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Authors: Joseph McElroy

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BOOK: Women and Men
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One alone? But with what characteristics? Did he get that far? He is not there, he is deluded, isn’t he? Is he a guy grown more familyless than less as two or three years became six or seven and his family apart from him grew? He missed being naked in that woman’s presence whom he loved. No, that is not the first story; he is in a Florida roadhouse on Skylab night but he can’t get loose from that future he has come from, how old must he have been? he can’t reconstruct it, and fails the more he tries until he recalls he isn’t in the roadhouse now but in bed with a friendly person. Mayn recalls his own name, Mayn smiles (or thinks he smiles) in his sleep. He smiles on her sleep. Her generation grew up on noise, turning that wild wire of juice whorling down the ear into a mountain of life to look into the map of poison or radiation and imagine taking nothing from it but what can be used, except that this is Mayn’s own generational lie, not theirs. Her
name
gets dismantled in the air-conditioner, but her elbow’s all there. He smells the girl in her sleep: soap fading somewhere on her still holds: it makes clearer the last breaths of his Gauloises as rich and cutting making a home in the throat, as noise down the worming gullet of an ear. Bed sentiments from here to Walt Disney’s piece of Florida’s own Orlando the coast Chileanizes his intestine but make no mistake, Chile’s as long as America is across, so thank God the strip is stabilized by the Andes. Yet narrow as a mere layer: file that, file it along some southern continent’s Pacific flank. She doesn’t smoke, he sees along the cold rocket flanks steams like leaks of day into night, the Saturn V night-white waiting to fire stands upright fixed by the weight of searchlight beams. So it’s not yet May, but December: the night launch. Five months gone, and he not a stupid person but he came looking for the tall, tailored, bald Chilean not knowing what he would say when he found him. Slow-motion interview: would you mind saying that again, sir? History is the cover story. Why tell the girl? Will Mayn love her? He’s talking to her, which is important.

"What is it?" she says rather softly when he gets her name right and she moves her elbow off him; but her face doesn’t turn toward him but a couple three angels have hung around near the modular chests of drawers long and low or are checking out the towels and the clickless light switch.

Well, "it" threatens to grow by blurring into insignificance: is it a story? "How I played winter ball and was approached by anti-Castro elements," or "How I declassified a CIA director’s secret play to have himself abducted by his own men," or "How I became a message from here to there implanted in me and recoverable but not
by
me"—or "How as a P.O.W. in Vietnam I had to whisper for five years and what this did to my hearing," or "How I kept to myself a conversation with the pilot who helped stage the plane crash that faked the death of a right-wing Chilean revolutionary in January."

"Yes," she says.

No, said the Chilean that night in December,
have
we?

But I looked the same;
he
was the different one: was I drunk? No. He was taller and a shade less thin: mustache dark and drooping but he’s less bald close up if possible than five hours earlier in the correspondents’ telephone room at the Press Center—

I don’t think you usually talk like this, she says to Mayn, the most intimate thing so far.

Anyway I saw him meeting this moderately disreputable guy I know named Spence, and now I’m meeting him again and he looks different and seems to be saying he doesn’t think we
have
met (I mean, who really cares, but) . . . and he’s murmuring, half-politely,
I dont . . .

While I stared, and—

I don’t
think
so, he said. Unless, New York? he suddenly added like he would give something to get something, although there was fear. The accent on "York" Slavic, Italian, Spanish. But then hands were clapping hollowly in the early evening, hands that were not pressing pictures into cameras.

Jim, she’s saying close to his mouth,
I
can’t be bringing all this out of you.

No. You can’t.

But am I right? are you in the middle of something you can’t decide if it’s there or not?—so I feel, Is it trivial or dangerous or important or what? —because you aren’t whimsical.

