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    Orpheus Emerged

    Page 3
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      They were walking on M street. Halfway

      towards the boulevard, Paul turned in at an

      iron gate and led the two others down a

      short flight of stone steps to an iron grill-

      work door beneath the landing of the sec-

      ond floor entrance to the building. A nar-

      row dusty hall led to a crude wooden door

      that opened with a loud scrape against the

      concrete basement floor.

      Sitting on Paul’s sagging cot was a gray-

      haired man of indeterminate age—he could

      have been anywheres from twenty-five to

      forty years old—who jumped up immediate-

      ly and greeted Paul.

      “Well, it’s Anthony!”

      “Paul!” repeated Anthony nervously,

      glancing at Leo and Arthur, who were

      depositing their books on the little table in

      the corner. “I came to see you about… Well,

      it’s…” and Anthony could only look rather

      rudely in the direction of the two students.

      Paul, sensing what was up, immediately

      handled the situation. “Go out and get the

      sandwiches, Leo, and you too Arthur. Get

      me some beer to drink with it. We’ll have

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 38

      another of our provocative luncheons.. ”

      “Yes,” mocked Arthur, “in these, your

      luxurious chambers. All right, we’ll be back

      in a minute.” And with this, Leo and Arthur

      went out.

      Anthony was instantly back on the couch

      with his hands over his face. Paul went over

      and sat at the table, and pretended to be

      absorbed in the examining of the tall oil

      lamp.

      “I hit her!” Anthony announced, on the

      point of sobbing. “This morning. I’ve been

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 39

      looking for you since. I’m dying of… I can’t

      face it!”

      Paul smiled. “All right, all right. Let’s get

      to the point of this.”

      Anthony had begun to weep.

      “None of that!” snapped Paul. “Till you’ve

      told me the details.”

      “Will you help me?”

      “Of course, if I can.”

      “Oh,” cried Anthony, starting to sob

      again, “my brother, my brother!”

      “To the point!”

      “Well—” and Anthony rose to walk back

      and forth across the little room.

      “I struck Marie

      this morning;

      it was a stupid

      little argument

      over little

      things, but she

      had gotten the

      best of me, and

      I was suddenly

      enraged at her.

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 40

      Why? Can I tell

      you why? Can

      anyone explain

      why a man

      should suddenly

      strike his

      wife?

      By all let this be known, you know…the

      brave man—killing the one you love—with

      sword or kiss—in Oscar Wilde…”

      “Go on!” cried Paul impatiently.

      “Well—and I was a little drunk—”

      “Is that all?” Paul shouted. “Then there’s

      no problem. Go back to her this very

      minute and kiss her hand and weep there,

      not here.. ”

      “I can’t do it!”

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 41

      Paul came over to Anthony and smiled at

      him. “Nonsense. You can. And Marie is

      accustomed to that sort of thing, anyway—

      she told me so herself. You struck her, you

      remember, about a month ago, when I first

      met you. Did Marie hold it against you? Did

      …. But this is all a waste of time. Now, Tony,

      go immediately to Marie and do as I say.

      And don’t be a baby!”

      Anthony’s lip was quivering.

      “You’re in a terribly nervous state,” Paul

      added. “Otherwise you would realize how

      simple the whole thing is. Are you going

      now?”

      Anthony hesitated. Then he started

      towards the door, shuffling his feet patheti-

      cally as though wishing to arouse his

      friend’s sympathy. “Yes,” he said, “I am.”

      “Goodbye. I’ll see you tonight.”

      Anthony turned. “And we were supposed

      to go to the party tonight, now everything is

      terrible!—” He was almost on the verge of

      crying again.

      “You’ll make up, and you’ll be at the party

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 42

      tonight. Goodbye! I’ll see you when you’re

      not in one of your neurotic moods, then we

      can have a talk about things, and enjoy a

      few drinks together.”

      Anthony began to chuckle. “I guess

      you’re right. I’ll go now. And without the

      fortitude of a drink, too. Watch me.”

      “All right.” There was a minute or two of

      brooding silence…

      “A la vue! ” Anthony now flung carelessly.

      Then he paused again: “But it’s going to be so

      hard. You don’t understand me, Paul, although

      you claim to. You’re too young! I’m older than

      you are, and I’m more complex…”

      Leo and Arthur were at the door, pushing

      it in. They had packages of food with them.

