?" I said. "I mean did you ever get scared that
everything was going to go lousy unless you did something? I mean do you like
school, and all that stuff?"
"It's a terrific bore."
"I mean do you hate it? I know it's a terrific bore, but do you hate it,
is what I mean."
"Well, I don't exactly hate it. You always have to--"
"Well, I hate it. Boy, do I hate it," I said. "But it isn't just that.
It's everything. I hate living in New York and all. Taxicabs, and Madison Avenue
buses, with the drivers and all always yelling at you to get out at the rear
door, and being introduced to phony guys that call the Lunts angels, and going
up and down in elevators when you just want to go outside, and guys fitting
your pants all the time at Brooks, and people always--"
"Don't shout, please," old Sally said. Which was very funny, because I
wasn't even shouting.
"Take cars," I said. I said it in this very quiet voice. "Take most people,
they're crazy about cars. They worry if they get a little scratch on them, and
they're always talking about how many miles they get to a gallon, and if they
get a brand-new car already they start thinking about trading it in for one
that's even newer. I don't even like old cars. I mean they don't even interest
me. I'd rather have a goddam horse. A horse is at least human, for God's sake.
A horse you can at least--"
"I don't know what you're even talking about," old Sally said. "You jump
from one--"
"You know something?" I said. "You're probably the only reason I'm in
New York right now, or anywhere. If you weren't around, I'd probably be someplace
way the hell off. In the woods or some goddam place. You're the only reason
I'm around, practically."
"You're sweet," she said. But you could tell she wanted me to change the
damn subject.
"You ought to go to a boys' school sometime. Try it sometime," I said.
"It's full of phonies, and all you do is study so that you can learn enough
to be smart enough to be able to buy a goddam Cadillac some day, and you have
to keep making believe you give a damn if the football team loses, and all you
do is talk about girls and liquor and sex all day, and everybody sticks together
in these dirty little goddam cliques. The guys that are on the basketball team
stick together, the Catholics stick together, the goddam intellectuals stick
together, the guys that play bridge stick together. Even the guys that belong
to the goddam Book-of-the-Month Club stick together. If you try to have a little
intelligent--"
"Now, listen," old Sally said. "Lots of boys get more out of school than
that."
"I agree! I agree they do, some of them! But that's all I get out of it.
See? That's my point. That's exactly my goddam point," I said. "I don't get
hardly anything out of anything. I'm in bad shape. I'm in lousy shape."
"You certainly are."
Then, all of a sudden, I got this idea.
"Look," I said. "Here's my idea. How would you like to get the hell out
of here? Here's my idea. I know this guy down in Greenwich Village that we can
borrow his car for a couple of weeks. He used to go to the same school I did
and he still owes me ten bucks. What we could do is, tomorrow morning we could
drive up to Massachusetts and Vermont, and all around there, see. It's beautiful
as hell up there, It really is." I was getting excited as hell, the more I thought
of it, and I sort of reached over and took old Sally's goddam hand. What a goddam
fool I was. "No kidding," I said. "I have about a hundred and eighty bucks in
the bank. I can take it out when it opens in the morning, and then I could go
down and get this guy's car. No kidding. We'll stay in these cabin camps and
stuff like that till the dough runs out. Then, when the dough runs out, I could
get a job somewhere and we could live somewhere with a brook and all and, later
on, we could get married or something. I could chop all our own wood in the
wintertime and all. Honest to God, we could have a terrific time! Wuddaya say?
C'mon! Wuddaya say? Will you do it with me? Please!"
"You can't just do something like that," old Sally said. She sounded sore
as hell.
"Why not? Why the hell not?"
"Stop screaming at me, please," she said. Which was crap, because I wasn't
even screaming at her.
"Why can'tcha? Why not?"
"Because you can't, that's all. In the first place, we're both practically
children. And did you ever stop to think what you'd do if you didn't get a job
when your money ran out? We'd starve to death. The whole thing's so fantastic,
it isn't even--"
"It isn't fantastic. I'd get a job. Don't worry about that. You don't
have to worry about that. What's the matter? Don't you want to go with me? Say
so, if you don't."
"It isn't that. It isn't that at all," old Sally said. I was beginning
to hate her, in a way. "We'll have oodles of time to do those things--all those
things. I mean after you go to college and all, and if we should get married
and all. There'll be oodles of marvelous places to go to. You're just--"
"No, there wouldn't be. There wouldn't be oodles of places to go to at
all. It'd be entirely different," I said. I was getting depressed as hell again.