Anyway the three brilliant white suits came out of the building, each man carrying his twin-hosed portable life-support pack, out of the suiting-up building (you understood that) and under the outside roof-overhang above where the white van was parked a grand hotel seeing off a team of—I don’t know what they were: not warriors though suspicious plunder was their aim; not priests, notwithstanding the slow uniforms and tight caps beneath the helmets; not condemned men in their divers’ fishbowls fixed forever onto neck rings; not statesmen in protective on-site inspection suits—but (words fail, again and again, words, words) surprise!—explorers: hunters. A fireman on one knee watches them stop to greet their families, the rangy American women dolled up, a cool, Sundayfied adolescent or two, one in a long skirt, was it Carlsbad Caverns, the Empire State Building? No kissing through the helmets, two wives not three—one wife, the Command Module pilot’s, did kiss her husband’s convex bubble and he the air inside, so their kiss met very firm, no tongues, poles invisible they are so familiar. And the blithe bachelor rock man Schmitt (also seen off by a lady) kicked up his huge Earth-heels—or was it Evans, the Command Module pilot—just before he climbed in the back of the Apollo van, his white bringing up into contrast a touch of rust-brown.

The boxes they are carrying said the South American gent next to me after all, maintaining the conversation he had seemed to decline. I pointed out the hoses and told him what I’d picked up—which did not (in reply to him) include who made the space suits and where. He said, They are taking overnight bags . . .

Kidney-machine overnight bags, I said.

They are getting away from their women for a weekend—

—on the Moon, I said—

—it is every American’s dream, he said, it is what you and I were bused here from the Press Site to see, it is a brief, expensive shot from a movie—

—seen much closer up (I pointed out) by the crowd back at the Press Site on closed-circuit. But are you a journalist?

The astronauts are elated.

They’re like kids in those aviator skullcaps.

Who is the one who danced? Was it not our bachelor rock man?

The geology of space.

But now that they are in the van I am not so sure.

Hard to tell.

They look alike, suited up. Unknown soldiers.

Wasn’t the idea
one
unknown soldier? Mayn asked.

Yes, more than one spoils that.

Ah well, unknown soldiers vacuum-packed for burial in space, Mayn slowly quipped.

Is it the Service Module pilot who orbits the Moon while the other two are on the surface?

The reliable friend who is there for the heroes.

Still, a vacation in a vacuum, said the tall, bald man with the mustache; what was that you said? vacuum-packed for burial in space? I will remember that.

The van has a rusty tailpipe, I said.

It will drop off on the way; nothing spent, nothing gained.

You know about the Polish revolutionary who was told to blow up a bus.

I knew him; he was not Polish.

And burnt his lips on the tailpipe.

That’s not the one I knew. Your astronauts don’t make mistakes. Can they be heroes?

Those tight skullcaps, that’s the secret.

It is a performance.

Shot out of a cannon, I said: do they have that act in your circuses?

In America you can see anything and live to tell about it, said the man with the Spanish intonation in the first phrase and in "leave" for "live."

Or see nothing and not live to tell about it, Mayn had replied, he thought.

Nothing? A man in prison assured me, yes, prison is about nothing. But of course that is not just anywhere.

A journalist also? I asked.

Also?

A journalist?

In fact, he had once wanted to be one, since you ask. As well as a public speaker, perhaps, though now compelled to have a limited audience however practiced an audience.

Political prisoner? I asked.

He killed someone. He had a theory, said the tall, bald man.

Political? I said (I couldn’t just say, Oh?).

Possibly about imprisonment, said the tall, bald man, but it was about the unconscious: in effect he said—he was not so clear as my summary of him—he had found it unavoidable, the unconscious—we reconstituted ourselves in each other’s heads, I believe, our minds being congruent frequently, does that sound right?—always near to being one mind, was that it? Oh, he apologized, always, and it was not him I at first went to visit; he eavesdropped; he ignored a man and woman who had come to see him, actually, and listened to me and the man I was talking with. It’s chemistry, this mind-family affair, but I was unable to give him my full attention. His theory was of imprisonment, and in the fragments I heard while essentially speaking to the person I was with, I gathered it was consolatory rationalization, yet moving. He expressed contempt for exposes of prison life. He was quite intelligent: he called jail abstract. No, his theory was about all imprisonment, if there is such a thing; but I would not have called him a political prisoner. I learned later that he had killed a woman one night who had been his girlfriend more or less since grade school. He was doing a long stretch.

You were not.

