Evening in Byzantium (33 page)

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Authors: Irwin Shaw

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Contemporary Fiction, #Maraya21

BOOK: Evening in Byzantium
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“Murph …” Klein looked appealingly to Murphy.

“You heard what the man said,” Murphy said.

“Okay,” Klein said. “There’s nothing I can do about it, one way or another. I think the best thing we all can do is get on a plane to New York and talk it out with Thomas. And take Ian Wadleigh along with us and see if we can fit all the pieces together.”

Murphy shook his head. “I’m due in Rome next week and London the week after that. Tell Thomas to wait.”

“You know Thomas,” Klein said. “He won’t wait. He’s got another commitment starting in January, and everybody’ll have to work day and night to get this one in the can before then. One of the things he likes about your script, Jesse, is that it’s easy to do and he can fit it in.”

“Jess?” Murphy said. “You’re really the one who has to do the talking. I can come in later.”

“I don’t know,” Craig said. “I’ll have to think about it.”

“I’m going to call Thomas tonight,” Klein said. “What should I tell him?”

“Tell him I’m thinking about it,” Craig said.

“He’ll love that,” Klein said sourly. He stood up. “Anybody want a drink?”

“No, thanks.” Craig stood up, too. “I have to get back to Cannes. I appreciate what you’ve done so far, Walt.”

“Just out to turn an honest dollar for me and my friends,” Klein said. “I don’t know why the fuck you didn’t use your own name.”

“I’ll tell you some day,” Craig said. “Murph, why don’t you drive with me to Cannes? Tell your chauffeur to pick you up at the Carlton.”

“Yeah.” Murphy looked strangely subdued.

Klein walked out with them to the courtyard. They all shook hands ceremonially, and then there was the ringing of the telephone from inside the house, and Klein hurried in as Craig and Murphy drove off, the chauffeur following in Murphy’s Mercedes.

Murphy was silent for a long time, staring out at the wild green countryside, the trees throwing long shadows in the evening light. Craig didn’t speak, either. He knew that Murphy was troubled and was preparing himself for the conversation that had to take place.

“Jess,” Murphy said finally, his voice low. “I want to apologize.”

“There’s nothing to apologize for.”

“I’m a horse’s ass,” Murphy said. “An old horse’s ass.”

“Cut that,” Craig said.

“I’ve lost my touch. I’m just no good any more.”

“Oh, come on, Murph. Everybody makes mistakes. I could tell you about some of mine.” He thought of Edward Brenner in the empty theatre on the night after the final performance of Brenner’s last and best play.

Murphy shook his head sadly. “I had that script in my hand, and I told you to forget it, and that little punk Klein got you the hottest director in the business for it with one telephone call. What the hell do you need me for?”

“I need you,” Craig said. “Is that clear enough? I should have told you I wrote it myself.”

“That makes no difference,” Murphy said. “Even though it was a crappy thing to do to me. After all these years.”

“I have my own problems,” Craig said. “You know some of them.”

“Yeah,” Murphy said. “There’s one big problem I could have helped you with—should have helped you with—a long time ago … And I didn’t.”

“What’s that?”

“Your goddamn wife.”

“What could you have done?”

“I could have warned you. I knew what was happening.”

“So did I,” Craig said. “In general. And late in the game. But I knew.”

“Did you ever figure out why she did it?” Murphy asked. “I mean, she wasn’t a nymphomaniac or anything like that. It wasn’t as though she couldn’t control herself. She isn’t one of those women who throw themselves in bed with the boy who delivers the groceries, for Christ’s sake.”

“No, she isn’t.”

“Has it ever occurred to you how she made her choices?”

“Not really.”

“If this is painful to you, Jess, I’ll shut up.”

“It’s painful,” Craig said, “and don’t shut up.”

“She always picked your friends,” Murphy said, “people who admired you, people you worked with, people
you
admired.”

“I can’t say that I’m wild with admiration for her last choice,” Craig said.

“Even him,” Murphy insisted. “He’s a successful man, successful at something that you’re lousy at, that you’re ashamed you’re lousy at. You went to him for advice. You trusted him with your money. Do you see what I mean?”

“In a way,” Craig said, “yes.”

“And all these people always wanted to see you, listen to you, you were the center of attraction. She was always in the background. There was one way she could stop being in the background. And she took it.”

“And she took it.” Craig nodded.

