Lloyd
I
t’s an awesome start to our first summer season. A beautiful warm day, the sky an unbroken umbrella of blue. In the harbor, dozens of white sailboats dot the turquoise bay, and the street is thronged with tourists. Ty is one of our guests for the weekend, surprising us by filling the house with the most fragrant white lilies I’ve ever smelled. He also left a single red rose on my pillow. If not for all the complications in my life, I might welcome his persistent advances. But as it is, I simply said good night and shook his hand when it was time to go to bed last night.
Now it’s Friday morning, and I’m sitting in our office, behind the front desk, going over the payroll account. We’ve hired three houseboys to help run the place. Believe me, we need them. Poaching eggs, flipping pancakes, washing linens, turning mattresses, changing sheets, and folding towels for four or five visitors each week was one thing. Doing it for ten to fifteen people
per day
is quite another.
We’re booked to capacity for the whole holiday weekend, and despite our
NO VACANCY
sign out front, bedraggled tourists still wander in, asking if we’ve had any cancellations.
I hear the bell on the front door tinkle; another forlorn lot of bad planners, I presume. “Just a minute,” I call.
“Take your time,” comes the reply.
I know the voice. I try to place it, then shake my head in disbelief. I walk out front.
“Innkeeping becomes you, Lloyd. You took great.”
Drake.
“Thanks,” I say, a little wary. Two cloth suitcases sit at his feet.
“I was
thrilled
that you had a room available at the last minute,” he says, leaning in over the counter. “My lucky day.”
“Drake, I’m afraid to say your luck has run out. I don’t have a reservation for you, and we are completely full.”
He smiles. “Not according to your partner, you aren’t.”
I frown. “Eva? When did you talk to her?”
“A couple of days ago. At first, she told me you were booked, but then I reminded her how we’d met at the opening party, and she suddenly said there was a room.” He smiles. “It’s a beautiful day out there, Lloyd. Maybe I can persuade you to take a break and join me on my boat?” His eyes twinkle. “Did I mention I bought a boat?”
“No,” I say. “You didn’t mention that.” I hold up my hand to him. “Wait a second, okay?” I pick up the phone and press Eva’s extension. She answers cheerily. “Eva,” I ask, keeping my voice level, “could you come down to the front desk, please?”
I hang up and look over at Drake. “I’m being up front with you here, Drake. I don’t know why she said we had a room. We just
don’t.
We’ve been booked solid for months, and there have been no cancellations.”
He shrugs, seeming so fucking cocky in the belief that I’ll be eventually proven wrong. Eva comes down the stairs. When she spots Drake, she beams, rushing over to embrace him tightly. “How
good
it is to see you again,” she enthuses.
“And you, too, Eva,” he says. “Now, maybe you can explain to our friend here that you really
did
find a room for me.”
She lets him go and turns to look at me. “I did. Come into the office with me for a moment, Lloyd. I’ll show you which one on the house diagram. Drake, we’ll be right back.”
He gives us a jaunty little salute.
Eva closes the door behind us. “Lloyd, I cleared out
my
room so he’d have a place to stay.”
“Your
room? Eva, that’s crazy! You can’t give up your room!”
She offers a brave little self-sacrificing smile. “It’s okay. He’s your friend. I’d like to do it for you.”
I’m flabbergasted. “This is absurd. Where were you thinking
you’d
sleep?”
“In the attic.”
“The attic!
With the
houseboys?”
“There’s an extra cot,” she says simply.
I grip her by the shoulders. “Listen to me. I don’t
want
Drake here! Do you understand? He wants to see me romantically, and I’m just not interested.”
“Oh.” Her brow furrows. “I see.”
I sigh. “You need to explain to him that you made a mistake.”
She looks at me with some anxiety. “Oh, I can’t do that, Lloyd. Everything’s booked up all over town. He came down here expecting a room.” She puts a hand on her forehead. “Oh, dear, I’ve made a mess of things, haven’t I? It was just that when he said he was your friend, I figured you’d be
glad
to see him.”
“Why didn’t you tell me about it?”
She smiles wanly. “He thought we ought to surprise you.”
I just shake my head.
Her smile changes a little. Suddenly she looks more sassy than distressed, as if she’s just thought of a plan. “Well, you don’t have to worry about him, Lloyd. I promise I will keep him away from you.”
“Eva, we have a houseful of guests. You can’t be patrolling Drake all weekend.”
She grinned. “I’ll get him to take me out on his boat. He told me all about it when we talked. That will keep him occupied for at least half a day.” She looks off in the direction of the door. “He is awfully handsome, isn’t he?”
I look at her sharply. “Oh, is
that
what you’re thinking?” I lean down close into her face. “Do you want to sleep with
him,
too? Not all gay men are as easy marks as Ira, you know.”
Okay. I suppose I need to take a breather here. Just talking about it gets me worked up. Because ever since that night I walked in on her and Ira, things just haven’t been the same between Eva and me. All of my old fears about her state of mind have been revived. When I confronted her about Ira, she acted surprised that I knew, and immediately burst into tears. She claimed she’d just gone in to check on him and discovered him lonely and depressed, and they’d started talking, and before she knew it they were kissing, and well, one thing led to another....
“But he’s a gay man, for God’s sake!”
“I know, I know,” she said, tears dripping off her chin. “He said I was the first woman he’d slept with in fifteen years!”
“Are you planning on seeing him again?” I asked.
She was trembling. “No. Not if you think I shouldn’t.”
I sighed. “You can’t be seducing guests, Eva.”
