This beautiful story by Irwin Shaw tries to explore romantic love, fidelity, and marriage.
The Girls in Their Summer Dresses
Irwin Shaw
Fifth Avenue was shining in the sun when
they left the Brevoort and started walking toward Washington Square. The sun
was warm, even though it was November, and everything looked like Sunday
morning--the buses, and the well-dressed people walking slowly in couples and
the quiet buildings with the windows closed.
Michael held Frances' arm tightly as
they walked downtown in the sunlight. They walked lightly, almost smiling,
because they had slept late and had a good breakfast and it was Sunday. Michael
unbuttoned his coat and let it flap around him in the mild wind. They walked,
without saying anything, among the young and pleasant-looking people who
somehow seem to make up most of the population of that section of New York
City.
"Look out," Frances said, as
they crossed Eighth Street. "You'll break your neck."
Michael laughed and Frances laughed with
him.
"She's not so pretty, anyway,"
Frances said. "Anyway, not pretty enough to take a chance breaking your
neck looking at her."
Michael laughed again. He laughed louder
this time, but not as solidly. "She wasn't a bad-looking girl. She had a
nice complexion. Country-girl complexion. How did you know I was looking at
her?" Frances cocked her head to one side and smiled at her husband under
the tip-tilted brim of her hat. "Mike, darling . . ." she said.
Michael laughed, just a little laugh
this time. "Okay," he said. "The evidence is in. Excuse me. It
was the complexion. It's not the sort of complexion you see much in New York.
Excuse me."
Frances patted his arm lightly and
pulled him along a little faster toward Washington Square.
"This is a nice morning," she
said. "This is a wonderful morning. When I have breakfast with you it
makes me feel good all day."
"Tonic," Michael said.
"Morning pickup. Rolls and coffee with Mike and you're on the alkali side,
guaranteed."
"That's the story. Also, I slept
all night, wound around you like a rope."
"Saturday night," he said.
"I permit such liberties only when the week's work is done."
"You're getting fat," she
said.
"Isn't it the truth? The lean man
from Ohio."
"I love it," she said,
"an extra five pounds of husband."
"I love it, too," Michael said
gravely.
"I have an idea," Frances
said.
"My wife has an idea. That pretty
girl."
"Let's not see anybody all
day," Frances said. "Let's just hang around with each other. You and
me. We're always up to our neck in people, drinking their Scotch, or drinking
our Scotch, we only see each other in bed . . ."
"The Great Meeting Place,"
Michael said. "Stay in bed long enough and everybody you ever knew will
show up there."
"Wise guy," Frances said.
"I'm talking serious."
"Okay, I'm listening serious."
"I want to go out with my husband
all day long. I want him to talk only to me and listen only to me."
"What's to stop us?" Michael
asked. "What party intends to prevent me from seeing my wife alone on
Sunday? What party?"
"The Stevensons. They want us to
drop by around one o'clock and they'll drive us into the country."
"The lousy Stevensons," Mike
said. "Transparent. They can whistle. They can go driving in the country
by themselves. My wife and I have to stay in New York and bore each other
tˆte-…-tˆte."
"Is it a date?"
"It's a date."
Frances leaned over and kissed him on
the tip of the ear.
"Darling," Michael said.
"This is Fifth Avenue."
"Let me arrange a program,"
Frances said. "A planned Sunday in New York for a young couple with money
to throw away."
"Go easy."
"First let's go see a football
game. A professional football game," Frances said, because she knew
Michael loved to watch them. "The Giants are playing. And it'll be nice to
be outside all day today and get hungry and later we'll go down to Cavanagh's
and get a steak as big as a blacksmith's apron, with a bottle of wine, and
after that, there's a new French picture at the Filmarte that everybody says...
Say, are you listening to me?"
"Sure," he said. He took his
eyes off the hatless girl with the dark hair, cut dancer-style, like a helmet,
who was walking past him with the self-conscious strength and grace dancers
have. She was walking without a coat and she looked very solid and strong and
her belly was flat, like a boy's, under her skirt, and her hips swung boldly
because she was a dancer and also because she knew Michael was looking at her.
She smiled a little to herself as she went past and Michael noticed all these things
before he looked back at his wife. "Sure," he said, "we're going
to watch the Giants and we're going to eat steak and we're going to see a
French picture. How do you like that?"
"That's it," Frances said
flatly. "That's the program for the day. Or maybe you'd just rather walk
up and down Fifth Avenue."
"No," Michael said carefully.
"Not at all."
"You always look at other
women," Frances said. "At every damn woman in the city of New
York."
"Oh, come now," Michael said,
pretending to joke. "Only pretty ones. And, after all, how many pretty
women are there in New York? Seventeen?"
"More. At least you seem to think
so. Wherever you go."
"Not the truth. Occasionally,
maybe, I look at a woman as she passes. In the street. I admit, perhaps in the
street I look at a woman once in a while. . . ."
"Everywhere," Frances said.
