“Well, look, Mr. Cawffle. I’m not in the habit of making engagements in the
middle of the night. I’m a working gal.”
“Tomorrow’s Sunday,” I told her.
“Well, anyway. I gotta get my beauty sleep. You know how it is.”
“I thought we might have just one cocktail together. It isn’t too late.”
“Well. You’re very sweet,” she said. “Where ya callin’ from? Where ya at now,
anyways?”
“Me? I’m in a phone booth.”
“Oh,” she said. Then there was this very long pause. “Well, I’d like awfully to get
together with you sometime, Mr. Cawffle. You sound very attractive. You sound like a
very attractive person. But it is late.”
“I could come up to your place.”
“Well, ordinary, I’d say grand. I mean I’d love to have you drop up for a cocktail,
but my roommate happens to be ill. She’s been laying here all night without a wink of
sleep. She just this minute closed her eyes and all. I mean.”
“Oh. That’s too bad.”
“Where ya stopping at? Perhaps we could get together for cocktails tomorrow.”
“I can’t make it tomorrow,” I said. “Tonight’s the only time I can make it.” What a
dope I was. I shouldn’t’ve said that.
“Oh. Well, I’m awfully sorry.”
“I’ll say hello to Eddie for you.”
“Willya do that? I hope you enjoy your stay in New York. It’s a grand place.”
“I know it is. Thanks. Good night,” I said. Then I hung up.
Boy, I really fouled that up. I should’ve at least made it for cocktails or something. It was still pretty early. I’m not sure what time it was, but it wasn’t too late. The
one thing I hate to do is go to bed when I’m not even tired. So I opened my suitcases and
took out a clean shirt, and then I went in the bathroom and washed and changed my shirt.
What I thought I’d do, I thought I’d go downstairs and see what the hell was going on in
the Lavender Room. They had this night club, the Lavender Room, in the hotel.
While I was changing my shirt, I damn near gave my kid sister Phoebe a buzz,
though. I certainly felt like talking to her on the phone. Somebody with sense and all. But
I couldn’t take a chance on giving her a buzz, because she was only a little kid and she
wouldn’t have been up, let alone anywhere near the phone. I thought of maybe hanging
up if my parents answered, but that wouldn’t’ve worked, either. They’d know it was me.
My mother always knows it’s me. She’s psychic. But I certainly wouldn’t have minded
shooting the crap with old Phoebe for a while.
You should see her. You never saw a little kid so pretty and smart in your whole
life. She’s really smart. I mean she’s had all A’s ever since she started school. As a matter
of fact, I’m the only dumb one in the family. My brother D.B.’s a writer and all, and my
brother Allie, the one that died, that I told you about, was a wizard. I’m the only really
dumb one. But you ought to see old Phoebe. She has this sort of red hair, a little bit like
Allie’s was, that’s very short in the summertime. In the summertime, she sticks it behind
her ears. She has nice, pretty little ears. In the wintertime, it’s pretty long, though.
Sometimes my mother braids it and sometimes she doesn’t. It’s really nice, though. She’s
only ten. She’s quite skinny, like me, but nice skinny. Roller-skate skinny. I watched her
once from the window when she was crossing over Fifth Avenue to go to the park, and
that’s what she is, roller-skate skinny. You’d like her. I mean if you tell old Phoebe
something, she knows exactly what the hell you’re talking about. I mean you can even
take her anywhere with you. If you take her to a lousy movie, for instance, she knows it’s
a lousy movie. If you take her to a pretty good movie, she knows it’s a pretty good movie.
D.B. and I took her to see this French movie, The Baker’s Wife, with Raimu in it. It killed
her. Her favorite is The 39 Steps, though, with Robert Donat. She knows the whole
goddam movie by heart, because I’ve taken her to see it about ten times. When old Donat
comes up to this Scotch farmhouse, for instance, when he’s running away from the cops
and all, Phoebe’ll say right out loud in the movie–right when the Scotch guy in the
picture says it–“Can you eat the herring?” She knows all the talk by heart. And when this
professor in the picture, that’s really a German spy, sticks up his little finger with part of
the middle joint missing, to show Robert Donat, old Phoebe beats him to it–she holds up
her little finger at me in the dark, right in front of my face. She’s all right. You’d like her.