She burst into a new torrent of tears. I found myself consoling her. “Did you at least use a condom?” I asked.
“No,” she whimpered, and that set off a round of paranoia and a long discussion of safer sex. She hadn’t had sex since Steven, she said. She should have known better.
“It will never happen again,” she promised shamefacedly. “Even though I think Ira has feelings for me ...”
Even though he’s a gay man.
I needed to talk with someone, so I described the situation to a friend, a therapist practicing here on the Cape. Without naming any names, I asked her what diagnosis she might make in this case.
“From what you’re telling me, I’d say this person is a little delusional,” my friend told me. “There’s definitely a personality disorder. She might even be borderline.”
I shuddered. No, that much isn’t possible. I’m a trained psychologist. I’d have recognized a borderline personality. There’s
no way
I could have missed that.
No way? None at all? I force myself to remember what my own frame of mind had been like when I met Eva. I was depressed myself, drowning in my own confusion and grief. I was looking for a lifesaver, and it seemed that Eva tossed one in the water for me to grab on to. When you’re
this close
to drowning, you don’t take the time to inspect the thing to see if it has any holes.
What makes this even more troubling is the fact that I’m starting to think Eva
lies
to me. I don’t think she’s in therapy. She said she was, but I don’t think she went
for even one session.
In the past couple of months, she’s rarely been far from my side: if she’s been seeing somebody regularly, I can’t imagine
when.
She’s never talked about her therapy, either, and for someone who discloses as easily and as often as she does, I tend to think that’s significant. No, I don’t think she’s in therapy, and that troubles me a great deal.
But if she
is
personality disordered, then so much of what I’ve been observing makes sense. Every male guest—gay or straight, young or old—has been practically smothered with attention from Eva. Some love it, singing her praises and promising they’ll return for more. Others seem puzzled by it, often finding themselves trapped for hours looking at her scrapbooks and listening to her stories. One night I came downstairs to find her on the couch with a very handsome guest in his forties, and she was crying. The man was consoling her about something. I just bit my lip and walked back upstairs.
It’s as if she’s this black hole of emotion, sucking into her void every male who happens to cross her path. I ponder my evolving diagnosis. Just suppose those bedtimes with Daddy weren’t as innocent as she makes out. Sexual abuse would help to explain a good deal of her behavior. I’m beginning to feel Eva’s dependence on me isn’t just about her grief over Steven’s death. It goes back much farther than that.
I don’t know what to do, how much more I can take. Every time I turn around these days, there she is. Forget the solitary walks along the breakwater I once so treasured. Now a quiet half hour alone in my room is hard enough to achieve.
Can I talk to you just a minute, Lloyd?
I’m sorry to bother you, Lloyd.
I don’t know how to fix the toaster, Lloyd.
Lloyd, can you take a look at this, please?
I am so frazzled, Lloyd. I need a shoulder to cry on.
Please???
Her clever little machinations to coerce what she needs from me have only increased. Like that day of the opening, when she’d
supposedly
twisted her ankle. I wonder about that now. Then there was the fainting spell at the Unitarian Meeting House, where I carried her downstairs and tenderly placed a cold cloth on her head. A few nights later there was an episode of sleepwalking. I found her staring out from the front door in her nightgown and gently escorted her back to her room. “Thank you, Lloyd,” she said as I tucked her in. “Thank you for taking care of me.”
Another evening she sat on my bed, talking dreamily and playing with her hair, eventually falling asleep, apparently hoping I’d simply crawl in next to her. No, thanks. I’m not Ira.
This
gay man does not sleep with women. I took my pillow and headed down to the couch.
It’s you she wants. Not a guest house in Provincetown. You could be opening up a laundromat together and she’d be just as into it.
“Lloyd?”
I blink. She’s looking up at me with those big round eyes.
“Lloyd, what do you want to do about Drake? I’ll do whatever you say.”
I give in. She wins. She convinces me that we simply can’t turn him away; he does indeed take her room. But I can’t bear the thought of her sleeping up in the attic with three randy houseboys. I give her my bed, and instead, it’s
me
who climbs the ladder up to the attic and takes the cot beside Ian, Justin, and José. Queer, isn’t it? I trust
myself
with them more than I do her.
The next day I barricade myself in the office, not wanting to run into anyone. But forget that: there’s always
somebody
knocking at the door.
Around noon I hear a voice. “Lloyd?”
I look up. It’s Ty. I give him a small smile.
“I had dinner with your friend Drake last night,” he says. “What a charmer.”
I shrug. “If you say so.”
Ty smirks. “I tried to show him some charm myself, but all he wanted to talk about was you.” He stares down at me. “Not that I blame him.”
I run a hand over my buzzed head. “Ty, I’m kind of swamped with work right now....”
He moves around behind me and begins giving me a shoulder massage. “You’re missing a fabulous day. Can I entice you into a walk?”
“Really, I can’t—”
“Just to clear your head. Get out of this place for a while.” He pauses. “Before Eva gets back from the grocery store.”
I look up at him. He raises his eyebrows.
“Yeah,” I say. “A walk might do me good.”
We’re on our way out the door when we run into Shane coming up the front steps. He’s dressed in a pair of leopard-print Lycra shorts and a Bundeswehr tanktop. I like Shane. He’s not filled with attitude the way so many of Jeff’s circuit friends are.
“Hey,” I greet him. “In town for the weekend?”
“Sure am,” he says, snapping his fingers like a drag queen. “Kickin’ off the season!”
“And in
style,”
I say. He pirouettes for us. “We’re going for a walk,” I tell him. “Care to join us?”