Read The Laughing Matter Online
Authors: William Saroyan
“It's a trick,” Evan said.
He took Warren's glass and went up onto the porch to get each of them a new drink. He tossed the ice and dregs out of each glass onto the lawn, fixed the drinks quickly, saying only a few words to May Walz, not looking at Swan, not even looking at May, and then went back to Walz, who took his glass and said, “What
is
a loner, anyway? I'm not sure I know what you mean.”
Evan Nazarenus laughed, laughing at himself and not at the man's question.
“Everybody's a loner,” he said. “It has no special meaning. I'm glad Dade likes to prune the vines. I think I'd like to do that myself. I get a pretty good Christmas and New Year holiday. It might be a good idea to come down and go to work with Dade this winter.”
“I wonder if you'd like the work,” Walz said. “It's the same thing over and over. I make a stab at it every year. After I've done a dozen vines or so, an hour's work, I've had all I can take.”
The women came down to the lawn, not insisting on
joining them, but lingering near by. The four of them were soon talking, and drawing closer.
“I thought we might eat on the lawn,” Swan said, almost speaking to Walz. “I mean, we could bring the picnic table from the back yard.”
“It's O.K. with me,” Evan said to May Walz. “O.K. with you?”
“I think it would be fine,” May said.
“Shall we get the table, then?” Walz said to Evan.
They went off together and soon returned with the long table. Swan and May went into the house for a tablecloth and other stuff. When they came out and went to work, Swan said, “It's steaks and a salad. Do your daughters like steaks?”
“Sure,” Walz said. “Wonderful.”
“Medium-rare, pretty much?” Swan said.
“I think so,” Walz said.
The women fooled around the table, going in and coming out of the house. The men gradually wandered around the house to the back yard, Evan Nazarenus going there almost helplessly, for he wanted to have another look at Red and Eva.
After dinner Cody Bone came by with his son Bart, as Evan had asked them to do, for at the back of his mind had been the thought that it was necessary for anyone who had seen him last night to see him again as soon as possible. It had seemed extremely important to get this matter out of the way, so he could turn to the other matter. From the depot, while Red had been riding in the locomotive with Cody Bone, he had telephoned Dade at the St. Francis in San Francisco.
“Can you do me a favor?” he'd said. “Fly down tonight. Stay only a couple of hours if you like, but fly down.”
“I'll try,” Dade had said. “I may not be able to make it until late. Will you be up?”
“I'll be up.”
“I'll try. Midnight or one or two, or maybe even three, if that's not too late.”
“Any time, Dade.”
“I'll try.”
The table was soon cleared, the kids played on the front lawn, the others sat at the table with drinks, or stood near it.
Evan stood with Bart, who was drinking beer. The father and the son had cleaned up and put on fresh clothes: open white shirts, white slacks, moccasins. The boy, like Warren Walz, had nothing to say about last night. He wanted some information about Stanford.
“When you get there,” Evan said, “call me. I'll take you around to the people you ought to see. How much longer will you be at the college in Fresno?”
“Another year,” Bart said, “but I want to begin making plans now. I'm not sure I may not want to go to one of the Eastern schools at the last minute. I think I'd
rather
, except for Cody. I can't decide on a profession, either, so if it's just school I'll be going to, it seems to me a school in another part of the country would be best.”
“Most likely,” Evan said. “How about law?”
“No, I think not,” Bart said. “I hate disputes, and the whole idea. I mean, the idea's supposed to be to reach truth andâwell, justice, I suppose. But that's not what happens at all. Lawyers take pride in concealing the truth, in distorting it, in prohibiting it. I suppose
somebody
might come along and be a true lawyer, but I doubt if he'd get very far, or last very long.”
“Medicine?”
“Not for me. I couldn't be near pain in others without feeling it myself. I'd feel it all the time. I wouldn't be much help.”
“What about teaching?”
“Well, that
might
be O.K. if I could think of something to teach. I can't.” He thought a moment, then said, “Most of all I'd like to travel, but that's no profession. Besides, you've got to have money, and the only way you can get money is to work.”
