The Moviegoer
you and I have to laugh. Do you think that is sufficient ground for marriage?â
âAs good as any. Better than love.â
âLove! What do you know about love?â
âI didnât say I knew anything about it.â
She is back at her window, moving her hand to see it move in the flying yellow square. We hunch up knee to knee and nose to nose like the two devils on the Rorschach card. Something glitters in the corner of her eye. Surely not a tear.
âQuite a Carnival. Two proposals in one Mardi Gras.â
âWho else?â
âSam.â
âNo kidding.â
âNo kidding. And Iâll tell you something else. Sam is quite a person behind that façade. An essentially lonely person.â
âI know.â
âYouâre worse than Sam.â She is angry.
âHow?â
âSam is a schemer. He also likes me. He knows that someday I will be quite rich. But he also likes me. That isnât so bad. Scheming is human. You have to be human to be a schemer. Whenever I see through one of Samâs little schemes, I feel a sensation of warmth. Ah ha, think I to myself, so it must have been in the world onceâmen and women wanting something badly and scheming away like beavers. But youââ
âYes?â
âYouâre like me. So let us not deceive one another.â
Her voice is steadier. Perhaps it is the gentle motion of the train with which we nod ever so slightly, yes, yes, yes.
She says: âCanât you see that for us it is much too late for such ingenious little schemes?â
âAs marrying?â
âThe only way you could carry it off is as another one of your ingenious little researches. Admit it.â
âThen why not do it?â
âYou remind me of a prisoner in the death house who takes a wry pleasure in doing things like registering to vote. Come to think of it, all your gaiety and good spirits have the same death house quality. No thanks. Iâve had enough of your death house pranks.â
âWhat is there to lose?â
âCanât you see that after what happened last night, it is no use. I canât play games now. But donât you worry. Iâm not going to swallow all the pills at once. Losing hope is not so bad. Thereâs something worse: losing hope and hiding it from yourself.â
âVery well. Lose hope or not. Be afraid or not. But marry me anyhow, and we can still walk abroad on a summer night, hope or no hope, shivering or not, and see a show and eat some oysters down on Magazine.â
âNo no.â
âI donât understandââ
âYouâre right. You donât understand. It is not some one thing, as you think. It is everything. It is all so monstrous.â
âWhat is monstrous?â
âI told you,â she says irritably. âEverything. Iâm not up to it. Having a little hubbyâyou would be hubby, dearest Binx, and that is ridiculousâdid I hurt your feelings? Seeing hubby off in the morning, having lunch with the girls, getting tight at Eddieâs and Nellâs house and having a little humbug with somebody elseâs hubby, wearing my little diaphragm and raising my two lovely boys and worrying for the next twenty years about whether they will make Princeton.â
âI told you we would live in Gentilly. Or Modesto.â
âI was being ingenious like you.â
âDo you want to live like Sam and Joel?â
âBinx Binx. Youâre just like your aunt. When I told her how I felt, she said to me: Katherine, youâre perfectly right. Donât ever lose your ideals and your enthusiasm for ideasâshe thought I was talking about something literary or political or Great Books, for Godâs sake. I thought to myself: is that what Iâm doing?âand ran out and took four pills. Incidentally theyâre all wrong about that. They all think any minute Iâm going to commit suicide. What a joke. The truth of course is the exact opposite: suicide is the only thing that keeps me alive. Whenever everything else fails, all I have to do is consider suicide and in two seconds Iâm as cheerful as a nitwit. But if I could not kill myselfâah then, I would. I can do without nembutal or murder mysteries but not without suicide. And that reminds me.â And off she goes down the steel corridor, one hand held palm out to the wall.
None of this is new, of course. I do not, to
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