Evening In Byzantium Part 23

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Evening In Byzantium



Evening In Byzantium Part 23


She glided across the room, a pale shadow, slipped into the bed beside him. Her body was precious to him, generous and familiar. "Home again," he whispered to her, erasing other memories.

But later on, lying still, side by side, she said, "You didn't really want me to come to Cannes."

He hesitated. "No," he said.

"It wasn't only because of your daughter."

"No." He had been marked. Somehow.




"There's somebody else there."

"Yes."

She was silent for a moment. "A serious somebody else or an accidental somebody else?"

"I would say accidental," he said. "But I'm not sure. Anyway, it happened accidentally. That is, I didn't go to Cannes to meet her. I didn't know she was alive until a few days ago." Now that she had broached the subject, he was relieved that he could talk about it. She was too dear to him for lying. "I don't really know how it happened," he said. "It just happened."

"I didn't stay home alone in Paris every night since you were gone," she said.

"I won't ask you what you mean by that," he said.

"It means what it means."

"Okay."

"We're not bound to each other," she said, "by anything else but what we feel for each other at any given moment."

"All right."

"Do you mind if I smoke a cigarette?"

"I always mind if anybody smokes a cigarette."

"I promise not to come down with cancer tonight." She got out of bed, put on a robe, and went to the dresser. He saw the flare of the match. She came back to the bed and sat on its edge, her face from time to time lit by the glow of the cigarette tip when she inhaled. "I have some news for you tonight, too," she said. "I was going to save it for another time, but I'm in a chatty mood."

He laughed.

"What're you laughing at?" she asked.

"Nothing," he said. "Just laughing. What's the news?"

"I'm leaving Paris," she said.

Unreasonably, he felt that this was a blow aimed at him. "Why?"

"We're setting up a branch in San Francisco. There's been a big movement of the Youth back and forth to and from the East. Exchange scholarships-stuff like that. We've been negotiating with an organization in California for months, and it finally came through, and I'm elected. I'm going to be our private Window on the Awakening Orient."

"Paris won't be the same place without you."

"I won't be the same lady without Paris," she said.

"How do you feel about it?"

"About living in San Francisco? Curious. It's a pretty city, and I hear it's seething with cultural aspiration." Her tone was mocking. "It'll probably be good for my kids. Improve their English. A mother has to think about improving her children's English from time to time, doesn't she?"

"I suppose so," he said. "When are you going to make the move?"

"Sometime this summer. A month or two."

"I have lost another home," he said. "I will wipe Paris off my itinerary."

"That's loyal," she said. "Will you add San Francisco? They tell me there are some good restaurants."

"So I hear," he said. "I'll be there. From time to time."

"From time to time," she said. "A girl can't ask for everything, can she?"

He didn't answer her. "Foundations keep shifting," he said.

Then, much later, she said, "I don't pretend I'm wildly pleased by what you told me tonight. But I'm no child, and neither are you. You didn't expect me to make a scene, or throw myself out the window, or anything like that, did you?"

"No, of course not."

"As I said, I'm not wildly pleased," she said. "But I am wildly pleased about a lot of other things about us. Will you do me a favor?"

"Of course."

"Say, I love you."

"I love you," he said.

She stubbed out the cigarette, took off the robe, dropping it onto the floor, and got into the bed beside him, her head on his chest. "And that's enough talk for tonight. I'm not in a chatty mood anymore."

"I love you," he whispered into her tumbled hair.

They slept late and woke to sunlight and birds singing. Constance called Ma.r.s.eilles, but the money from St. Louis hadn't arrived yet for her Youth, and the narcotics man would not be in until tomorrow. They decided to stay in Meyrague another day, and he didn't call Cannes to let anyone know where he was. The day was going to be only theirs.

Then, the next morning, the money still hadn't come, and it was too nice to leave, and they stayed another twenty-four hours.

When he left her at the hotel in Ma.r.s.eilles the next morning, he told her he would take her to lunch in Paris on Monday. It looked, she said, as if she had a good chance to spring the Youth by nightfall. If she failed, she'd go back to Paris, anyway, and leave him to his fate. She had spent enough time in the south, she said. She was a working woman.

"d.a.m.n it, Jesse," Klein was saying loudly over the phone, "I tried to get you ten times. Where are you now?"

"Ca.s.sis," Craig said. He had stopped off for lunch on the way back from Ma.r.s.eilles. He was calling from a restaurant on the harbor. The harbor was blue and toylike. The season hadn't begun yet, and there was a sleepy, tranced look about it, the boats all closed up under their winter canvas and everybody away for lunch.

"Ca.s.sis," Klein said. "Just when you need people, they're in Ca.s.sis. Where the h.e.l.l is Ca.s.sis?"

"In between," Craig said. "What did you want to talk to me about?"

"I think I have a deal for you. That's what I want to talk to you about. When can you get here?"

"Three, four hours."

"I'll be here," Klein said. "I won't move all afternoon."

"Will you do me a favor?" Craig said.

"What?"

"Will you call Murphy for me and ask him to be at your place at five o'clock, too?" He could sense Klein's hesitation at the other end of the line, an intake of breath, an almost-cough.

"What do you want Murphy here for?" Klein asked.

"I want to spare his feelings as much as possible," Craig said.

"That's a new one, a client wanting to spare an agent's feelings," Klein said. "I wish I had some like that."

"I'm not sparing an agent's feelings," Craig said. "I'm sparing a friend's feelings."

"Murphy's read the script, of course," Klein said.

