“Towels, fresh towels.”
“Sydney.”
“She did. Ondine forgot to—”
“What were the towels wrapped around?”
“Why you keep thinking that? Everything she drinks you see her drink. A little dinner wine, that’s all and hardly more than a glass of that. She never was a drinker. You the one. Why you always trying to make her into one?”
“I’ll speak to Jade.”
“What could Jade know that I don’t?”
“Nothing, but she’s as honest as they come.”
“Come on, now, Mr. Street. It’s the truth.”
Valerian held a pineapple quarter with his fork and began cutting small regular pieces from it.
“All right,” said Sydney, “I’ll tell you. She wanted Yardman to stop by the airport before he comes Thursday.”
“What for, pray?”
“A trunk. She’s expecting a trunk. It’s been shipped already, she said, and ought to be here by then.”
“What an idiot.”
“Sir?”
“Idiot. Idiot.”
“Mrs. Street, sir?”
“Mrs. Street, Mr. Street, you, Ondine. Everybody. This is the first time in thirty years I’ve been able to enjoy this house. Really live in it. Not for a month or a weekend but for a while, and everybody is conspiring to ruin it for me. Coming and going, going and coming. It’s beginning to feel like Thirtieth Street Station. Why can’t everybody settle down, relax, have a nice simple Christmas. Not a throng, just a nice simple Christmas dinner.”
“She gets a little bored, I guess. Got more time than she can use.”
“Insane. Jade’s here. They get on like schoolgirls, it seems to me. Am I wrong?”
“No, you’re right. They get along fine, like each other’s company, both of them.”
“They don’t like it enough to let it go at that. Apparently we are expecting more company, and since I am merely the owner and operator of this hotel, there is no reason to let me know about it.”
“Can I get you some toast?”
“And you. You have finally surprised me. What else have you been keeping from me?”
“Eat your pineapple.”
“I am eating it.”
“I can’t stand here all morning. You got corns—I got bunions.”
“If you won’t take my advice, bunions are the consequence.”
“I know my work. I’m a first-rate butler and I can’t be first-rate in slippers.”
“You know your work, but I know your feet. Thom McAn will be the death of you.”
“I never wore Thom McAns in my life. Never. In nineteen twenty-nine I didn’t wear them.”
“I distinctly recall at least four pairs of decent shoes I’ve given you.”
“I prefer my bunions to your corns.”
“Ballys don’t cause corns. If anything they prevent them. It’s the perspiration that causes them. When—”
“See? Gotcha. That’s exactly what I been tellin you. Philadelphia shoes don’t work in the tropics. Make your feet sweat. You need some nice huaraches. Make your feet feel good. Free em up, so they can breathe.”
“The day I spend in huaraches is the day I spend in a straitjacket.”
“You keep on hacking away at your toes with a razor and you’ll beg for a straitjacket.”
“Well, you won’t know about it because your Thom McAn bunions are going to put you in a rocker for the rest of your life.”
“Suit me fine.”
“And me. Maybe then I could hire somebody who wouldn’t keep things from me. Sneak Postum into a good pot of coffee, saccharin in the lime pie. And don’t think I don’t know about the phony salt.”
“Health is the most important thing at our age, Mr. Street.”
“Not at all. It’s the least important. I have no intention of staying alive just so I can wake up and skip down the stairs to a cup of Postum in the morning. Look in the cabinet and get me a drop of medicine for this stuff.”
“Cognac’s not medicine.” Sydney moved toward the sideboard and bent to open one of its doors.
“At seventy everything’s medicine. Tell Ondine to quit it. It’s not doing a thing for me.”
“Sure don’t help your disposition none.”
“Exactly. Now. Very quietly and very quickly, tell me who this company is.”
“No company, Mr. Street.”
“Don’t antagonize an old man reduced to Postum.”
“It’s your son. Michael’s not company.”
Valerian put his cup carefully onto the saucer. “She told you that? That Michael was coming?”
“No. Not exactly. But so Yardman would know what to look for she told me where the trunk was coming from and what color it was.”
“Then it’s coming from California.”
“It’s coming from California.”
“And it’s red.”
“And it’s red. Fire red.”
“With ‘Dick Gregory for President’ stickers pasted on the sides.”
“And a bull’s-eye painted on the lid.”
“And a lock that only closes if you kick it, but opens with a hairpin and the key is…” Valerian stopped and looked up at Sydney. Sydney looked at Valerian. They said it together. “…at the top of Kilimanjaro.”
“Some joke,” said Valerian.
“Pretty good for a seven-year-old.”
They were quiet for a while, Valerian chewing pineapple, Sydney leaning against the sideboard. Then Valerian said, “Why do you suppose he hangs on to it? A boy’s camp footlocker.”
“Keep his clothes in.”
“Foolish. All of it. The trunk, him and this visit. Besides, he won’t show.”
“She thinks so this time.”
“She’s not thinking. She’s dreaming, poor baby. Are you sure there was nothing between those towels?”
“Here comes the lady. Ask her yourself.”
A light clicking of heels on Mexican tile was getting louder.
