boldly.
— Where is Beatrice? Deems asked.
— Who?
— Beatrice, your wife.
— Gone, Brennan said.
He searched for a chair.
— To visit her father? Irene asked.
— What makes you think that? Brennan said menacingly. To Ardis’s alarm he sat down next to her.
— He’s been in the hospital, hasn’t he?
— Who knows where he’s been, Brennan said darkly. He’s a swine. Lucre, gain. He’s a slum owner, a criminal. I would hang him myself. In the fashion of Gomez, the dictator, whose daughters are probably wealthy women.
He discovered Ardis and said to her, as if imitating someone, perhaps someone he assumed her to be,
— ’N ’at funny? ’N ’at wonderful?
To her relief he turned away.
— I’m their only hope, he said to Irene. I’m living on their money and it’s ruinous, the end of me. He held out his glass and asked mildly, Can I have just a tiny bit of ice? I adore my wife. To Ardis he confided, Do you know how we met? Unimaginable. She was walking by on the beach. I was unprepared. I saw the ventral, then the dorsal, I imagined the rest. Bang! We came together like planets. Endless fornication. Sometimes I just lie silent and observe her. The black panther lies under his rose-tree, he recited. J’ai eu pitié des autres . . .
He stared at her.
— What is that? she asked tentatively.
— . . . but that the child walk in peace in her basilica, he intoned.
— Is it Wilde?
— You can’t guess? Pound. The sole genius of the century. No, not the sole. I am another: a drunk, a failure, and a great genius. Who are you? he said. Another little housewife?
She felt the blood leave her face and stood to busy herself clearing the table. His hand was on her arm.
— Don’t go. I know who you are, another priceless woman meant to languish. Beautiful figure, he said as she managed to free herself, pretty shoes.
As she carried some plates into the kitchen she could hear him saying,
— Don’t go to many of these parties. Not invited.
— Can’t imagine why, someone murmured.
— But Deems is my friend, my very closest friend.
— Who is he? Ardis asked Irene in the kitchen.
— Oh, he’s a poet. He’s married to a Venezuelan woman and she runs off. He’s not always this bad.
They had quieted him down in the other room. Ardis could see her husband nervously pushing his glasses up on his nose with one finger. Deems, in a polo shirt and with rumpled hair, was trying to guide Brennan toward the back door. Brennan kept stopping to talk. For a moment he would seem reformed.
—I want to tell you something, he said. I went past the school, the one on the street there. There was a poster. The First Annual Miss Fuck Contest. I’m serious. This is a fact.
— No, no, Deems said.
— It’s been held, I don’t know when. Question is, are they coming to their senses finally or losing them? A tiny bit more, he begged; his glass was empty. His mind doubled back, Seriously, what do you think of that?
In the light of the kitchen he seemed merely dishevelled, like a journalist who has been working hard all night. The unsettling thing was the absence of reason in him, his glare. One nostril was smaller than the other. He was used to being ungovernable. Ardis hoped he would not notice her again. His forehead had two gleaming places, like nascent horns. Were men drawn to you when they knew they were frightening you?
She could feel his eyes. There was silence. She could feel him standing there like a menacing beggar.
— What are you, another bourgeois? he said to her. I know I’ve been drinking. Come and have dinner, he said. I’ve ordered something wonderful for us. Vichyssoise. Lobster. S. G. Always on the menu like that, selon grosseur.
He was talking in an easy way, as if they were in the casino together, chips piled high before them, as if it were a shrewd discussion of what to bet on and her breasts in the dark T-shirt were a thing of indifference to him. He calmly reached out and