"Of course."

"And he said he didn't want to handle it."

"Yes."

"Well," Klein said reluctantly, "if you insist."

"I think it would be better all round," Craig said. "But if you don't want to do business with someone looking over your shoulder ..."

"h.e.l.l," Klein said, "I'll do business with the Pope looking over my shoulder. I'll call Murphy."

"That's a good fellow."

"That's me," Klein said. "Despite all rumors to the contrary."

"I'll be there at five," Craig said. He hung up. While it was a fact that he was asking for Murphy out of affection for his old friend, he also wanted him in on the beginning of the talks about the deal. He knew that he himself was a poor dealer for himself, loath to press for advantage, and Murphy had always protected him in all the contracts he had signed. And this contract promised to be a complicated one. It was true that he had written The Three Horizons for other reasons than the money he might eventually make out of it, but he had been around the movies long enough to know that the more money you were paid, the easier it was to get your way in other matters. While the old formula, Money versus Art, often held, he had found that in the movie business, in his case, the formula, Money multiplies Art, was likely to be the more valid one.

Craig went out and sat at a table overlooking the harbor. He was the only customer. It was restful, being the only customer, looking out at the sunny little blue body of water, thinking of lunch and Klein not moving for an entire afternoon. He ordered a pastis in honor of the fishermen and vintners of Ca.s.sis and leisurely examined the menu.

He ordered a dorade and a bottle of white wine and sipped at his pastis. The liquorice taste made the Mediterranean richer for him, brought back the memory of a hundred lazy afternoons. The time with Constance had been good for him. He thought of her fondly. He knew that if he ever used the word in her presence, she would be enraged. No matter. It was a fair enough word. People were not fond enough of each other. They said they loved each other, but what they meant was that they wanted to use each other, patrol each other, dominate each other, devour each other, destroy each other, weep for each other. Constance and he enjoyed each other, at least most of the time, and fond was as good a word as any for that. He postponed thinking of San Francisco.

He had said, "I love you," to Constance, and he had said, "I love you," to Gail McKinnon, and he had meant it both times, and perhaps he meant it simultaneously. In the sunlight, alone over a milky cold southern drink, it seemed easily possible.

He also did not deny to himself that it was pleasant to sit idly by the side of a deserted harbor and know that a man as involved in important affairs as Walter Klein had called him ten times the day before and was even now waiting impatiently for his arrival. He had thought that he had given all that up, but he realized now, with some satisfaction, that he was not immune to the joys of power.

Well, he thought, with everything that has happened, it wasn't a bad idea coming down to Cannes after all. He hoped that when he arrived in Cannes that evening he would discover that Gail McKinnon had left town.

When he reached Klein's house just a little after five, he saw a car with a chauffeur parked in the courtyard and knew that Murphy was already there. Murphy didn't like to drive himself. He had been in three accidents and had, as he put it, gotten the message.

Murphy and Klein were sitting by the side of the heated swimming pool, Murphy drinking. The last time Craig had been there, the night of the party, it had been Sidney Green, the director who had been hailed by Cahiers du Cinema and who couldn't get a job, who had come out of the bushes to greet him after p.i.s.sing on the expensive green gra.s.s of Walter Klein. For losers only, Craig remembered thinking. Today he didn't feel like a winner, but he didn't feel like a loser, either.

"Hi, boys," Craig said as he came up to the side of the pool. "I hope I haven't kept you waiting." He sat down quickly so that they wouldn't have to decide whether or not to stand up to greet him.

"I just got here," Murphy said. "A half ounce of Scotch ago."

"I explained a little of the situation over the phone to Murph," Klein said.

"Well," Murphy said gruffly, "if there's somebody d.a.m.n fool enough to put up a million bucks for that script on today's market, more power to him."

"Where did you get that amount?" Craig asked. "A million dollars?"

"That's what I figure it'll cost to make," Murphy said. "Minimum."

"I haven't discussed money yet with anyone," Klein said. "It's all according how you want to make it and with whom."

"You told me a director had read it," Craig said to Klein. "Which director?"

"Bruce Thomas," Klein said. He looked quickly from one to the other of the two men, enjoying his moment of triumph.

"If Bruce Thomas wants to make it," Murphy said, "you can get all the money you need." He shook his head. "I would never have guessed Thomas. Why he would want to do something like this. He's never done anything like this before."

"That's exactly why," Klein said. "That's what he told me. Now," Klein said to Craig, "Thomas agrees with me, the script needs a lot of rewriting. What do you think, Murph?"

"Yeah. A lot," Murphy said.

"And Thomas would like to bring in another writer," Klein said. "To work on it alone, preferably, or if there's a hitch, to work with this fellow Harte. Just what sort of deal do you have with Harte, Jesse?"

Craig hesitated. "No deal," he said.

Murphy made a startled noise. "What do you mean by no deal?" Klein asked. "Do you own the script or don't you?"

"I own it, all right," Craig said.

"So?" Klein asked.

"I wrote it," Craig said, "with my own little old fountain pen. There is no Malcolm Harte. I just picked a name at random and put it on the script."

"What the h.e.l.l did you do that for?" Murphy said angrily.

"It's too complicated to go into now. Anyway, there we are," Craig said. "Let's move on from there."

"Thomas is going to be surprised when he hears," Klein said.

"If he likes the script with the name Malcolm Harte on it," Murphy said, "he's going to like it with the name Craig on it."

"I suppose so," Klein said doubtfully. "But it's bound to change his thinking somewhat."






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