      Without a word, Anthony walked past them

      and out, giving a show of resoluteness and

      purpose. Arthur motioned his thumb after

      the departing Anthony and said to Paul,

      “He’s in a strange state! What’s the matter?”

      “Nothing, as usual,” Paul said. “Now,

      let’s eat.”

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 43

      II

      AS FAR AS

      MAUREEN WAS

      CONCERNED,

      Paul was by the way of being an unwel-

      come guest in her apartment—nay, an

      intruder. He was always neglected in his

      habits, and left cigarette butts around the

      house, sometimes in her flowerpots.

      When Paul called at three o’clock that

      afternoon, Michael was out.

      “Where is he?”

      “He went out for a walk,” answered

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 45

      Michael’s mistress, disdaining to open the

      door any wider. “He’s probably sitting in the

      park meditating or something.”

      “Well, then—” Paul reflected.

      “No one is here,” Maureen added

      unpleasantly. She was a woman in her late

      twenties, buxom, sensual—yet strangely

      maternal in her attitude towards the boy

      who lived with her. At times, however, her

      earthiness got the better of her maternal

      instinct, and she was wont to minimize the

      intellectualism of her lover.

      Paul turned and started down the stairs.

      Then he paused and seemed to reflect again.

      “In the park,” Maureen reminded him.

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 46

      Paul turned his face up to her. “Don’t

      worry, Maureen, I don’t want to come into

      your
    house. I was just thinking.”

      “All of you are crazy,” Maureen

      remarked sweepingly. She too had now

      begun to reflect. “All of you. I wonder

      sometimes what I’m doing here.”

      The boy grinned and went down a few

      more steps; then he stopped again.

      “Maureen,” he said, “I won’t come into your

      house if you don’t want me to. I only come to

      see Michael, and if he’s not in…” Maureen

      was silent. “So don’t worry. I’m leaving now.”

      “Goodbye,” said Maureen. “It’s only that

      you dirty up the house.”

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 47

      “Yes,”

      admitted Paul,

      “houses don’t

      mean anything

      to me. If I had

      one, the wind

      would blow

      through it all

      year, round and

      it would get

      all dusty and

      I’d freeze to

      death.”

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 48

      “All of you are crazy,” Maureen repeated.

      “Back home, the kids aren’t like all of you

      around here. They enjoy life, they have

      good times…”

      “I’m looking for Michael,” Paul put in.

      “You can tell me of your past the next time I

      come. I’m in a hurry now.” Maureen

      slammed the door before he could finish,

      and so he descended the stairs and was

      presently out on the street. It was warmish

      April afternoon, pregnant already with the

      sunny and lyrical thaw of an early spring.

      Paul walked rapidly towards the park

      and scanned all the benches. He could not

      find Michael on any of them. Then he went

      back towards the campus, and crossed the

      street to go into the Boulevard Bar. Anthony

      was there, reeling in front of the counter

      and holding a glass of beer in his hand.

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 49

      “This gentleman,” Anthony announced

      as soon as he saw Paul, “has been kind

      enough to buy me drinks this afternoon. He

      is a sailor, a man of the sea.” Paul nodded to

      the man who sat on a stool next to Anthony.

      “Reason? Because he has a social thirst, and

      craves to converse with a man well steeped,

      as I am, in Western culture.”

      “Largely Slavic,” said the man, whose eyes

      seemed a trifle crossed, which gave him an

      appearance of zaniness. “Largely Slavic!” he

      repeated, for he too was drunk and repetitive.

      “Your friend, sir,” he addressed to Paul, “is a

      man of learning and manners.”

      Paul threw a coin on the counter and

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 50

      asked for a glass of beer.

      “Your friend and I have been indulging in

      intellectual conversation this long afternoon,”

      the man went on. “At sea, where there is but

      silence and ennui, a man develops a social

      thirst; and as soon as he reaches land, his first

      impulse is to venture forth to meet kindred

      spirits of his like, with whom to discuss and

      share the various beauties of wisdom.”

      Paul inwardly winced. He thought the

      man insane, for a moment, although he had

      a great deal of money with him. He had

      extracted a large bill from his wallet, and

      with a flourish, was ordering two more

      drinks for himself and his friend Anthony.

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 51

      “Anthony”

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 52

      “Anthony,” Paul said. “Have you gone to

      her today?”

      Anthony did not answer.

      “Have you?” But Anthony still did not

      deign to answer.

      “You bungler,” Paul hissed. “But ah—that

      is you all over, that’s poor Anthony himself!”

      he added gloomily.

