A Fairly Good Time

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A Fairly Good Time Page 38

by Mavis Gallant


  Wishart permitted Bob to pump his hand up and down, as if to show that he recognized good manners when he saw them. Flor’s sullen “Hullo Wishart” had been worse than a snub. He decided that Bob was no problem where he was concerned: his shrewdness was not the variety likely to threaten Wishart, and he would take up Flor’s time, leaving Bonnie free to listen to Wishart’s chat. He did not desire Bonnie to himself as a lover might, but he did want to get on with his anecdotes without continual interruptions.

  Every day after that the four met on Bonnie’s beach and lunched in a restaurant Bonnie liked. If Wishart had disapproved of the beach, it was nothing to his opinion of the restaurant, which was full of Bonnie’s new friends. Wine—Algerian pink—came out of a barrel, there were paper flags stuck in the butter, the waiters were insolent and barefoot, the menu written on a slate and full of obscene puns. Everyone knew everyone, and Wishart could have murdered Bonnie. He was appalled at her thinking he could possibly like the place, but remembered that her attitude was the result of years of neuter camaraderie. It didn’t matter: on the tenth of July he was expected in Venice. It was not a pattern of life.

  It seemed to Wishart that Bonnie was becoming silly with age. She had developed a piercing laugh, and the affected drawl was becoming real. Her baiting of Bob Harris was too direct to be funny, and her antagonism was forming a bond between them—the last thing on earth she wanted. Bob had the habit of many Americans of constantly repeating the name of the person he was talking to. Bonnie retaliated by calling him Bob Harris in full, every time she spoke to him, and this, combined with her slightly artificial voice, made him ask, “Is that a southern accent you’ve got, Mrs. McCarthy?”

  “Well, it just might be, Bob Harris,” Bonnie cried, putting one on. But it was a movie accent; she did it badly, and it got on Wishart’s nerves. “Well, that’s a nice breeze that’s just come up,” she would say, trailing the vowels. “We’re certainly a nice little party, aren’t we? It’s nice being four.” Nice being four? Nice for Wishart, the adored, the sought-after, Europe’s troubadour? He closed his eyes and thought of Mrs. Sebastian, Venice, shuttered room, green canals. Then Florence burst out with something. Only Wishart guessed that these cheeky outbursts, fit for a child of twelve, were innocent attempts to converse. Because of the way her mother had dragged her around, because she had never been part of a fixed society, she didn’t know how people talked; she had none of the coins of light exchange. She said in an excited voice, “The Fox, the Ape, the Bumblebee, were all at odds, being three, and then the Goose came out the door, and stayed the odds by making four. We’re like that. Mama’s a lovely bumblebee and I’m fox-colored.” This left Wishart the vexing choice between being a goose and an ape, and he was the more distressed to hear Bob say placidly that it wasn’t the first time he had been called a big ape. All at once it seemed to him preferable to be an ape than a goose.

  “Have you got many friends in Paris, Bob Harris?” said Bonnie, as if she hadn’t seen Wishart’s face pucker and shrink.

  “Last year I had to send out one hundred and sixty-nine Christmas cards,” said Bob simply. “I don’t mean cards for the firm.”

  “The Bambino of the Eiffel Tower? Something real Parisian?” Even as Bonnie was bringing this out Wishart knew it was wrong. Bob looked down, with a smile. He seemed to feel sorry for Mrs. McCarthy, who didn’t know about the cards people sent now, nondenominational, either funny or artistic, depending on your friends.

  Alone with Wishart, Bonnie was the person he liked. When they laughed together on the beach it was like the old days when she had seemed so superior, enchanting, and bright. They lived out the fantasy essential to Wishart; he might have been back in London saying and thinking “Cannes.” They had worked out their code of intimate jokes for the season: they called Bonnie’s young friends les fleurs et couronnes, and they made fun of French jargon with its nervous emphasis on “moderne” and “dynamique.” When Bonnie called Wishart un homme du vingtième siècle, moderne et dynamique, they were convulsed. Flor and Bob, a little apart, regarded them soberly, as if they were a pair of chattering squirrels.