“I saw it a long time ago,” Murphy said. “So did Sonia. And while there was still time to do something about it, I kept my mouth shut, I left you with your problem. And how do I make up for it?” He shook his head mournfully again. “I become another one of your problems.” He looked tired, somehow diminished, sitting in the small car, his bulk slack in the flimsy bucket seat, his voice weary, his face sorrowful in the moving shadows from the trees that lined the road.

“You’re not a problem,” Craig said sharply. “You’re my friend and my partner, and you’ve done wonders for me in the past, and I expect you to do wonders for me in the future. I wouldn’t know what to do without you.”

“Being an agent is a joke,” Murphy said. “I’m a sixty-year-old joke.”

“Nobody thinks you’re a joke,” Craig said. “Not me and certainly not anyone who has to do business with you. Snap out of it.” He hated to see Murphy, whose style, whose reason for living, even, was to be robust, assured, overriding, in a mood like this.

“If you want, Jess,” Murphy said, “I’ll cancel Rome and London and fly to New York with you.”

“Unnecessary,” Craig said. “You’ll come on stronger when they know they have to wait for you.”

“Don’t make any concessions before I get there.” Murphy’s voice was stronger now. “Don’t give a fucking inch. Let me think about it overnight, and tomorrow you tell me exactly what you want and we’ll figure out just how much of it you can get and how you can get it.”

“That’s more like it,” Craig said. “That’s why I told Klein to ask you to be there when I saw him.”

“Christ,” Murphy said loudly, “how I hate to have to split a commission with that little punk.”

Craig laughed. Then Murphy laughed, too, sitting up straighter in the bucket seat, his laughter resounding in the little car.

But when they reached the Carlton, he said, “Jess, do you have an extra copy of the script? I’d like to read it again, just to see how stupid I can be.”

“I’ll have it for you tomorrow,” Craig said. “Give my love to Sonia.”

When Murphy got out of the Simca and walked over to his own car, he was striding imperiously, huge and dangerous, a terrible man to cross. Craig couldn’t help grinning as he saw his friend hurl himself into the big black Mercedes.

The lobby of the hotel was crowded. There were already people in dinner jackets and evening gowns, dressed for the showing in the Festival Hall that night. Automatically, as he made his way to the concierge’s desk, Craig looked around the lobby to see if Gail was there. There were many familiar faces, Joe Reynolds’ among them, but no Gail. Reynolds’ bruises had turned a streaky yellow. It didn’t help his looks. He was talking earnestly to Eliot Steinhardt. A large young man with a blond beard was standing near the elevator, and Craig felt him staring at him. While Craig was collecting his mail and his key, the young man with the beard came up to him. “Mr. Craig?” he said.

“Yes.”

“I’m Bayard Patty,” the young man said.

“Yes?”

“I mean I’m Anne’s friend. From California.”

“Oh, how do you do?” Craig extended his hand, and Patty shook it. He had an enormous, crushing hand.

“I’m very pleased to meet you, sir,” Patty said. He sounded mournful.

“Where is Anne?” Craig said. “Let’s get her and have a drink.”

“That’s what I’ve been waiting to talk to you about, Mr. Craig,” Patty said. “Anne’s not here. She’s gone away.”

“What do you mean, she’s gone away?” Craig said sharply.

“She’s gone away, that’s all,” Patty said. “This morning. She left me a note.”

Craig turned back to the concierge. “Has my daughter checked out?” he asked.

“Yes,
monsieur
,” the concierge said. “This morning.”

Craig looked through his mail and messages. There was nothing there from Anne. “Did she leave a forwarding address?” he asked the concierge.

“No,
monsieur.”

“Patty,” Craig said, “did she tell you where she was going?”

“No, sir,” Patty said. “And please call me Bayard. She just vanished.”

“Wait here for me, Bayard,” Craig said. “Maybe there’s a note from her in my room.”

But there was nothing from Anne in his apartment. He went downstairs again. Patty was waiting near the desk like a huge, faithful, shaggy Newfoundland.

“Was there anything?” Patty asked.

Craig shook his head.

“She’s a peculiar girl,” Patty said. “I just got here yesterday. I flew over the Pole.”

“I think we both could use a drink,” Craig said. He felt very small walking beside the enormous young man along the corridor toward the bar. Patty was dressed in blue jeans and skivvy shirt and a light brown windbreaker. He limped a little, too, which made him even more conspicuous among the dinner jackets and jewelry.

“I see you’re still limping,” Craig said.