"What?" she said. "I can't hear you. One minute you scream at me, and
the next you--"
"I said no, there wouldn't be marvelous places to go to after I went to
college and all. Open your ears. It'd be entirely different. We'd have to go
downstairs in elevators with suitcases and stuff. We'd have to phone up everybody
and tell 'em good-by and send 'em postcards from hotels and all. And I'd be
working in some office, making a lot of dough, and riding to work in cabs and
Madison Avenue buses, and reading newspapers, and playing bridge all the time,
and going to the movies and seeing a lot of stupid shorts and coming attractions
and newsreels. Newsreels. Christ almighty. There's always a dumb horse race,
and some dame breaking a bottle over a ship, and some chimpanzee riding a goddam
bicycle with pants on. It wouldn't be the same at all. You don't see what I
mean at all."
"Maybe I don't! Maybe you don't, either," old Sally said. We both hated
each other's guts by that time. You could see there wasn't any sense trying
to have an intelligent conversation. I was sorry as hell I'd started it.
"C'mon, let's get outa here," I said. "You give me a royal pain in the
ass, if you want to know the truth."
Boy, did she hit the ceiling when I said that. I know I shouldn't've said
it, and I probably wouldn't've ordinarily, but she was depressing the hell out
of me. Usually I never say crude things like that to girls. Boy, did she hit
the ceiling. I apologized like a madman, but she wouldn't accept my apology.
She was even crying. Which scared me a little bit, because I was a little afraid
she'd go home and tell her father I called her a pain in the ass. Her father
was one of those big silent bastards, and he wasn't too crazy about me anyhow.
He once told old Sally I was too goddam noisy.
"No kidding. I'm sorry," I kept telling her.
"You're sorry. You're sorry. That's very funny," she said. She was still
sort of crying, and all of a sudden I did feel sort of sorry I'd said it.
"C'mon, I'll take ya home. No kidding."
"I can go home by myself, thank you. If you think I'd let you take me
home, you're mad. No boy ever said that to me in my entire life."
The whole thing was sort of funny, in a way, if you thought about it,
and all of a sudden I did something I shouldn't have. I laughed. And I have
one of these very loud, stupid laughs. I mean if I ever sat behind myself in
a movie or something, I'd probably lean over and tell myself to please shut
up. It made old Sally madder than ever.
I stuck around for a while, apologizing and trying to get her to excuse
me, but she wouldn't. She kept telling me to go away and leave her alone. So
finally I did it. I went inside and got my shoes and stuff, and left without
her. I shouldn't've, but I was pretty goddam fed up by that time.
If you want to know the truth, I don't even know why I started all that
stuff with her. I mean about going away somewhere, to Massachusetts and Vermont
and all. I probably wouldn't've taken her even if she'd wanted to go with me.
She wouldn't have been anybody to go with. The terrible part, though, is that
I meant it when I asked her. That's the terrible part. I swear to God I'm a
madman.
18
When
I left the skating rink I felt sort of hungry, so I went in this drugstore and
had a Swiss cheese sandwich and a malted, and then I went in a phone booth.
I thought maybe I might give old Jane another buzz and see if she was home yet.
I mean I had the whole evening free, and I thought I'd give her a buzz and,
if she was home yet, take her dancing or something somewhere. I never danced
with her or anything the whole time I knew her. I saw her dancing once, though.
She looked like a very good dancer. It was at this Fourth of July dance at the
club. I didn't know her too well then, and I didn't think I ought to cut in
on her date. She was dating this terrible guy, Al Pike, that went to Choate.
I didn't know him too well, but he was always hanging around the swimming pool.
He wore those white Lastex kind of swimming trunks, and he was always going
off the high dive. He did the same lousy old half gainer all day long. It was
the only dive he could do, but he thought he was very hot stuff. All muscles
and no brains. Anyway, that's who Jane dated that night. I couldn't understand
it. I swear I couldn't. After we started going around together, I asked her
how come she could date a showoff bastard like Al Pike. Jane said he wasn't
a show-off. She said he had an inferiority complex. She acted like she felt
sorry for him or something, and she wasn't just putting it on. She meant it.