“Have you thought of going to sea? A voyage around the world, for instance? I know a fellow with the President Line who might get you on as an able seaman. I think a little training would be involved, but nothing much.”
He saw the boy's eyes brighten.
“I've
dreamed
of something like that all my life,” Bart said. “It's what I'd
really
like to do. I don't
have
to go back to college. I've planned to only because there's nothing else to do. I suppose I'd even be paid.”
“Yes, of course.”
“I'd have time ashore in quite a few cities, wouldn't I?”
“I'm not sure, but I should imagine so.”
“Would you speak to the man?” the boy said. “I'm ready to go. I'm ready to take the necessary training. I wouldn't want to wait table or anything like that. I'd want to work with the ship itself.” He brought an envelope from his back pocket, removed the letter, and handed the envelope to Evan. “That's my name and address. The phone's Clovis 121, but if you forget, the operator will put you through. Do you think there's a chance? It's
exactly
what I want to do.”
“Yes, I think there
is
a chance,” Evan said. “Do you want to speak to your father about it?”
“Not until I know if I can go,” Bart said. “The reason for that is, I don't want him to worry for nothing, in case it doesn't turn out. When it looks as if it
might
turn out, then I know I can explain it to him so he won't worry. I I mean I'll know when I'll be leaving and when I'll be back. When things are clear that way, well, they
are
clear, and there's little left to worry about. I might even know the places I'd be able to visit, the places from which I'd send him letters. He wouldn't worry if it was all clear, but if it wasn't, he'd worry, and he might just worry so much that I'd start worrying about him, and hell, that's silly. How long
would
the trip take?”
“About three months, I think. Figure four. Perhaps five, even.”
“What's five months?” the boy said. “What's six? What's a year? To do a thing like that, I mean? I want to go. I can't wait to go. I don't just mean around the world. I mean, to
go
. I've been here all my life, almost eighteen years. I'm not sick and tired of it exactly, but do you want to know something? I've never met a girl here I'd like to marry. I've liked the ones I've known, but I want to see others. I want to see them in all sorts of different countries. I want to know the way they are. I'll probably come home and marry one of the girls here, but before I do, I want to see the others. I want to have seen them. I want to know what I'm doing, and why. I mean, I don't want what I do to happen because I happened to be there at the time, and all the rest of it. I'm sure you understand what I mean.”
“I understand,” Evan said. “I'll call the man at his home
tomorrow. Tomorrow's Sunday, so unless he's on his vacation, he'll be home. I'll call you just as soon as I've had a talk with him.”
“I'll be hanging around the house all day,” the boy said. “I hope this works.”
“I hope it does, too,” Evan said. “Let me get you another beer.”
At the table, opening another can and filling the glass, Evan saw Cody Bone talking to Red. Red was away from the others, standing in front of Cody, who sat with his back to the table, holding a glass with Scotch and ice in it. Evan didn't hear much, but he heard enough to know that his son was asking Cody about Cody's personal experience in the matter of anger.
Evan and Cody's son Bart were joined after a moment by Warren Walz, who, without preamble, said, “What's it all about, anyway? Can you tell me, Bart? Can
you
, Evan?”
Cody's son laughed, perhaps because he was excited about the idea of making a voyage around the world. He also laughed because it was such a strange question. He certainly had never before heard Warren Walz ask a question like that. Bart turned to Evan, as if to delegate to him the responsibility of trying to answer the question.
“Well, Warren,” Evan said, “I think I know what you mean.”
“I mean,” Walz said swiftly,
“what's it all about
, that's all.”
“I know,” Evan said. “And the answer is,
you
know, and nobody else does.”
“Do I?” Walz said. “Do I know? I didn't know. I didn't think I knew at all. I was
sure
I didn't, but come to think
of it, maybe I did. Maybe I knew all the time. Maybe I
do
know.”
