“And I got to keep my arms and my legs and my sight and my hearing. All I lost was what makes a man a man.”
“My God,” she breathed.
“When I came back, my wife walked out on me. I didn’t blame her. She would’ve stood by me in anything else, if I was on crutches, if I was blind. She was a good wife. But she was entitled to a husband.”
She looked over at the picture on the wall. The soldier in his helmet, the girl looking up worshipfully from his shoulder. It couldn’t have been Starr, then. Tarawa had been in 1943. But maybe Starr had come along afterward, unsuspecting. Who knows what this terrible tourniquet had turned into later on?
“At first it wasn’t so bad for a little while. I went out on dates like I had before I got married. Plenty of dates. Plenty of girls. Some wanted to marry. Some were ready to settle for less. But there always comes a time in an evening when the two of you are alone by yourselves. I used to tell all kinds of lies to cover myself up.” He laughed mirthlessly. “I even told one girl I was contagious.”
“What’d she say?”
“She told me she didn’t mind, not to let it stop me, because she was contagious herself.”
He went over to the vicinity of the washbasin and picked up a flat brown-glass bottle from somewhere near it, she didn’t quite see where. “I don’t suppose I can offer you a drink?” he said uncertainly.
“That might only lead to trouble.”
“Trouble?”
“Trouble for me. And trouble for me spells trouble for you too,” she told him coolly. “You know that, don’t you?”
Even his answer was the perfect answer — for her line of inquiry. “I ought to by now,” he said with a heavy sigh.
He tipped the bottle up, pulled the cork with his teeth, held it fast there, let some liquor run into his mouth alongside of it, then reinserted the cork, still with his teeth only. She’d never seen that done before.
“It started in gradually, the bad part of it. I found myself starting to hit them, to get a little rough, to throw them around and swing at them. One or two even stood for it, but not too long. Most ran away. Then the stray slaps and knocks became regular beatings. I beat one girl up very badly one night. I had to throw cold water on her before she came around. I put some money in her hand, all I had on me, and kissed her and beat it away. She never preferred charges against me, but she used to duck out of sight if she saw me on the street after that.”
She gave him a look of antipathy. “You hated them because of what had happened to you. Is that why you roughed them up?”
“No, no. You’ve got it turned around. I only did it because I loved them. I couldn’t show them I loved them like other guys can. And you have to
This is the one, she told herself inexorably. He’s the one — knew Starr.
“But I knew it wouldn’t stop there. I knew sooner or later I was going to kill one of them.”
“And have you?”
His answer was bloodcurdling in its simplicity. “Not yet.”
“Why don’t you have yourself placed under treatment before that? Before that happens?”
“There
“What year is this?” he asked at a tangent.
“Sixty-one.”
“That don’t mean my memory’s failing,” he defended himself. “It’s just that I lose track every now and then. I was nineteen when I was on Tarawa. That means I’m still only thirty-seven today. At thirty-seven you still get restless every week or so. You wouldn’t know it, but you do.”
She lowered her head, strangely touched for a moment.
“You want to go out for a stroll, be a part of the world again, the world you once knew. You see other fellows with their girls. You want a girl too. Nothing dirty about it, unhealthy about it. It’s as normal, as natural, as that. But that’s when the trouble comes in.”
He poked his thumb over his shoulder. “Do you see that pipe back there?”
“I noticed it when I first came in.”
“I’ve set up a system. You know, like a fire-protection system. The superintendent of this building is a Norwegian, his name is Jansen, husky as an ox. He has the apartment right over this one. He used to live down here in the basement, but when I came in he turned this one over to me and moved upstairs. You see, he likes me. His son and I were buddies in the war. Well, one night we were having a few beers around the corner, and I told him about it: how I was afraid I was going to end up in serious trouble if things kept on going the way they were; maybe even do away with someone altogether.