Dreams of Molly
by Jonathan Baumbach
I am here without wife or woman, your guide and reporter, a hostage to the habits of rerunning the dead past in the cause of waking from the dream.
When Molly left, everything burned. I was vulnerable to the touch of air.
PART ONE
(Dreams of Molly)
35th Night
It was not the same. It was all the same. I was in Italy sitting at my desk in a luxuriant Villa writing the story of my invented life. I was in bed in Brooklyn dreaming I was in Italy at the Villa Mondare, which was a made-up place in any event, writing the first sentence of a fictional memoir. My wife, who was no longer my wife, who had left me years ago for greener pastures, was in the bathroom dyeing her hair (back to its original dirty blond) so that I would remember with regret what she looked like when I let her get away. I kept asking her if she was done to which she would say, “Any minute now,” but hours passed without her emergence. After awhile, my impatience dissipated. I reinvested my concentration on the first sentence of my new book, a sentence so important in the scheme of things, it produced near-unbearable anxiety just to be in its presence, a sentence that, if it were doing its job, which was to segue between the distant past and the relatively near past, would probably need to resist conclusion indefinitely. I heard the toilet flush in a secretive manner as if evidence were being destroyed. “Is everything all right in there?” I asked. “I’ll be out before you know it,” she said.
I had always been impatient. Everyone who knew me knew I had a history of impatience. Anecdotes abounded, whispered exaggerations. As soon as I started a piece of writing — story, novel, memoir, poem, shopping list — I felt driven to complete the job. I wanted to be where I was going the moment I conceived of taking the trip. And yet more often than not the trip itself, the daily skirmishes with the page, had its own grudgingly acknowledged pleasures.
I returned to my chore. (Was she coming out of the bathroom anytime soon or not?) The sentence I was contending with stalled. Plagued by distraction, I wondered if all of the scholars at the Villa Mondare had a former wife (or mate) in the private bathroom adjoining their accommodations. There was something in the brochure, which I had glanced at in passing, about providing each scholar with everything he would need to complete his project. Was Molly, if that’s actually who it was in the bathroom — I had not seen her yet — intended as a kind of recovered muse? I decided to ask her when the time was right how she happened to be in my bathroom at the Villa Mondare.
“If you went away for thirty minutes,” she called through the closed door, “I’ll be out when you get back.”
“Why can’t I just stay here,” I said.
“You know why,” she said, “and don’t pretend you don’t. It’s virtually impossible to get anything done when you know someone impatient is standing at the door waiting for you.”
I retreated from the door and returned to my desk, working silently on my recalcitrant sentence, adding a word here and there while barely touching the keys of the selectric typewriter I had been issued. Then it struck me that Molly would know I was still there because she hadn’t heard the outside door slam closed.
So I tiptoed to the door, opened it carefully and closed it with enough noise to wake the building.
“Are you back already, Jack?” she called through the door. “That’s so like you. It’s not thirty minutes yet.”
So I left my room, joined my shadow self, on a time consuming walk, returning thirty-one minutes after Molly’s original request. The night had been quiet and uneventful except for the painter in residence painting from nature in the apparent dark. We exchanged grunts when I passed her.
“Time’s up,” I said to Molly.
“I’ll come out,” she said, “but you’ll be sorry. What I’m doing takes longer than anyone knows.”
“I’m willing to be sorry,” I said.
And still there was no sign of her.
“If you promise to look the other way,” she said, “I’ll come out.”
“I’m turning around,” I said, hoping to sneak a glimpse over my shoulder.
It was only after I turned all the way, that I heard the bathroom door open. “When can I look?” I asked.
“You can turn around when I tell you to,” she said. “Deal?”
I nodded my agreement, used the time standing with my back to her trying to remember what she looked like that fateful day fifteen years ago when she announced it was over between us… No image offered itself.
“What happens, Molly, if I turn around?” I asked, eager to see her even with the unattractive plastic bonnet over her hair.
I meant to keep my part of the bargain, but the extended silence intensified my curiosity. I sensed her shadow moving stealthily in the direction of the bed.
I turned my head warily, barely an inch, then turned back quickly, catching a glimpse of red dress as evanescent as a flash bulb explosion.
Perhaps I’d seen nothing, but my expectations, minimal in the best of seasons, glowed with promise.
36th Night
In the morning she was gone. I had actually written the line in nuanced anticipation an hour before she left. “Do you remember me?” she asked. She was sitting on a stool on the other side of the room, her face in shadow. I leaned forward, strained my neck to get a better view. She offered me a right profile, removed her plastic cap, shook out her hair.
“Of course,” I said. To be honest, I was not absolutely sure.
“Could you come a little closer.”
“If you know me, you’d know me anywhere,” she said. “Anyway, I’m feeling a little shy.”
The wall switch controlling the overhead light was behind me and to the left. I reached back over my shoulder, hoping to flip the switch before she was aware it was happening. I tried unsuccessfully to turn my head and keep her in sight at the same time.
“What are you doing?” she asked. “Why is your hand behind your head like that?”
The voice struck a chord or perhaps it was what she said. Though embarrassed at being found out, I didn’t dissemble. “I was looking for the light switch,” I said, returning my hand to my side.
“That’s so sneaky,” she said. “The terms of my residence in your quarters — read the small print in your contract — is to be in the shadows of the room during working hours. If you turn the ugly overhead on, I’ll have to leave. Is that what you have in mind?”
I had nothing in mind beyond determining whether she was the real Molly. The voice was passingly familiar, though it lacked authoritative context or perhaps I had willed the voice’s more or less familiarity. “What happens after working hours?” I asked.
The question seemed to trouble her and she offered me the back of her head in exchange. I repeated the question or the question repeated itself and I got the same answer, which was no answer at all.
“It was good of you to visit,” I said, which produced a muted sardonic laugh.
Eventually, I left the room to go to lunch (or was it dinner?). Eventually, I came back from dinner with two dinner rolls wrapped in a napkin for my temporarily disappeared guest. Eventually, I reread my opening sentence in progress, which ran two pages without conclusion. Which seemed to have lost a few words in my absence, a sentence with no memory of its past and with fading hope of a future. Eventually, I accepted the fact that she was gone from the shadows of my magisterial room. Eventually, I felt abandoned so I gave up my unresolved sentence to search the grounds.