"Every damned place we go. Restaurants, subways, theaters, lectures,
concerts."
"Now, darling," Michael said.
"I look at everything. God gave me eyes and I look at women and men and
subway excavations and moving pictures and the little flowers of the field. I
casually inspect the universe."
"You ought to see the look in your
eye," Frances said, "as you casually inspect the universe on Fifth
Avenue."
"I'm a happily married man."
Michael pressed her elbow tenderly, knowing what he was doing. "Example
for the whole twentieth century, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Loomis."
"You mean it?"
"Frances, baby . . ."
"Are you really happily
married?"
"Sure," Michael said, feeling
the whole Sunday morning sinking like lead inside him. "Now what the hell
is the sense in talking like that?"
"I would like to know."
Frances walked faster now, looking straight ahead, her face showing nothing,
which was the way she always managed it when she was arguing or feeling bad.
"I'm wonderfully happily
married," Michael said patiently. "I am the envy of all men between
the ages of fifteen and sixty in the state of New York."
"Stop kidding," Frances said.
"I have a fine home," Michael
said. "I got nice books and a phonograph and nice friends. I live in a
town I like the way I like and I do the work I like and I live with the woman I
like. Whenever something good happens, don't I run to you? When something bad
happens, don't I cry on your shoulder?"
"Yes," Frances said. "You
look at every woman that passes."
"That's an exaggeration."
"Every woman." Frances took
her hand off Michael's arm. "If she's not pretty you turn away fairly
quickly. If she's halfway pretty you watch her for about seven steps. . .
."
"My Lord, Frances!"
"If she's pretty you practically
break your neck . . ."
"Hey, let's have a drink,"
Michael said, stopping.
"We just had breakfast."
"Now, listen, darling," Mike
said, choosing his words with care, "it's a nice day and we both feel good
and there's no reason why we have to break it up. Let's have a nice
Sunday."
"I could have a fine Sunday if you
didn't look as though you were dying to run after every skirt on Fifth
Avenue."
"Let's have a drink," Michael
said.
"I don't want a drink."
"What do you want, a fight?"
"No," Frances said, so
unhappily that Michael felt terribly sorry for her. "I don't want a fight.
I don't know why I started this. All right, let's drop it. Let's have a good
time."
They joined hands consciously and walked
without talking among the baby carriages and the old Italian men in their
Sunday clothes and the young women with Scotties in Washington Square Park.
"I hope it's a good game
today," Frances said after a while, her tone a good imitation of the tone
she had used at breakfast and at the beginning of their walk. "I like
professional football games. They hit each other as though they're made out of
concrete. When they tackle each other," she said, trying to make Michael
laugh, "they make divots. It's very exciting."
"I want to tell you
something," Michael said very seriously. "I have not touched another
woman. Not once. In all the five years."
"All right," Frances said.
"You believe that, don't you?"
"All right."
They walked between the crowded benches,
under the scrubby citypark trees.
"I try not to notice it,"
Frances said, as though she were talking to herself. "I try to make
believe it doesn't mean anything. Some men're like that, I tell myself, they
have to see what they're missing."
"Some women're like that,
too," Michael said. "In my time I've seen a couple of ladies."
"I haven't even looked at another
man," Frances said, walking straight ahead, "since the second time I
went out with you."
"There's no law," Michael
said.
"I feel rotten inside, in my
stomach, when we pass a woman and you look at her and I see that look in your
eye and that's the way you looked at me the first time, in Alice Maxwell's
house. Standing there in the living room, next to the radio, with a green hat
on and all those people."
"I remember the hat," Michael
said.
"The same look," Frances said.
"And it makes me feel bad. It makes me feel terrible."
"Sssh, please, darling, sssh. . .
."
"I think I would like a drink
now," Frances said.
They walked over to a bar on Eighth
Street, not saying anything, Michael automatically helping her over curbstones
and guiding her past automobiles. He walked, buttoning his coat, looking
thoughtfully at his neatly shined heavy brown shoes as they made the steps
toward the bar. They sat near a window in the bar and the sun streamed in, and
there was a small cheerful fire in the fireplace. A little Japanese waiter came
over and put down some pretzels and smiled happily at them.
"What do you order after
breakfast?" Michael asked.
"Brandy, I suppose," Frances
said.
"Courvoisier," Michael told
the waiter. "Two Courvoisier."
The waiter came with the glasses and
they sat drinking the brandy in the sunlight. Michael finished half his and drank
a little water.
"I look at women," he said.
"Correct. I don't say it's wrong or right, I look at them. If I pass them
on the street and I don't look at them, I'm fooling you, I'm fooling
myself."
"You look at them as though you
want them," Frances said, playing with her brandy glass. "Every one
of them."
"In a way," Michael said,
speaking softly and not to his wife, "in a way that's true. I don't do
anything about it, but it's true."
"I know it. That's why I feel
bad."
"Another brandy," Michael
called. "Waiter, two more brandies."
"Why do you hurt me?" Frances
asked. "What're you doing?"
