IT WAS TOO LATE to call up for a cab or anything, so I walked the whole way to the station. It wasn’t too far, but it was cold as hell, and the snow made it hard for walking, and my Gladstones kept banging hell out of my legs. I sort of enjoyed the air and all, though. The only trouble was, the cold made my nose hurt, and right under my upper lip, where old Stradlater’d laid one on me. He’d smacked my lip right on my teeth, and it was pretty sore. My ears were nice and warm, though. That hat I bought had earlaps in it, and I put them onโI didn’t give a damn how I looked. Nobody was around anyway. Everybody was in the sack.
I was quite lucky when I got to the station, because I only had to wait about ten minutes for a train. While I waited, I got some snow in my hand and washed my face with it. I still had quite a bit of blood on.
Usually I like riding on trains, especially at night, with the lights on and the windows so black, and one of those guys coming up the aisle selling coffee and sandwiches and magazines. I usually buy a ham sandwich and about four magazines. If I’m on a train at night, I can usually even read one of those dumb stories in a magazine without puking. You know. One of those stories with a lot of phony, lean-jawed guys named David in it, and a lot of phony girls named Linda or Marcia that are always lighting all the goddam Davids’ pipes for them. I can even read one of those lousy stories on a train at night, usually. But this time, it was different. I just didn’t feel like it. I just sort of sat and not did anything. All I did was take off my hunting hat and put it in my pocket.
All of a sudden, this lady got on at Trenton and sat down next to me. Practically the whole car was empty, because it was pretty late and all, but she sat down next to me, instead of an empty seat, because she had this big bag with her and I was sitting in the front seat. She stuck the bag right out in the middle of the aisle, where the conductor and everybody could trip over it. She had these orchids on, like she’d just been to a big party or something. She was around forty or forty-five, I guess, but she was very good looking. Women kill me. They really do. I don’t mean I’m oversexed or anything like thatโalthough I am quite sexy. I just like them, I mean. They’re always leaving their goddam bags out in the middle of the aisle.
Anyway, we were sitting there, and all of a sudden she said to me, “Excuse me, but isn’t that a Pencey Prep sticker?” She was looking up at my suitcases, up on the rack.
“Yes, it is,” I said. She was right. I did have a goddam Pencey sticker on
one of my Gladstones. Very corny, I’ll admit.
“Oh, do you go to Pencey?” she said. She had a nice voice. A nice telephone voice, mostly. She should’ve carried a goddam telephone around with her.
“Yes, I do,” I said.
“Oh, how lovely! Perhaps you know my son, then, Ernest Morrow? He goes to Pencey.”
“Yes, I do. He’s in my class.”
Her son was doubtless the biggest bastard that ever went to Pencey, in the whole crumby history of the school. He was always going down the corridor, after he’d had a shower, snapping his soggy old wet towel at people’s asses. That’s exactly the kind of a guy he was.
“Oh, how nice!” the lady said. But not corny. She was just nice and all. “I must tell Ernest we met,” she said. “May I ask your name, dear?”
“Rudolf Schmidt,” I told her. I didn’t feel like giving her my whole life history. Rudolf Schmidt was the name of the janitor of our dorm.
“Do you like Pencey?” she asked me.
“Pencey? It’s not too bad. It’s notย paradiseย or anything, but it’s as good as most schools. Some of the faculty are pretty conscientious.”
“Ernest just adores it.”
“I know he does,” I said. Then I started shooting the old crap around a little bit. “He adapts himself very well to things. He really does. I mean he really knows how to adapt himself.”
“Do you think so?” she asked me. She sounded interested as hell.
“Ernest? Sure,” I said. Then I watched her take off her gloves. Boy, was she lousy with rocks.
“I just broke a nail, getting out of a cab,” she said. She looked up at me and sort of smiled. She had a terrifically nice smile. She really did. Most people have hardly any smile at all, or a lousy one. “Ernest’s father and I sometimes worry about him,” she said. “We sometimes feel he’s not a terribly good mixer.”
“How do you mean?”
“Well. He’s a very sensitive boy. He’s really never been a terribly good mixer with other boys. Perhaps he takes things a little more seriously than he should at his age.”
Sensitive. That killed me. That guy Morrow was about as sensitive as a goddam toilet seat.
I gave her a good look. She didn’t look like any dope to me. She looked like she might have a pretty damn good idea what a bastard she was the mother of. But you can’t always tellโwith somebody’s mother, I mean. Mothers are all slightly insane. The thing is, though, I liked old Morrow’s mother. She was all right. “Would you care for a cigarette?” I asked her.
She looked all around. “I don’t believe this is a smoker, Rudolf,” she said.
Rudolf. That killed me.
