man shook Eileenâs hand with as much flourish as a stage comedian. âGlad to know you,â he said. Eileen saw that he wore hexagonal rimless glasses, and a clip across his tie spelled in pinkish synthetic gold âE.J.H.â
âCarlitta Hicksââ Waldeck put out a hand and squeezed Carlittaâs elbow. âI canât believe it.â
âSure is extraordinary,â said Mr Hicks. âCarlitta here and I havenât been up to New York for more than three years.â
â Ach , no, darling,â said Carlitta, frowning and smiling quickly. She used her face so much, no wonder she had worn it out. âFour at least. You remember, that last time was at Christmas.â She added to Waldeck, âOnce in a blue moon is enough for me. Our life . . .â She half lifted a worn hand, gave a little sudden intake of breath through her fine nostrils, as if to suggest that their life, whatever it was, was such that the pleasures of New York or anywhere else offered no rival enticement. She had still a slight German accent to soften the American pronunciation of her speech.
Everyone was incoherent. Waldeck kept saying excitedly, âI havenât been out of South Africa since I arrived there twenty years ago. Iâm in New York two days and I find Carlitta!â
There was time only to exchange the names of hotels and to promise to telephone tomorrow. Then the theatre bell interrupted. As they parted, Waldeck called back, âKeep Sunday lunch free. Stefanâs coming. Weâll all be together . . .â
Carlittaâs mouth pursed; her eyes opened wide in a pantomime âLovelyâ across the crowd.
âAnd yet Iâm not really entirely surprised,â Waldeck whispered to his wife in the darkening theatre. âItâs been happening to us in one way or another all the time. What do you think of the husband? What about Mr Edgar Hicks from Ohio?â he added with a nudge.
In the dark, as the curtain rose, Eileen followed it with her eyes for a moment and then said, âI shouldnât have known her. I donât think I should ever have known her.â
âBut Carlitta hasnât changed at all!â said Waldeck.
Â
Waldeck was on the telephone, talking to Stefan, immediately after breakfast next morning. Passing to and fro between the bedroom and the bathroom, Eileen could see him, his body hitched up on to the corner of the small desk, smiling excitedly at what must have been Stefanâs quiet incredulity. âBut I tell you he actually is some sort of farmer in Ohio. Yes. Well, thatâs what I wanted to know. I canât really say â very tall and fairish and thin. Very American . . . Well, you know what I mean â a certain type of American, then. Slow, drawling way of speaking. Shakes your hand a long time. A weekend farmer, really. Heâs got some job with a firm that makes agricultural implements, in the nearby town. She said she runs pigs and chickens. Can you believe it? So is it all right about Sunday? I can imagine you are . . . Ach , the same old Carlitta.â
Sunday was a clear, sharp spring day in New York, exactly the temperature and brightness of a winter day in Johannesburg. Stefan rang up to say he would call for the Brands at about eleven, so that they could drive around a little before meeting Carlitta and her husband for luncheon.
âWill it be all right if I wear slacks?â asked Eileen. She always wore slacks on Sundays in Johannesburg.
âCertainly not,â said Stefan gravely. âYou cannot lunch in a restaurant in New York in slacks.â
Eileen put on a suit she had bought in London. She was filled with a childlike love and respect for Stefan; she would not have done the smallest thing to displease him or to prejudice his opinion of her. When he arrived to fetch the Brands he said, equally gravely, âYou look very well in that suit,â and led them to his car, where
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