“They’re fine,” I said. “Pour some water onto my balls, for Christ’s sake.”
“I’ve been waiting so long for you to say that,” said Arthur.
So Jane was among us now, and although I missed the intimacy of the previous day, I found her so thrilling, so prim and
“Oh, no—a salad,” said Arthur.
Jane had brought several pounds of vegetables with her, and she proceeded to make an enormous salad and, rather mechanically, to vent her spleen at Cleveland. “You raped our dog,” she said, slicing thin, translucent wafers of cucumber into a wooden salad bowl as big as a bicycle wheel. “I mean…” Cleveland changed completely. He switched from drinking beer to drinking the orange juice that she had brought, and he kept going over to embrace her, to smell her, to assure himself that she was really there. Arthur and I sat down at the kitchen table, ate grapes, and watched them reunite; they forgot us completely, or pretended to do so.
“They said you were dead,” Cleveland said happily. “Dead of dysentery.”
Jane blushed and said, “You made them say that,” changing carrots and scallions to orange nickels and green dimes. “You left them no option.” She made as though to slice her rosy throat with the Sabatier knife, and stuck out her tongue. “I hear you took it very well.”
“I was devastated,” he said, and his face grew grim, and he looked, for a moment, like a devastated man. “How was New Mexico?”
“It was wonderful.”
“Was it stark? Starkly sensual?” As she chopped, he orbited her, slow as Jupiter, regarding her from every angle, but on this last word his orbit decayed and he fell against her, softly.
“Starkly sensual doesn’t even begin to describe it. You asshole,” she said.
Jane and Cleveland had been an item for nearly six years, and although their manner with each other was utterly familiar, they nonetheless displayed all the intoxicated rancor of a brand-new couple. It was as though they still had not decided if they liked each other. When she looked at him lovingly, her eyes were filled with the strong regret and disapproval of a mother with a jailbird son. And though when speaking to her he came closer than with anyone else to ridding his voice of its smirk, nevertheless the smirk remained. I think that fundamentally he was jealous of her: not of any phantom lovers—for she never had any—but jealous of
“Do you all like chives?” she said. “I bought some fresh chives.” She waved them hopefully. “I’ll bet you haven’t had a single vegetable since you got here.”
“We had beans,” I said.
There was silence while we all watched her make a vinaigrette, shaking flakes of this and that into the cruet without looking at the labels on the spice jars. I saw her shake nutmeg into the dressing, and curry. After she had held the bottle to the light and examined it closely for half a minute, watching the particles slowly sink through the line from oil to vinegar, she looked at Cleveland. “You know, I did like New Mexico an awful lot. So many interesting animals, and the Indians are so kind. I saw a rattlesnake, Cleveland. And tons and tons of motorcycles. I think you’d like it. I was thinking maybe the two of us could go out there sometime.”
“Sure,” said Cleveland. He fanned out his hands as though to say, Why not leave right now?
“You don’t mean it,” she said.
“Wait till I get some money. Then we can go anywhere. We can buy a trailer.”
“You’ll never get any money,” said Jane. She shook the dressing, then dumped it onto the salad. “Or will you?”
I watched Cleveland’s face, which revealed nothing, but when I turned back to Jane, she was staring directly at me, and I realized that I was blushing.
“That’s a beautiful salad,” I said.
“Well, let’s eat it, Art,” she said. “Come on, Cleveland, Arthur. Come eat some vegetables.”
After lunch, to my surprise, Jane asked me to walk into town with her. Cleveland smiled, woodenly, and raised his can of beer to me; evidently she had warned him that she planned to do this.
“I can give you only glowing reports of his behavior, Jane,” I said.