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Authors: Thomas McGuane

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BOOK: The Sporting Club
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“Had a lot of jobs.”

“Such as?”

“I was a model, a librarian, a guide in a champagne factory.”

“You were? Where was that?”

“It was the only champagne company in Waco and it wasn't a good job. I took thirty tours a day and made the same speech over and over. The tour started upstairs where it was usually about a hundred degrees and it ended up in the cellars fifty degrees colder. So, I always had the grippe until I demanded to be put upstairs or down. They put me downstairs. My job was to rotate the bottles so the residue would settle evenly. I had to wear a fencing mask in case a bottle blew up. I got pneumonia and went back to the mineral spring.”

“Do you plan to get married?” Quinn asked, his eyes traveling over slatted, white-painted walls with their streaks of paint beading. Janey was biting her cheek again. Quinn reached and pushed her chin with his forefinger to make her stop.

“Well!” she said. “If I could do it right!”

“What kind of wife would you make?”

“A good one!”

“I'd marry you myself,” Quinn said, wrapped up in his own fraudulence.

“Well, I wouldn't marry you!”

“Why not?” He was still looking at boards, fixtures and chairs, a real interior decorator. Janey was no longer biting her cheek. And Quinn felt that he had to explain who he was and that he could do it quickest by indirection, by talking about the hats he had worn, cars he had owned, the women he had been with, the fly rods he used, the profits he had made. It worked in the past; why wouldn't it work now? It wouldn't work now. He knew that by instinct.

“… then a funny thing happened,” Janey said, still thinking and now smoking and clicking a gold Dunhill lighter in her hand. “Vernor and I would be … I wonder … okay, Vernor and I would be walking in the street…” She went very carefully. Stanton had been getting strange, insisting that people were “cruising” him. They had to leave restaurants before they'd eaten because he had spotted people outside the window cruising him. After that—and this was all after Quinn had last seen him—he got worse. He wrote sarcastic letters to his father who was dead. He started traveling, taking Janey along, at an absurd rate, a country or two a day. One peculiar thing, a rude clerk or some tourist cruising him, as he saw it, and they had to get out. He spent less than five minutes in Spain after seeing a dwarf in a flowerprint sport shirt slumbering with a bright strip of lottery tickets pinned to his chest.
“Did you see that?”
he had demanded.
“Did you?”
They were in Gold Beach, Oregon, the next day, where Stanton couldn't stand the smell of fish because it was an airborne river of lethal botulism. Everywhere they went, the mail mania dominated: he had to have letters. They tried Florence the year before the floods and saw men throwing treble hooks in the swollen Arno for bodies and Stanton screamed at the draggers in bad Italian demanding to know who they thought they were. That one ended with the police and jail, where Stanton couldn't get the mail without enormous bribes once the local officials had matched his bankroll with his psychosis. Quinn thought of the letters he had planned but never written to Stanton; he saw Stanton before him in the fluorescence of advanced personal decrepitude. Janey handed him a calling card; on one side was Stanton's name; on the other it said, “No, prisoners of love, I did not begin as a joke.” After Florence, Stanton began to invent conversations which he would write down and then memorize. He made Janey learn cues so that when people were around she could lead him from one recital to the other. She would give him one line and he would talk for five minutes and she'd give him another. Some were about Quinn. Some about Judy, the aunt; some about his father. Quinn asked what the other speeches were: a short history of the exploration of the Nile, a lecture on how the first zippers were made, instructions for building a Bessemer converter or making sourdough bread. When people got bored, he really buried them. One day, they were sitting in a German restaurant in Philadelphia and he leaned over and whispered that he could no longer move his arms and legs. They got him into a clinic right away. He called his mother in Michigan and she told him to pull himself together. He had to be watched every minute. He said his lanyard had snapped. He said his life had gotten to be so funny he couldn't stand the laughing. He said his spring was running down and that the whole mechanism would have to be returned to Switzerland for adjustment. They carried him into the clinic like a plank and the psychiatrist attending him said that he was exaggerating the little things we all have. Quinn listened and looked on with new regard and a hopelessness that would have cleared the air if he had accepted it.

