narrative
â âI went to stay with my sister and brother-in-law â she had been here some years already. But he got a job with a real-estate scheme, and they went to live on one of the firmâs housing projects â you know, a little house, another little house next door, a swing for the kids, the same swing next door. I came back to New York on my own and I found a place in Greenwich Village.â
Ah, now, there was a setting in which one could imagine the Carlitta of the photographs, the beautiful, Oriental-looking German girl from Heidelberg, with the bold, promising eyes. And at the moment at which Eileen thought this, her ear caught the drawl of Edgar Hicks. â. . . now, our boyâs the real independent type. Now, only the other day . . .â Edgar Hicks! Where had Edgar Hicks come in? She looked at him, carefully separating the flesh from the fine fringe of bone in his boiled trout, the knife held deliberately in his freckled hand.
âDid you live in Greenwich Village?â Eileen said to him suddenly.
He interrupted his description of his boyâs seat in the saddle to turn and say, surprised, âNo, maâam, I certainly didnât. Iâve never spent more than two consecutive weeks in New York in my life.â He thought Eileenâs question merely a piece of tourist curiosity, and returned to Alice Raines, his boy and the saddle.
Carlitta had digressed into some reminiscence about Heidelberg days, but when she paused, laughing from Stefan to Waldeck with a faltering coquettishness that rose in her like a half-forgotten mannerism, Eileen said, âWhere did you and your husband meet?â
âIn a train,â Carlitta said loudly and smiled, directed at her husband.
He took it up across the table. âBaltimore and Ohio line,â he said, well rehearsed. There was the feeling that all the few things he had to say had been slowly thought out and slowly spoken many times before. âI was sittinâ in the diner havinâ a beer with my dinner, and in comes this little person looking mighty proud and cute as you can make âem . . .â So it went on, the usual story, and Edgar Hicks spared them no detail of the romantic convention. âTook Carlitta down to see my folks the following month and we were married two weeks after that,â he concluded at last. He had expected to marry one of the local girls heâd been to school with; it was clear that Carlitta was the one and the ever-present adventure of his life. Now they had a boy who rode as naturally as an Indian and didnât watch television; he liked to raise his own chickens and have independent pocket money from the sale of eggs.
âCarlitta,â Stefan said, aside, âhow long were you in Greenwich Village?â
âFour years,â she said shortly, replying from some other part of her mind; her attention and animation were given to the comments with which she amplified her husbandâs description of their childâs remarkable knowledge of country lore, his superiority over town-bred children.
Eileen overheard the low, flat reply. Four years! Four years about which Carlitta had said not a word, four years which somehow or other had brought her from the arrogant, beautiful, âadvancedâ girl with whom Waldeck and Stefan could not fall in love because they and she agreed they were not good enough for her, to the girl who would accept Edgar Hicks a few weeks after a meeting on a train.
Carlitta felt the gaze of the girl from South Africa. A small patch of bright colour appeared on each of Carlittaâs thin cheekbones. Perhaps it was the wine. Perhaps it was the wine, too, that made her voice rise, so that she began to talk of her life on the Ohio farm with a zest and insistence which made the whole table her audience. She told how she never went to town unless she had to; never more than once a month. How country people, like herself, discovered a
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