"Disappointing," observed Missy on the seventh day. "I felt certain there"d be a tall, cold man with a notebook and another with a camera and flashbulbs flashing. Poor girl was lonelier than we guessed."
c.o.c.ktail parties streamed wildly through the house. It was Missy"s idea. "So we can pick each other off in a forest of obstacles; moving targets!"
Mr. Gowry, gamely returning to the house, limping after his tumble of some weeks before, joked, laughed, and didn"t quite blow his ear off with one of the dueling pistols. Everyone roared but the party broke up early. Gowry vowed never to return.
Then there was a Miss k.u.mmer, who, staying overnight, borrowed Joshua"s electric razor and was almost but not quite electrocuted. She left the house rubbing her right underarm. Joshua promptly grew a beard.
Soon after, a Mr. Schlagel vanished. So did a Mr. Smith. The last seen of these unfortunates was at a Sat.u.r.day night soiree at the Enderbys" mansion.
"Hide-and-seek?" Friends slapped Joshua"s back jovially.
"How do you do it? Kill "em with toadstools, plant "em like mushrooms?"
"Grand joke, yes!" chortled Joshua. "No, no, ha, not toadstools, but one got locked in our stand-up fridge. Overnight Eskimo Pie. The other tripped on a croquet hoop. Defenestrated through a greenhouse window."
"Eskimo Pie, defenestrated!" hooted the party people. "Dear Joshua, you are a card!"
"I speak only the truth," Joshua protested.
"What won"t you think of next?"
"One wonders what did happen to old Schlagel and that rascal Smith."
"What did happen to Schlagel and Smith?" Missy inquired some days later.
"Let me explain. The Eskimo Pie was my dessert. But the croquet hoop? No! Did you spot it in the wrong place, hoping I"d pop by and lunge through the greenhouse panes?"
Missy turned to stone; he had touched a nerve.
"Well, now, it"s time for a wee talk," he said. "Cancel the parties. One more victim and sirens will announce the arrival of the law."
"Yes," Missy agreed. "Our target practice seems to wind up in ricochet. About that croquet hoop. You always take midnight greenhouse walks. Why was that d.a.m.n fool Schlagel stumbling about out there at two a.m.? Dumb ox. Is he still under the compost?"
"Until I stash him with he-who-is-frozen."
"Dear, dear. No more parties."
"Just you, me and-ah-the chandelier?"
"Ah, no. I"ve hid the stepladder so you can"t climb!"
"d.a.m.n," said Joshua.
That night by the fireplace, he poured a few gla.s.ses of their best port. While he was out of the room, answering the telephone, she dropped a little white powder in her own gla.s.s.
"Hate this," she murmured. "Terribly unoriginal. But there won"t be an inquest. He looked long dead before he died, they"ll say as they shut the lid." And she added a touch more lethal stuff to her port just as he wandered in to sit and pluck up his gla.s.s. He .eyed it and fixed his wife a grin. "Ah, no, no, you don"t!"
"Don"t what?" she said, all innocence.
The fire crackled warmly, gently on the hearth. The mantel clock ticked.
"You don"t mind, do you, my dear, if we exchange drinks?"
"Surely you don"t think I poisoned your drink while you were out?"
"Trite. Ba.n.a.l. But possible."
"Well, then, fussbudget, trade."
He looked surprised but traded gla.s.ses.
"Here"s not looking at you!" both said, and laughed.
They drank with mysterious smiles.
And then they sat with immense satisfaction in their easy chairs, the firelight glimmering on their ghost-pale faces, letting the port warm their almost spidery veins. He stuck his legs out and held one hand to the fire. "Ah." He sighed.
"Nothing, nothing quite like port!"
She leaned her small gray head back, dozing, gumming her red-sticky mouth, and glancing at him with half-secretive, lazy eyes. "Poor Lila," she murmured.
"Yes," he murmured. "Lila. Poor."
The fire popped and she at last added, "Poor Mr. Schlagel."
"Yes." He drowsed. "Poor Schlagel. Don"t forget Smith."
"And you, old man," she said finally, slowly, slyly. "How do you feel?"
"Sleepy."
"Very sleepy?"
"Un-huh." He studied her with bright eyes. "And, my dear, what about you?"
"Sleepy," she said behind closed eyes. Then they popped wide. "Why all these questions?"
"Indeed," he said, stirring alert. "Why?"
"Oh, well, because ..." She examined her little black shoe moving in a low rhythm a long way off below her knee. "I think, or perhaps imagine, I have just destroyed your digestive and nervous systems."
For the moment he was drowsily content and examined the warm fire and listened to the clock tick. "What you mean is that you have just poisoned me?" He dreamed the words. "You what!?" He jumped as all the air gusted from his body. The port gla.s.s shattered on the floor.
She leaned forward like a fortune-teller eagerly predicting futures.
"I cleverly poisoned my own drink and knew that you"d ask to trade off, so you felt safe. And we did!" Her laugh tinkled.