“Oh, you know about that.” Patty sounded surprised.

“Anne told me about it.”

“What else did she tell you about me?” There was a childish bitterness in the way Patty asked the question that was incongruous in a man his size.

“Nothing much else,” Craig said diplomatically. He was certainly not going to repeat Anne’s judgment on the bearded boy from San Bernardino.

“Did she tell you I wanted to marry her?”

“I believe she did.”

“You don’t think there’s anything so all-out horrible or depraved about a man wanting to marry the girl he loves, do you?”

“No.”

“It cost me a fortune to fly over the Pole,” Patty said. “I see her for a few hours—she wouldn’t even let me stay in the same hotel—and then, bang, there’s a note saying she’s leaving and good-by. Do you think she’ll be coming back here?”

“I have no idea.”

All the tables were full, and they had to stand at the crowded bar. More familiar faces. “I tell you,” a young man was saying, “the British film industry has signed its death warrant.”

“Maybe I should have put on a suit,” Patty said, looking around uneasily. “I
own
a suit. In a fancy place like this.”

“Not necessary,” Craig said. “Nobody notices how anybody dresses anymore. For two weeks here you have a really open society.”

“You can say that again,” Patty said sourly. He ordered a martini. “That’s one good thing about my leg,” he said. “I can drink martinis.”

“What’s that?”

“I mean I don’t have to worry about keeping in shape and all that crap. I’ll tell you something, Mr. Craig, when I heard my knee go, I was relieved, mightily relieved. You want to know why I was relieved?”

“If you want to tell me.” Craig sipped his whisky and watched Patty knock off half his martini in one gulp.

“I knew I didn’t have to play football anymore. It’s a game for beasts. And being my size, I didn’t have the guts to quit. And another thing—when I heard it snap, I thought, ‘There goes Vietnam.’ Do you think that’s unpatriotic?”

“Not really,” Craig said.

“When I got out of the hospital,” Patty went on, wiping the martini-damp beard with the back of his hand, “I decided I could finally ask Anne to marry me. There was nothing hanging over us anymore. Only her,” he added bitterly. “What the hell has she got against San Bernardino, Mr. Craig? Did she ever say?”

“Not that I remember,” Craig said.

“She’s given me proof that she loves me,” Patty said belligerently. “The most convincing proof a girl can give. As recently as yesterday afternoon.”

“Yes, she mentioned something about that,” Craig said, although the yesterday afternoon surprised him. Unpleasantly. Most convincing proof. What proof had
he
given yesterday afternoon in Meyrague? The boy’s vocabulary had not yet emerged from the Victorian era. It was somehow touching. Anne had not been circumspect in her choice of words when she had spoken on the subject.

“I’ve
got
to go back to San Bernardino,” Patty said. “I’m the only son. I’ve got four sisters.
Younger
sisters. My father worked for a lifetime to build up his business. He’s one of the most respected men in the town. What am I supposed to say to my father—‘You did it all for nothing’?”

“I find your attitude refreshing,” Craig said.

“Anne doesn’t,” Patty said dolefully. He finished his drink, and Craig motioned for two more. He wondered how he was going to get rid of the boy. If music was the food of love, Patty was a high school band playing the school anthem between halves of a football game. He couldn’t help grinning slightly at the thought.

“You think I’m foolish, don’t you, Mr. Craig?” Patty asked. He had noticed the twitch of Craig’s lips.

“Not at all, Bayard,” Craig said. “It’s just that you and Anne seem to have two different sets of values.”

“Do you think she’ll change?”

“Everybody changes,” Craig said. “But I don’t know if she’ll change in your direction.”

“Yeah.” Patty hung his head, his beard down on his chest. “I don’t like to say this to any girl’s father,” he said, “but the truth is I’m a shy man, and I don’t make advances to anybody. Your daughter led me on.”

“That’s quite possible,” Craig said. “You’re a handsome young man and, as far as I can tell, a very nice one …”

“Yeah,” Patty said without conviction.

To cheer him, Craig said, “She even told me that when you walked on the beach, you looked as though you belonged on a marble pedestal in Thrace.”

“What does that mean?” Patty asked suspiciously.

“It’s very flattering.” Craig handed him his second martini.

“It doesn’t sound so damned flattering to me,” Patty said, taking a gulp from his drink. “Actions speak louder than words, I always say. And your daughter’s actions are mystifying, to say the least. Ah, what the hell—I know how she’s been brought up …”

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