The only trouble is, she’s a little too affectionate sometimes. She’s very emotional, for a
child. She really is. Something else she does, she writes books all the time. Only, she
doesn’t finish them. They’re all about some kid named Hazel Weatherfield–only old
Phoebe spells it “Hazle.” Old Hazle Weatherfield is a girl detective. She’s supposed to be
an orphan, but her old man keeps showing up. Her old man’s always a “tall attractive
gentleman about 20 years of age.” That kills me. Old Phoebe. I swear to God you’d like
her. She was smart even when she was a very tiny little kid. When she was a very tiny
little kid, I and Allie used to take her to the park with us, especially on Sundays. Allie had
this sailboat he used to like to fool around with on Sundays, and we used to take old
Phoebe with us. She’d wear white gloves and walk right between us, like a lady and all.
And when Allie and I were having some conversation about things in general, old
Phoebe’d be listening. Sometimes you’d forget she was around, because she was such a
little kid, but she’d let you know. She’d interrupt you all the time. She’d give Allie or I a
push or something, and say, “Who? Who said that? Bobby or the lady?” And we’d tell her
who said it, and she’d say, “Oh,” and go right on listening and all. She killed Allie, too. I
mean he liked her, too. She’s ten now, and not such a tiny little kid any more, but she still
kills everybody–everybody with any sense, anyway.
Anyway, she was somebody you always felt like talking to on the phone. But I
was too afraid my parents would answer, and then they’d find out I was in New York and
kicked out of Pencey and all. So I just finished putting on my shirt. Then I got all ready
and went down in the elevator to the lobby to see what was going on.
Except for a few pimpy-looking guys, and a few whory-looking blondes, the
lobby was pretty empty. But you could hear the band playing in the Lavender Room, and
so I went in there. It wasn’t very crowded, but they gave me a lousy table anyway–way in
the back. I should’ve waved a buck under the head-waiter’s nose. In New York, boy,
money really talks–I’m not kidding.
The band was putrid. Buddy Singer. Very brassy, but not good brassy–corny
brassy. Also, there were very few people around my age in the place. In fact, nobody was
around my age. They were mostly old, show-offy-looking guys with their dates. Except at
the table right next to me. At the table right next to me, there were these three girls
around thirty or so. The whole three of them were pretty ugly, and they all had on the
kind of hats that you knew they didn’t really live in New York, but one of them, the
blonde one, wasn’t too bad. She was sort of cute, the blonde one, and I started giving her
the old eye a little bit, but just then the waiter came up for my order. I ordered a Scotch
and soda, and told him not to mix it–I said it fast as hell, because if you hem and haw,
they think you’re under twenty-one and won’t sell you any intoxicating liquor. I had
trouble with him anyway, though. “I’m sorry, sir,” he said, “but do you have some
verification of your age? Your driver’s license, perhaps?”
I gave him this very cold stare, like he’d insulted the hell out of me, and asked
him, “Do I look like I’m under twenty-one?”
“I’m sorry, sir, but we have our–”
“Okay, okay,” I said. I figured the hell with it. “Bring me a Coke.” He started to
go away, but I called him back. “Can’tcha stick a little rum in it or something?” I asked
him. I asked him very nicely and all. “I can’t sit in a corny place like this cold sober.
Can’tcha stick a little rum in it or something?”
“I’m very sorry, sir. . .” he said, and beat it on me. I didn’t hold it against him,
though. They lose their jobs if they get caught selling to a minor. I’m a goddam minor.