“When the boy goes to the airport,” whispered Valerian, “tell him to pick up some Maalox on the way back.” “Well,” he said to his wife, “what have we here? Wonder Woman?”
“Please,” she said, “it’s too hot. Good morning, Sydney.”
“Morning, Mrs. Street.”
“Then what is that between your eyebrows?”
“Frownies.”
“Beg pardon?”
“Frownies.”
Sydney walked around the table, tilted the pot and poured coffee soundlessly into her cup.
“You have trouble frowning?” asked her husband.
“Yes.”
“And that helps?”
“Supposed to.” She held the cup in front of her lips and closed her eyes. The steam floated into her face while she inhaled.
“I am confused. Not senile, mind you. Just confused. Why would you want to frown?”
Margaret took another breath of coffee steam and opened her eyes very slowly. She looked at her husband with the complete dislike of a natural late-sleeper for a cheerful early-riser.
“I don’t want to frown. Frownies don’t make you frown. They erase the consequences of frowning.”
Valerian opened his mouth but said nothing for a moment. Then: “But why don’t you just stop frowning? Then you won’t need to paste your face with little pieces of tape.”
Margaret sipped more coffee and returned the cup to its saucer. Lifting the neckline of her dress away from her she blew gently into her bosom and looked at the pale wedges Sydney placed before her. Ondine had left the spiky skin on the underside deliberately—just to hurt and confuse her. “I thought we’d have…mangoes.” Sydney removed the fruit and hurried to the swinging doors. “What gets into everybody? The same thing every morning?”
“I wanted pineapple. If you don’t, tell Sydney at night what you’d like for breakfast the next morning. That way he can—”
“She knows I hate fresh pineapple. The threads get in my t
eeth. I like canned. Is that so terrible?”
“Yes. Terrible.”
“They tell us what to eat. Who’s working for who?”
“Whom. If you give Ondine menus for the whole week—that is exactly what she will prepare.”
“Really? You’ve been doing that for thirty years and you can’t even get her to fix you a cup of coffee. She makes you drink Postum.”
“That’s different.”
“Sure.”
Sydney returned with a bowl of crushed ice in which a mango stood. The peeling had been pulled back from the shiny fruit in perfect curls. The slits along the pulp were barely visible. Valerian yawned behind his fist, then said, “Sydney, can I or can I not order a cup of coffee and get it?”
“Yes, sir. ’Course you can.” He put down the mango and filled Valerian’s cup.
“See, Margaret. And there’s your mango. Four hundred and twenty-five calories.”
“What about your croissant?”
“One twenty-seven.”
“God.” Margaret closed her eyes, her blue-if-it’s-a-boy blue eyes and put down her fork.
“Have a grapefruit.”
“I don’t want grapefruit. I want mango.”
Valerian shrugged. “Slurp away. But you had three helpings of mousse last night.”
“Two, I had two. Jade had three.”
“Oh, well, only two…”
“Well, what do we have a cook for? Even I can slice grapefruit.”
“To wash the dishes.”
“Who needs dishes? According to you, all I need is a teaspoon.”
“Well, someone has to wash your teaspoon.”
“And your shovel.”
“Funny. Very funny.”
“It’s true.” Margaret held her breath and stuck her fork into the mango. She exhaled slowly as the section came away on the tines. She glanced at Valerian before putting the slice in her mouth. “I’ve never seen anyone eat as much as you and not gain an ounce—ever. I think she adds things to my food. Wheat germs or something. At night she sneaks in with one of those intravenous things and pumps me full of malts.”
“Nobody pumps you full of anything.”
“Or whipped cream maybe.”
Sydney had left them discussing calories and now he was back with a silver tray on which wafer-thin slices of ham tucked into toast baskets held a poached egg. He went to the sideboard and lifted them onto plates. He laid stems of parsley on the right rim and two tomato slices to the left of each plate. He whisked away the fruit bowls, careful not to spill the water from the ice, and then leaned forward with the hot dish. Margaret frowned at the dish and waved it away. Sydney returned to the sideboard, put the rejected dish down and picked up the other. Valerian accepted it enthusiastically and Sydney edged the salt and pepper mill an inch or two out of his reach.
“I suppose you are decorating the house with guests for Christmas. Push that salt over here, will you?”
“Why would you suppose that?” Margaret stretched out a hand, a beautifully manicured hand, and passed him the salt and pepper. Her little victory with the mango strengthened her enough to concentrate on what her husband was saying.
“Because I asked you not to. It follows therefore that you would defy me.”
“Have it your way. Let’s just spend the holidays all alone in the cellar.”
“We haven’t got a cellar, Margaret. You should take a look around this place. You might like it. Come to think of it, I don’t believe you’ve seen the kitchen yet, have you? We’ve got two, two kitchens. One is—”
“Valerian. Please shut up.”
“But this is exciting. We’ve been coming here for only thirty years and already you’ve discovered the dining room. That’s three whole rooms. One every decade. First you found the bedroom. That is I assume you did. It’s hard to tell when a wife sleeps separately from her mate. Then in nineteen sixty-five I think it was, you located the living room. Remember that? Those cocktail parties? Those were good times. Heights, I’d say. You not only knew the airport and the dock and the bedroom, but the living room as well.”