*   *   *

The discovery that Earl Olive was a criminal and a fugitive should have surprised nobody; but it surprised Quinn. Fortescue, visiting the ailing young businessman with an eye to enlisting his aid, bent his authoritarian spaniel face to a teletyped dossier and, scanning, gave Quinn a rapid précis of its contents: fraud, arson, assault and battery, breaking and entering, suspicion of armed robbery, suspicion of rape, suspicion of murder, known to be armed, considered dangerous. The fraud conviction began as a rape indictment, Fortescue explained, his eyes scanning another stapled pair of sheets. Earl Olive had been in the habit of calling up girls he didn't know and representing himself as a social worker; it had been his practice to explain confidentially that they had been established as V.D. carriers and would have to be treated under state supervision. At this point, the girls were willing to accept Olive's help: he would recommend a friend with rare type-M-positive blood who could stop the disease through sexual intercourse; the girls were eager for this simple cure; and Olive, “the friend,” would soon be at the door. It was only that the girls stayed on for more than the prescribed treatment that forced the disillusioned judge to change the indictment to the charge of fraud. Olive was convicted. He jumped bail and went on with the crimes that continued out there in the woods.

“Why don't you call the police?” Quinn asked sensibly.

“Why do you think? Because we clean our own house here.”

“Seems pointless.”

“Does it? It doesn't to me. There are still some of us alive for whom life in the forest means a return to older virtues, not just a vacation.”

“Very well, if you want to make a speech.”

“I mean you and your friend Stanton and the rest of your generation are just a little farther away from the founding years of this country.”

“Mm, being younger.”

“And we're not sarcastic and we're not facetious and damn it there are things we call valuable. What I'm saying is that we believe we can clean this Olive business up in a way that will not only be a tribute to the Centennial Club but a tribute to the country as well.”

“It sounds like you have your hands full.”

“So don't tell me police.”

“I see now I was playing the wrong shot. Gee—”

“I've got equipment rolling in now, paid for out of my own pocket, I might add. I got a rack of Winchester riot guns, K-rations, rucksacks, primus stoves, hammocks, a quartermaster's tent for extended bivouac, compasses, aerial photographs, flares, tracers.”

“Any grommets?”

“Well, the tents have grommets on their corners. What do you mean! Anyhoo, are you with us or agin us?”

“Oh, agin you, I would say.”

“Then stay out of the way. That's an order.”

*   *   *

When it was dark, Quinn crept through the compound in his bathrobe, feeling a little sick and unsteady in the night. He went around and around the tent, each time cutting one more strand of the powerful guy ropes that held the tent aloft. In the vague light that came from within, the tent was a glacier. Quinn paused once in this superior task and had a giddy moment of not knowing where he was; when it came to him again, as it did immediately, he saw himself as a resistance fighter, a saboteur with ideals. Then he went on with his cutting until halfway around the tent on perhaps the fifth pass, one of the guy ropes popped; then they all went like a zipper and the great tent slumped. Quinn ran for it, running in a sick blur, as oaths and cries raged from under cloth; and by the time he was well into the woods, the riot guns were barking importantly into the night.

Back in his sickroom, the bed itself seemed to reject him like the trick-shop miniature of King Tut. Quinn thinks:
I am in it hand and foot. I have suffered a relapse.

*   *   *

In the morning, in bed, Quinn still in Stanton's house and posturing sickly for Janey, Charles Murray appeared. He had a bouquet wrapped in wax paper and a packet of letters. “Yoohoo,” he said, “couldn't you hear me knocking away? I've been to the mail in town today—” He handed Quinn his letters, then shyly, “—these silly old—” Janey got up to get them coffee and Quinn followed her exit with forlorn eyes. He held the flowers now; they were dark orange. “How are you feeling?” Murray asked.

“Oh, all right.”

“You probably have the
flu
for God sakes.”

“I know, I know. But this was kind.” Quinn waved the flowers awkwardly. Murray brushed off the compliment.

“They're just tacky nothings. All you can expect up here though. You do look feverish.” He laid his narrow hand on Quinn's brow.