I started giving the three witches at the next table the eye again. That is, the
blonde one. The other two were strictly from hunger. I didn’t do it crudely, though. I just
gave all three of them this very cool glance and all. What they did, though, the three of
them, when I did it, they started giggling like morons. They probably thought I was too
young to give anybody the once-over. That annoyed hell out of me– you’d’ve thought I
wanted to marry them or something. I should’ve given them the freeze, after they did that,
but the trouble was, I really felt like dancing. I’m very fond of dancing, sometimes, and
that was one of the times. So all of a sudden, I sort of leaned over and said, “Would any
of you girls care to dance?” I didn’t ask them crudely or anything. Very suave, in fact. But
God damn it, they thought that was a panic, too. They started giggling some more. I’m
not kidding, they were three real morons. “C’mon,” I said. “I’ll dance with you one at a
time. All right? How ’bout it? C’mon!” I really felt like dancing.
Finally, the blonde one got up to dance with me, because you could tell I was
really talking to her, and we walked out to the dance floor. The other two grools nearly
had hysterics when we did. I certainly must’ve been very hard up to even bother with any
of them.
But it was worth it. The blonde was some dancer. She was one of the best dancers
I ever danced with. I’m not kidding, some of these very stupid girls can really knock you
out on a dance floor. You take a really smart girl, and half the time she’s trying to lead
you around the dance floor, or else she’s such a lousy dancer, the best thing to do is stay
at the table and just get drunk with her.
“You really can dance,” I told the blonde one. “You oughta be a pro. I mean it. I
danced with a pro once, and you’re twice as good as she was. Did you ever hear of Marco
and Miranda?”
“What?” she said. She wasn’t even listening to me. She was looking all around the
place.
“I said did you ever hear of Marco and Miranda?”
“I don’t know. No. I don’t know.” “Well, they’re dancers, she’s a dancer. She’s not too hot, though. She does
everything she’s supposed to, but she’s not so hot anyway. You know when a girl’s really
a terrific dancer?”
“Wudga say?” she said. She wasn’t listening to me, even. Her mind was
wandering all over the place.
“I said do you know when a girl’s really a terrific dancer?”
“Uh-uh.”
“Well–where I have my hand on your back. If I think there isn’t anything
underneath my hand–no can, no legs, no feet, no anything–then the girl’s really a terrific
dancer.”
She wasn’t listening, though. So I ignored her for a while. We just danced. God,
could that dopey girl dance. Buddy Singer and his stinking band was playing “Just One of
Those Things” and even they couldn’t ruin it entirely. It’s a swell song. I didn’t try any
trick stuff while we danced–I hate a guy that does a lot of show-off tricky stuff on the
dance floor–but I was moving her around plenty, and she stayed with me. The funny
thing is, I thought she was enjoying it, too, till all of a sudden she came out with this very
dumb remark. “I and my girl friends saw Peter Lorre last night,” she said. “The movie
actor. In person. He was buyin’ a newspaper. He’s cute.”
“You’re lucky,” I told her. “You’re really lucky. You know that?” She was really a
moron. But what a dancer. I could hardly stop myself from sort of giving her a kiss on the
top of her dopey head–you know– right where the part is, and all. She got sore when I
did it.
“Hey! What’s the idea?”
“Nothing. No idea. You really can dance,” I said. “I have a kid sister that’s only in
the goddam fourth grade. You’re about as good as she is, and she can dance better than
anybody living or dead.”
“Watch your language, if you don’t mind.”
What a lady, boy. A queen, for Chrissake.
“Where you girls from?” I asked her.
She didn’t answer me, though. She was busy looking around for old Peter Lorre to
show up, I guess.
“Where you girls from?” I asked her again.
“What?” she said.
“Where you girls from? Don’t answer if you don’t feel like it. I don’t want you to
strain yourself.”
“Seattle, Washington,” she said. She was doing me a big favor to tell me.
“You’re a very good conversationalist,” I told her. “You know that?”
“What?”
I let it drop. It was over her head, anyway. “Do you feel like jitterbugging a little
bit, if they play a fast one? Not corny jitterbug, not jump or anything–just nice and easy.
Everybody’ll all sit down when they play a fast one, except the old guys and the fat guys,
and we’ll have plenty of room. Okay?”
“It’s immaterial to me,” she said. “Hey–how old are you, anyhow?”
That annoyed me, for some reason. “Oh, Christ. Don’t spoil it,” I said. “I’m
twelve, for Chrissake. I’m big for my age.”