Back to The Catcher in the Rye
The Catcher in the Rye
By H.G. Wells
Day 10 Audio |
Chapter 23
I MADE IT very
snappy on the phone because I was afraid my parents would barge in on me right
in the middle of it. They didn't, though. Mr. Antolini was very nice. He said I
could come right over if I wanted to. I think I probably woke he and his wife
up, because it took them a helluva long time to answer the phone. The first
thing he asked me was if anything was wrong, and I said no. I said I'd flunked
out of Pencey, though. I thought I might as well tell him. He said "Good God,"
when I said that. He had a good sense of humor and all. He told me to come right
over if I felt like it.
He was about the
best teacher I ever had, Mr. Antolini. He was a pretty young guy, not much older
than my brother D.B., and you could kid around with him without losing your
respect for him. He was the one that finally picked up that boy that jumped out
the window I told you about, James Castle. Old Mr. Antolini felt his pulse and
all, and then he took off his coat and put it over James Castle and carried him
all the way over to the infirmary. He didn't even give a dang if his coat got
all bloody.
When I got back to
D.B.'s room, old Phoebe'd turned the radio on. This dance music was coming out.
She'd turned it on low, though, so the maid wouldn't hear it. You should've seen
her. She was sitting smack in the middle of the bed, outside the covers, with
her legs folded like one of those Yogi guys. She was listening to the music. She
kills me.
"C'mon," I said.
"You feel like dancing?" I taught her how to dance and all when she was a tiny
little kid. She's a very good dancer. I mean I just taught her a few things. She
learned it mostly by herself. You can't teach somebody how to really dance.
"You have shoes on,"
she said.
"I'll take 'em off.
C'mon."
She practically
jumped off the bed, and then she waited while I took my shoes off, and then I
danced with her for a while. She's really dang good. I don't like people that
dance with little kids, because most of the time it looks terrible. I mean if
you're out at a restaurant somewhere and you see some old guy take his little
kid out on the dance floor. Usually they keep yanking the kid's dress up in the
back by mistake, and the kid can't dance worth a dang anyway, and it looks
terrible, but I don't do it out in public with Phoebe or anything. We just horse
around in the house. It's different with her anyway, because she can dance. She
can follow anything you do. I mean if you hold her in close as heck so that it
doesn't matter that your legs are so much longer. She stays right with you. You
can cross over, or do some corny dips, or even jitterbug a little, and she stays
right with you. You can even tango, for God's sake.
We danced about four
numbers. In between numbers she's funny as heck. She stays right in position.
She won't even talk or anything. You both have to stay right in position and
wait for the orchestra to start playing again. That kills me. You're not
supposed to laugh or anything, either.
Anyway, we danced
about four numbers, and then I turned off the radio. Old Phoebe jumped back in
bed and got under the covers. "I'm improving, aren't I?" she asked me.
"And how," I said. I
sat down next to her on the bed again. I was sort of out of breath. I was
smoking so dang much, I had hardly any wind. She wasn't even out of breath.
"Feel my forehead,"
she said all of a sudden.
"Why?"
"Feel it. Just feel
it once."
I felt it. I didn't
feel anything, though.
"Does it feel very
feverish?" she said.
"No. Is it supposed
to?"
"Yes―I'm making it.
Feel it again."
I felt it again, and
I still didn't feel anything, but I said, "I think it's starting to, now." I
didn't want her to get a goldarn inferiority complex.
She nodded. "I can
make it go up to over the thermoneter."
"Thermometer. Who
said so?"
"Alice Holmborg
showed me how. You cross your legs and hold your breath and think of something
very, very hot. A radiator or something. Then your whole forehead gets so hot
you can burn somebody's hand."
That killed me. I
pulled my hand away from her forehead, like I was in terrific danger. "Thanks
for telling me," I said.
"Oh, I wouldn't've
burned your hand. I'd've stopped before it got too― Shhh!" Then, quick as heck,
she sat way the heck up in bed.