It's a funny thing about girls. Every time you mention some guy that's strictly
a bastard--very mean, or very conceited and all--and when you mention it to
the girl, she'll tell you he has an inferiority complex. Maybe he has, but that
still doesn't keep him from being a bastard, in my opinion. Girls. You never
know what they're going to think. I once got this girl Roberta Walsh's roommate
a date with a friend of mine. His name was Bob Robinson and he really had an
inferiority complex. You could tell he was very ashamed of his parents and all,
because they said "he don't" and "she don't" and stuff like that and they weren't
very wealthy. But he wasn't a bastard or anything. He was a very nice guy. But
this Roberta Walsh's roommate didn't like him at all. She told Roberta he was
too conceited--and the reason she thought he was conceited was because he happened
to mention to her that he was captain of the debating team. A little thing like
that, and she thought he was conceited! The trouble with girls is, if they like
a boy, no matter how big a bastard he is, they'll say he has an inferiority
complex, and if they don't like him, no matter how nice a guy he is, or how
big an inferiority complex he has, they'll say he's conceited. Even smart girls
do it.
Anyway, I gave old Jane a buzz again, but her phone didn't answer, so
I had to hang up. Then I had to look through my address book to see who the
hell might be available for the evening. The trouble was, though, my address
book only has about three people in it. Jane, and this man, Mr. Antolini, that
was my teacher at Elkton Hills, and my father's office number. I keep forgetting
to put people's names in. So what I did finally, I gave old Carl Luce a buzz.
He graduated from the Whooton School after I left. He was about three years
older than I was, and I didn't like him too much, but he was one of these very
intellectual guys-- he had the highest I.Q. of any boy at Whooton--and I thought
he might want to have dinner with me somewhere and have a slightly intellectual
conversation. He was very enlightening sometimes. So I gave him a buzz. He went
to Columbia now, but he lived on 65th Street and all, and I knew he'd be home.
When I got him on the phone, he said he couldn't make it for dinner but that
he'd meet me for a drink at ten o'clock at the Wicker Bar, on 54th. I think
he was pretty surprised to hear from me. I once called him a fat-assed phony.
I had quite a bit of time to kill till ten o'clock, so what I did, I went
to the movies at Radio City. It was probably the worst thing I could've done,
but it was near, and I couldn't think of anything else.
I came in when the goddam stage show was on. The Rockettes were kicking
their heads off, the way they do when they're all in line with their arms around
each other's waist. The audience applauded like mad, and some guy behind me
kept saying to his wife, "You know what that is? That's precision." He killed
me. Then, after the Rockettes, a guy came out in a tuxedo and roller skates
on, and started skating under a bunch of little tables, and telling jokes while
he did it. He was a very good skater and all, but I couldn't enjoy it much because
I kept picturing him practicing to be a guy that roller-skates on the stage.
It seemed so stupid. I guess I just wasn't in the right mood. Then, after him,
they had this Christmas thing they have at Radio City every year. All these
angels start coming out of the boxes and everywhere, guys carrying crucifixes
and stuff all over the place, and the whole bunch of them--thousands of them--singing
"Come All Ye Faithful!" like mad. Big deal. It's supposed to be religious as
hell, I know, and very pretty and all, but I can't see anything religious or
pretty, for God's sake, about a bunch of actors carrying crucifixes all over
the stage. When they were all finished and started going out the boxes again,
you could tell they could hardly wait to get a cigarette or something. I saw
it with old Sally Hayes the year before, and she kept saying how beautiful it
was, the costumes and all. I said old Jesus probably would've puked if He could
see it--all those fancy costumes and all. Sally said I was a sacrilegious atheist.
I probably am. The thing Jesus really would've liked would be the guy that plays
the kettle drums in the orchestra. I've watched that guy since I was about eight
years old. My brother Allie and I, if we were with our parents and all, we used
to move our seats and go way down so we could watch him. He's the best drummer
I ever saw. He only gets a chance to bang them a couple of times during a whole
piece, but he never looks bored when he isn't doing it. Then when he does bang
them, he does it so nice and sweet, with this nervous expression on his face.
One time when we went to Washington with my father, Allie sent him a postcard,
but I'll bet he never got it. We weren't too sure how to address it.
After the Christmas thing was over, the goddam picture started. It was
so putrid I couldn't take my eyes off it. It was about this English guy, Alec
something, that was in the war and loses his memory in the hospital and all.