      Anthony had now turned, and he shouted

      loudly and emphatically into Paul’s face; “No,

      I did not go to see her!”

      “All right,” Paul said, and drank down his

      beer. “I’ll have to go and see her myself,

      although I should be doing something else.”

      “Are you?” Anthony breathed. “Are you, Paul?”

      — and suddenly he had begun to sob. The sea

      gentleman looked very confused at all this.

      “Excuse it all,” Paul told the stranger.

      “Buy Tony some more drinks. Sit him over

      there in the booth, sit with him and discuss

      the beauties of wisdom as you call them. I’ll

      arrange everything. There’s a private matter,

      you understand. Anthony’s meeting you

      saved him the emotional stress of executing a

      most painful…”

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 53

      “I believe,” interrupted the man, holding

      up his hand with tense drama, “I believe I

      begin to comprehend the entire matter. I

      believe so. I see. This friend, Anthony, is

      full of sorrow, and you are his friend. Very

      well. I shall take care of him.”

      Paul went over to Anthony, who was still

      sobbing, and pulled on his ear. “Anthony,

      shut up. Sit with your friend. I’m going over

      to see her now and everything’ll be all right.”

      Anthony now

      sobbed more loud-

      ly than ever,

      and, having put

      his hand on

      Paul’s sleeve, he

      was clutching it

      desperately.

      ”You’re too good,

      Paul, too good.

      Your goodness

      will kill you."

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 54

      “Likely!” scoffed Paul, his eyes gleaming.

      “My brother, my brother,” bawled

      Anthony, making no attempt to control him-

      self.

      Paul finished his beer and turned to the

      man. “Take care of him. I’m going there

      now.”

      “Anthony is a man of great learning,” the

      stranger pronounced. “And I understand he is a

      musician of no inconsiderable talent. I shall be

      honored to pay him my friendly respects for the

      remainder of the afternoon, perhaps far into the

      watches of the night indeed!..”

      “Yes,” Paul said.

      “So do not worry, young friend.

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 55

      Everything—” Here, the man hiccuped and

      then turned his crossed, aimless glance

      back to focus in Paul’s general direction.

      “Everything is in firm hands.” Paul was cer-

      tain that this man was mad. “Everything

      will come safely to port. You have entrust-

      ed your friend well.…”

      Paul was out on the boulevard and as he

      began to walk toward Marie’s house, he

      caught sight of Michael emerging from a

      doorway across the street.

      “Michael!” he called, starting across the

      street in a half-trot. But Michael, at the

      same instant,
    had caught sight of Paul, and

      he had begun to walk away very swiftly.

      Paul persisted in his chase, until Michael,

      turning to see that it was hopeless, decided

      to run—and run he did, so that in a few

      moments, he had disappeared around a

      corner and was gone.

      Paul gave it up and stopped in his tracks.

      He shrugged his shoulders and muttered

      under his breath.

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 56

      “He will con-

      tinue to be

      stupid like

      that. He

      insists on

      running away,

      as though it

      were in any

      way possible.

      It’s all a

      waste of time,

      that’s all I

      care! Time.

      He’s having

      his so-called

      season in

      hell, ha-ha.”

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 57

      Paul walked for awhile, thinking, until

      suddenly he realized that he had passed

      Marie’s house. He turned and hurried back

      towards his original destination. Breathless

      — for all the hurrying — he arrived in the

      lobby of her apartment house and glanced

      at the brass plates near the buzzers. He

      rang her buzzer and was soon admitted. He

      went up the stairs, where Marie had already

      left open her door, though she herself was

      not standing in the doorway. “May I come

      in?” Paul shouted through the open door.

      “Of course,” answered a quiet voice,

      Marie’s, from the front room.

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 58

      Marie was

      wearing her

      rose-colored

      pajamas,seat-

      ed on the

      bright quilt

      laid out on

      the divan,

      and smoking

      a red-tipped

      cigarette.

      LiveREADS

      ORPHEUS EMERGED 59

      The radio was on to a Bach organ fugue.

      “And where is my darling?” Marie said

      straight off, with mockery in her tone. “Did

      you close the door?”

      “I just saw him. Yes, I closed the door.

      Marie—he is weeping.”

      Marie snuffed down her nose contemp-

      tuously. “Shut up about that weeping! Do

      you think that when a thing is a rule, and

      not an exception, it’ll continue to move one?

     


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