Yeah,
That Old Seven-Year Itch
From
The Pen Of Frank Jackman
You
never know when a guy, a rationale ordinary guy under most circumstances is
going to go off the deep end, going to get, ah, that seven –year itch. You know what I am
talking about if you are a guy, hell, now that we live in a more enlightened
time, a little more anyway, women too. But today I speak of the male version of
the itch. Take Professor Joseph Sanders, yes, that Joseph Sanders, the
well-respected acolyte of Sigmund Freud, who wrote the book, THE book, on the
psychological dysfunctional of American family a generation or so back, and
which is still footnoted by eager doctoral candidates, and for all I know is
still consulted in tough family-related cases in the real world.
That
though was in the days before the good professor got the itch, before he went
off the deep end, back in the days when one and all would see him coming and
going cutting diagonally through Washington Square, New York City’s Washington,
the one made famous, or infamous, by Henry James back around the turn of the 20th
century, with that patented homburg of his and that obligatory cigar sticking
out of his mouth as he headed to the Compton Club after a hard day of lecturing
the young and innocent at New York University where he taught for many years. But
that was before she, and you knew damn well if a guy was going off the
deep-end, stevedore or professor, a dame, a frail, a twist, a femme fatale if you go for such
descriptions, or whatever you call a heart-breaker of a woman in your
neighborhood, had to go with the story.
So we might as well get to it.
Funny,
funny because of all people Joe Sanders, he liked to be called Joe to show that
he could be a regular guy and show too that he hadn’t forgotten his working
poor roots growing up in Paterson across the river, the Hudson River if you
need to know the exact river, was the guy least likely to get the itch, to go
off the tracks. First off he was strictly a square, although that was not the term
used in his circles, more like, ah, stuffy, kept to a routine, up at dawn, do
some work, eat a light breakfast, teach a couple of classes in the morning,
lunch at the Compton Club, a little advising on this and that in the afternoon,
then back to the club for a few drinks, home, supper and to bed by nine or ten.
Like clockwork and like I say a square. No lady’s man, not with that homburg
and cigar a constant presence, and not with his tight circle of male friends
who gathered at the club and provided whatever he desired for non-family
companionship (desired like I said before until she knocked him of his
moorings).
Funny
too because strictly speaking Joe Sanders did not technically have a seven-year
itch, although he had an itch all right, but it came at the thirteenth year of
his marriage. His rather late marriage to the former Louise Daye, whom he
courted for almost a decade before he married and with whom he produced two
daughters, and whom he constantly said, said to her and to one and all, that he
was quite happy with. And maybe that was to be his downfall. New York City had
been a bear that summer, that summer of 1953, had had day after day of high
temperatures and high humidity which made things worse in the closed- in city.
So because he loved his wife and two daughters dearly he sprung for a summer’s
vacation for the whole lot down at Atlantic City. He had to finish some paper
and would join them on week-ends later so on the face of it the whole idea
would work splendidly.
No sooner than the good Professor had seen his
family off on the train at 42nd Street than he ran into her. Now the
guys, his friends, his circle of male friends in particular, at the club later,
later when recalling the start-up events counted, were not sure whether he
bumped into her or she bumped into him but there was no question that an
off-hand bump started it. That is when
Joe “met” Alice, Alice Reed, the woman for whom he would go off the rails. Not
in dispute is that Joe, in any case, made apologies as a well-bred and thought of
gentleman would, and offered to buy her a drink as a token of good –will. The professor
expected to be turned down and that would be the end of it. He expected to be turned
down mainly because, at best, he was aware that he a very ordinary looking
aging guy with homburg and cigar, not appendages that would set a flaming young
New York City woman on fire. And turned down too because one Alice Reed, a
photographer’s model, and make of that what you will, was drop-dead beautiful,
was all that a man, a handsome young rich man would try to catch, and an old
man dream of, dream of to disturb his sleep. Alice, a brunette wearing her hair
in that longest 1950s New York fashion, long legs, well-turned ankles, nice
figure, maybe a bit on the slim side, and great big laughing blue eyes.
What
one Professor Joseph Sanders, now many years removed from those from hunger
Paterson tenement days, dead father, single mother working the textile mills to
bring in a few dollars, did not know was that drop-dead beautiful girls, or
maybe ugly women for that matter, who were struggling in the New York City heat
and night were not turning down an offered drink from anybody for any reason
that year. And so it started. They went to the Skyline Club, a couple of blocks
from the train station, ordered drinks and more drinks and talked for a couple
of hours. She said he was funny, witty, amusing and he said she was beautiful.
At the end of the evening, and here again there is a dispute whether he or she
said they should get together again, for dinner maybe. And so they did the next
night.
After
that next night dinner, or maybe it was that first encounter, she, Alice Reed
she, had her hooks into our good professor bad, bad as a woman can have those
hooks with a man. He started to send her presents, started to visit her at her
flat (a walk-up studio, fold-up wall bed, small kitchenette, you know small as
befits a struggle young, ah, photographers’
model), started taking her build-up of him more seriously as time went on. At
first he could not quite believe her protestations that she was tired of flashy
guys with no manner and big wanting habits, wanting habits with nothing but
front to show her. That she was tired, very tired of living hand-to-mouth and
tired of not having things, not having what the Mayfair swells who would buy
photographs of her had to offer.
She
said he was different, that he knew from hunger, knew her needs. As time went
on though Joe began to believe her words, wanted to believe her words. His only
complaints, silly things really, was her
constant chewing of gum, Wrigley’s, that he said took away from look while
chewing and her dropping of her “g’s” which bespoke (his word) of a lack of language
skills. Then the other shoe dropped.
One night while they were having supper at her
place an ex-lover, Jack Rogers, well, really an ex-walking daddy, a sugar daddy
as she explained to Joe later, turned the key to her door and walked in on
them. Needless to say this Rogers was an older man, rich, and a sugar daddy that
Alice had neglected to mention had until the month before been paying her, ah, the
rent and expenses. They had had a row and they had split up, or so she thought.
This Rogers had apparently been drinking
and put up quite an argument about why was Joe there, arguing that Alice was
private stock, and things like that. Rogers tried to attack Alice and Joe, no
prize-fighter, somehow had to fend him off. They finally got him out of the
flat, and Joe thought that would be the end of it, especially when Alice stated
that Joe was the only man for her.
And
that is really where a woman getting her hooks into a man came into play. Alice
convinced him, although he probably needed little convincing by that time, that
their happiness depended on getting rid of Jack, getting rid of Jack for good.
So in the course of events Joe purchased a gun, a gun for Alice’s protection he
said. About a week after that first
encounter with Jack Rogers he came to her door again drunk, drunk and nasty.
Before Joe realized what had happened Alice took the gun from a desk drawer and
shot Jack point blank, shot him dead, very dead.
Once
Joe realized what had happened, once he started thinking he knew his die was
cast, knew that their fates were now joined. They fled the flat, her taking a rushed
suitcase of things with her, went to his house where he got a suitcase full of
his things and grabbed a cab to the bus station, the Greyhound bus station and
headed out of town. The last anybody had heard, and that was sketchy but an old
friend of Joe’s, a man looking very much
like Joe and a young woman were seen in Paterson, seen being escorted by an old
time hood, a gangster from his boyhood streets, from Joe’s old neighborhood to parts unknown.
Yeah, you never know about that itch, that seven-year itch.
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