  “Wishart is one of Mama’s best friends,” said Flor, apologizing for this elderly foolishness. “I’ve never liked him. I think he thinks they’re like Oberon and Titania, you know, all malice and showing off. Wishart would love to have wings and power and have people do as he says. He’s always seemed wormy to me. Have you noticed that my mother pays for everything?”

  In point of fact, Bob paid for everything now. He expected to: it was as essential to his nature as it was to Wishart’s to giggle and sneer. To amuse Bonnie, he had sneered about Bob. “Wishart doesn’t like the way I look because Wishart would like to look like nothing at all. The hell with him,” he said placidly. He really was awfully pleased with himself: lying on her back on the sand, Flor shaded her eyes to see him properly. He was turned away. He seemed casual, indifferent, but she knew that he stayed on in Cannes because of her. His holiday was over, and his father, business and family-minded, was waiting for him in Paris. The discovery of Flor had disturbed him. Until now he had liked much younger girls with straight hair and mild, anxious eyes; girls who were photographed in the living room wearing printed silk and their mother’s pearls. His ideal was the image of some minor Germanic princess, whose nickname might be Mousie, who seems to wear the same costume, the same hair, and the same air of patient supplication until a husband can be found. This picture, into which he had tried to fit so many women, now proved accommodating: the hair became red, the features hardened, the hands were thin and brown. She stared at him with less hopeless distress. At last the bland young woman became Flor, and he did not remember having held in his mind’s eye any face but hers, just as he would never expect to look in the mirror one morning and see any face except his own.

  These two people seemed to Wishart common objects, washed together by a tide of mutual mindlessness and simple desire. To oblige Bonnie, he pretended to see in Flor a courted darling, and Bob one of a chain of victims. “Bob is just a deep, creative boy looking for a girl with a tragic sense of life,” he said to Bonnie, who laughed herself to tears, for, having tried to trap Bob into saying “stateside” and “drapes,” and having failed, she needed new confirmation of his absurdity. The conversation of the pair, devoid of humor, was repeated by anyone close enough to hear. “Do you know what they’re talking about now?” was a new opening for discussion, amazement, and, finally, helpless laughter.

  “They’re on birds today,” Wishart said, with a deliberately solemn face.

  “Birds?”

  “Birds.” They collapsed, heaving with laughter, as if in a fit. The fleurs et couronnes, out of sympathy, joined in.

  “Do you know what bothered me most when I first came over here?” Wishart had heard Flor say. “We were in England then, and I didn’t recognize a single tree or a single bird. They looked different, and the birds had different songs. A robin wasn’t a robin any more. It was terrible. It frightened me more than anything. And they were so drab. Everything was brown and gray. There aren’t any red-winged blackbirds, you know, nothing with a bright flash.”

  “Aren’t there?” The urban boy tried to sound surprised. Wishart sympathized. The only quality he shared with Bob was ignorance of nature.

  “Didn’t you know? That’s what’s missing here, in everything. There’s color enough, but you don’t know how I miss it, the bright flash.”

  He saw the sun flash off a speedboat and everywhere he looked he saw color and light. The cars moving along the Croisette were color enough.

  “Will you always live here now?” said Flor. “Will you never live at home again?”

  “It depends on my father. I came over to learn, and I’m practically running the whole Paris end. It’s something.”

  “Do you like business?”

  “Do you mean do I wish I was an actor or something?” He gave her a resentful look and the shadow of their first possible difference fe
ll over the exchange.

  “My father never did anything much,” she said. Her eyes were closed and she talked into the sun. The sun bleached her words. Any revelation was just talk. “Now they say he drinks quite a lot. But that’s none of my business. He married a really dull thing, they say. He and Mama are Catholics so they don’t believe in their own divorce. At least, Mama doesn’t. I suppose he thinks he shouldn’t be living with his second wife. If he still believes.”

  “How about you?”

  “I’d believe anything I thought would do me or Mama any good.”

