Superior Women (23 page)

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Authors: Alice Adams

Tags: #Fiction, #Women College Students, #Women College Students - Fiction, #General

BOOK: Superior Women
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But the priest is saying, “Well now, Radcliffe, I’ll be bound. You don’t have the look of a B.U. girl. I’m a Tufts man myself, but of course that’s a long way back.”

“Oh,” is all Cathy can think of to say. On her face she feels the presence of a simpering smile.

And so he finishes it off, their nonconversation. “Well, I’ll see you in class,” he says, and he moves away from her, out of the store and out into the alien California sunlight. He has a jaunty, athletic walk, more like a tennis player than a priest (but a priest could play tennis; why not?).

Despite the white hair, close up that priest looked younger than she had thought, Cathy muses later on, when she is “at home.” He must be about her father’s age, late forties, but he is thinner, healthier-looking than her fat, bold, adored-feared father. Why couldn’t she at least have asked him how he likes it out here, which is not as dumb a question as it might sound. She could mention the quote from William James. Priests get lonely too, they like to talk. Cathy’s mother is always befriending some priest, having priests to dinner, in the small Ardmore house. Cathy is used to priests (or she should be), to seeing them outside as well as in church.

She next thinks, daringly: Maybe I should invite that priest to dinner? (But suppose he said no!) And what could I cook for two people on a hot plate? Maybe ask him for a drink? A lot of priests like to drink. But what would I buy? And everything costs so much, Scotch, Irish whiskey (her father drinks Irish, drinks much too much of it).

He probably wouldn’t come, no matter what I asked him to, Cathy then decides. What an insane idea.

She would like to telephone Megan, but is frightened by the probable cost of the call. She knows that what she needs, though, is a good long laugh. What with the strangeness of California, Stanford, everything, she is just a little out of control. Her thinking has got a little bizarre; she has never even imagined asking a priest to dinner before.

18

In New York, down in the Village, the quarters in which Megan lives are considerably smaller than those occupied by Cathy, in California. Megan has one room on the top floor of a brownstone on West 12th Street, just off Fifth Avenue—an impressive address, but she is in what once were the servants’ quarters, four small rooms around a large, central (and entirely wasted) space, with a grime-filled skylight in the middle. Megan has one of those four rooms, and she shares the bath with two anonymous and seemingly identical old men, whom she almost never sees, their hours being somehow opposite to hers. The fourth room is fortunately unoccupied.

In her narrow room there is a single bed, and a table which holds alternately her typewriter and a hot plate. She has a chair, one bookcase. Her window opens onto a fire escape where she sometimes sits and smokes, on those chokingly hot New York summer nights. From that perch she can peer into what must be a dance studio, on Fifth Avenue (she finds later that it is indeed a dance studio, Martha Graham’s). What she sees are portions of marvelously leaping, prancing bodies, long brown arms and legs, in black tank suits or tights.

For her room Megan pays fifteen dollars a week, from her salary of forty-five, also weekly, at the publishing house. She occasionally takes a few books from the mail room and sells them, but that does not bring in much cash, and besides, it seems so sordid, petty thievery—although she is assured that all the underlings in publishing do just that, that year.

Megan likes her room very much, and she was pleased to find it, in her favorite part of New York, even her favorite block. And it is handy to her job; she can walk over to Fourth Avenue by way of Union Square. When she can afford it she stops at the Fifth Avenue Schrafft’s for breakfast. And that is her general rule:
breakfast out, and lunch at a counter, somewhere. At night she heats something on her hot plate, a can of soup or stew.

She enjoys coming back to her room at night, alone; to her it seems compact rather than much too small. It reminds her a little of her room in Paris, in the Welcome Hotel; this too is her absolute, independent domain.

It is not, however, a room to which to invite her friends, and sometimes Megan decides that that is just as well; she does not need another Danny moving in with her, for example. But at other times she strongly wishes for more space.

As it is, only two people ever visit Megan, in her 12th Street room: Jackson Clay, and Biff Maloney, the editor whom Megan told Lavinia that she thought was “queer,” and who is by now a considerable friend. (The two men do not visit her together, naturally.)

