Read Look at the Birdie Online
Authors: Kurt Vonnegut
“I know. She told me. Beatrix told me. Janice told me. Edith told me.” The roster seemed to please him. “Ellen says she won’t detach, by the way.”
“Really? How unwise. Well, we shall see what we shall see.”
When God had been in his heaven as far as Ellen was concerned, when she had been confident that she was about to bring a certified New York celebrity back to Buffalo in a matter of weeks, I had taken her in fatherly fashion to lunch at my favorite restaurant. She seemed to like it, and I saw her there now and then after the breakup.
She was usually with the type of person both Larry and I had told her she deserved—someone closer to her own age. She also seemed to have chosen persons closer to her own
amiable vacuity, which made for lunch hours of sighs, long silences, and the general atmosphere of being fogbound often mistaken for love. Actually, Ellen and her companion were in the miserable condition of not being able to think of anything to say, I’m sure. With Larry, the problem had never come up. It was understood that he was to do the talking, and that when he fell silent, it was a silence for effect, beautiful, to be remembered and unbroken by her. When her escorts focused their attention on the matter of paying the check, Ellen, ever aware of her audience, indicated by restlessness and a look of disdain that this wasn’t the caliber stuff she was used to. And, of course, it wasn’t.
When we happened to be in the restaurant at the same time, she ignored my nods, and—giving less than a damn, really—I gave the practice of nodding up. I think she felt I was part of a
plot
, somehow
in on
Larry’s
scheme
to
humiliate
her.
After a while, she gave up young men closer to her age in favor of buying her own lunch. And finally, by a coincidence that surprised us both, she found herself seated at the table next to mine, clearing her white throat.
It became impossible for me to go on reading my paper. “Well, as I live and breathe,” I said.
“And how have you been?” she asked coldly. “Still getting lots of laughs?”
“Oh yes, lots and lots. Sadism’s on the upswing, you know. New Jersey’s legalized it, and Indiana and Wyoming are on the brink.”
She nodded. “Still waters run deep,” she said enigmatically.
“Meaning me, Ellen?”
“Me.”
“I see,” I said perplexedly. “By that, you mean there is
more to you than meets the eye? I agree.” And I did agree. It was incredible that there should be so little to Ellen—intellectually, mind you—as what met the eye. “Larry’s eye,” she said.
“Oh, come on, Ellen—surely you’re over that. He’s vain and selfish, and keeps his stomach in with a girdle.”
She held up her hands. “No, no—just tell me about the postcards and the horn. What does he say about them?”
“Postcards? Horn?” I shook my head. “He hasn’t said a word about either one.”
“Natch,” she said. “Excellent, perfect. But perf.”
“Sorry, I’m conf and have an imp app,” I said, rising.
“What’s that?”
“I said I’m confused, Ellen. And I’d try to understand, but I haven’t time. I’ve an important appointment. Good luck, dear.”
The appointment was with the dentist, and, with that grim visit over and the back of the afternoon broken, I decided to find Larry and ask him about the postcards and the horn. It was Tuesday, and it was four, so Larry would naturally be at his barber’s. I went to the shop and took the seat next to him. His face was covered with lather, but it was Larry, all right. For years, no one else had been in that chair at four on Tuesday.
“Trim,” I said to the barber; and then, to Larry, “Ellen Sparks says you should know still waters run deep.”
“Hmmmm?” said Larry through the lather. “Who’s Ellen Sparks?”
“A former student of yours. Remember?” This forgetting routine was an old trick of Larry’s, and, for all I know, it was on the level. “She graduated two months ago.”
“Tough job keeping track of all the alumnae,” he said. “That little Buffalo thing? Wholesale groceries? I remember. And now the shampoo,” he said to the barber.
“Of course, Mr. Whiteman.
Naturally
the shampoo next.”
“She wants to know about the postcards and the horn.”
“Postcards and horn,” he said thoughtfully. “No, doesn’t ring a bell.” He snapped his fingers. “Oh yes, yes, yes, yes. You can tell her that she is absolutely destroying me with them. Every morning I get a card from her in the mail.”
“What does she say?”