She scared heck out
of me when she did that. "What's the matter?" I said.
"The front door!"
she said in this loud whisper. "It's them!"
I quick jumped up
and ran over and turned off the light over the desk. Then I jammed out my
cigarette on my shoe and put it in my pocket. Then I fanned heck out of the air,
to get the smoke out―I shouldn't even have been smoking, for God's sake. Then I
grabbed my shoes and got in the closet and shut the door. Boy, my heart was
beating like a idiot.
I heard my mother
come in the room.
"Phoebe?" she said.
"Now, stop that. I saw the light, young lady."
"Hello!" I heard old
Phoebe say. "I couldn't sleep. Did you have a good time?"
"Marvelous," my
mother said, but you could tell she didn't mean it. She doesn't enjoy herself
much when she goes out. "Why are you awake, may I ask? Were you warm enough?"
"I was warm enough,
I just couldn't sleep."
"Phoebe, have you
been smoking a cigarette in here? Tell me the truth, please, young lady."
"What?" old Phoebe
said.
"You heard me."
"I just lit one for
one second. I just took one puff. Then I threw it out the window."
"Why, may I ask?"
"I couldn't sleep."
"I don't like that,
Phoebe. I don't like that at all," my mother said. "Do you want another
blanket?"
"No, thanks.
G'night!" old Phoebe said. She was trying to get rid of her, you could tell.
"How was the movie?"
my mother said.
"Excellent. Except
Alice's mother. She kept leaning over and asking her if she felt grippy during
the whole entire movie. We took a taxi home."
"Let me feel your
forehead."
"I didn't catch
anything. She didn't have anything. It was just her mother."
"Well. Go to sleep
now. How was your dinner?"
"Lousy," Phoebe
said.
"You heard what your
father said about using that word. What was lousy about it? You had a lovely
lamb chop. I walked all over Lexington Avenue just to―"
"The lamb chop was
all right, but Charlene always breathes on me whenever she puts something down.
She breathes all over the food and everything. She breathes on everything."
"Well. Go to sleep.
Give Mother a kiss. Did you say your prayers?"
"I said them in the
bathroom. G'night!"
"Good night. Go
right to sleep now. I have a splitting headache," my mother said. She gets
headaches quite frequently. She really does.
"Take a few
aspirins," old Phoebe said. "Holden'll be home on Wednesday, won't he?"
"So far as I know.
Get under there, now. Way down."
I heard my mother go
out and close the door. I waited a couple of minutes. Then I came out of the
closet. I bumped smack into old Phoebe when I did it, because it was so dark and
she was out of bed and coming to tell me. "I hurt you?" I said. You had to
whisper now, because they were both home. "I gotta get a move on," I said. I
found the edge of the bed in the dark and sat down on it and started putting on
my shoes. I was pretty nervous. I admit it.
"Don't go now,"
Phoebe whispered. "Wait'll they're asleep!"
"No. Now. Now's the
best time," I said. "She'll be in the bathroom and Daddy'll turn on the news or
something. Now's the best time." I could hardly tie my shoelaces, I was so dang
nervous. Not that they would've killed me or anything if they'd caught me home,
but it would've been very unpleasant and all. "Where the heck are ya?" I said to
old Phoebe. It was so dark I couldn't see her.
"Here." She was
standing right next to me. I didn't even see her.
"I got my dang bags
at the station," I said. "Listen. You got any dough, Phoeb? I'm practically
broke."
"Just my Christmas
dough. For presents and all. I haven't done any shopping at all yet."
"Oh." I didn't want
to take her Christmas dough.
"You want some?" she
said.
"I don't want to
take your Christmas dough."
"I can lend you
some," she said. Then I heard her over at D.B.'s desk, opening a million drawers
and feeling around with her hand. It was pitch-black, it was so dark in the
room. "If you go away, you won't see me in the play," she said. Her voice
sounded funny when she said it.