He comes out of the hospital carrying a cane and limping all over the place,
all over London, not knowing who the hell he is. He's really a duke, but he
doesn't know it. Then he meets this nice, homey, sincere girl getting on a bus.
Her goddam hat blows off and he catches it, and then they go upstairs and sit
down and start talking about Charles Dickens. He's both their favorite author
and all. He's carrying this copy of Oliver Twist and so's she. I could've puked.
Anyway, they fell in love right away, on account of they're both so nuts about
Charles Dickens and all, and he helps her run her publishing business. She's
a publisher, the girl. Only, she's not doing so hot, because her brother's a
drunkard and he spends all their dough. He's a very bitter guy, the brother,
because he was a doctor in the war and now he can't operate any more because
his nerves are shot, so he boozes all the time, but he's pretty witty and all.
Anyway, old Alec writes a book, and this girl publishes it, and they both make
a hatful of dough on it. They're all set to get married when this other girl,
old Marcia, shows up. Marcia was Alec's fiancée before he lost his memory,
and she recognizes him when he's in this store autographing books. She tells
old Alec he's really a duke and all, but he doesn't believe her and doesn't
want to go with her to visit his mother and all. His mother's blind as a bat.
But the other girl, the homey one, makes him go. She's very noble and all. So
he goes. But he still doesn't get his memory back, even when his great Dane
jumps all over him and his mother sticks her fingers all over his face and brings
him this teddy bear he used to slobber around with when he was a kid. But then,
one day, some kids are playing cricket on the lawn and he gets smacked in the
head with a cricket ball. Then right away he gets his goddam memory back and
he goes in and kisses his mother on the forehead and all. Then he starts being
a regular duke again, and he forgets all about the homey babe that has the publishing
business. I'd tell you the rest of the story, but I might puke if I did. It
isn't that I'd spoil it for you or anything. There isn't anything to spoil for
Chrissake. Anyway, it ends up with Alec and the homey babe getting married,
and the brother that's a drunkard gets his nerves back and operates on Alec's
mother so she can see again, and then the drunken brother and old Marcia go
for each other. It ends up with everybody at this long dinner table laughing
their asses off because the great Dane comes in with a bunch of puppies. Everybody
thought it was a male, I suppose, or some goddam thing. All I can say is, don't
see it if you don't want to puke all over yourself.
The part that got me was, there was a lady sitting next to me that cried
all through the goddam picture. The phonier it got, the more she cried. You'd
have thought she did it because she was kindhearted as hell, but I was sitting
right next to her, and she wasn't. She had this little kid with her that was
bored as hell and had to go to the bathroom, but she wouldn't take him. She
kept telling him to sit still and behave himself. She was about as kindhearted
as a goddam wolf. You take somebody that cries their goddam eyes out over phony
stuff in the movies, and nine times out of ten they're mean bastards at heart.
I'm not kidding.
After the movie was over, I started walking down to the Wicker Bar, where
I was supposed to meet old Carl Luce, and while I walked I sort of thought about
war and all. Those war movies always do that to me. I don't think I could stand
it if I had to go to war. I really couldn't. It wouldn't be too bad if they'd
just take you out and shoot you or something, but you have to stay in the Army
so goddam long. That's the whole trouble. My brother D.B. was in the Army for
four goddam years. He was in the war, too--he landed on D-Day and all--but I
really think he hated the Army worse than the war. I was practically a child
at the time, but I remember when he used to come home on furlough and all, all
he did was lie on his bed, practically. He hardly ever even came in the living
room. Later, when he went overseas and was in the war and all, he didn't get
wounded or anything and he didn't have to shoot anybody. All he had to do was
drive some cowboy general around all day in a command car. He once told Allie
and I that if he'd had to shoot anybody, he wouldn't've known which direction
to shoot in. He said the Army was practically as full of bastards as the Nazis
were. I remember Allie once asked him wasn't it sort of good that he was in
the war because he was a writer and it gave him a lot to write about and all.
He made Allie go get his baseball mitt and then he asked him who was the best
war poet, Rupert Brooke or Emily Dickinson. Allie said Emily Dickinson. I don't
know too much about it myself, because I don't read much poetry, but I do know
it'd drive me crazy if I had to be in the Army and be with a bunch of guys like
Ackley and Stradlater and old Maurice all the time, marching with them and all.