Michael sighed and closed his eyes and
rubbed them gently with his fingertips. "I love the way women look. One of
the things I like best about New York is the battalions of women. When I first
came to New York from Ohio that was the first thing I noticed, the million
wonderful women, all over the city. I walked around with my heart in my
throat."
"A kid," Frances said.
"That's a kid's feeling."
"Guess again," Michael said.
"Guess again. I'm older now, I'm a man getting near middle age, putting on
a little fat and I still love to walk along Fifth Avenue at three o'clock on
the east side of the street between Fiftieth and Fifty-seventh streets, they're
all out then, making believe they're shopping, in their furs and their crazy
hats, everything all concentrated from all over the world into eight blocks,
the best furs, the best clothes, the handsomest women, out to spend money and
feeling good about it, looking coldly at you, making believe they're not
looking at you as you go past."
The Japanese waiter put the two drinks
down, smiling with great happiness.
"Everything is all right?" he
asked.
"Everything is wonderful,"
Michael said.
"If it's just a couple of fur
coats," Frances said, "and forty-five-dollar hats . . ."
"It's not the fur coats. Or the
hats. That's just the scenery for that particular kind of woman.
Understand," he said, "you don't have to listen to this."
"I want to listen."
"I like the girls in the offices.
Neat, with their eyeglasses, smart, chipper, knowing what everything is about,
taking care of themselves all the time." He kept his eye on the people
going slowly past outside the window. "I like the girls on Forty-fourth Street
at lunchtime, the actresses, all dressed up on nothing a week, talking to the
good-looking boys, wearing themselves out being young and vivacious outside
Sardi's, waiting for producers to look at them. I like the salesgirls in
Macy's, paying attention to you first because you're a man, leaving lady
customers waiting, flirting with you over socks and books and phonograph
needles. I got all this stuff accumulated in me because I've been thinking
about it for ten years and now you've asked for it and here it is."
"Go ahead," Frances said.
"When I think of New York City, I
think of all the girls, the Jewish girls, the Italian girls, the Irish, Polack,
Chinese, German, Negro, Spanish, Russian girls, all on parade in the city. I
don't know whether it's something special with me or whether every man in the
city walks around with the same feeling inside him, but I feel as though I'm at
a picnic in this city. I like to sit near the women in the theaters, the famous
beauties who've taken six hours to get ready and look it. And the young girls
at the football games, with the red cheeks, and when the warm weather comes,
the girls in their summer dresses . . ." He finished his drink.
"That's the story. You asked for it, remember. I can't help but look at
them. I can't help but want them."
"You want them," Frances
repeated without expression. "You said that."
"Right," Michael said, being
cruel now and not caring, because she had made him expose himself. "You
brought this subject up for discussion, we will discuss it fully."
Frances finished her drink and swallowed
two or three times extra. "You say you love me?"
"I love you, but I also want them.
Okay."
"I'm pretty, too," Frances
said. "As pretty as any of them."
"You're beautiful," Michael
said, meaning it.
"I'm good for you," Frances
said, pleading. "I've made a good wife, a good housekeeper, a good friend.
I'd do any damn thing for you."
"I know," Michael said. He put
his hand out and grasped hers.
"You'd like to be free to . .
." Frances said.
"Sssh."
"Tell the truth." She took her
hand away from under his.
Michael flicked the edge of his glass
with his finger. "Okay," he said gently. "Sometimes I feel I
would like to be free."
"Well," Frances said
defiantly, drumming on the table, "anytime you say . . ."
"Don't be foolish." Michael
swung his chair around to her side of the table and patted her thigh.
She began to cry, silently, into her
handkerchief, bent over just enough so that nobody else in the bar would
notice. "Someday," she said, crying, "you're going to make a
move . . ."
Michael didn't say anything. He sat
watching the bartender slowly peel a lemon.
"Aren't you?" Frances asked
harshly. "Come on, tell me. Talk. Aren't you?"
"Maybe," Michael said. He
moved his chair back again. "How the hell do I know?"
"You know," Frances persisted.
"Don't you know?"
"Yes," Michael said after a
while. "I know."
Frances stopped crying then. Two or
three snuffles into the handkerchief and she put it away and her face didn't
tell anything to anybody. "At least do me one favor," she said.
"Sure."
"Stop talking about how pretty this
woman is, or that one. Nice eyes, nice breasts, a pretty figure, good
voice," she mimicked his voice. "Keep it to yourself. I'm not
interested."
"Excuse me." Michael waved to
the waiter. "I'll keep it to myself."
Frances flicked the corner of her eyes.
"Another brandy," she told the waiter.
"Two," Michael said.
"Yes, ma'am, yes, sir," said
the waiter, backing away.
Frances regarded him coolly across the
table. "Do you want me to call the Stevensons?" she asked.
"It'll be nice in the country."
"Sure," Michael said.
"Call them up."
She got up from the table and walked
across the room toward the telephone. Michael watched her walk, thinking, What
a pretty girl, what nice legs.
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