"Yes, I will. I
won't go way before that. You think I wanna miss the play?" I said. "What I'll
do, I'll probably stay at Mr. Antolini's house till maybe Tuesday night. Then
I'll come home. If I get a chance, I'll phone ya."
"Here," old Phoebe
said. She was trying to give me the dough, but she couldn't find my hand.
"Where?"
She put the dough in
my hand.
"Hey, I don't need
all this," I said. "Just give me two bucks, is all. No kidding―Here." I tried to
give it back to her, but she wouldn't take it.
"You can take it
all. You can pay me back. Bring it to the play."
"How much is it, for
God's sake?"
"Eight dollars and
eighty-five cents. Sixty-five cents. I spent some."
Then, all of a
sudden, I started to cry. I couldn't help it. I did it so nobody could hear me,
but I did it. It scared heck out of old Phoebe when I started doing it, and she
came over and tried to make me stop, but once you get started, you can't just
stop on a goldarn dime. I was still sitting on the edge of the bed when I did
it, and she put her old arm around my neck, and I put my arm around her, too,
but I still couldn't stop for a long time. I thought I was going to choke to
death or something. Boy, I scared heck out of poor old Phoebe. The dang window
was open and everything, and I could feel her shivering and all, because all she
had on was her pajamas. I tried to make her get back in bed, but she wouldn't
go. Finally I stopped. But it certainly took me a long, long time. Then I
finished buttoning my coat and all. I told her I'd keep in touch with her. She
told me I could sleep with her if I wanted to, but I said no, that I'd better
beat it, that Mr. Antolini was waiting for me and all. Then I took my hunting
hat out of my coat pocket and gave it to her. She likes those kind of crazy
hats. She didn't want to take it, but I made her. I'll bet she slept with it on.
She really likes those kind of hats. Then I told her again I'd give her a buzz
if I got a chance, and then I left.
It was a helluva lot
easier getting out of the house than it was getting in, for some reason. For one
thing, I didn't give much of a dang any more if they caught me. I really didn't.
I figured if they caught me, they caught me. I almost wished they did, in a way.
I walked all the way
downstairs, instead of taking the elevator. I went down the back stairs. I
nearly broke my neck on about ten million garbage pails, but I got out all
right. The elevator boy didn't even see me. He probably still thinks I'm up at
the Dicksteins'.
Chapter 24
MR. AND MRS.
ANTOLINI had this very swanky
apartment over on Sutton Place, with two steps that you go down to get in the
living room, and a bar and all. I'd been there quite a few times, because after
I left Elkton Hills Mr. Antolini came up to our house for dinner quite
frequently to find out how I was getting along. He wasn't married then. Then
when he got married, I used to play tennis with he and Mrs. Antolini quite
frequently, out at the West Side Tennis Club, in Forest Hills, Long Island. Mrs.
Antolini, belonged there. She was lousy with dough. She was about sixty years
older than Mr. Antolini, but they seemed to get along quite well. For one thing,
they were both very intellectual, especially Mr. Antolini except that he was
more witty than intellectual when you were with him, sort of like D.B. Mrs.
Antolini was mostly serious. She had asthma pretty bad. They both read all
D.B.'s stories―Mrs. Antolini, too―and when D.B. went to Hollywood, Mr. Antolini
phoned him up and told him not to go. He went anyway, though. Mr. Antolini said
that anybody that could write like D.B. had no business going out to Hollywood.
That's exactly what I said, practically.
I would have walked
down to their house, because I didn't want to spend any of Phoebe's Christmas
dough that I didn't have to, but I felt funny when I got outside. Sort of dizzy.
So I took a cab. I didn't want to, but I did. I had a helluva time even finding
a cab.
Old Mr. Antolini
answered the door when I rang the bell―after the elevator boy finally let me up,
the idiot. He had on his bathrobe and slippers, and he had a highball in one
hand. He was a pretty sophisticated guy, and he was a pretty heavy drinker.
"Holden, m'boy!" he said. "My God, he's grown another twenty inches. Fine to see
you."