  This seemed to him insufficient. He expected women to be religious. He gave any amount of money to nuns.

  These dialogues, which Wishart heard from a distance while seeming to concentrate on his tan, and which he found so dull and discouraging that the pair seemed mentally deficient, were attempts to furnish the past. Flor was perplexed by their separate pasts. She saw Bob rather as Bonnie did, but with a natural loyalty that was almost as strong as a family tie. She believed she was objective, detached; then she discovered he had come down to Cannes from Paris with a Swedish girl, the student from whom he had inherited the cap. Knowing that “student” in Europe is a generous term, covering a boundless field of age as well as activity, she experienced the hopeless jealousy a woman feels for someone she believes inferior to herself. It was impossible for Bonnie’s daughter to achieve this inferiority; she saw the man already lost. The girl and Bob had lived together, in his room, where Flor now went afternoons while Bonnie was having her rest. Flor’s imagination constructed a spiteful picture of a girl being cute and Swedish and larking about in his pajamas. Secretly flattered, he said no, she was rather sickly and quiet. Her name was Eve. She was traveling on a bus. Cards arrived bearing the sticky imprint of her lips: a disgusting practice. Trembling with feigned indifference, Flor grabbed the hat and threw it out the window. It landed on the balcony of the room below.

  Bob kept the cap, but he gave up his hotel and moved into Flor’s. The new room was better. It was quiet, dark, and contained no memories. It was in the basement, with a window high on the wall. The walls were white. There was sand everywhere, in the cracked red tiles of the floor, in the chinks of the decaying armchair, caked to the rope soles of their shoes. It seemed to Flor that here the grit of sand and salt came into their lives, and their existence as a couple began. When the shutters were opened, late in the afternoon, they let in the peppery scent of geraniums and the view of a raked gravel path. There must have been a four-season mimosa nearby; the wind sent minute yellow pompoms against the sill, and often a gust of sweetish perfume came in with the dying afternoon.

  Flor had not mentioned the change to Bonnie, but, inevitably, Bonnie met her enemy at the desk, amiable and arrogant, collecting his key. “Has that boy been here all along?” she cried in despair. She insisted on seeing his room. She didn’t know what she expected to find, but, as she told Wishart, she had a right to know. Bob invited her formally. She came with Flor one afternoon, both dressed in white, with skirts like lampshades, Bonnie on waves of “Femme.” He saw for the first time that the two were alike and perhaps inseparable; they had a private casual way of speaking and laughed at the same things. It was like seeing a college friend in his own background, set against his parents, his sisters, his mother’s taste in books. He offered Bonnie peanuts out of a tin, brandy in a toothbrush glass. He saw everything about her except that she was attractive, and here their difference of age was in the way. Bob and Florence avoided sitting on the lumpy bed, strewn with newspapers and photographs. That was Bonnie’s answer. They knew she knew: Bonnie left in triumph, with an air she soon had cause to change. Now that Bonnie knew, the lovers spent more time together. They no longer slipped away during Bonnie’s rest: they met when they chose and stayed away as long as they liked. If they kept a pretense of secrecy, it was because to Bob a façade of decency was needed. He had not completely lost sight of the beseeching princess into whose outline Flor had disappeared.

  When he and Flor were apart, he found reason to doubt. She had told him the birds of Europe were not like the birds at home, but what about human beings? She never mentioned them. The breath of life for him was contained in relations, in his friendships, in which he did not distinguish between the random and the intense. All his relationships were of the same quality. She had told him that this room was like a place she had imagined. The only difference was that her imagined room was spangled, bright, perfectly silent, and full of mirrors. Years after this, he could say to himself, Cannes, and evoke a season of his life, with all the sounds, smells, light and dark that the season had contained; but he never remembered accurately how it had started or what it had been like. Their intimacy came first, then love, and some unclouded moments. Like most lovers, he believed that the beginning was made up of these moments only, and he would remember Flor’s silent, mirrored room, and believe it was their room at Cannes, and that he had lived in it too.