Jackson very much objects to Megan’s room. He snorts unpleasantly, derisively, whenever she refers to it as her apartment (which is how she thinks of it). For a while Megan does not understand what he finds so objectionable; after all he does not have to live there—there has never been even the slightest question of their living together, not at that time. And for a few drinks, a few hours of love, which is how they use the room, it is perfectly adequate. But since Megan is truly, deeply fond of Jackson, she tries to understand what bothers him about it.

“Look,” she tells him. “It’s really okay for me. I don’t feel crowded. I love this neighborhood, and it’s so cheap.”

Evasively, he tells her, “I bet I could find you some place, more uptown?”

“But Jackson, I like it down here.”

“Oh, the Village’s okay. I been to some Village places I like just fine.”

“Well, I know this is small, but I don’t give parties here, I don’t even want to give parties, for heaven’s sake.”

“Oh, parties. I been to enough parties to last me for good. But baby, I think about you, like when I’m doing a date in Chicago, or D.C., and I think about you in this room, and that really brings me down.”

And at last Megan begins to understand: this small cheap room simply does not coincide with Jackson’s view of her. To Jackson she is a superior woman, who should therefore live in grand surroundings. And while Megan does not necessarily agree, she is touched by his concern. Jackson is one of the nicest men she has ever known, if not the nicest.

They are linked, she and Jackson Clay, in ways that are both mysterious and strong. And interesting, to Megan; she gives considerable thought to the mysteries of their connection—God knows it escapes all the usual definitions. Certainly none of the current concepts of “in love” quite apply, although in their ways Megan and Jackson do love each other. But they are not jealous or even curious about other people in each other’s lives, as people in love are supposed to be. Megan supposes that Jackson sees other women; well, he must—he is extremely handsome, sexy, attractive, and he spends so much time away, on tours. And she supposes that he assumes the same of her—although actually, for several years, the years of seeing Jackson most, Megan only makes love with him. But she sees no point in telling Jackson that; he might find it in some way alarming, or even embarrassing, her unsought fidelity.

And their needs to see each other are in perfect accord, seemingly; just when Megan has begun to wonder when she will see him again, when she feels that she must see him, suddenly there he is. From out of the blue he will call; he will tell her that he just got back into town, is she free? He’ll come by her place long about seven o’clock.

Generally, almost always, Megan works considerably past the eight hours that she is paid for; but on the days that she is expecting Jackson she will leave her office at about five thirty, very early for her. In a happy anticipatory daze she will walk home (not having to stop for a can of stew, or soup). Sometimes she will buy a small bunch of flowers, fall asters or daisies; she has learned that Jackson likes these touches (they improve her “apartment”). Back home, she will take a long bath, at last emerging all clean and smooth and perfumed, all dusted with powder. Black underthings, a black dress, some makeup—and she is ready, waiting for Jackson.

But he is always late; she has come to think that his “long
about” means
late,
and during that time of waiting for him her blood does race, her heart beats anxiously. Perhaps, after all, she is in love with Jackson?

Then she hears those well-known, unmistakable steps, bounding, heavy. He always runs up her stairs; a big tall man, he is out of breath at her door. Handsome Jackson, in his sharkskin suit and camel’s hair coat, his shining yellow-brown skin and wide dark eyes. Jackson, who kisses her with his whole mouth, her whole mouth, and all of their bodies. So eagerly, with love.

Jackson would like to help her out with money. He hints around at this, so that Megan has understood what he means before he is able to ask her, in a very low, strained voice: “They pay you okay, at that book house?”

“Oh, I guess so.”

“You ever need a loan, or anything extra, you come to me, you hear?”

“Oh sure, Jackson. Uh, thanks.”

But of course she cannot, would not ever ask Jackson for money. Even though she does need money, and he seems to have a lot, and they are friends. Megan is aware of the illogic of her view, but she is deeply prudish, in this way. And she knows that she is much more prudish than she would be if she were not so broke. If she were richer she could probably say something like, Jackson, I’m really in over my head at Lord & Taylor, at Bendel’s—could you let me have a hundred, two hundred, five? Whereas, as it is, she cannot ask for the twenty or thirty dollars that she is usually short of, by the end of the month.

When Jackson is in town, and playing on 52d Street, Megan would like to go and hear him every night, if she could; she still is crazy about his music, that hot wild blasting trombone—and crazy too about the way he sings, those sliding lilts. And his eyes, as he sings to her.