"How are you, Mr.
Antolini? How's Mrs. Antolini?"
"We're both just
dandy. Let's have that coat." He took my coat off me and hung it up. "I expected
to see a day-old infant in your arms. Nowhere to turn. Snowflakes in your
eyelashes." He's a very witty guy sometimes. He turned around and yelled out to
the kitchen, "Lillian! How's the coffee coming?" Lillian was Mrs. Antolini's
first name.
"It's all ready,"
she yelled back. "Is that Holden? Hello, Holden!"
"Hello, Mrs.
Antolini!"
You were always
yelling when you were there. That's because the both of them were never in the
same room at the same time. It was sort of funny.
"Sit down, Holden,"
Mr. Antolini said. You could tell he was a little oiled up. The room looked like
they'd just had a party. Glasses were all over the place, and dishes with
peanuts in them. "Excuse the appearance of the place," he said. "We've been
entertaining some Buffalo friends of Mrs. Antolini's . . . Some buffaloes, as a
matter of fact."
I laughed, and Mrs.
Antolini yelled something in to me from the kitchen, but I couldn't hear her.
"What'd she say?" I asked Mr. Antolini.
"She said not to
look at her when she comes in. She just arose from the sack. Have a cigarette.
Are you smoking now?"
"Thanks," I said. I
took a cigarette from the box he offered me. "Just once in a while. I'm a
moderate smoker."
"I'll bet you are,"
he said. He gave me a light from this big lighter off the table. "So. You and
Pencey are no longer one," he said. He always said things that way. Sometimes it
amused me a lot and sometimes it didn't. He sort of did it a little bit too
much. I don't mean he wasn't witty or anything―he was―but sometimes it gets on
your nerves when somebody's always saying things like "So you and Pencey are no
longer one." D.B. does it too much sometimes, too.
"What was the
trouble?" Mr. Antolini asked me. "How'd you do in English? I'll show you the
door in short order if you flunked English, you little ace composition writer."
"Oh, I passed
English all right. It was mostly literature, though. I only wrote about two
compositions the whole term," I said. "I flunked Oral Expression, though. They
had this course you had to take, Oral Expression. That I flunked."
"Why?"
"Oh, I don't know."
I didn't feel much like going into it. I was still feeling sort of dizzy or
something, and I had a helluva headache all of a sudden. I really did. But you
could tell he was interested, so I told him a little bit about it. "It's this
course where each boy in class has to get up in class and make a speech. You
know. Spontaneous and all. And if the boy digresses at all, you're supposed to
yell 'Digression!' at him as fast as you can. It just about drove me crazy. I
got an F in it."
"Why?"
"Oh, I don't know.
That digression business got on my nerves. I don't know. The trouble with me is,
I like it when somebody digresses. It's more interesting and all."
"You don't care to
have somebody stick to the point when he tells you something?"
"Oh, sure! I like
somebody to stick to the point and all. But I don't like them to stick too much
to the point. I don't know. I guess I don't like it when somebody sticks to the
point all the time. The boys that got the best marks in Oral Expression were the
ones that stuck to the point all the time―I admit it. But there was this one
boy, Richard Kinsella. He didn't stick to the point too much, and they were
always yelling 'Digression!' at him. It was terrible, because in the first
place, he was a very nervous guy―I mean he was a very nervous guy―and his lips
were always shaking whenever it was his time to make a speech, and you could
hardly hear him if you were sitting way in the back of the room. When his lips
sort of quit shaking a little bit, though, I liked his speeches better than
anybody else's. He practically flunked the course, though, too. He got a D plus
because they kept yelling 'Digression!' at him all the time. For instance, he
made this speech about this farm his father bought in Vermont. They kept yelling
'Digression!' at him the whole time he was making it, and this teacher, Mr.