I was in the Boy Scouts once, for about a week, and I couldn't even stand looking
at the back of the guy's neck in front of me. They kept telling you to look
at the back of the guy's neck in front of you. I swear if there's ever another
war, they better just take me out and stick me in front of a firing squad. I
wouldn't object. What gets me about D.B., though, he hated the war so much,
and yet he got me to read this book A Farewell to Arms last summer. He said
it was so terrific. That's what I can't understand. It had this guy in it named
Lieutenant Henry that was supposed to be a nice guy and all. I don't see how
D.B. could hate the Army and war and all so much and still like a phony like
that. I mean, for instance, I don't see how he could like a phony book like
that and still like that one by Ring Lardner, or that other one he's so crazy
about, The Great Gatsby. D.B. got sore when I said that, and said I was too
young and all to appreciate it, but I don't think so. I told him I liked Ring
Lardner and The Great Gatsby and all. I did, too. I was crazy about The Great
Gatsby. Old Gatsby. Old sport. That killed me. Anyway, I'm sort of glad they've
got the atomic bomb invented. If there's ever another war, I'm going to sit
right the hell on top of it. I'll volunteer for it, I swear to God I will.
19
In
case you don't live in New York, the Wicker Bar is in this sort of swanky hotel,
the Seton Hotel. I used to go there quite a lot, but I don't any more. I gradually
cut it out. It's one of those places that are supposed to be very sophisticated
and all, and the phonies are coming in the window. They used to have these two
French babes, Tina and Janine, come out and play the piano and sing about three
times every night. One of them played the piano--strictly lousy--and the other
one sang, and most of the songs were either pretty dirty or in French. The one
that sang, old Janine, was always whispering into the goddam microphone before
she sang. She'd say, "And now we like to geeve you our impression of Vooly Voo
Fransay. Eet ees the story of a leetle Fransh girl who comes to a beeg ceety,
just like New York, and falls een love wees a leetle boy from Brookleen. We
hope you like eet." Then, when she was all done whispering and being cute as
hell, she'd sing some dopey song, half in English and half in French, and drive
all the phonies in the place mad with joy. If you sat around there long enough
and heard all the phonies applauding and all, you got to hate everybody in the
world, I swear you did. The bartender was a louse, too. He was a big snob. He
didn't talk to you at all hardly unless you were a big shot or a celebrity or
something. If you were a big shot or a celebrity or something, then he was even
more nauseating. He'd go up to you and say, with this big charming smile, like
he was a helluva swell guy if you knew him, "Well! How's Connecticut?" or "How's
Florida?" It was a terrible place, I'm not kidding. I cut out going there entirely,
gradually.
It was pretty early when I got there. I sat down at the bar--it was pretty
crowded--and had a couple of Scotch and sodas before old Luce even showed up.
I stood up when I ordered them so they could see how tall I was and all and
not think I was a goddam minor. Then I watched the phonies for a while. Some
guy next to me was snowing hell out of the babe he was with. He kept telling
her she had aristocratic hands. That killed me. The other end of the bar was
full of flits. They weren't too flitty-looking--I mean they didn't have their
hair too long or anything--but you could tell they were flits anyway. Finally
old Luce showed up.
Old Luce. What a guy. He was supposed to be my Student Adviser when I
was at Whooton. The only thing he ever did, though, was give these sex talks
and all, late at night when there was a bunch of guys in his room. He knew quite
a bit about sex, especially perverts and all. He was always telling us about
a lot of creepy guys that go around having affairs with sheep, and guys that
go around with girls' pants sewed in the lining of their hats and all. And flits
and Lesbians. Old Luce knew who every flit and Lesbian in the United States
was. All you had to do was mention somebody--anybody--and old Luce'd tell you
if he was a flit or not. Sometimes it was hard to believe, the people he said
were flits and Lesbians and all, movie actors and like that. Some of the ones
he said were flits were even married, for God's sake. You'd keep saying to him,
"You mean Joe Blow's a flit? Joe Blow? That big, tough guy that plays gangsters
and cowboys all the time?" Old Luce'd say, "Certainly." He was always saying
"Certainly." He said it didn't matter if a guy was married or not. He said half
the married guys in the world were flits and didn't even know it. He said you
could turn into one practically overnight, if you had all the traits and all.