“That’s all right. We can smoke till they start screaming at us,” I said. She took a cigarette off me, and I gave her a light.
She looked nice, smoking. She inhaled and all, but she didn’tย wolfย the smoke down, the way most women around her age do. She had a lot of charm. She had quite a lot of sex appeal, too, if you really want to know.
She was looking at me sort of funny. “I may be wrong but I believe your nose is bleeding, dear,” she said, all of a sudden.
I nodded and took out my handkerchief. “I got hit with a snowball,” I said. “One of those very icy ones.” I probably would’ve told her what really happened, but it would’ve taken too long. I liked her, though. I was beginning to feel sort of sorry I’d told her my name was Rudolf Schmidt. “Old Ernie,” I said. “He’s one of the most popular boys at Pencey. Did you know that?”
“No, I didn’t.”
I nodded. “It really took everybody quite a long time to get to know him. He’s a funny guy. Aย strangeย guy, in lots of waysโknow what I mean? Like when I first met him. When I first met him, I thought he was kind of a snobbish person. That’s what I thought. But he isn’t. He’s just got this very original personality that takes you a little while to get to know him.”
Old Mrs. Morrow didn’t say anything, but boy, you should’ve seen her. I had her glued to her seat. You take somebody’s mother, all they want to hear about is what a hot-shot their son is.
Then Iย reallyย started chucking the old crap around. “Did he tell you about the elections?” I asked her. “The class elections?”
She shook her head. I had her in a trance, like. I really did.
“Well, a bunch of us wanted old Ernie to be president of the class. I mean he was the unanimous choice. I mean he was the only boy that could really handle the job,” I saidโboy, was I chucking it. “But this other boyโHarry Fencerโwas elected. And theย reasonย he was elected, the simple and obvious reason, was because Ernie wouldn’t let us nominate him. Because he’s so darn shy and modest and all. Heย refused… Boy, he’sย reallyย shy. You oughta make him try to get over that.” I looked at her. “Didn’t he tell you about it?”
“No, he didn’t.”
I nodded. “That’s Ernie. He wouldn’t. That’s the one fault with himโhe’s too shy and modest. You really oughta get him to try to relax occasionally.”
Right then, the conductor came around for Mrs. Morrow’s ticket, giving me a chance to stop talking. I’m glad I kept it up for a while, though. Guys like Morrow, who are always snapping their towels at peopleโs asses and trying to hurt someone, donโt just stay rats as kidsโtheyโre rats for life. But after all the nonsense I spewed, Mrs. Morrow will probably think of him as this shy, modest guy who wouldnโt let them nominate him for president. She might. You canโt tell. Mothers arenโt too sharp about that stuff.
“Would you care for a cocktail?” I asked her. I was in the mood for one myself. “We can go to the club car. All right?”
“Dear, are you allowed to order drinks?” she asked. Not snotty, though. She was too charming and all to be snotty.
“Well, no, not exactly, but I can usually get them because of my height,” I said. “And I have quite a bit of gray hair.” I turned sideways and showed her my gray hair. It fascinated the hell out of her. “Come on, join me, why donโt you?” I said. I would’ve enjoyed her company.
“I really don’t think Iโd better. Thank you so much, though, dear,” she said. “Anyway, the club carโs most likely closed. Itโs quite late, you know.” She was right. Iโd forgotten all about what time it was.
Then she looked at me and asked the question I was afraid she was going to ask. “Ernest wrote that heโd be home on Wednesday, that Christmas vacation would start on Wednesday,” she said. “I hope you werenโt called home suddenly because of illness in the family.” She really looked worried. She wasnโt just being nosy; you could tell.
“No, everybodyโs fine at home,” I said. “Itโs me. I have to have this operation.”
“Oh! Iโm so sorry,” she said. She really was, too. I immediately regretted saying it, but it was too late.
“It isnโt very serious. I have this tiny little tumor on the brain.”
“Oh, no!” She put her hand up to her mouth and all. “Oh, Iโll be all right and everything! Itโs right near the outside. And itโs a very tiny one. They can take it out in about two minutes.”
Then I started reading this timetable I had in my pocket, just to stop lying. Once I get started, I can go on for hours if I feel like it. No kidding. Hours.
We didnโt talk much after that. She started reading this Vogue she had with her, and I looked out the window for a while. She got off at Newark. She wished me a lot of luck with the operation and all. She kept calling me Rudolf. Then she invited me to visit Ernie during the summer, in Gloucester, Massachusetts. She said their house was right on the beach, and they had a tennis court and all, but I just thanked her and told her I was going to South America with my grandmother. Which was really a hot one because my grandmother hardly ever even goes out of the house, except maybe to a matinee or something. But I wouldnโt visit that sonuvabitch Morrow for all the money in the world, even if I was desperate.