Vinson, gave him an F on it because he hadn't told what kind of animals and
vegetables and stuff grew on the farm and all. What he did was, Richard
Kinsella, he'd start telling you all about that stuff―then all of a sudden he'd
start telling you about this letter his mother got from his uncle, and how his
uncle got polio and all when he was forty-two years old, and how he wouldn't let
anybody come to see him in the hospital because he didn't want anybody to see
him with a brace on. It didn't have much to do with the farm―I admit it―but it
was nice. It's nice when somebody tells you about their uncle. Especially when
they start out telling you about their father's farm and then all of a sudden
get more interested in their uncle. I mean it's dirty to keep yelling
'Digression!' at him when he's all nice and excited. . . . I don't know. It's
hard to explain." I didn't feel too much like trying, either. For one thing, I
had this terrific headache all of a sudden. I wished to God old Mrs. Antolini
would come in with the coffee. That's something that annoys heck out of me―I
mean if somebody says the coffee's all ready and it isn't.
"Holden . . . One
short, faintly stuffy, pedagogical question. Don't you think there's a time and
place for everything? Don't you think if someone starts out to tell you about
his father's farm, he should stick to his guns, then get around to telling you
about his uncle's brace? Or, if his uncle's brace is such a provocative subject,
shouldn't he have selected it in the first place as his subject―not the farm?"
I didn't feel much
like thinking and answering and all. I had a headache and I felt lousy. I even
had sort of a stomach-ache, if you want to know the truth.
"Yes―I don't know. I
guess he should. I mean I guess he should've picked his uncle as a subject,
instead of the farm, if that interested him most. But what I mean is, lots of
time you don't know what interests you most till you start talking about
something that doesn't interest you most. I mean you can't help it sometimes.
What I think is, you're supposed to leave somebody alone if he's at least being
interesting and he's getting all excited about something. I like it when
somebody gets excited about something. It's nice. You just didn't know this
teacher, Mr. Vinson. He could drive you crazy sometimes, him and the goldarn
class. I mean he'd keep telling you to unify and simplify all the time. Some
things you just can't do that to. I mean you can't hardly ever simplify and
unify something just because somebody wants you to. You didn't know this guy,
Mr. Vinson. I mean he was very intelligent and all, but you could tell he didn't
have too much brains."
"Coffee, gentlemen,
finally," Mrs. Antolini said. She came in carrying this tray with coffee and
cakes and stuff on it. "Holden, don't you even peek at me. I'm a mess."
"Hello, Mrs.
Antolini," I said. I started to get up and all, but Mr. Antolini got hold of my
jacket and pulled me back down. Old Mrs. Antolini's hair was full of those iron
curler jobs, and she didn't have any lipstick or anything on. She didn't look
too gorgeous. She looked pretty old and all.
"I'll leave this
right here. Just dive in, you two," she said. She put the tray down on the
cigarette table, pushing all these glasses out of the way. "How's your mother,
Holden?"
"She's fine, thanks.
I haven't seen her too recently, but the last I―"
"Darling, if Holden
needs anything, everything's in the linen closet. The top shelf. I'm going to
bed. I'm exhausted," Mrs. Antolini said. She looked it, too. "Can you boys make
up the couch by yourselves?"
"We'll take care of
everything. You run along to bed," Mr. Antolini said. He gave Mrs. Antolini a
kiss and she said good-by to me and went in the bedroom. They were always
kissing each other a lot in public.
I had part of a cup
of coffee and about half of some cake that was as hard as a rock. All old Mr.
Antolini had was another highball, though. He makes them strong, too, you could
tell. He may get to be an alcoholic if he doesn't watch his step.
"I had lunch with
your dad a couple of weeks ago," he said all of a sudden. "Did you know that?"
"No, I didn't."
"You're aware, of
course, that he's terribly concerned about you."
"I know it. I know
he is," I said.
"Apparently before
he phoned me he'd just had a long, rather harrowing letter from your latest
headmaster, to the effect that you were making absolutely no effort at all.
Cutting classes. Coming unprepared to all your classes. In general, being an
all-around―"
"I didn't cut any
classes. You weren't allowed to cut any. There were a couple of them I didn't
attend once in a while, like that Oral Expression I told you about, but I didn't
cut any."
