"Linda," he said, "you got to get that dress off."
"Mf."
"You can't sleep in it. It cost a hundred dollars."
"Nine'nine-fif'y."
"Now come on, honey."
"Fm."
He rolled his eyes in exasperation and then undressed her, carefully hanging up the basic black cocktail frock, and standing the sixty-dollar pumps in a corner. He could not manage the clasp of the pearls (simulated), so he put her to bed still wearing them. Lying on the pale blue sheets, nude except for the necklace, she looked like a Nordic odalisque.
"Did you muss my dolls?" she mumbled.
"No. They're all around you."
"Tha's right. Never sleep without 'em." She reached out and petted them lovingly. "Happy days. Long nights."
"Women!" Mayo snorted. He extinguished the lamp and tramped out, slamming the door behind him.
Next morning Mayo was again awakened by the clatter of dispossessed ducks. The red balloon was sailing on the surface of the pond, bright in the warm June sunshine. Mayo wished it was a model boat instead of the kind of girl who got drunk in bars. He stalked out and jumped into the water as far from Linda as possible. He was sluicing his chest when something seized his ankle and nipped him. He let out a yell and was confronted by Linda's beaming face bursting out of the water before him.
"Good morning," she laughed.
"Very funny," he muttered.
"You look mad this morning."
He grunted.
"And I don't blame you. I did an awful thing last night. I didn't give you any dinner, and I want to apologize."
"I wasn't thinking about dinner," he said with baleful dignity.
"No? Then what on earth are you mad about?"
"I can't stand women who get drunk."
"Who was drunk?"
"You."
"I was not," she said indignantly.
"No? Who had to be undressed and put to bed like a kid?"
"Who was too dumb to take off my pearls?" she countered. "They broke and I slept on pebbles all night. I'm covered with black and blue marks. Look. Here and here and—"
"Linda," he interrupted sternly, "I'm just a plain guy from New Haven. I got no use for spoiled girls who run up charge accounts and all the time decorate theirselves and hang around society-type saloons getting loaded."
"If you don't like my company, why do you stay?"
"I'm going," he said. He climbed out and began drying himself. "I'm starting south this morning."
"Enjoy your hike."
"I'm driving."
"What? A kiddie-car?"
"The Chevy."
"Jim, you're not serious?" She climbed out of the pond, looking alarmed. "You really don't know how to drive yet."
"No? Didn't I drive you home falling-down drunk last night?"
"You'll get into awful trouble."
"Nothing I can't get out of. Anyway, I can't hang around here forever. You're a party girl; you just want to play. I got serious things on my mind. I got to go south and find guys who know about TV."
"Jim, you've got me wrong. I'm not like that at all. Why, look at the way I fixed up my house. Could I have done that if I'd been going to parties all the time?"
"You done a nice job," he admitted.
"Please don't leave today. You're not ready yet."
"Aw, you just want me to hang around and teach you music."
"Who said that?"
"You did. Last night."
She frowned, pulled off her cap, then picked up her towel and began drying herself. At last she said, "Jim, I'll be honest with you. Sure, I want you to stay a while. I won't deny it. But I wouldn't want you around permanently. After all, what have we got in common?"
"You're so damn uptown," he growled.
"No, no, it's nothing like that. It's simply that you're a guy and I'm a girl, and we've got nothing to offer each other. We're different. We've got different tastes and interests. Fact?"
"Absolutely."
"But you're not ready to leave yet. So I tell you what; we'll spend the whole morning practicing driving, and then we'll have some fun. What would you like to do? Go window-shopping? Buy more clothes? Visit the Modern Museum? Have a picnic?"
His face brightened. "Gee, you know something? I was never to a picnic in my whole life. Once I was bartender at a clambake, but that's not the same thing; not like when you're a kid."
She was delighted. "Then we'll have a real kid-type picnic."
And she brought her dolls. She carried them in her arms while Mayo toted the picnic basket to the Alice in Wonderland monument. The statue perplexed Mayo, who had never heard of Lewis Carroll. While Linda seated her pets and unpacked the picnic, she gave Mayo a summary of the story and described how the bronze heads of Alice, the Mad Hatter, and the March Hare had been polished bright by the swarms of kids playing King of the Mountain.
"Funny, I never heard of that story," he said.
"I don't think you had much of a childhood, Jim."
"Why would you say a—" He stopped, cocked his head, and listened intently.
"What's the matter?" Linda asked.
"You hear that bluejay?"
"No."
"Listen. He's making a funny sound; like steel."
"Steel?"
"Yeah. Like … like swords in a duel."
"You're kidding."
"No. Honest."
"But birds sing; they don't make noises."
"Not always. Bluejays imitate noises a lot. Starlings, too. And parrots. Now why would he be imitating a sword fight? Where'd he hear it?"
"You're a real country boy, aren't you, Jim? Bees and bluejays and starlings and all that …"
"I guess so. I was going to ask; why would you say a thing like that, me not having any childhood?"
"Oh, things like not knowing Alice, and never going on a picnic, and always wanting a model yacht." Linda opened a dark bottle. "Like to try some wine?"
"You better go easy," he warned.
"Now stop it, Jim. I'm not a drunk."
"Did you or didn't you get smashed last night?"
She capitulated. "All right, I did; but only because it was my first drink in years."
He was pleased by her surrender. "Sure. Sure. That figures."
"So? Join me?"
"What the hell, why not?" He grinned. "Let's live a little. Say, this is one swingin' picnic, and I like the plates, too. Where'd you get them?"
"Abercrombie & Fitch," Linda said, deadpan. "Stainless Steel Service for Four, thirty-nine fifty. Skoal."
Mayo burst out laughing. "I sure goofed, didn't I, kicking up all that fuss? Here's looking at you."
"Here's looking right back."
They drank and continued eating in warm silence, smiling companionably at each other. Linda removed her madras silk shirt in order to tan in the blazing afternoon sun, and Mayo politely hung it up on a branch. Suddenly Linda asked, "Why didn't you have a childhood, Jim?"
"Gee, I don't know." He thought it over. "I guess because my mother died when I was a kid. And something else, too; I had to work a lot."
"Why?"
"My father was a schoolteacher. You know how they get paid."
"Oh, so that's why you're anti-egghead."
"I am?"
"Of course. No offense."
"Maybe I am," he conceded. "It sure was a letdown for my old man, me playing fullback in high school and him wanting like an Einstein in the house."
"Was football fun?"
"Not like playing games. Football's a business. Hey, remember when we were kids how we used to choose up sides? Ibbety, bibbety, zibbety, zab?"
"We used to say, Eenie, meenie, miney, mo."
"Remember: April Fool, go to school, tell your teacher you're a fool?"
"I love coffee, I love tea, I love the boys, and the boys love me."
"I bet they did at that," Mayo said solemnly.
"Not me."
"Why not?"