The Girl With the Glass Heart: A Novel (11 page)

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Authors: Daniel Stern

Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Coming of Age

BOOK: The Girl With the Glass Heart: A Novel
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Only at night did she sometimes awaken and, smoking a cigarette while Max slept soundly, wonder at the emptiness that seemed to wait for her until Elly would return, wonder if they ever did return, once having left, and sensing the beginning of tears in the corners of each eye, impatiently wipe them away. Looking through the door of the bedroom which stood ajar and seeing the large expanse of the living room, a small stretch of the glass wall peeping through the partially drawn draperies, she thought, Who needs such a big house for the two of us? “Max,” she said aloud, “what’s going to be with us?”

Her husband stirred in his sleep and grunted something, then lay still and silent. She didn’t want to cry. Was she going through change of life? Was she going to be one of “those” women? She’d heard of women going crazy at this time in their life. It wasn’t fair to her that Elly should leave.

What’s going to be with me? she thought, forgetting to crush her cigarette in the ash tray and letting the room fill with smoke as the tobacco became a long thin ash which was finally cold and crumbled at the touch of her breath when she reached over to shut off the lamp.

The day before she was to leave for Vernon, Vermont, Elly said good-by joyfully to all her friends in town, feeling love for those girls and boys she’d fought with and hated, and for Jerry Wilson a great pity as the voyager feels for the land-held. She was like a girl whose parents had been seafarers and who had died far inland, leaving her to make her way toward some dimly remembered sea. This was to be her first big step toward the coast beyond which was an enormous world of possibility.

That night after supper she walked about the house, running her hands over the cool glass, as if memorizing it by touch. She took snapshots of the house from many angles, even one from the bottom of the hill. Then, not from any desire, but because she knew they would be hurt if she didn’t, she asked her mother and father to pose for a picture in front of the house. They had furnished her with enough accouterments to last a lifetime, from an extensive wardrobe to a camera and flash-bulb outfit. In addition to this a lavish allowance was promised.

“What else should I do with my money?” Max said, when Elly had kissed him after being told how much she was to have each month.

She was feeling so benign toward the world in general that she took from her wallet an envelope, on which was written: Mrs. John Marron Lang. Inside reposed, as it had since she had written it five months before, the letter which began, “Dear Mrs. Lang: Your husband and I—” If she set a match to it now, she knew she would never write another one. It had served, during periods of deep depression in the months since Lang had left, as a potential action against, rather than Lang himself, the great world which had left her here, stranded far inland, while the world in which Lang moved, made love to his wife, built his houses, went on without her. It made her feel, in some odd way, a little less helpless; it was her secret weapon.

But, in her present elation, she could not imagine ever being so depressed again that she would want to use it, with trembling hand paste a stamp on it and drop it on its way to New York. She was no longer excluded from that world (although she had been expressly forbidden to go to New York while at school; her mother had promised to write the dean about it) and there was no need to move against it.

Something, however, made her blow out the match (tearing it up would not have been as final; it had to be by fire) without touching it to the letter. Perhaps the memory of past defeats, promises broken, hopes failing, the eternal treachery of the most loved, held her hand. Well, she would keep it but never use it. The possession of it stimulated her in an odd way. She tucked it in her bag and shut it. She was aroused, she could feel it in the insides of her thighs and her stomach. Probably the letter. After all it
had
been in this very room. She sat down on the edge of the bed and almost leaned back. But she jumped up, thinking. Not now. This is going to be a new life. None of that!

She had been wrong before. Happiness was not the remembrance of excitement. True happiness lay in the anticipation of it.

Whatever her dreams of life at Vernon had been, they had not encompassed the one factor which, it seemed to Elly on arrival, was central to it: multiplicity. There was so much. So many worlds within the confines of the small school that she was at first bewildered and then challenged by it.

“I haven’t felt so goddamned stimulated in years,” she told her cottage mate, Lois Harper. She rolled the
goddamned
slowly in her mouth, enjoying it. “What do you do first?”

“What do you mean?” asked Lois, a small girl with a little round face and a high piping voice.

“Oh, you know. Dramatics, modern dance, even fencing and—” she leaned forward dramatically—“love-making.”

