He arrived in a panic, sick at being lost and alone, horrified at how fragile his illness had made him.
“I drove round and round for hours! I couldn’t find where I was!” He was sobbing. He had to sit down.
“Muffy, get a whisky, could you?” asked Bill.
Bill took Jonathan in his arms. It was a great comfort to be held. But it was an enfeebling comfort. Jonathan had been reduced to needing to be hugged after a simple drive in the car. Jonathan wiped his cheeks and tried to pull away, patting Bill on his great bare arms.
“There you go, buddy,” said Bill, and let him go.
And Bill’s wife Muffy was there, holding out a glass of whisky. A glass of whisky in Waterford crystal. Jonathan was terrified he might drop it.
“You must think I’m a real wimp,” he said.
“I think you’re scared,” said Muffy. “It’s not pleasant, being alone and lost.”
It was alarming how people were the only island of safety he had against terror. As soon as he was around people, the fear went. Most of the time in L.A. he was alone.
“I couldn’t read the map,” he said, gulping whisky and snot.
“Let me show you around the house,” said Bill.
The house was a museum. It was a great old farmhouse from the days when L.A. was a Western settlement of farmers and fruit trees. There were huge wooden spoons on the wall that had been used for stirring vats of lye soap. There were old homemade candles. There were shoes people had made themselves out of hides. There were family Bibles, with names of parents and grandparents.
“Look at this! Look at this!’ Jonathan exclaimed. “I didn’t know you were into all of this!”
How can you cover so many bases? Jonathan thought, looking at Bill Davison’s face. You can talk shop to a ball player, history to a historian. With a face like yours, you ought to be some Reaganite businessman in favor of defense budgets. With money like you make, you ought to be slick and sharp and spouting horrible, phony relation-speak.
“All these things,” said Bill Davison. “They’re from Kansas. I kind of collect them.”
“I only take photographs,” said Jonathan.
Muffy walked with them, commenting quietly on the implements. “That object there is for firing pills down horses’ throats.” There was something European about her. She was plump and pale, with undyed hair, no makeup, and yet there was something forcefully sensual about her. Even Jonathan felt it. Her breasts hung loose, her hips wobbled under the peasant dress. Jonathan found that he was glad for Bill, glad that he had a wife who was his match.
Muffy had gone with Bill on his expeditions to Kansas. She talked about the samplers on the walls. She knew about the people who had made them. One of them had been singed in the fire at Lawrence. Made by Millie Branscomb, aged eight.
“This is the strangest thing,” Muffy said. “When we researched this, we found out it was done by the mother of someone Bill knew.”
“The mother of a patient of mine. I got to know a woman about eighty-something. She was living in a Home. She thought she was Dorothy Gale.”
It took a moment. “From Oz,” said Jonathan.
“Turned out,” said Bill, “that she was. She knew Frank Baum.”
There was that icy vapor again, from the snow, from the cold. It rose up from the floorboards. Jonathan saw it at his feet.
Later, when Muffy was in the kitchen, they sat at the table and Jonathan said, “I’m having visions, Bill.”
“What?”
“I’m seeing things. I’m hallucinating. You’re a psychiatrist. You tell me what that means.”
Bill went very silent. In front of him was a rush place mat. He traced its spiral pattern with the blade of a knife. “It all depends,” said Bill Davison, “on whether the visions are true or not.”
Jonathan thought a minute and then said, “I think they are.”
Muffy had cooked a Turkish meal. The main course was made of eggplants and onions. They waited awhile before dessert, hoping that Ira would come. Drinking whisky had been a mistake. Jonathan felt himself go quiet and slighty confused. He listened.
Bill talked about the history of Kansas. The Old West, he said, had stringent gun-control laws. You checked your firearms before you came into town. Wichita, Kansas, was the town of Wyatt Earp, of Bat Masterson, the town of all those TV shows along with Dodge City, also in Kansas. For the whole decade of the 1870s, when Wichita was one of the wildest cowtowns, the total number of people murdered in it was four. Four people killed in ten years. In Los Angeles, it was four a day.
“It was the cities Back East that made up the Wild West,” said Bill. “The penny-dreadful magazines, and the movies after them.”
“What about Billy the Kid? He was real.”
“Looks as if he may have been born in New York City.”
Jonathan began to hear cattle lowing, somewhere up the canyon perhaps.