“I feel pretty much terrific,” Quinn said abruptly.

“After what you've been through? How killing!”

“Just a little dunking—”

“A little dunking!” He seized Quinn's hand in wild laughter. Quinn tugged a tiny bit but was held fast. Murray leaned over. “What the hell?” he squinted.

“What do you mean?” Murray relinquished his hand and threw his own in the air. “Oh, how should I know, how should I
know!
So much is happening so fast! My poor brain is no better than a big silly Caesar salad!” His face flushed and he turned into the wall close by and simpered, “Really, it's insupportable. Well!” He jumped up. Janey came in. “I've got to go! I have a date with an angel! Janet Fortescue by name!” He and Janey dodged and feinted in the doorway before Murray got away, Quinn calling out his thanks after. An instant later, farther down the stairs, Stanton could be heard gruffly and rudely putting Murray on. His own approach was not secretive, the drumming of heavy footwear on a hollow staircase, no doubt exaggerated in its regularity; and his entrance, pausing in the doorway, a big grin behind the white linen handkerchief into which he trumpeted majestically; then rolling the cloth, he thrust it into his hind pocket. Quinn suddenly felt their quietude and inactivity in the contrasting presence of Stanton. Stanton was noble in knee-high black Wellingtons and green turtleneck pullover. His mouth opened fiercely and he gave lung to a great elk roar. “Well, sir,” he said softly, “I like to give you what you expect.”

“And thank you.”

“What's the talk up here? Cultural topics?”

“I'm afraid you were the subject in question.”

“I saw Murray on the way in. What'd he have in mind?”

“He was visting me.”

“Figured on getting a little, did he?”

“The question never came up.”

Stanton's mouth found its natural downward curve though his eyes continued to hunt in their old trouble-making way. “The rampant Olive struck again last night. He collapsed the tent with the whole club inside—” Quinn began to laugh in childish yelps. Stanton laughed too, then stopped and began to hunt with his eyes again. “Wait, there's more. I know, Quinn, but shut up, can't you? Fortescue was adjusting one of the inside lines and he had it around his waist for purchase. When the tent collapsed and the center pole went down, it snatched him forty feet. Fortescue is a madman. He's shooting everything that moves, sending up flares. He is crazed and he's got rope burns all over his body. His wife tried to take the riot gun away from him and he slapped her face like a punching bag. It has gone nuts over there. Fortescue screams orders like the D.I. and everyone wants to go home but they're afraid to. Fortescue won't let them. He imagines word will leak and the police will be in on it. They've propped up the canvas with timber to make a ledge and they're living under it. Twenty-four-hour watches. On top of that they're still going to have the centennial celebration on the Fourth and dig up that fucking time capsule. God, Quinn, won't you join me? Please! We could make it so insane for those bastards!”

“What about Olive?”

“I know, I know, mmmm. In some ways, I'd like to plug him. Would too, if I could be sure of not killing him. Hate to go to the pen over that kind of riffraff. And that's what Olive and his crew are: riffraff, marginal types, floozies, shabby local farm stock—” This version grated Quinn. Stanton, it seemed, had watched the Olive camp with field glasses. He was an authority.

Janey asked, “What do they do?”

“They serve Olive. He's forcing the men to build a big lodge out there. He himself does not work. Now and again he drags one of the women off into the bush. You can bet it comes to no good, too.” Quinn imagined the demented bait purveyor demanding his perquisites of Lu, throwing his hairy, bellied person on her little smudged body. Quinn wondered if, peaceful and tired, she whizzed on the ground after Olive had done with her, flicking leaves over the spot with backsweeps of her feet as dogs will do. Quinn saw Lu when she had been his alone, smiling wanly in the half-light with her behind looking like nothing so much as a pair of pale coughdrops or a papier-mâché valentine; and he could share Stanton's antipathy. “They sing together,” Stanton said with vituperation.

“What kind of songs?”

“Couldn't make it out. They had a little fire and they swayed and moved their mouths—”

“Vernor,” Quinn said, “what's the use? It hasn't anything to do with you.”

BOOK: The Sporting Club
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