The Moviegoer
lip, leans out from the servantsâ walk to shake a mop. Since she is kitchen help, she can allow herself to greet me in the old style. âMist Binx,â she declares hoarsely, hollering it out over my head to the neighborhood in a burlesque of a greeting yet good-naturedly and even inviting me to join in the burlesque.
âShe is seventy five years old, a little bitty dried-up old thing and next to Em the most charming, the wittiest and the wisest woman I ever knew. She has been of more service to us in the U.N. than the entire American delegation. Her place is always electric with excitement. Kateâwho in my opinion is already a great ladyâwould find herself for the first time. The long and the short of it is she needs a companion. The very night I left New York she said to me: now you listen hereâwhile you are in your American South, you make it your business to find me a nice Southern girlâyou know the kind I have in mind. Of course the kind she had in mind is the Southerner who is so curiously like the old-style Russian gentry. I thought no more about it until last night as I watched Kate go up the steps. My God, I said, there goes Natasha Rostov. Have you ever noticed it?â
âNatasha?â I say blinking. âWhat has happened? Has something happened to Kate?â
âI am not sure what happened.â Sam places heel to toe and, holding his elbow in his hand and his arm straight up and down in front of himâhimself gathered to a point, aimedâpuffs a cigarette. âCertainly there was nothing wrong when Kate went to bed at two oâclock this morning. On the contrary. She was exalted. We had had, she and I and Em, four hours of the best talk I ever had anywhere. She was the most fascinating woman in New Orleans and she damn well knew it.â
(Aye, sweet Kate, and I know too. I know your old upside-down trick: when all is lost, when they despair of you, then it is, at this darkest hour, that you emerge as the gorgeous one.)
âEmily and I talked for a little while longer and went up to bed. It was not later than two thirty. At four oâclock something woke me. What it was I canât for the life of me recall but I awoke with the most importunate sense of something wrong. I went into the hall. There was a light under Kateâs door but I heard nothing. So I went back to bed and slept until eight.â Sam speaks in a perfunctory voice, listing items rapidly and accurately in a professional style. âWhen Kate had not appeared for breakfast by ten oâclock, Emily sent Mercer up with a tray. Meanwhile Jules had left for church. Mercer knocked at Kateâs door and called out loudly enough to be heard downstairs and received no answer. Now Emily was visibly alarmed and asked me to come up with her. For ten minutes we knocked and called (do you know how very long ten minutes is?). So what the hell, I kicked the door down. Kate was in bed and deeply asleep, it seemed to me. But her breathing was quite shallow and there was a bottle of capsules open on the table. But it was by no means emptyâI judge that it was just over one third filled. Anyhow, Emily could not wake her up. Whereupon she, Emily, became extremely agitated and asked me to call Dr Mink. By the time he arrived, of course, Kate had waked up and was lashing out with a particularly malevolent and drunken sort of violence. Toward Emily she exhibited a cold fury which was actually frightening. When she told us to get the hell out, I can assure you that I obeyed at once. Dr Mink lavaged her stomach and gave her a stimulantââ Sam looks at his watch, ââthat was an hour ago. Now that fellow has pretty good nerve. He wouldnât put her in the hospital which would have been the cagey thing to do. Emily asked him what he proposed to do. He said Kate had promised to see him Monday and that was good enough for himâand as for the pentobarbital, no one could really keep anybody else from swallowing any number any time he wanted to. Heâs a great admirer of Suë, by the way. We did manage to get the bottle, howeverââ
âSam!â My auntâs voice, low and rich in overtones of meaning, comes down to us.
Sam looks down past his arm to see that his heel is aligned properly. I start up nervously, uneasy that Sam might have missed the warning in my auntâs voice.
âOne more thing. Oscar and Edna are here. Now wouldnât you
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