“No, I’m just thinking out loud. The house design’ll have to take that into consideration. How many acres are there?”
“Six.” Altar looked out over the land. “How are the trees?”
“They look fine. Come on, let’s walk through it.”
“In there?” Agnes asked, her eyes taking in the fallen branches and the brambles and the thick overgrown weeds. “I’m wearing heels.”
“If you like, you can stay in the car,” Altar said.
“No. I want to see how an architect works,” she said, and she looked at Larry archly. For a moment Larry thought he’d imagined the look. He had not been looked at in quite that way for eight years. There was open invitation in the blue eyes, baldly stated, and all he had to do was pick up the dropped cue. He chose to let it lie where it was.
Together, they started into the woods. Autumn lost some of its splendor when viewed leaf by leaf. Like the pointillism of a Seurat painting, the tiny areas of pigment lost their force unless viewed at a distance as an overwhelming whole. Piece by piece, autumn built her jigsaw puzzle around them. The woods were curiously still. There were no bird sounds, no animal sounds. There was only the rattling crush of leaves underfoot, and a sense of time unchanging, unmoving so that Larry felt almost suspended, disoriented as he walked with a man he didn’t yet know and a blonde who wanted to know him better.
He could not put her invitation out of his mind. Nor could he dismiss her physical presence. She was there by his side, her hand touching his arm whenever they navigated a difficult stretch of ground. He felt, oddly, as if he were being unfair to Altar, and he did not like the feeling. But he could not rid himself of the appealing idea that this girl had found him attractive, and he cursed his own ego for responding as it had.
In an attempt to get his mind back to the task of studying the land, he asked, “Have you got a survey, Altar?”
“Yes, in the car. Want me to get it?”
“It would help.”
“Okay,” Altar said, and he turned abruptly and started up toward the convertible.
Agnes sat on a large boulder, crossed her legs and examined her nylons for runs. Larry watched her. The stillness of the woods seemed intense.
She looked up suddenly and said, “Why don’t you call me?”
“What for?”
“Don’t you want to?”
“I don’t know,” he said honestly.
“Rhinelander 4-4598,” she said. “Think it over.”
“I already have.”
“Good,” she said, as if convinced he would call.
“I’m married, you know.”
“I know.”
“Well...”
“I’m not,” Agnes said flatly. “Rhinelander 4-4598.”
Altar came thrashing through the woods.
“Here are the surveys,” he said, handing the photostated copies to Larry. “Are you going to lay her?”
And Larry burst out laughing.
The day with Altar and Agnes had been something of a narcotic.
There was about Altar the glamour of the unattached, irresponsible stud living in Bohemian abandon. This week’s blonde was Agnes, and when she was gone there would be another blonde, or a redhead, or a brunette. Altar owed allegiance to no woman; the idea was sinfully stimulating. And on the heels of such a heady concept had come the girl’s invitation, awakening in Larry a male ego which he thought had died in his teens.
That he responded, that he felt flattered at first, and then puzzled, and then terribly masculine, had disturbed him. He did not mention the incident to Eve, and his conscious concealment of something on his mind produced a feeling of guilt out of all proportion to what had actually happened.
By 5:30 the next afternoon, the feeling of guilt — inert to begin with — was totally immobilized by the dissipating power of two martinis.
“You are pretty,” he said to Eve. He recognized a certain fuzziness about his speech, and he wondered why a drink so subtly beautiful should possess such hidden muscularity.
He reached for the shaker, and Eve sitting opposite him in a straight black skirt and a pale-blue sweater, said, “Don’t get drunk.”
“Why not?”
“Because you get idiotic.”
“I get amorous.”
“You get incapable.”
“Well, you look pretty.” He nodded in agreement with himself.
“Those are the martinis talking, and I’m not flattered.”
“You should be flattered,” he said.
“Why?”
“Because,” he started, and he almost added, “a girl gave me her phone number,” but he clipped the word off so that it sounded like a simple childish declaration.
“I’m going to get dinner,” Eve said, rising.
“Let’s finish the drinks first.”
“No. You’re going to get romantic, and I’m hungry.” She paused. “Besides, the kids are still up.”
“We’ll invite them in.”
“Oh, Larry, for God’s sake.”
“What’s the matter?”
“There’s a time and a place,” Eve said. “I hate to see you silly.”
“What’s so silly about drinking a few martinis?”
“Nothing.”
“Are you sore or something?”
“No.”
“Then what?”
“Nothing. We need bread. Will you go up to the store?”
“The stores are closed. This is Sunday.”
“The delicatessen is open. You can get bread there.”
“Man does not live by bread alone,” he said, grinning.
“Listen, don’t...” Eve paused. “Larry, there’s always later. Will you go for the bread?”
“Sure. Will you be waiting for me when I come back?”
“I’m not going anywhere.”
“That’s not what I meant.”
“I know what you meant.”
“Well?”
Eve smiled. The smile to Larry was a thing of a mystery and promise. “I told you,” she said. “I’m not going anywhere.”
“That means no.”
“Does it?” she said, and still she smiled.
“Do you want me to go to the delicatessen?”
“Yes.”
“Okay.” He rose and started unsteadily for the front door.
“Be careful driving.”
“I’m always careful driving. I’m too talented to die in an automobile accident.”
“A loaf of white bread.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“You’re drunk already, aren’t you?”
“No, ma’am.”
“If you had any idea how absurd you look with that silly grin on your mouth...”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Don’t get killed.” She studied him concernedly. “Maybe I ought to go for the bread.”
“I’ll go for the bread,” he said emphatically, and walked out of the house.
There was a cruel bite on the air, but he was just drunk enough to appreciate it. He liked this idea of sunny days and cool evenings — that was good weather provided by a most provident providence — what did we poor humans do to deserve it? He walked to the car, a ’52 Dodge, part of the prize money, he thought, did I once win a prize, did I really win a prize, where’s that money now, where’s the promise of the shining young star, why am I designing harems for the crazy-bastard writers, what’s the matter with you, Cole, what the hell is the matter with you?
He twisted the key in the ignition and started the car, looking at his house, the brick and shingle, the ridiculously outsized gable, the goddam shabby architectural pretense of lovely Pinecrest Manor, the affront, the insult, the padded cell of an eagle. I live there, he thought. Dammit, I live there!
“Gracious Living,” she had called it. Not the house, never such a sin for an architect’s wife, certainly not Eve, whose eye was true, who recognized the falseness of Pinecrest Manor, who could dissect the development with the cold logic of an Aesthetics professor. But the drinks. Eve’s idea, and Eve’s title. The first time he’d come out of the small third bedroom which served as his office to find hot hors d’oeuvres and a private cocktail hour. Had they ever been that naïve? Had “Gracious Living” been capitalized in quotes even then, or had they really discovered the before-dinner drink and then later given the title sarcastic overtones in defense of their earlier naïvete?