I didn't feel at all
like discussing it. The coffee made my stomach feel a little better, but I still
had this awful headache.
Mr. Antolini lit
another cigarette. He smoked like a fiend. Then he said, "Frankly, I don't know
what the heck to say to you, Holden."
"I know. I'm very
hard to talk to. I realize that."
"I have a feeling
that you're riding for some kind of a terrible, terrible fall. But I don't
honestly know what kind . . . Are you listening to me?"
"Yes."
You could tell he
was trying to concentrate and all.
"It may be the kind
where, at the age of thirty, you sit in some bar hating everybody who comes in
looking as if he might have played football in college. Then again, you may pick
up just enough education to hate people who say, 'It's a secret between he and
I.' Or you may end up in some business office, throwing paper clips at the
nearest stenographer. I just don't know. But do you know what I'm driving at, at
all?"
"Yes. Sure," I said.
I did, too. "But you're wrong about that hating business. I mean about hating
football players and all. You really are. I don't hate too many guys. What I may
do, I may hate them for a little while, like this guy Stradlater I knew at
Pencey, and this other boy, Robert Ackley. I hated them once in a while―I admit
it―but it doesn't last too long, is what I mean. After a while, if I didn't see
them, if they didn't come in the room, or if I didn't see them in the dining
room for a couple of meals, I sort of missed them. I mean I sort of missed
them."
Mr. Antolini didn't
say anything for a while. He got up and got another hunk of ice and put it in
his drink, then he sat down again. You could tell he was thinking. I kept
wishing, though, that he'd continue the conversation in the morning, instead of
now, but he was hot. People are mostly hot to have a discussion when you're not.
"All right. Listen
to me a minute now. . . . I may not word this as memorably as I'd like to, but
I'll write you a letter about it in a day or two. Then you can get it all
straight. But listen now, anyway." He started concentrating again. Then he said,
"This fall I think you're riding for―it's a special kind of fall, a horrible
kind. The man falling isn't permitted to feel or hear himself hit bottom. He
just keeps falling and falling. The whole arrangement's designed for men who, at
some time or other in their lives, were looking for something their own
environment couldn't supply them with. Or they thought their own environment
couldn't supply them with. So they gave up looking. They gave it up before they
ever really even got started. You follow me?"
"Yes, sir."
"Sure?"
"Yes."
He got up and poured
some more booze in his glass. Then he sat down again. He didn't say anything for
a long time.
"I don't want to
scare you," he said, "but I can very clearly see you dying nobly, one way or
another, for some highly unworthy cause." He gave me a funny look. "If I write
something down for you, will you read it carefully? And keep it?"
"Yes. Sure," I said.
I did, too. I still have the paper he gave me.
He went over to this
desk on the other side of the room, and without sitting down wrote something on
a piece of paper. Then he came back and sat down with the paper in his hand.
"Oddly enough, this wasn't written by a practicing poet. It was written by a
psychoanalyst named Wilhelm Stekel. Here's what he―Are you still with me?"
"Yes, sure I am."
"Here's what he
said: 'The mark of the immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause,
while the mark of the mature man is that he wants to live humbly for one.'"
He leaned over and
handed it to me. I read it right when he gave it to me, and then I thanked him
and all and put it in my pocket. It was nice of him to go to all that trouble.
It really was. The thing was, though, I didn't feel much like concentrating.
Boy, I felt so dang tired all of a sudden.
You could tell he
wasn't tired at all, though. He was pretty oiled up, for one thing. "I think
that one of these days," he said, "you're going to have to find out where you
want to go. And then you've got to start going there. But immediately. You can't
afford to lose a minute. Not you."
I nodded, because he
was looking right at me and all, but I wasn't too sure what he was talking
about. I was pretty sure I knew, but I wasn't too positive at the time. I was
too dang tired.