“Oh, they don’t, Elly.”

“Yes, they do, yes, they do.”

“Oh, stop it for God’s sake!”

“All right! We’re going to be good friends, Lois.”

“I hope so, Elly.”

And it had developed so. They
were
good friends, but on Elly’s terms. Lois, she soon found, could be imposed on to an amazing degree, and Elly hesitated not at all. Now, two months after her arrival at Vernon, she thought of herself as a dancer. She dried her hot wet skin and changed into her skirt and peasant blouse, hanging her leotard up to dry. She was sitting on the cold radiator, gazing at the dangling garment, when Lois arrived.

“Hi, Elly. How’s the dance coming?”

“Beautiful. It’s going to be terrific. I wish I could have a real orchestra, though. The record is lousy.”

“Elly, guess what? Roy was talking to Miss Matthews—she comes to chamber music at his home sometimes—and she said you’re her best student and that you’re going to be the best at the concert. She said they don’t usually allow freshmen to dance in public. Isn’t that marvelous?”

“She really said that? Sometimes I’m amazed at how I took to it right away. Let’s get some lunch. Have you got any classes this afternoon? Neither have I. Let’s have lunch in town.”

Vernon College was a small, exclusive girls’ school of twelve hundred students about four miles outside of Vernon, Vermont. A bus ran by the Administration Building every half hour.

The bus dropped Elly and Lois off in the center of the small main street a few steps away from The Waffle, the school hangout.

“It’s really fantastic,” Elly was saying. “I used to hate lessons of any kind, because I couldn’t play the piano no matter what I did and you know how I love music. But I had this teacher, an older man, who tried to make love to me. Actually during a lesson he’d reach over and grab me—
here
.”

“No!” Lois squealed. “Did you tell your mother or father?”

“Oh, no,” Elly pronounced solemnly as she bit into a cheese sandwich, “I wouldn’t want to do that to an old man. It would have destroyed him.
Ruined
him.”

Lois nodded equally solemnly. Then she rustled around in her pocketbook and came up with two letters in her hand. “These came after you left the cottage this morning.”

One was from Elly’s father and one from her mother. She hesitated a moment, then opened Max’s letter first and read:

D
EAREST
E
LLY
:

Just a line to let you know all continues well here and hope the same for you.

I’m sending this so that it reaches you before Mother’s letter does. She has been pretty ill, although nothing so bad that you should worry about it. They are headaches, mostly, along with the flushes that women get at your mother’s time of life. It is a difficult time for her and I hope you’ll be considerate enough not to let yourself be upset if her letters are difficult sometimes and not to show it when you write to her if you are disturbed.

She feels, naturally, since you are gone, that she has very little purpose in life. We have a couple now, to take care of the house. Their names are Mimi and Justin.

Anyway, I am writing this mostly to tell you that I’m afraid Mother won’t be able to come to Vermont to see you dance at the concert. She’s really not well enough and the doctor agrees.

Wild horses couldn’t keep yours truly away, though, and you can count on me.

All my love,

Y
OUR
L
OVING
D
ADDY

“What’s up?” Lois asked, seeing Elly’s frown as she folded the letter and tucked it in a pocket. “Not bad news, is it?”

“No,” Elly replied. “Good news.” She opened the second letter and read:

D
EAR
E
LLY
:

How are you? Your mother doesn’t wish to worry you but she has been deathly ill. The headaches have been at their worst. We miss you terribly, especially me, who needs you so. I won’t be able to come as
five
doctors have all agreed I shouldn’t make the trip now. But I don’t want you to worry. I’ll be all right. Especially after I see you at Christmas. Take care of yourself and don’t practice too hard for your concert. It’s too bad you never cared for piano playing because you can see now that I was right about your being talented. It’s too bad you have to use your body in what you do—in dancing—music is so much more pure, somehow. Your father is fine and will see you in a while.

Love,

M
OTHER

P.S.
Daddy is on the concert committee now and gets to know all the musical celebrities who come to town. It’s so exciting. I’ll bet you’d love it here now. By-by.

