The Deer Park

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The Deer Park Page 24

by Norman Mailer


  By evening my fear had come back, physical fear with a dry throat and a hot heart. I was scared and there was no check on it, because I knew my mind was made up and I would not change it now. I even forced myself to tell Lulu. I expected anything from her, tantrums, fights, maybe even the announcement that she wouldn’t see me any more. Instead she surprised me. She was silent for a long time, and then she said, “You didn’t want to do it, did you, Sergius? I knew, honey. I knew you were unhappy.”

  At that moment I was full of pity for her. She looked so small, so blonde, so disappointed and frightened, and yet she would not try to argue with me. Suddenly I felt that Lulu was really very frail and I loved her. My anger was gone. She had given me the best she could, and I could love her; how can there be love without some weakness? All I knew was that I wanted to give her all I had, and it hurt that I had so little.

  “I love you, baby,” I said to her.

  Tears came into Lulu’s eyes. “I love you, too,” she whispered. “I know that now.”

  “Oh, listen,” I said, “listen, let’s get married.”

  “How?” she said hopelessly.

  “No, look, it’s not that hard. Let’s go away. Give it up. Give up the movies. Maybe you can act on the stage, and I’ll do something, I swear I will.”

  Lulu began to cry. “It’s not possible, Sergius,” she said.

  “It is. You hate the movies. You told me so.”

  “I don’t really hate them,” she said in a little voice.

  “Then we’ll live where you say. But marry me.”

  She tried to nod. This was just what she had wanted a month ago, but once we want more, we can hardly want less. “It couldn’t work, Sergius.”

  I didn’t know if it could. While we sat holding one another I tried to find a way, and in my enthusiasm it did seem possible. “Let’s try,” I said at last.

  “Kiss me, darling,” she said.

  We hugged each other very hard, and while she cried she kissed my eyes and nose with long wet kisses. “Oh, Sergius, let’s just go on like this for a while and not worry, and then we’ll see.”

  What she said made me afraid again, and it was a tangible fear, as if the moment I left her room the burned corpses of half the world would be lying outside the door. We started to make love, and I couldn’t think of her or of myself or of anything but flesh, and flesh came into my mind, bursting flesh, rotting flesh, flesh hung on spikes in butcher stalls, flesh burning, flesh gone to blood.

  All the while Lulu and I were caressing each other I could think of nothing else, and although I tried up to the end I knew it was no use. Her body was frightening to me. “No, I can’t, I just can’t tonight,” I said to her in panic, and she must have known it already for she did nothing except to touch my face, easily and gently.

  “My poor baby,” Lulu said, and held me against her breast. “What’s the matter, my darling? I do love you.”

  I had a horror I would start crying, and I couldn’t trust myself to speak. We weren’t inches apart and yet I had the feeling I had to reach out to her across a great distance. “Everything’s the matter,” I said, and perspiration covered my body.

  “Tell me, tell me, I don’t care what it is.”

  I did tell her, or at least I tried; for half an hour, maybe it was an hour, maybe more, I told her all the things I never told anybody else, the operations I had flown and their names, those box-office names military press agents would put on them until they sounded like night-club acts, “Operation Castanet,” and “Punchbowl,” and “Red Hot Mama,” and how red the fires had been which our planes sowed, and how cruel was jellied gasoline—a blob on a man and the man was the fire, fire hot enough to melt the skull. So I told her what I thought the corpses looked like, for we were never encouraged to get up to visit the front, but I could know how dead Oriental villages looked the following day, staring their blind eye into the air like the sour black ash of a garbage dump, and all the while we flew and we would drink and there were the geisha houses and the poker games and the taste on one’s tongue of being up at four in the morning ready for a flight, and the long conversations about parties and girls where nobody ever knew who knew the most, and the arguments about the technical performances of airplanes and which plane was better, and what was a career in the Air Force. I tried to tell it all to her, about the Japanese K.P. and how I came not to like the fliers I knew, until finally there had come the time when I could no longer go to the geisha girls, so nice, so feminine, because flesh was raw, flesh was the thing one burned in the real world, and in a kind of sweat at myself, I would yell into the pressure of my brain, “I enjoy it. I enjoy the fire. I have the cruelty to be a man.” So I had been without a woman and without love until the night I met her, she had been the first in over a year, and that had meant more, it had meant so much more than anything which had happened to me … except that now my sickness seemed to have returned.