"And I hate to tell
you," he said, "but I think that once you have a fair idea where you want to go,
your first move will be to apply yourself in school. You'll have to. You're a
student―whether the idea appeals to you or not. You're in love with knowledge.
And I think you'll find, once you get past all the Mr. Vineses and their Oral
Comp―"
"Mr. Vinsons," I
said. He meant all the Mr. Vinsons, not all the Mr. Vineses. I shouldn't have
interrupted him, though.
"All right―the Mr.
Vinsons. Once you get past all the Mr. Vinsons, you're going to start getting
closer and closer―that is, if you want to, and if you look for it and wait for
it―to the kind of information that will be very, very dear to your heart. Among
other things, you'll find that you're not the first person who was ever confused
and frightened and even sickened by human behavior. You're by no means alone on
that score, you'll be excited and stimulated to know. Many, many men have been
just as troubled morally and spiritually as you are right now. Happily, some of
them kept records of their troubles. You'll learn from them―if you want to. Just
as someday, if you have something to offer, someone will learn something from
you. It's a beautiful reciprocal arrangement. And it isn't education. It's
history. It's poetry." He stopped and took a big drink out of his highball. Then
he started again. Boy, he was really hot. I was glad I didn't try to stop him or
anything. "I'm not trying to tell you," he said, "that only educated and
scholarly men are able to contribute something valuable to the world. It's not
so. But I do say that educated and scholarly men, if they're brilliant and
creative to begin with―which, unfortunately, is rarely the case―tend to leave
infinitely more valuable records behind them than men do who are merely
brilliant and creative. They tend to express themselves more clearly, and they
usually have a passion for following their thoughts through to the end. And―most
important―nine times out of ten they have more humility than the unscholarly
thinker. Do you follow me at all?"
"Yes, sir."
He didn't say
anything again for quite a while. I don't know if you've ever done it, but it's
sort of hard to sit around waiting for somebody to say something when they're
thinking and all. It really is. I kept trying not to yawn. It wasn't that I was
bored or anything―I wasn't―but I was so dang sleepy all of a sudden.
"Something else an
academic education will do for you. If you go along with it any considerable
distance, it'll begin to give you an idea what size mind you have. What it'll
fit and, maybe, what it won't. After a while, you'll have an idea what kind of
thoughts your particular size mind should be wearing. For one thing, it may save
you an extraordinary amount of time trying on ideas that don't suit you, aren't
becoming to you. You'll begin to know your true measurements and dress your mind
accordingly."
Then, all of a
sudden, I yawned. What a rude idiot, but I couldn't help it!
Mr. Antolini just
laughed, though. "C'mon," he said, and got up. "We'll fix up the couch for you."
I followed him and
he went over to this closet and tried to take down some sheets and blankets and
stuff that was on the top shelf, but he couldn't do it with this highball glass
in his hand. So he drank it and then put the glass down on the floor and then he
took the stuff down. I helped him bring it over to the couch. We both made the
bed together. He wasn't too hot at it. He didn't tuck anything in very tight. I
didn't care, though. I could've slept standing up I was so tired.
"How're all your
women?"
"They're okay." I
was being a lousy conversationalist, but I didn't feel like it.
"How's Sally?" He
knew old Sally Hayes. I introduced him once.
"She's all right. I
had a date with her this afternoon." Boy, it seemed like twenty years ago! "We
don't have too much in common any more."
"Helluva pretty
girl. What about that other girl? The one you told me about, in Maine?"
"Oh―Jane Gallagher.
She's all right. I'm probably gonna give her a buzz tomorrow."
We were all done
making up the couch then. "It's all yours," Mr. Antolini said. "I don't know
what the heck you're going to do with those legs of yours."
"That's all right.
I'm used to short beds," I said. "Thanks a lot, sir. You and Mrs. Antolini
really saved my life tonight."
"You know where the
bathroom is. If there's anything you want, just holler. I'll be in the kitchen
for a while―will the light bother you?"
"No―heck, no. Thanks
a lot."