“Tell me more about Dorothy,” he said.
“She was from a farming community called Zeandale, near a place called Manhattan, Kansas. Its other claim to fame is that Damon Runyon was born there.
“What was she like?”
“Well,” said Bill, looking into his wineglass. “It was as if she lived in Oz all the time. She lived in a world of her own. Maybe that was what Baum saw in her, maybe not. I wrote to the Baum Estate to find out more about it. All they could tell me was that Baum had been a substitute teacher there for a short while. They thought it more likely that the character in the book was named for Baum’s niece.”
He told Jonathan the story, as much as he knew. He told him how Dorothy had died. The room seemed to fill with the low smoky light that comes on winter afternoons, sun through silver mist.
“One day,” said Bill, “I might just go to Manhattan and see what else I can find out about her. Speaking of which, how are you and Oz getting on?”
“I beg your pardon?”
“Oz. Remember our contract?”
Jonathan had forgotten.
Ira finally arrived in his own car. He was gray with fatigue, and he stared coldly at Jonathan.
“I rang and rang. Where were you?” he asked, as he sat down.
Jonathan’s eyes were round, unblinking, feverish. He didn’t answer.
Ira turned to Bill. “I’m really sorry, Bill. I wanted to call and say I was going to be late, but I didn’t have your home number.”
Bill explained. “That’s okay. Jonathan told me he was locked out of your house. He couldn’t answer the phone.”
“I’ve lost my house keys, Ira,” said Jonathan. The room glimmered, as sunlight sprinkles snow with stars. Someone was trying to walk toward Jonathan through the mist. All Jonathan could see was a dark shape, lumpy, in dark clothes. Light came in rays from all around it, cutting through the mist, casting shadows.
“I’ll need sunglasses,” said Jonathan and grinned and grinned.
Muffy came in, carrying the dessert. To Jonathan, the dessert looked like a chocolate pudding.
“I made this specially for you,” Muffy said to Jonathan.
Jonathan imagined how smooth the chocolate pudding would be. He picked up the serving spoon and plunged it into the dish, and then, confused, pushed it into his own mouth.
“Jonathan!” exclaimed Ira and thumped both hands on the table. The pudding seemed to turn into dust in Jonathan’s mouth. It was chestnut pudding, bland and with a kind of powdery texture underneath.
“It’s okay,” said Muffy. “I’ll get another serving spoon.”
As she left for the kitchen, Jonathan thought: She made it for me, and I don’t like it and that will hurt her feelings.
I know. I’ll eat without chewing it, so I won’t have to taste it. There was silence at the table as he gulped it. He took another serving spoonful and swallowed again. He made a noise like a frog.
Muffy came back out. One more mouthful for her. He stuck the spoon in and swallowed it whole, raw.
“Very. Good,” he said.
Then he stood up and shambled into the kitchen and threw it up, into the sink, over the draining board.
“Oh God! Jonathan!” shouted Ira.
There was a kitchen chair. Jonathan slumped helpless onto it, otherwise he might have fallen.
Ira was in the kitchen first. He picked up a towel. It was a good dishtowel, too good to use.
“Oh Jesus, Jesus, Jesus,” he said and flung the towel against the wall in rage. Muffy came in.
“I’m so sorry,” said Ira to her.
“That’s okay. I can clean it up,” said Muffy. She did not sound cheerful, but managed to be reasonably businesslike.
“No. You will not. That is one thing you mustn’t do,” said Ira. There were wispy trails of blood in the pudding.
Jonathan had begun to realize exactly what he had done. He wished he was dead. Then he remembered that he would be soon enough. “I’m sorry,” he said, in a voice perhaps too low for the others to hear. Jonathan tried to get up and found that he couldn’t. “I’ll clean it up,” he said. Again, no one seemed to hear.
Muffy flashed rubber gloves. Ira took them from her. “Really,” he said. “I’d rather you let me do it.”
“Okay,” said Muffy. “Jonathan, would you like to go outside for a walk?”
What?
Then it was a minute or two later and Muffy wasn’t there. Ira was scrubbing, his back to Jonathan, pouring bleach on the draining board.
“Ira? We were talking about Wichita,” said Jonathan. “And Wyatt Earp. He wore a policeman’s uniform. Mostly he just took in stray dogs. His sisters were registered prostitutes.”
Ira did not answer.
“I’m sorry, Ira.”