He used to scare the hell out of us. I kept waiting to turn into a flit or something.
The funny thing about old Luce, I used to think he was sort of flitty himself,
in a way. He was always saying, "Try this for size," and then he'd goose the
hell out of you while you were going down the corridor. And whenever he went
to the can, he always left the goddam door open and talked to you while you
were brushing your teeth or something. That stuff's sort of flitty. It really
is. I've known quite a few real flits, at schools and all, and they're always
doing stuff like that, and that's why I always had my doubts about old Luce.
He was a pretty intelligent guy, though. He really was.
He never said hello or anything when he met you. The first thing he said
when he sat down was that he could only stay a couple of minutes. He said he
had a date. Then he ordered a dry Martini. He told the bartender to make it
very dry, and no olive.
"Hey, I got a flit for you," I told him. "At the end of the bar. Don't
look now. I been saving him for ya."
"Very funny," he said. "Same old Caulfield. When are you going to grow
up?"
I bored him a lot. I really did. He amused me, though. He was one of those
guys that sort of amuse me a lot.
"How's your sex life?" I asked him. He hated you to ask him stuff like
that.
"Relax," he said. "Just sit back and relax, for Chrissake."
"I'm relaxed," I said. "How's Columbia? Ya like it?"
"Certainly I like it. If I didn't like it I wouldn't have gone there,"
he said. He could be pretty boring himself sometimes.
"What're you majoring in?" I asked him. "Perverts?" I was only horsing
around.
"What're you trying to be--funny?"
"No. I'm only kidding," I said. "Listen, hey, Luce. You're one of these
intellectual guys. I need your advice. I'm in a terrific--"
He let out this big groan on me. "Listen, Caulfield. If you want to sit
here and have a quiet, peaceful drink and a quiet, peaceful conver--"
"All right, all right," I said. "Relax." You could tell he didn't feel
like discussing anything serious with me. That's the trouble with these intellectual
guys. They never want to discuss anything serious unless they feel like it.
So all I did was, I started discussing topics in general with him. "No kidding,
how's your sex life?" I asked him. "You still going around with that same babe
you used to at Whooton? The one with the terrffic--"
"Good God, no," he said.
"How come? What happened to her?"
"I haven't the faintest idea. For all I know, since you ask, she's probably
the Whore of New Hampshire by this time."
"That isn't nice. If she was decent enough to let you get sexy with her
all the time, you at least shouldn't talk about her that way."
"Oh, God!" old Luce said. "Is this going to be a typical Caulfield conversation?
I want to know right now."
"No," I said, "but it isn't nice anyway. If she was decent and nice enough
to let you--"
"Must we pursue this horrible trend of thought?"
I didn't say anything. I was sort of afraid he'd get up and leave on me
if I didn't shut up. So all I did was, I ordered another drink. I felt like
getting stinking drunk.
"Who're you going around with now?" I asked him. "You feel like telling
me?"
"Nobody you know."
"Yeah, but who? I might know her."
"Girl lives in the Village. Sculptress. If you must know."
"Yeah? No kidding? How old is she?"
"I've never asked her, for God's sake."
"Well, around how old?"
"I should imagine she's in her late thirties," old Luce said.
"In her late thirties? Yeah? You like that?" I asked him. "You like 'em
that old?" The reason I was asking was because he really knew quite a bit about
sex and all. He was one of the few guys I knew that did. He lost his virginity
when he was only fourteen, in Nantucket. He really did.
"I like a mature person, if that's what you mean. Certainly."
"You do? Why? No kidding, they better for sex and all?"
"Listen. Let's get one thing straight. I refuse to answer any typical
Caulfield questions tonight. When in hell are you going to grow up?"
I didn't say anything for a while. I let it drop for a while. Then old
Luce ordered another Martini and told the bartender to make it a lot dryer.
"Listen. How long you been going around with her, this sculpture babe?"
I asked him. I was really interested. "Did you know her when you were at Whooton?"
"Hardly. She just arrived in this country a few months ago."
"She did? Where's she from?"
"She happens to be from Shanghai."
"No kidding! She Chinese, for Chrissake?"
"Obviously."
"No kidding! Do you like that? Her being Chinese?"
"Obviously."
"Why? I'd be interested to know--I really would."