Going to one of those clubs presents a problem for her, though. In those days it is almost impossible for her, a young woman, to go alone. And it is hard for her to ask anyone to take her there, unless by some odd chance she has a date, someone she knew at Harvard, calling her up, and whom she knows has enough money for the fairly stiff cover charge. (Saying to someone, Look, please let me pay half was just not done, not then.)

“You don’t just know some guy, some guy like a brother, you could ask him to be your guest at the club?” sensitive Jackson asks her, as they discuss her coming to hear him, at the Onyx. “That way,” he says, “I tell the manager you my guests.”

Megan laughs. “But I don’t have any brothers.”

However, of course she thinks of Biff, at work.

One of the ways in which Megan sees Biff is at the counter of the corner Rexall’s, where they both often go for sandwiches at lunchtime. She has concluded that Biff has no money either, other than what is probably a salary not much larger than hers (but somewhat larger; he has been there for two years longer, and men are always paid more, no matter what they do,
of course
).

Broke or not, Biff’s manner is very grand indeed. He is a small man, barely taller than Megan is, with extremely curly, extremely red hair. Wide-spaced blue eyes, and freckles; he is the most freckled person Megan has ever seen. An Irish kid, obviously, from some never mentioned suburb of Boston. His accent and his whole demeanor, however, are the purest, perhaps even exaggerated Harvard, or possibly Back Bay. Old days in Cambridge are one of the things that he and Megan talk about, as Biff’s huge eyes tear with nostalgia, remembering the best days of his life.

And so it seems quite natural for Megan to ask Biff, over grilled cheese and coffee, “Biff, did you ever go to any of those jazz places in Boston? The Savoy?”

“Oh, did I not!” The wide eyes widen expressively. “Although I must say, those places sometimes made me rather nervous. I was much more
comfortable,
really, at the Napoleon Club.”

“I heard of it, but I never went there.”

“Well, you wouldn’t have, it’s of another generation. But there used to be a wonderful singer. Johnny something. He was terribly Dwight Fiske. You know.”

“Oh. Well, I was sort of wondering. Do you know a trombone player named Jackson Clay?”

“Not personally, but I’ve heard of him, if that’s what you mean. He’s rather sensational, I thought.”

“Well, I do sort of know him. He’s a friend of a friend.” (Is this a necessary lie? Megan feels bad about it, but is not sure how else to explain.) “Anyway, when he’s in town I can get in free, free drinks and all, with anyone I want. So I wondered if you—”

“But my dear girl, I’d be enchanted.”

And that is how it comes about that Megan and Biff from time to time go together to the Downbeat, or the Onyx Club; they are admitted free, and guided to a table near the bandstand, near Jackson—who sings and smiles to Megan, and sometimes nods in a friendly way to Biff, Megan’s “brother.”

Biff must of course perceive what is going on between Jackson and Megan, although there would seem to be a tacit agreement among the three of them that nothing be made explicit. Never does Megan abandon Biff at the end of the evening in order to meet Jackson after the show (although Biff may have expected, at first, that that would happen, and would probably not mind). But for one thing, in a practical way, that would keep them there much too late. But more important, it strikes Megan as a very rude thing to do to a friend.

Also, as Megan gradually comes to understand, as she knows Biff better, he does not at all want to hear about her romantic or sexual life—any more than he would recount his own to her (assuming that he has such a life, which Megan sometimes wonders). Instead, in her room, to which he brings an occasional bottle of wine, or in his Horatio Street apartment, where he sometimes cooks supper for her, they discuss Proust, or Elizabeth Bowen,
or E. M. Forster, all old favorites of Biff’s, and more recently of Megan’s. And of course there is always the endless bond of Henry James, their household god, as it were.

In terms of food, as well as of literature, Biff is innovative in Megan’s life. His specialty is small rich stews of innards—tripe or kidneys, liver—which, under Danny’s tutelage in Paris, Megan has tasted but not quite learned to like (at home in Palo Alto, Florence would never have cooked such things, of course not). But Biff’s stews all taste quite wonderful to Megan, no doubt in part because they provide such a contrast to all her other meals, the bland overcooked canned meats which she heats up on her hot plate, or even the occasional restaurant steaks, with Jackson, late at night, in some Village bar and grill.

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