Ira still did not answer. When he was done, he seemed to sag in place. He pulled off the gloves and let them soak in bleach, and he washed his hands, and he turned around, and his face was white like a fish’s belly and stubbled with blue-black beard. He looked fat and haggard at the same time. He had been working until nine o’clock. He had been working a lot lately.
Ira walked out of the kitchen and left Jonathan sitting there.
And there was the mist again, and there was someone walking through the mist, out of the midst of the dishwasher.
“Squeaky clean,” said Jonathan and grinned.
Whoever, whatever it was drew back as if afraid. Was it wearing a dress?
“No, no, don’t be afraid,” said Jonathan. It seemed to come back.
Sometime later, Bill was leaning over him, arm across his shoulders. “Who are you talking to, Jonathan?”
“I beg your pardon?” Jonathan replied, on automatic pilot. There was nothing in the kitchen except for the stove, the sink, the dishwasher.
“You’ve been talking to someone out here for quite some time.”
Jonathan didn’t remember that at all.
“Who to?” Bill asked.
Jonathan wasn’t quite sure, but he could hazard a guess. “Dorothy,” he replied.
Ira drove them back home in silence. They had had to leave Jonathan’s car behind. Muffy said she would drive it home for them the next day while Ira was at work. “I’ll stop in and see you,” she said to Jonathan.
Jonathan realized later that he had not answered her.
It had drizzled during dinner. The streets were greasy with rain, slick and shiny. The colors swam in Jonathan’s eyes.
“Snakes,” he said. “Snakes on the road.” He meant that the lights seemed to move. He did not mean that he was actually seeing snakes. Ira’s eyes were as hard as the lenses of his glasses.
Getting back to the freeway, they passed an old-fashioned shopping plaza. There was a long low blank white wall, with a row of poplars in front of it. It glowed in blue-white strip lighting, and Jonathan blinked.
The wall looked to him exactly like the face of a faraway hill. He began to see the evergreen trees in its blue mistiness. There must be a deep gully, a valley between him and the slop. He smelled water. A river too, full of cool spray.
“I didn’t know there was a valley with a river here,” said Jonathan.
“What?” asked Ira. His knuckles on the steering wheel were white.
“There, the valley over there, with the river.” Jonathan pointed at the shopping plaza.
Ira was sweating. He kept looking over at Jonathan, and pushing his glasses back up his nose.
“We need some gas,” Ira muttered to himself. He signaled and pulled in, under a bright canopy with Coke machines and the glimmer of piped music. A Mexican strode over to the car and saluted them. He held up a bottle of wine. He smiled, face creased, some of his teeth outlined with gold. He held the bottle out to Jonathan. Jonathan smiled blearily back and took a swig.
Ira came back to the car after paying.
“That will be some surprised Mexican if he finds out he’s HIV positive,” said Ira.
Jonathan suffered a moment of clarity. “It doesn’t spread that way, Jo-Jo.” Jo-Jo? He had just called Ira by his own nickname.
“You’ve got bleeding gums,” said Ira, succinctly. He turned the car key with a wrench and the engine made a grinding sound. They pulled out into the wide boulevard, toward the on-ramps.
Very suddenly, in the middle of the road, Ira stopped the car. He threw off his glasses and covered his face and sobbed, and wiped his eyes with the heel of his hand.
“I don’t think this is a good place to stop, Ira.”
“Oh, shut up!” said Ira.
A truck howled in alarm behind them, swerved onto the wrong side of the road and, blaring hatred, roared past them.
“You used to be a pretty bright guy, you know?” said Ira quietly. He put his glasses back on and started the car and crept carefully forward.
“I get confused, Ira. Ira?” Ira didn’t answer.
Jonathan needed Ira to take the terror away. Jonathan shrank down very small and quiet in a corner of the car, so that Ira would not be angry. So that Ira would not go away. The freeway, the Santa Monica hills, sped past in the darkness.
Jonathan began to sing. He was not aware of it.
I would wile away the hours
Conferring with the flowers
Consulting with the rain
I would dance and be merry.
Life would be a ding-a-derry
If I only had a brain.
“Don’t sing that,” said Ira, teeth together.
Jonathan shrank even smaller.
The car pulled into the garage, a reassuring throb of engine bounding back from the narrow walls and a smell of gas and the settling down of light and noise when the engine was turned off. The sensations of coming home.