"All right. Good
night, handsome."
"G'night, sir.
Thanks a lot."
He went out in the
kitchen and I went in the bathroom and got undressed and all. I couldn't brush
my teeth because I didn't have any toothbrush with me. I didn't have any pajamas
either and Mr. Antolini forgot to lend me some. So I just went back in the
living room and turned off this little lamp next to the couch, and then I got in
bed with just my shorts on. It was way too short for me, the couch, but I really
could've slept standing up without batting an eyelash. I laid awake for just a
couple of seconds thinking about all that stuff Mr. Antolini'd told me. About
finding out the size of your mind and all. He was really a pretty smart guy. But
I couldn't keep my goldarn eyes open, and I fell asleep.
Then something
happened. I don't even like to talk about it.
I woke up all of a
sudden. I don't know what time it was or anything, but I woke up. I felt
something on my head, some guy's hand. Boy, it really scared heck out of me.
What it was, it was Mr. Antolini's hand. What he was doing was, he was sitting
on the floor right next to the couch, in the dark and all, and he was sort of
petting me or patting me on the goldarn head. Boy, I'll bet I jumped about a
thousand feet.
"What the hellya
doing?" I said.
"Nothing! I'm simply
sitting here, admiring―"
"What're ya doing,
anyway?" I said over again. I didn't know what the heck to say―I mean I was
embarrassed as heck.
"How 'bout keeping
your voice down? I'm simply sitting here―"
"I have to go,
anyway," I said―boy, was I nervous! I started putting on my dang pants in the
dark. I could hardly get them on I was so dang nervous. I know more dang
perverts, at schools and all, than anybody you ever met, and they're always
being perverty when I'm around.
"You have to go
where?" Mr. Antolini said. He was trying to act very goldarn casual and cool and
all, but he wasn't any too goldarn cool. Take my word.
"I left my bags and
all at the station. I think maybe I'd better go down and get them. I have all my
stuff in them."
"They'll be there in
the morning. Now, go back to bed. I'm going to bed myself. What's the matter
with you?"
"Nothing's the
matter, it's just that all my money and stuff's in one of my bags. I'll be right
back. I'll get a cab and be right back," I said. Boy, I was falling all over
myself in the dark. "The thing is, it isn't mine, the money. It's my mother's,
and I―"
"Don't be
ridiculous, Holden. Get back in that bed. I'm going to bed myself. The money
will be there safe and sound in the morn―"
"No, no kidding. I
gotta get going. I really do." I was dang near all dressed already, except that
I couldn't find my tie. I couldn't remember where I'd put my tie. I put on my
jacket and all without it. Old Mr. Antolini was sitting now in the big chair a
little ways away from me, watching me. It was dark and all and I couldn't see
him so hot, but I knew he was watching me, all right. He was still boozing, too.
I could see his trusty highball glass in his hand.
"You're a very, very
strange boy."
"I know it," I said.
I didn't even look around much for my tie. So I went without it. "Good-by, sir,"
I said, "Thanks a lot. No kidding."
He kept walking
right behind me when I went to the front door, and when I rang the elevator bell
he stayed in the dang doorway. All he said was that business about my being a
"very, very strange boy" again. Strange, my butt. Then he waited in the doorway
and all till the goldarn elevator came. I never waited so long for an elevator
in my whole goldarn life. I swear.
I didn't know what
the heck to talk about while I was waiting for the elevator, and he kept
standing there, so I said, "I'm gonna start reading some good books. I really
am." I mean you had to say something. It was very embarrassing.
"You grab your bags
and scoot right on back here again. I'll leave the door unlatched."
"Thanks a lot," I
said. "G'by!" The elevator was finally there. I got in and went down. Boy, I was
shaking like a madman. I was sweating, too. When something perverty like that
happens, I start sweating like a idiot. That kind of stuff's happened to me
about twenty times since I was a kid. I can't stand it.
Day Eleven Text | The Catcher in the Rye |
English I Stories | Evans Homepage |