A matter of hours, no more. He seemed to have taken up economics but later I wondered if/ had started something.

This lean, diplomatic man with a mustache turned away, clasping his hands behind his back and raising his chin like a royal consort on a visit. Or a king. Not a journalist.

But I did see you, I said, in the telephone room at the Press Center back in town.

The man seemed frank—and if contempt was here it was not for Mayn, to whom the man had attended quite warmly. But he was looking away now. He did not speak of the man Mayn knew with whom Mayn had seen him in conversation, an ageless little villain (well, not so little) named Spence. Ever meet him? he gives information a bad name. The Chilean answered me that he was not a journalist, he said he knew nothing of space but he had heard there were particular pathways in it finding which we might save time. He had humor to spare.

That’s quite a lot, the girl murmurs, and an elbow lands on Mayn’s breast, and charges into him so the skin and bones couldn’t stop it.

Mayn’s more awake and there is a strip of horror over his heart, he wouldn’t know why, he hasn’t been asleep, he knows that. Hey, did you tell me the gravitational hills and valleys of space give us libration points but not the transfer of persons two to one?

Two people one, yeah, the girl murmurs, half asleep and more than half, Libration, vuhbration, she says the
v
like another language.

But did you?

For just a moment she’s awake like a woman he once married who when she woke up cocked one eye at the light and kept the other shut (but which eye suddenly seems important, but it’s lost): Yeah, well libration points I know but ... I don’t really recall . . . saying anything about them, and . . . transfer of persons from two to one, I know I didn’t say gravity ... her voice closes . . . didn’t . . . and she’s out again. Or in.

Where did he get gravity valleys, gravity hills, geology of space, libration points, where’s he coming from?, he’s no scientist, far from it. It’s like a mountain is coming to
him.

We are not there any more, he continues. "No, we’re at Sky lab, May, ‘73," he imagines her sharply saying out of one wire-thin cleft of sleep; but he hears, "Mmhmm" and says, "Please" (meaning stay awake and hear me) and she says, "No" (meaning perhaps some opposite) and breathes; and then she breathes words he’s heard before—"resting my eyes"—heard from a wife—again between his lips feels the softness of her lower lip and her eyes looking out the back of his head. His fingers catch the ghost of the word
Spence.

We’ve been bused back to the Press Site now, and it’s getting late. The place is packed, the grass infield stretching from the grandstand toward the Banana River. We don’t know for a few minutes yet that we have four hours to wait. The delay doesn’t dull me. Against the blinding giant disk of searchlight the contour of bald head and loose robe of an Indian holy man stood for a long moment. A delay is coming. A computer hold. And the computer is far away in Alabama, same Moon though. But my man, you see, appears twice more to me and then a third time. Under the grandstand at the hot-chocolate machine. Hands at his sides, calm, indifferent you’d say if you didn’t pick up this weird independence. But he’s not doing anything there, and you can’t see the launch pad, and he’s not there to study the structure of the grandstand or blow it up, although I might ask again about that one. He’s got to be waiting for someone, and I felt stupidly it was me. He looks away through me with a steady power I didn’t see before, so he’s above me and I’m only half there, and I have to make some conversation, the bastard; but then abruptly he acknowledges me: Where are they? he asks, and he answers, Elsewhere, elsewhere. The Governor of Alabama and the one-hundred-thirty-year-old slave must be seen, and he smiles and moves away.

I look at a girl’s name tag as she tips a paper cup to her mouth and eyes me and I look away to the body in general of a girl next to her who doesn’t have a name tag and this girl does not notice, and moves away from the other girl, they’re not together, why am I going into this?, while someone behind me reports that Press Site buses will visit the VIP stands, and I can hear a student returning to her friends camped on the infield grass down near the dark glimmer of the water say, "I saw him—he looked dead," and a boy called out, "What about the slave, Suzie?" while somewhere a woman says, "Zsa Zsa Gabor," and the syllable hangs on and holds as if the whole statement opens toward verbless nothing, but we know what is meant even if the future should think it not worth the struggle. The third time that night I see my man the South American—I’m jumping from first to third—

BOOK: Women and Men
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