He fell back in his chair, clutching at his face to stop the wild swiveling of his eyes. Then suddenly he remembered something and let out an incredible explosion of laughter.
"Why," cried Missy, "why are you laughing?"
"Because," he gasped, tears streaming down his cheeks, his mouth grinning horribly, "I poisoned my drink! and hoped for an excuse to change with you!"
"Oh, dear," she cried, no longer smiling. "How stupid of us. Why didn"t I guess?"
"Because both of us are much too clever by far!" And he lay back, chortling.
"Oh, the mortification, the embarra.s.sment, I feel stark naked and hate myself!"
"No, no," he husked. "Think instead how much you still hate me."
"With all my withered heart and soul. You?"
"No deathbed forgiveness here, old lily-white iron-maiden wife 0 mine. Cheerio," he added faintly, far away.
"If you think I"ll say "Cheerio" back, you"re crazed," she whispered, her head rolling to one side, her eyes clamped, her mouth gone loose around the words. "But what the h.e.l.l. Cheer-"
At which her breath ceased and the fire burned to ashes as the clock ticked and ticked in the quiet room.
Friends found them strewn in their library chairs the next day, both looking more than usually pleased with their situation.
"A suicide pact," said all. "So great their love they could not bear to let the other vanish alone into eternity."
"I hope," said Mr. Gowry, on his crutches, "my wife will someday join me in similar drinks."
QUICKER THAN THE EYE.
It was at a magic show I saw the man who looked enough like me to be my twin.
My wife and I were seated at a Sat.u.r.day night performance, it was summer and warm, the audience melting in weather and conviviality. All around I saw married and engaged couples delighted and then alarmed by the comic opera of their lives which was being shown in immense symbol onstage.
A woman was sawed in half. How the husbands in the audience smiled.
A woman in a cabinet vanished. A bearded magician wept for her in despair. Then, at the tip-top of the balcony, she appeared, waving a white-powdered hand, infinitely beautiful, unattainable, far away.
How the wives grinned their cat grins!
"Look at them!" I said to my wife.
A woman floated in midair. .. a G.o.ddess born in all men"s minds by their own true love. Let not her dainty feet touch earth. Keep her on that invisible pedestal. Watch it! G.o.d, don"t tell me how it"s done, anyone! Ah, look at her float, and dream.
And what was that man who spun plates, globes, stars, torches, his elbows twirling hoops, his nose balancing a blue feather, sweating everything at once! What, I asked myself, but the commuter husband, lover, worker, the quick luncher, juggling hour, Benzedrine, Nembutal, bank balances, and budgets?
Obviously, none of us had come to escape the world outside, but rather to have it tossed back at us in more easily digested forms, brighter, cleaner, quicker, neater; a spectacle both heartening and melancholy.
Who in life has not seen a woman disappear?
There, on the black, plush stage, women, mysteries of talc and rose petal, vanished. Cream alabaster statues, sculptures of summer lily and fresh rain melted to dreams, and the dreams became empty mirrors even as the magician reached hungrily to seize them.
From cabinets and nests of boxes, from flung sea-nets, shattering like porcelain as the conjurer fired his gun, the women vanished.
Symbolic, I thought. Why do magicians point pistols at lovely a.s.sistants, unless through some secret pact with the male subconscious?
"What?" asked my wife.
"Eh?"
"You were muttering," said my wife.
"Sorry." I searched the program. "Oh! Next comes Miss Quick! The only female pickpocket in the world!"
"That can"t be true," said my wife quietly.
I looked to see if she was joking. In the dark, her dim mouth seemed to be smiling, but the quality of that smile was lost to me.
The orchestra hummed like a serene flight of bees.
The curtains parted.
There, with no great fanfare, no swirl of cape, no bow, only the most condescending tilt of her head, and the faintest elevation of her left eyebrow, stood Miss Quick.
I thought it was a dog act, when she snapped her fingers.
"Volunteers. All men!"
"Sit down." My wife pulled at me.
I had risen.
There was a stir. Like so many hounds, a silently baying pack rose and walked (or did they run?) to the snapping of Miss Quick"s colorless fingernails.
It was obvious instantly that Miss Quick was the same woman who had been vanishing all evening.
Budget show, I thought; everyone doubles in bra.s.s. I don"t like her.
"What?" asked my wife.
"Am I talking out loud again?"
But really, Miss Quick provoked me. For she looked as if she had gone backstage, shrugged on a rumpled tweed walking suit, one size too large, gravy-spotted and gra.s.s-stained, and then purposely rumpled her hair, painted her lipstick askew, and was on the point of exiting the stage door when someone cried, "You"re on!"
So here she was now, in her practical shoes, her nose shiny, her hands in motion but her face immobile, getting it over with.
Feet firmly and resolutely planted, she waited, her hands deep in her lumpy tweed pockets, her mouth cool, as the dumb volunteers dogged it to the stage.