Part 5
Reunion
The last time I saw my father was in Grand Central Station. I was going from my grandmother’s in
the Adirondacks to a cottage on the
Cape that my mother had rented, and I wrote my father that I
would be in New York between trains for an hour and a half, and asked if we could have lunch together.
His secretary wrote to say that he would meet me at
the information booth at noon, and at twelve
o’clock sharp I saw him coming through the crowd.
He was a stranger to me — my mother divorced him three years ago and I hadn’t been with him
since — but as soon as I saw him I felt that he was my father, my flesh and blood, my future and my
doom. I knew that when I was grown I would be something like him;
I would have to plan my
campaigns within his limitations. He was a big, good-looking man, and I was terribly happy to see
him again.
He struck me on the back and shook my hand. “Hi, Charlie,” he said. “Hi, boy. I’d like to take you up
to my club, but it’s in the Sixties, and if you have to catch an early train I guess we’d better get
something to eat around here.” He put his arm around me, and I smelled my father the way my mother
sniffs a rose. It was a rich compound of whiskey, after-shave lotion, shoe polish, woollens, and the
rankness of a mature male. I hoped that someone would see us together. I wished that we could be
photographed. I wanted some record of our having been together.
We went out of the station and up a side street to a restaurant. It was
still early, and the place was
empty. The bartender was quarrelling with a delivery boy, and there was one very old waiter in a red
coat down by the kitchen door. We sat down, and my father hailed the waiter in a loud voice.
“Kellner!” he shouted. “Garcon! You!” His boisterousness in the empty restaurant seemed out of place.
“Could we have a little service here!” he shouted. Then he clapped his hands. This caught the waiter’s
attention, and he shuffled over to our table.
“Were you clapping your hands at me?” he asked.
“Calm down, calm down,” my father said. “It isn’t too much to ask of you — if it wouldn’t be too
much above and beyond the call of duty, we would like a couple of Beefeater Gibsons.”
“I don’t like to be clapped at,” the waiter said.
“I should have brought my whistle,” my father said. “I have a whistle that is audible only to the ears
of old waiters. Now, take out your little pad and your little pencil and see if you can get this straight:
two Beefeater Gibsons. Repeat after me: two Beefeater Gibsons.”
“I think you’d better go somewhere else,” the waiter said quietly.
“That,” said my father, “is one of the most brilliant suggestions I have ever heard. Come on, Charlie.”
I followed my father out of that restaurant into another. He was not so boisterous this time. Our drinks
came, and he cross-questioned me about the baseball season. He then struck the edge of his empty
glass with his knife and began shouting again. “Garcon! You! Could we trouble you to bring us two
more of the same.”
“How old is the boy?” the waiter asked.
“That,” my father said, “is none of your business.”
“I’m sorry, sir,” the waiter said, “but I won’t serve the boy another drink.”
“Well, I have some news for you,” my father said. “I have some very interesting news for you. This
doesn’t happen to be the only restaurant in New York. They’ve opened another on the corner. Come
on, Charlie.”
He paid the bill, and I followed him out of that restaurant into another ...
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