  “Oh, my baby, oh my darling,” Lulu said, “if I could only chase it away.” And with a little air of tender child’s amazement, as if she had never considered this before, she said, “You’ve been hurt even more than me.” She was good that night, and as we lay together hour after hour my fear went back where it had come from, but it was weaker when it left. I could feel her body again, I could come to touch it and to sense it and to know it was beautiful until the moment when caught by the curve of her belly, loving the touch of her hips and so fond of the wink of her breast, I was able to take her again. It was the best night we ever had, for I loved her and I think she loved me. We passed into each other, and long afterward lay looking at one another and smiling. “I love you,” I kept whispering to her, and her eyes filled with tears. “I feel like a woman for the first time,” she said. Yet, before I left, our mood changed again. If I had loved her earlier in the evening, I loved her more now, I had never loved her more, and yet it was with bitter love, with a feeling of loss. For each of us knew that there was nowhere to go after this night.

  My instinct was good. By the next day I had lost her sure enough. We had lost what we had had. We were close no longer and we could rarely lift above the sad depression which hangs upon people who still feel emotion and know the emotion has no future. We did what she said, we went on the way we had before, we even made believe there was nothing the matter. And all the while I was mourning our one fine hour.

  We made the rounds, we had our little fights, we even made love, and all the while we were waiting. The date when she would have to begin work on her new picture came closer, and as if that were the first of a whole series of dates which meant ends to different things—the day she left for the capital, the day I drew my last money from the bank, the day I would have to leave Desert D’Or—we never talked about it. Once she told me that Teddy Pope and Tony Tanner would be down soon at the resort for publicity photos with her, and she even bothered to explain the movie. The new picture would be a triangle. Teddy Pope was to get her in the end, but through the middle of the film she was to think she was in love with Tony Tanner. “I don’t want you to be silly about it,” she said to me. “Naturally, I have to be seen all the time with Tony and Teddy. The studio wants a lot of advance publicity on this picture.”

  “I guess I won’t be seeing much of you.”

  “That’s so ridiculous. You can be with us all the time. It’s just that when they take pictures, it would be better if you sort of dropped into the background.”

  “I’ll carry my trap door,” I said.

  “You’re just a baby.”

  When Teddy and Tony arrived, our life changed. Instead of going to Dorothea’s, we made a tour of the supper clubs and the night clubs, Teddy going as escort to Lulu while Tony Tanner and I would follow behind. A week went by of watered whisky, dim rooms, and the curving walls and scalloped arches of Desert D’Or architecture. We made quite a quartet. Publicly, the romance between Teddy and Lulu was sounded again, and there must have been a hundred pictures taken of them looking into each othe
r’s eyes, holding hands, or dancing together. Yet when we were seated and no photographers were around, Teddy Pope gave his attention to me and Tony Tanner would go into long conversations with Lulu. At dawn when we separated, Lulu and I would be alone for an hour or two. I had never seen her so happy. Lulu was enchanted to be divided into three.

  “I wonder which girl you like,” I said to her after an evening, and she answered too quickly, “The one with you, of course. What a bore that Tony is.”