“Tell her the mail arrives as I am eating my four-minute eggs. I lay it all before me, with her card on top. I finish my eggs, eagerly seize the card. And then? I tear it in halves, then quarters, then sixteenths, and drop the little snowstorm in my wastebasket. Then it is time for coffee. I haven’t the remotest idea what she says.”
“And the horn?”
“Even more horrible punishment than the cards.” He laughed. “Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned. So, every afternoon at two-thirty, as I am about to begin practice, what happens?”
“She lifts you off the floor with a five-minute blast on the horns?”
“She hasn’t the nerve. Every afternoon I get one little, almost imperceptible
beep
, the shifting of gears, and the silly child is gone.”
“Doesn’t bother you, eh?”
“Bother me? She was right in thinking I was sensitive, but she underestimates my adaptability. It bothered me for the first couple of days, but now I no more notice it than I notice the noise of the trains. I actually had to think a minute before
realizing what you were talking about when you asked about horns.”
“That girl’s got blood in her eye,” I said.
“She’d do well to send a little of it to her brain,” said Larry. “What do you think of my new student, by the way?”
“Christina? If she’d been my daughter, I’d have sent her to welding school. She’s the kind the teachers in grade school used to call
listeners
. The teachers would put them in the corner during singing class, and tell them to beat time with their feet and keep their little mouths shut.”
“She’s eager to learn,” said Larry defensively. He was sensitive to intimations that his interest in his students was ever anything but professional. And, more or less in self-defense, he was belligerently loyal to the artistic possibilities of his charges. His poisonous appraisal of Ellen’s voice, for instance, wasn’t made until she was ready to be chucked in the oubliette.
“In ten years, Christina will be ready for ‘Hot Cross Buns.’”
“She may surprise you.”
“I don’t think she will, but Ellen may,” I said. I was disturbed by Ellen’s air of being about to loose appalling, irresistible forces. And yet, there was just this damn fool business of the cards and horn.
“Ellen who?” said Larry fuzzily, from under a hot towel.
The barbershop telephone rang. The barber started for it, but it stopped ringing. He shrugged. “Funny thing. Seems like every time Mr. Whiteman’s in here lately, the phone does that.”
The telephone by my bed rang.
“This is Larry Whiteman!”
“Drop dead, Larry Whiteman!” The clock said two in the morning.
“Tell that girl to quit it, do you hear?”
“Fine, glad to, you bet,” I said thickly. “Who what?”
“That wholesale groceress, of course! That Buffalo thing. Do you hear? She’s got to quit it instantly. That light, that goddamned light.”
I started to drop the telephone into its cradle, hoping against hope to rupture his eardrum, when I came awake and realized that I was fascinated. Perhaps Ellen had at last unleashed her secret weapon. Larry had had a recital that night. Maybe she’d let him have it in front of everybody. “She blinded you with a light?”
“Worse! When the houselights went down, she lit up her fool face with one of those fool flashlights people carry on their key chains till the batteries pooh out. There she was, grinning out of the dark like death warmed over.”
“And she kept it up all evening? I’d think they’d have thrown her out.”
“She did it until she was sure I’d seen her, then out it went. Then came the coughs. Lord! the coughs!”
“Somebody always coughs.”
“Not the way she does it. Just as I took a breath to start each number, she’d let go—
hack hack hack
. Three deliberate hacks.”
“Well, if I see her, I’ll tell her,” I said. I was rather taken by the novelty of Ellen’s campaign, but disappointed by its lack of promise of long-range results. “An old trouper like you shouldn’t have any trouble ignoring that sort of business,” which was true.
“She’s trying to rattle me. She’s trying to make me crack
up before my Town Hall recital,” he said bitterly. The professional high point for Larry each year is his annual Town Hall recital—which is always a critical success, incidentally. Make no mistake about that—Larry, as a singer, is very hot stuff. But now, Ellen had begun her lamp and cough campaign with the big event only two months off.
Two weeks after Larry’s frantic call, Ellen and I coincided at lunch again. She was still distinctly unfriendly, treating me as though I were a valuable spy, but not to be trusted, and distasteful to deal with. Once more she gave me the unsettling impression of hidden power, of something big about to happen. Her color was high and her movements furtive. After a few brittle amenities, she asked if Larry had said anything about the light.
“A great deal,” I said, “after your first performance, that is. He was quite burned up.”
