All the King's Men - Robert Penn Warren [143]
And perhaps he never saw you. What he saw was simply part of the furniture of the wonderful opening world. Friendship was something he suddenly discovered and had to give away as a recognition of and payment for the breathlessly opening world which momently divulged itself like a moonflower. It didn’t matter a damn to whom he gave it, for the fact of giving was what mattered, and if you happened to be handy you were automatically endowed with all the appropriate attributes of a friend and forever after your reality is irrelevant. The Friend of Your Youth is the only friend you will ever have, for he hasn’t the slightest concern with calculating his interest or your virtue. He doesn’t give a damn, for the moment, about Getting Ahead or Needs Must Admiring the Best, the two official criteria in adult friendships, and when the boring stranger appears, he puts out his hand and smiles (not really seeing your face) and speaks your name (which doesn’t really belong to your face), saying, “Well, Jack, damned glad you came, come on in, boy!”
So I sat in one of his broken-down easy chairs, after he had cleared the books out, and drank his whisky, and waited for the moment when I was going to say, “Now, listen here, I’m going to tell you something and don’t you start yelling till I finish.”
He didn’t yell till I had finished. Not that I took long to finish. I said, “Governor Stark wants you to be director of the new hospital and medical center.”
He didn’t, to be precise, yell then. He didn’t make a sound. He looked at me for nearly a minute, with an unsmiling clinical eye as though my symptoms merit special attention; then he slowly shook his head. “Better think it over,” I said, “maybe it’s not as bad as it sounds, there may be some angles–” But I let my voice trail off, watching him shake his head again and smile now with the smile which did not forgive me but humbly asked me to forgive him for not being like me, for not being like everybody else, for not being like the world.
If he had not smiled. If he had smiled but had smiled a confident, to-hell-with-you, satirical smile. Or even a smile forgiving me. If he had not smiled the smile which humbly, but with dignity, begged me to forgive him, then things might have been different. But he smiled that way out of the fullness of whatever it was he had, out of the depth of the idea he lived by–whatever the hell it was or whyever the hell he lived that way–and things were the way they turned out to be. Giving that smile, he was like a man who stops to give a beggar a buck and in opening his wallet lets the beggar catch sight of the big roll. If the beggar hadn’t seen the big roll he would never have followed the man down the street, waiting for the block without the street lamp. Not so much because he wants the roll as because he now cannot endure the man who has it and gave him a buck.
For as he smiled and said, “But I’m not interested in the angles,” I did not feel that shy warmth as of the winter sunshine which I had always felt before when he smiled, but suddenly felt something else, which I didn’t have a name for but which was like the winter itself and not the winter sunshine, like the stab of an icicle through the heart. And I thought: All right, you smile like that–you smile like that–
So, even as the thought vanished–if a thought can ever be said to vanish, for it rises out of you and sinks back into you–so I said, “But you don’t know what the angles are. For instance, the Boss expects you to write your ticket.”
“The Boss,” he repeated, and on the words his upper lip curled more than customary to expose the teeth, and the sibilance seemed exaggerated, “need to expect to buy me. I have–” he looked about the room at the clutter and near-squalor–“everything I want.”
“The Boss isn’t any fool. You don’t think he was trying to buy you?”
“He couldn’t,” he said.
“What do you think he was trying to do?