  Tony was good-looking. Naturally. He was tall and big-muscled and he had dark hair which ran in rolling waves. He had a dimple in his chin. He was twenty-five but he still walked with a swagger, and he used the aggressive style of some comedians with little of the humor. I was prejudiced, that I knew, but he irritated me. “Hey, boychicks,” he would say, “let’s play the mouse into the next hole,” which was a way of saying that we should move on. Lulu laughed at almost everything he said. He had picked up several kinds of talk and he whipped them like a rug beater. “Sugar-boy,” he would say if I started to argue with him, “don’t swallow your words. Discussion is for squares.” To a woman’s nervous giggle, he would answer, “Lady, oil that libido.” Maybe it will help to understand him if I mention that he was friendly when I was alone with him. The only half hour we ever spent that way, he was full of admiration I was a flier. “You guys,” he said, nodding seriously, “I mean, you really had it rough. I was overseas on an entertainment junket, so in my own small way I know what it is.”

  “Yes,” I said, “in your own small way.”

  “It makes me feel ashamed and like a nothing when I talk to guys like you. Why …”

  “I understand you know Marion Faye,” I interrupted.

  “That bastard. A couple of bimbos I used to have around did a little work for him, so the word’s out I pimped. That’s the kind of thing that happens just when you’re starting to make it big in the industry.”

  “You want to make it big, don’t you?” I asked.

  He looked at me cautiously as though he didn’t know if it was important for me to like him. “What else?” he asked. “Don’t you?” Then his mouth turned. “I never will, though. I’ll never make it, laddie.”

  “You never know. You might just make it.”

  “I got a scandal. There was this screwball I used to live with, and she was nuts about me. Only she was hopeless. I carried her as long as I could, and then I told her to hang up. You know what? She killed herself. Believe it or not, I wanted the best for that little chick. What a break. They say I drove her to it.”

  The moment Tony Tanner was not alone with me, his style would change. Before an audience, he was always on the attack. He and Lulu would have fancy exchanges. “You’re a bland boy,” she tried once on him.

  “Bland? Honey, I’m mellow.”

  Lulu laughed. “I bet you faint on the doorstep.”

  “Your sweet little doorstep?” Tony fingered his hair. “Let me in, and I’ll demolish the house.” He talked so loudly that people at the nearby tables turned around. Tony winked at them and their eyes went back to their plates. “You darlings,” he said to them.

  “Oh, God,” Teddy Pope groaned. These days it was his habit to sit morosely.

  “What’s the matter,” said Tony, “you bleeding?”

  “I wish you were a Bimmler already,” Pope told him. “It would make things more relaxing.”

  “I have news for you,” Tony said, “you know how much fan mail I got last week?”

  Teddy yawned and turned away. “It’s such a pity you’re afraid of me,” he said in my ear. His manner went through several mutations. On the first evening he teased me. “You’re still a shy aviator, I see,” he said. Then he yawned again. “Forgive me. I forget you’re in love.”

  Things improved a little. After a few nights he was even friendly. “When you’re over thirty, as I am,” he said once, “you’ll understand that you can’t have romance unless it’s against the conventions.”

  In the meantime, somehow or other, Tony and Lulu were talking about Messalina. “Messalina had nothing on you, mouse,” Tony was saying.

  “I like you, Tony,” said Lulu. “You’re so crude.”

  “I’m tattooed. Try me.”

  That was about the way it went. To help my mood I discovered after several days that Desert D’Or gossip was putting Tony in Lulu’s bed, and Teddy in mine. “Now that we’re lovers,” Teddy said with a grin one night, “let me warn you that I have a bad character.” He made a play of telling me the story of his life. “My mother’s a very sad person,” Teddy said. “Father died when I was a kid, and then she was always introducing me to a new uncle. I guess I panicked. Today, what I would like is for something to happen where I could be true to myself. A moment of dignity.”

  “You don’t mean it,” I said to him.

  Teddy looked at me. “Sergius, you don’t like me,” he said.

  “I don’t feel anything one way or the other.”

  “Yes, you do. I make you uncomfortable. I make a lot of people uncomfortable, but that’s no reason for them to feel superior.”

  “You’re right,” I said to him. “I’m sorry.”

  “Are you really sorry?”