“But now?” she said eagerly.
“Bad news for you, Ellen—good news for Larry. He’s quite used to it now, after three recitals, so he has calmed down beautifully. The effect, I’m afraid, is zero. Look, why not give up? You’ve needled him long enough, haven’t you? Revenge is the most you can get, and you’ve got that.” She’d made one basic mistake that I didn’t feel was up to me to point out: All of her annoyances were regular, predictable, which made it very easy for Larry to assimilate them into the clockwork of his life and ignore them.
She took the bad news in her stride. I might as well have told her that her campaign was a smashing success—that Larry was at the point of surrender. “Revenge is small apples,” she said.
“Well, you’ve got to promise me one thing, Ellen—”
“Sure,” she said. “Why shouldn’t I be like Larry and promise anything, any old thing at all?”
“Ellen, promise not to do anything violent at his Town Hall recital.”
“Scout’s honor,” she said, and smiled. “The easiest promise I ever made.”
That evening, I played back the puzzling conversation to Larry. He was having his bedtime snack of crackers and hot milk.
“Uh-hummmm,” he said, his mouth full. “If she
had
made sense, it would have been the first time in her life.” He shrugged disdainfully. “She’s licked, this Helen Smart.”
“Ellen Sparks,” I corrected him.
“Whatever her name is, she’ll be catching the train home soon. Awful taste! Honestly. I wouldn’t have been surprised if she’d thrown spitballs and stuck pins in my doorbell.”
Somewhere along the street, a garbage can lid clattered. “What a racket,” I said. “Do they have to be that noisy about it?”
“What racket?”
“That garbage can.”
“Oh, that. If you lived here, you’d be used to it. Don’t know who it is, but they give the can a lick every night”—he yawned—“just at bedtime.”
Keeping big secrets, particularly secrets about things of one’s own doing, is a tough proposition for even very bright people. It is so much tougher for small brains that criminals, for instance, are constantly blabbing themselves into jail or worse. Whatever it is they’ve done, it’s too wonderful not to bring out in the open for admiration. That Ellen kept a secret for even
five minutes is hard to believe. The fact is, she kept a dandy one for six months, for the time separating her breakup with Larry and the two days before his Town Hall recital.
She finally told me at one of our back-to-back luncheons. She phrased the news in such a way that it wasn’t until I saw Larry the next day that I realized what it was she’d given away.
“Now, you promised, Ellen,” I told her again, “no rough stuff at the recital day after tomorrow. No heckling, no stink bombs, no serving of a subpoena.”
“Don’t be crude.”
“Don’t you, dear. The recital’s as much for music lovers as it is for Larry. It’s no place for partisan politics.”
She seemed, for the first time in months, relaxed, like a person who had just finished a completely satisfying piece of work—a rare type these days. Her color, usually tending toward the reds of excitement, mysterious expectancy, was serene pink and ivory.
She ate in silence, asked me nothing about Larry. There was nothing new I could have told her. Despite her persistent reminders—the horn, the cards, the light and coughs, and God knows what else—he had forgotten all about her. His life went its systematically selfish way, undisturbed.
Then she told me the news. It explained her calm. I had been expecting it for some time, and had even tried to coax her in that direction. I wasn’t surprised, nor impressed. It was a completely obvious solution to the mess, arrived at by a brain geared to the obvious.
“The die is cast,” she said soberly. “No turning back,” she added.
I agreed that the die was cast, indeed, and for the best; and I thought I understood what she meant. The only surprise
was that she kissed me on the cheek as she stood to leave the restaurant.
The next afternoon—cocktails-with-Larry-at-five time again—I let myself into his studio. He wasn’t anywhere to be seen. Larry had
always
been in the living room when I arrived, puttering around with the drinks, elegant in a loud tartan jacket a woman admirer had sent him. “Larry!”
The curtains into his bedroom parted, and he emerged unsteadily, pathetically. As a bathrobe he wore a scarlet-lined, braid-encrusted cape left over from some forgotten operetta. He sank into a chair like a wounded general, and hid his face in his hands.
“Flu!” I said.
“It’s some unknown virus,” he said darkly. “The doctor can find nothing. Nothing. Perhaps this is the beginning of a third world war—germ warfare.”