“Well, if you do,” Bart said, “tell
me
, because I don't.”
“Oh, no,” Walz said. “I know for
myself
, and you'll have to find out for yourself.”
“Well, tell me what it is for yourself, then,” Bart said.
“Why should I?” Walz said. “Now, if you were twenty-one, I could tell you a
little
of it, but as it is, I can't tell you
any
of it.”
Bart burst into laughter. Walz began to laugh, too, only he went on laughing. Fanny came and stood in front of him.
“What are
you
laughing about?” she said.
“You go over there and play,” Walz told his daughter with mock sternness, which might just not have been mock at all, but something he had wanted to do for a long time.
“Oh,” Fanny said. “O.K. I thought it was a joke you could tell me.”
She was gone instantly, indifferently.
“Get yourself three daughters and you've got yourself three more wives,” Walz said to Evan. “Wants to know why I'm laughing. Four wives is a lot of wives for one man.” He looked at his glass as if he had never before seen it. “What's it all about, anyway?” he said suddenly again. Then, looking at Evan, his eyes troubled arid hurt and ashamed, he said, “I can't drink worth a damn any more. I believe I'm drunk.” He swallowed all of the liquid in his glass, then said, “I hope to Christ you won't mind if I get a little drunker.”
“I promise to get you and your family safely home if you do,” Bart said.
“Oh, hell,” Walz said. “Can I freshen yours while I'm getting mine?” he said to Evan.
Evan handed him his glass. Walz went to the table, and as he went Bart noticed that he was actually drunk.
“I've never seen him this way before,” Bart said. “I mean, so likable. He's always been a little stuffy. You know how it is in a town like this. Six or seven families visit one another from time to time. Well, every time Warren and May have visited Cody, and I've been there, too, he's always beenâwell, a little stuffy. I think you've been a good influence. I meanââ”
He was suddenly embarrassed by what he'd said about a man better than twice his age, talking about him as if he were somebody slightly peculiar or a little inferior.
“I must be getting a little drunk myself,” he said softly and shyly. “A glass of beer, I guess, and I think I'm pretty smart. I hope it's because I'm so excited about the idea of this voyage.”
Walz came back with Evan's drink. Bart wandered off to talk to Fay Walz, as if to demonstrate to Evan he knew perfectly well when to shut up and go away.
“I've got something to tell you,” Walz said quickly. “I hope you won't mind. It's this. I know you're having a rough time. The reason I know is I am, too. I understand this whole business. I didn't want to come. I cooked up the excuse about the kids wanting to get away. Well, if there's anything I can doâand don't think I don't know what a fool I must seemâwell, I can't imagine what I could do. I wouldn't be able to do anything for myself, let alone for somebody else. What I mean isâwell, to hell with it. Forget it. I'm sorry I brought it up. Look at that damn middle
girl of mine standing on her head. She'll stay there an hour if she decides she wants to.”
“She's delightful,” Evan said.
“I'm crazy about her,” Walz said quickly. “I think I'll let her know.”
He went to the girl standing on her head, put his drink down on the lawn, and tried to stand on his head beside her. The first time he tried he fell back the way he had started, on his feet. He tried again instantly, made it for an instant, then fell flat on his back. He started again, though, very serious about what he was trying to do but getting tired. His wife and Swan, laughing, went to watch. The little girl, still standing on her head, laughed each time her father failed, then said, “You can't do it, Papa. You're too fat.”
“I'm not so fat,” Walz said.
Everybody gathered around now, and Evan saw Red stand on
his
head on the other side of Fanny. Red was able to stay on his head only five or six seconds, though. Walz tried again, made it, and Cody Bone applauded until the women did, too. Then Walz fell flat on his back, and went to sleep.
“Oh, dear,” May Walz said. “He's drunk.”
Walz opened his eyes.
“I'm
not
drunk,” he said softly. “I just want to lie here and sleep. Don't worry about me, May.”
Still standing on her head, Fanny shouted, “Whoever can't stand on his head is a moron.”