  One afternoon at the beginning of July, they fell asleep in this room, the real room, and when Flor woke it was dark. She knew it had begun to rain by the quickening in the air. She got up quietly and opened the shutters. A car came into the hotel drive: a bar of light swept across the ceiling and walls. She thought that what she felt now came because of the passage of light: it was a concrete sensation of happiness, as if happiness could be felt, lifted, carried around. She had not experienced anything of the kind before. She was in a watery world of perceptions, where impulses, doubts, intentions, detached from their roots, rise to the surface and expand. The difference between Bob and herself was that he had no attachments to the past. This was what caused him to seem inferior in her mother’s view of life. He had told them freely that his father was self-educated and that his mother’s parents were illiterate. There were no family records more than a generation old. Florence had been taught to draw her support from continuity and the past. Now she saw that the chain of fathers and daughters and mothers and sons had been powerless as a charm; in trouble, mistrusting her own capacity to think or move or enjoy living, she was alone. She saw that being positive of even a few things, that she was American, or pretty, or Christian, or Bonnie’s girl, had not helped. Bob Harris didn’t know his mother’s maiden name, and his father’s father had come out of a Polish ghetto, but he was not specifically less American than Florence, nor less proud. He was if anything more assertive and sure. She closed the shutters and came toward him, quietly, so that he would not wake and misinterpret her drawing near. Lacking an emotional country, it might be possible to consider another person one’s home. She pressed her face against his unmoving arm, accepting everything imperfect, as one accepts a faulty but beloved country, or the language in which one’s thoughts are formed. It was the most dangerous of ideas, this “only you can save me,” but her need to think it was so overwhelming that she wondered if this was what men, in the past, had been trying to say when they had talked about love.

  •

  The rainstorm that afternoon was not enough. Everyone agreed more rain was needed. Rain was wanted to wash the sand, clean the sea, cool their tempers, rinse the hot roofs of the bathing cabins along the beach. When Wishart thought “Cannes” now it was not light, dark, and blueness, but sand, and cigarette butts, and smears of oil. At night the heat and noise of traffic kept him awake. He lay patient and motionless with opened owl eyes. He and Bonnie compared headaches at breakfast: Bonnie’s was like something swelling inside the brain, a cluster of balloons, while Wishart’s was external, a leather band.

  He could not understand what Bonnie was doing in this place; she had been so fastidious, rejecting a resort when it became too popular, seeming to him to have secret mysterious friends and places to go to. He still believed she would not be here, fighting through mobs of sweating strangers every time she wanted a slopped cup of coffee or a few inches of sand, if there had not been a reason—if she had not been expecting something real.

  After a time he realized that Bonn
ie was not waiting for anything to happen, and that the air of expectancy that day had been false. If she had expected anything then, she must have believed it would come through him. She talked now of the futility of travel; she abandoned the Venus image of Flor, and said that Flor was cold and shallow and had broken her heart. There was no explanation for it, except that Flor was not fulfilling Bonnie’s hopes and plans. Self-pity followed: she said that she, Bonnie, would spend the rest of her life like a bit of old paper on the beach, cast up, beaten by waves, and so forth. She didn’t care what rubbish she talked and she no longer tried to be gay. Once she said, “It’s no good, Wishart, she’s never been a woman. How can she feel what I feel? She’s never even had her periods. We’ve done everything, hormones, God knows what all. I took her to Zurich. She was so passive, she didn’t seem to know it was important. Sometimes I think she’s dumb. She has these men—I don’t know how far she goes. I think she’s innocent. Yes, I really do. I don’t want to think too much. It’s nauseating when you start to think of your own daughter that way. But she’s cold. I know she’s cold. That’s why we have no contact now. That’s why we have no contact any more. I’ve never stopped being a woman. Thank God for it. If I haven’t married again it hasn’t been because I haven’t men after me. Wishart! It’s tragic for me to see that girl. I’m fifty and I’m still a woman, and she’s twenty-four and a piece of ice.”

 

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