  “Yes,” I said. “Everybody has the right to love the way they can.” I meant it, I suppose I couldn’t have meant anything more, but it must have sounded superior. Teddy exhaled smoke in my face, and said, “I hate to camp. But for some reason you bring it out in me.”

  “All right, kids, break it up,” Tony Tanner yelled. “Lulu can’t even hear me whisper in her ear.”

  “Let’s go outside and have a little talk,” I said to Tony.

  “Talk before an audience,” he answered. “It stimulates me.”

  “You’re very stimulating. With a crowd around you,” I told him across the table. He was about twenty pounds heavier than me, and he was conceivably in good shape, and I was not, but I had no worries about what was going to happen. All the pleasure of boxing was in my fingers. Like nearly everything else, good boxing is what is done with the rhythm and even more what is done just off the rhythm. I was so nicely ready that I was hoping Tony was good—I wanted it to go on for a while. “Tell you what, man,” I said, “you going outside or you going to sit here and let me give the talk?”

  But Lulu put an end to that. “You stop it, Sergius,” she snapped at me. “You’re brutal. You’re practically a professional prizefighter.”

  “Well,” said Tony, relaxing, “you didn’t mention that detail, did you?”

  I didn’t know where I was and who seemed worse to me—Tony, Lulu, or myself. I couldn’t even think of anything to say. But I have to give credit to Tony—he knew what to say.

  “Why not go outside?” Tony said. “Only when you take care of me, you better take good care, because if you don’t kill me, I’ve got a couple of friends who will be looking around for you.”

  “Oh, let’s go,” I said, starting to get out of my chair.

  And Lulu stopped us again. That was a night. I can’t know about the others, but I sat around drinking for hours and all the adrenalin I didn’t use was burning in me. “Look, like let’s forget it, man,” said Tony at the end of the evening, and I felt so stupid and so worn out that to tell the whole truth, I even shook hands with him.

  For a week the four of us endured each other, and then it was time for Tony and Teddy to go back to the capital. Lulu was in a bad mood the night they left. I took her afterward to one of the clubs but she was restless. “I can’t stand Tony,” she said. “It’s the reaction setting in. I hate his vulgarity, don’t you, Sugar? He makes me vulgar too. That’s what’s so disgusting.”

  In the following nights we returned to The Hangover. The routine was picked up again. We played Ghost, and we heard the words of Martin Pelley telling us how perfect was Dorothea. There was a change in Lulu, however. Her rudeness to me had come back, and she was listless and mean in bed. A depression thick as a fog bank settled over her.
/>   To change Lulu’s mood, Dorothea hired a projectionist one night, and we were shown two of Lulu’s movies. As films I thought they were bad, and Lulu’s acting was bewildering. There were a few scenes where she did the character called for by the plot, there were others where she was herself, and there were many scenes where she showed faces new to me. Yet she did something in and around the character, and what she did was a triumph for her; she was more beautiful than she ever seemed before. A girl somewhere between a child and a woman danced through the film. She had a naïve chastity which coaxed a man to find its opposite. Her husky little voice curled through a run of private humors. I sat beside her in the den while the film was projected, and felt she watched a vision. Little sounds came from her throat, her lips opened and closed, her body swayed slowly back and forth. She studied herself with an admiration, a pain, and a kind of awe.

  She took a drink afterward, she listened with a half-smile to the praise of Dorothea’s friends, she remembered to thank them, she even managed to stay for another half hour. When we got home, she was hysterical.

  “It’s awful, it’s awful,” she wept.

  “What’s awful?” Before my eyes I could still see that silver image of Lulu, more troubling to her, more real, than anybody she had ever known.

  “Oh, Sergius,” she cried, “for the rest of my life I have to go downhill.”

  As in all such moments, everything seemed to happen at once. The phone was ringing. It was Tony calling from the capital. Lulu sobbed into the mouthpiece, she hung up, she started to cry again. After half an hour of soothing her, she said in a broken voice, “Sergius, you have the right to know. I slept with Tony Tanner.”

 

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