"I simply happen to find Eastern philosophy more satisfactory than Western.
Since you ask."
"You do? Wuddaya mean 'philosophy'? Ya mean sex and all? You mean it's
better in China? That what you mean?"
"Not necessarily in China, for God's sake. The East I said. Must we go
on with this inane conversation?"
"Listen, I'm serious," I said. "No kidding. Why's it better in the East?"
"It's too involved to go into, for God's sake," old Luce said. "They simply
happen to regard sex as both a physical and a spiritual experience. If you think
I'm--"
"So do I! So do I regard it as a wuddayacallit--a physical and spiritual
experience and all. I really do. But it depends on who the hell I'm doing it
with. If I'm doing it with somebody I don't even--"
"Not so loud, for God's sake, Caulfield. If you can't manage to keep your
voice down, let's drop the whole--"
"All right, but listen," I said. I was getting excited and I was talking
a little too loud. Sometimes I talk a little loud when I get excited. "This
is what I mean, though," I said. "I know it's supposed to be physical and spiritual,
and artistic and all. But what I mean is, you can't do it with everybody--every
girl you neck with and all--and make it come out that way. Can you?"
"Let's drop it," old Luce said. "Do you mind?"
"All right, but listen. Take you and this Chinese babe. What's so good
about you two?"
"Drop it, I said."
I was getting a little too personal. I realize that. But that was one
of the annoying things about Luce. When we were at Whooton, he'd make you describe
the most personal stuff that happened to you, but if you started asking him
questions about himself, he got sore. These intellectual guys don't like to
have an intellectual conversation with you unless they're running the whole
thing. They always want you to shut up when they shut up, and go back to your
room when they go back to their room. When I was at Whooton old Luce used to
hate it--you really could tell he did--when after he was finished giving his
sex talk to a bunch of us in his room we stuck around and chewed the fat by
ourselves for a while. I mean the other guys and myself. In somebody else's
room. Old Luce hated that. He always wanted everybody to go back to their own
room and shut up when he was finished being the big shot. The thing he was afraid
of, he was afraid somebody'd say something smarter than he had. He really amused
me.
"Maybe I'll go to China. My sex life is lousy," I said.
"Naturally. Your mind is immature."
"It is. It really is. I know it," I said. "You know what the trouble with
me is? I can never get really sexy--I mean really sexy--with a girl I don't
like a lot. I mean I have to like her a lot. If I don't, I sort of lose my goddam
desire for her and all. Boy, it really screws up my sex life something awful.
My sex life stinks."
"Naturally it does, for God's sake. I told you the last time I saw you
what you need."
"You mean to go to a psychoanalyst and all?" I said. That's what he'd
told me I ought to do. His father was a psychoanalyst and all.
"It's up to you, for God's sake. It's none of my goddam business what
you do with your life."
I didn't say anything for a while. I was thinking.
"Supposing I went to your father and had him psychoanalyze me and all,"
I said. "What would he do to me? I mean what would he do to me?"
"He wouldn't do a goddam thing to you. He'd simply talk to you, and you'd
talk to him, for God's sake. For one thing, he'd help you to recognize the patterns
of your mind."
"The what?"
"The patterns of your mind. Your mind runs in-- Listen. I'm not giving
an elementary course in psychoanalysis. If you're interested, call him up and
make an appointment. If you're not, don't. I couldn't care less, frankly."
I put my hand on his shoulder. Boy, he amused me. "You're a real friendly
bastard," I told him. "You know that?"
He was looking at his wrist watch. "I have to tear," he said, and stood
up. "Nice seeing you." He got the bartender and told him to bring him his check.
"Hey," I said, just before he beat it. "Did your father ever psychoanalyze
you?"
"Me? Why do you ask?"
"No reason. Did he, though? Has he?"
"Not exactly. He's helped me to adjust myself to a certain extent, but
an extensive analysis hasn't been necessary. Why do you ask?"
"No reason. I was just wondering."
"Well. Take it easy," he said. He was leaving his tip and all and he was
starting to go.
"Have just one more drink," I told him. "Please. I'm lonesome as hell.
No kidding."
He said he couldn't do it, though. He said he was late now, and then he
left.
Old Luce. He was strictly a pain in the ass, but he certainly had a good
vocabulary. He had the largest vocabulary of any boy at Whooton when I was there.
They gave us a test.