Why can’t I feel anything? she thought, digging her nails into her palms. It’s obvious the woman is suffering. I should feel something. But it’s all so far away from me. I don’t live there in mind or body any more. She remembered the poem they’d read in class the other day. Yeats, it had been: “I have drunk ale in the country of the young and I weep for I know all things.”
I live in the country of the young.
That’s what Vernon is, certainly. That’s why I couldn’t go to school at Crofts. You can’t mix the two of them, your family and this. All right, she thought, if I can’t feel her trouble, I can’t. I can feel lots of other things, God knows. She was so absorbed that she failed to notice that Danny and Roy had joined them.

“Hey,” Danny called, “snap out of it. Your cold tuna fish is getting cold.”

Danny was Lois’ boy friend, a tall, angular easygoing boy who towered above Lois when they walked together and who treated her solicitously, as if she were a fragile thing that might shatter if he weren’t careful with her. He and his friend Roy, and sometimes others with them, came up from Dartmouth almost every week end. Elly had sort of automatically paired off with Roy, but she was attracted by the intense care which Danny lavished on Lois. It reminded her of John Lang’s gentleness when speaking to her that other time.

“No pants today?” Roy asked, smiling.

“Are you referring to what I’m wearing, or the way I breathe?” Elly raised a sardonic eyebrow.

“You know,” Danny said, “I think you succeeded with Roy. When you wore pants every week end, not blue jeans or dungarees, like everybody else, but men’s trousers, neatly creased down the middle, Roy thought sure you were a Lesbian.”

“Maybe I am,” Elly replied.

Roy’s smile was a little glassy. He had discarded his suspicions but had not been as completely convinced as he would like to be. She had been pretty cool to his advances; this was suspect.

On arriving at Vernon and finding so many girls surrounding her, Elly had become disturbed and gloomy. She would be lost, she felt, in this sea of girls. She had been reading
The Well of Loneliness
. Shortly afterward she began to comb her long, dark-blond hair back, behind her ears, starkly accentuating the perfect oval of her face. This made her normally wide eyes seem enormous in their steady gaze. Combined with the wearing of trousers on week ends, when even the trouser-wearing outdoor girls doffed jeans for dresses, it gave rise to whispers and giggles in the corridors.

One evening, as Elly returned to her cottage from town, a small dark girl named Rema, whom she knew, fell into step beside her and with very little preparation proposed that she and Elly sign out for the night and take a hotel room in town. Rema was explaining how no one would suspect them in town, when Elly burst into terrified flight. The hair came back around her ears and cheeks and the skirts and blouses were worn again. She did wonder that night what it would have been like, to go with Rema, but did not linger on this for long. In the event of her now benign environment becoming suddenly hostile (a hangover from home, when no possible weapon for the war could be discarded), she noted Rema’s name on a slip of paper which she carried in her wallet next to the letter to Mrs. Lang. You never know, she thought, you never know.

“No,” Danny said, “you’re no Lesbian.”

“I should hope not.” Lois laughed. “What would that make me? Hey, Elly, the boys want to go fishing next week end. How about it?”

“Yeah, before it gets too cold,” Roy said. “I’ve got all the tackle.”

“Well, I’ve never fished before, but I love the idea,” Elly said.

“Fine. We’ll teach you.”

“I’ve fished,” said Lois, “but Dad always put the worms on for me.”

“Elly do that for you,” Elly said in a deep booming voice.

“I don’t know if I should let you go home with her,” Danny told Lois.

“I’ll scream if I need help.”

“Okay, kids. So next week end then. We’ll pick you up at the cottage. Tell ’em you’re going to visit Lois’ aunt in Hanover. By the way, Allan and Vicki, Roy’s cousin, are coming too.”

“Fine.”

Lois and Elly returned home to study.

Elly raised her head from her book. “Have you and Danny made love?”

“I don’t know as it’s any of your business.”

“Oh, you haven’t, eh?”

“How do you know?”

“Well, if you had you’d tell me.”

“That’s ridiculous. As a matter of fact we haven’t.”

“I didn’t think you had.”

“Well, I agree with Schopenhauer that sex is destructive to women. Unless, of course, you’re in love.”

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