welcoming addresses, acknowledgments, introductions, and informal preambles to speeches on graver subjects. Getting laid is a joking matter on all levels of the company, even with people like Green and Horace White. But it’s not a matter for Andy Kagle to joke about now.
“Andy, I’m serious,” I say.
“So,” he says, “am I.”
I close the door of my office after Kagle leaves, sealing myself inside and shutting everybody else out, and try to decide what to do about my conversation with Arthur Baron. I cancel my lunch appointment and put my feet up on my desk.
I’ve got bad feet. I’ve got a jawbone that’s deteriorating and someday soon I’m going to have to have all my teeth pulled. It will hurt. I’ve got an unhappy wife to support and two unhappy children to take care of. (I’ve got that other child with irremediable brain damage who is neither happy nor unhappy, and I don’t know what will happen to him after we’re dead.) I’ve got eight unhappy people working for me who have problems and unhappy dependents of their own. I’ve got anxiety; I suppress hysteria. I’ve got politics on my mind, summer race riots, drugs, violence, and teen-age sex. There are perverts and deviates everywhere who might corrupt or strangle any one of my children. I’ve got crime in my streets. I’ve got old age to face. My boy, though only nine, is already worried because he does not know what he wants to be when he grows up. My daughter tells lies. I’ve got the decline of American civilization andthe guilt and ineptitude of the whole government of the United States to carry around on these poor shoulders of mine.
And I find I am being groomed for a better job.
And I find—God help me—that I want it.
My wife is unhappy
My wife is unhappy. She is one of those married women who are very, very bored, and lonely, and I don’t know what I can make myself do about it (except get a divorce, and make her unhappier still. I was with a married woman not long ago who told me she felt so lonely at times she turned ice cold and was literally afraid she was freezing to death from inside, and I believe I know what she meant).
My wife is a good person, really, or used to be, and sometimes I’m sorry for her. She drinks now during the day and flirts, or tries to, at parties we go to in the evening, although she really doesn’t know how. (She is very bad at flirting—poor thing.) She is not a joyful woman, except on special occasions, and usually when she is at least a little bit high on wine or whiskey. (We don’t get along well.) She thinks she has gotten older, heavier, and less attractive than she used to be—and, of course, she is right. She thinks it matters to me, and there she is wrong. I don’t think I mind. (If she knew I didn’t mind, she’d probably be even more unhappy.) My wife is not bad looking; she’s tall, dresses well, and has a good figure, and I’m often proud to have her with me. (She thinks I
never
want her with me.) She thinks I do not love her anymore, and she may be right about that, too.
“You were with Andy Kagle today,” she says.
“How can you tell?”
“You’re walking with a limp.”
There is this wretched habit I have of acquiring the characteristics of other people. I acquire these characteristics indiscriminately, even from people I don’t like. If I am with someone who talks loud and fast and assertively, I will begin talking loud and fast right along with him (but by no means always assertively). If I am with someone who drawls lazily and is from the South or West, I will drawl lazily too and begin speaking almost as though I were from the South or West, employing authentic regional idioms as though they were part of my own upbringing, and not of someone else’s.
I do not do this voluntarily. It’s a weakness, I know, a failure of character or morals, this subtle, sneaky, almost enslaving instinct to be like just about anyone I happen to find myself with. It happens