“Yes. I am having guests for Christmas.”
“Then the dining room. Speak of a find! Dinner for ten, twenty, thirty. Think what’s before you in one kitchen, let alone two. We could entertain hundreds, thousands.”
“Michael’s coming.”
“I wouldn’t put it off any longer if I were you. If we hurry by the time I’m eighty we can invite Philadelphia.”
“And a friend of his. That’s all.”
“He won’t come.”
“I’ve never had more than twelve people in this house at any one time.”
“His friend will show and he won’t. Again.”
“And I am not a cook and I never have been. I don’t want to see the kitchen. I don’t like kitchens.”
“Why work yourself up this way every year? You know he’ll disappoint you.”
“I was a child bride, remember? I hadn’t time to learn to cook before you put me in a house that already had one plus a kitchen fifty miles from the front door.”
“Seems to me you did once. You and Ondine giggling away in the kitchen is one of my clearest and fondest memories.”
“Why do you say that? You always say that.”
“It’s true. I’d come home and you’d be—”
“Not that! About Michael, I mean. That he won’t show up.”
“Because he never has.”
“He never has here. Down here in this jungle with nothing to do. No young people. No fun. No music…”
“No music?”
“I mean his kind of music.”
“You surprise me.”
“And so he won’t be bored to death, I’ve invited a friend of his—” She stopped and pressed a finger to the frownie between her eyes. “I haven’t invited anybody down here in years because of you. You hate everybody.”
“I don’t hate anybody.”
“Three years it’s been. What’s the matter with you? Don’t you want to see your son anymore? I know you don’t want to see anybody else—but your own son. You pay more attention to that fat dentist than you do Michael. What are you trying to prove down here? Why do you cut yourself off from everybody, everything?”
“It’s just that I’m undergoing this very big change in my life called dying.”
“Retirement isn’t death.”
“A distinction without a difference.”
“Well, I am not dying. I am living.”
“A difference without distinction.”
“And I’m going back with him.”
“Sounds terminal.”
“It might be.”
“Christmas isn’t the best time to make decisions like that, Margaret. It’s a sentimental holiday full of foolish—”
“Look. I’m going.”
“I don’t advise it.”
“I don’t care.”
“He’s not a little boy anymore. The knapsack, I know, is confusing, but Margaret, he’ll soon be thirty.”
“So what?”
“So what makes you think he’ll want you to live with him?”
“He will.”
“You’re going to travel with him? Go to snake dances?”
“I’m going to live near him. Not with him, near him.”
“It won’t work.”
“Why not?”
Valerian put his palms down on either side of his plate. “He doesn’t care all that much for us, Margaret.”
“You,” she said, “he doesn’t care all that much for you.”
“Whatever you say.”
“Then I can go?”
“We’ll see. When he gets here, ask him. Ask him if he wants his mother next door to the reservation in a condominium.”
“He’s through with that. The school closed. He’s not with them anymore.”
“Oh? He’s done the Hopis? Gone on to the Choctaws, I suppose. No, wait a minute. C comes before H. Let me see, Navaj
os, right?”
“He’s not with any tribe. He’s studying.”
“What, pray?”
“Environmental something. He wants to be an environmental lawyer.”
“Does he now?”
“Yes.”
“Well, why not? A band manager, shepherd, poet-in-residence, film producer, lifeguard ought to study law, the more environmental the better. An advantage really, since he’s certainly had enough environments to choose from. And what will you do? Design no-nuke stickers?”
“You can’t make me change my mind.”
“It’s not a matter of changing it. It’s a matter of using it. Let him alone, Margaret. Let him be. You can’t do it over. What you want is crazy.”
“No. This is crazy. I live in airplanes now. Nowhere. Not in Philadelphia where I at least have friends. Not here boiling under a palm tree with nobody to talk to. You keep saying next month, next month, next month. But you never do it. You never leave.”
“But you do—whenever you like. Lots of people live in two places.”
“I want to live in one—just one. In October you said after New Year’s, you’ll come back. Then when New Year’s comes you’ll say after carnival. If I want to live with you I have to do it your way—here. I can’t keep flying back and forth across the ocean wondering where I left the Kotex. Anyway. I’m going back with Michael. For a while. Make a home for him.”
“You’ll have to eat corncakes. Three hundred and twenty-five per serving.”
“I told you he’s not there anymore. He’s applied at U.C. Berkeley, I think.”
“Marijuana cookies then. Two hundred—”
“You will not listen.”
“Margaret, promise me something.”
“What?”
“That you won’t go unless he agrees to it.”
“But—”
“Promise.”
She studied him for a moment for she never knew if he was teasing her, patronizing her or simply lying. But now he looked deadly earnest so she nodded saying, “All right. All right. That’s no risk.
“What about Jade, then?” asked Valerian.
“What about her? She can stay as long as she likes.”
“She thinks she’s working for you.”
“Let her work for you while I’m gone.”
“Oh dear.”
“Or just relax. She wanted to spend the winter here is all. Why, I can’t think.”
“Getting over an affair, I thought.”