Silverman. She’s taking a couple of courses there in counseling, I think.” There was some discussion of how difficult it would be to find a student like that without more information. They’d transfer me to the School of Education.
The School of Education offices were closing at fourthirty and it would be quite difficult to locate a student. Had I tried the registrar? Yes, I had. Perhaps someone in the Department of Counseling and Guidance could help me. She switched me there. Did I know the professor’s name. No, I didn’t. The course number? No. Well, it would be very difficult.
“Not as difficult as I will be if I have to come over there and kick a professor.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“Just check the schedules. Tell me if there’s a counseling course meeting at this hour or later. You must have schedules. Pretend this isn’t a matter of life and death. Pretend I have a government grant to award. Pretend I’m Solomon Guggenheim.”
“I believe that Solomon Guggenheim is dead,” she said.
“Jesus Christ… ”
“But I’ll check,” she said. “Hold the line, please.” There was distant typing and vague movement at the other end of the line and in thirty seconds the secretary came back on.
“There’s a class in Techniques of Counseling, Professor More, that meets from two-o-five to four fifty-five.”
“Where is it?”
She told me. I hung up and headed for Harvard Square. It was four-twenty.
At four-forty I found a hydrant on Mass Avenue outside the Harvard Yard and parked in front of it. You could usually count on a hydrant. I asked a young woman in tennis shorts and hiking boots to direct me to Sever Hall and at four-fifty-six was waiting under a tree near the steps when Susan came out. She was wearing a blue madras jumpsuit with a big gold zipper, and carrying her books in a huge white canvas shoulder bag. She had a quality coming down the steps that she always had. She looked as if it were her building and she was strolling out to survey the grounds. I felt the jolt. I’d been looking at her for about three years now but every time I saw her I felt a kind of jolt, a body shock that was tangible. It made the muscles in my neck and shoulders tighten. She saw me and her face brightened and she smiled.
Two undergraduates eyed her covertly. The jumpsuit fitted her well. Her dark hair glistened in the sunshine and as she got close I could see my reflection in the opaque lenses of her big sunglasses. My white three-piece suit looked terrific.
She said to me, “I beg your pardon, are you a Greek multibillionaire shipping magnate and member of the international jet set?”
I said, “Yes, I am, would you care to marry me and live on my private island in great luxury?”
She said, “Yes, I would, but I’m committed to a smalltime thug in Boston and first I’ll have to shake him.”
“It’s not the thug I mind,” I said. “It’s the small-time.”
She hooked her arm through mine and said, “You’re big-time with me, kid.”
As we walked through the Yard several students and faculty eyed Susan. I didn’t blame them but looked hard at them anyway. It’s good to keep in practice.
“Why are you here?” she said.
“I gotta go to England at eight tonight and I wanted some time to say goodbye.”
“How long?”
“I don’t know. Could be long. Could be some months. I can’t tell.”
“I will miss you,” she said.
“We’ll miss each other.”
“Yes.”
“I’m parked out on Mass Avenue.”
“I parked at Everett Station and took the subway in. We can go to your apartment and I’ll drive you to the airport in your car.”
“Okay,” I said. “But don’t be so bossy. You know how I hate a bossy broad.”
“Bossy?”
“Yeah.”
“Did you have a plan for our farewell celebration?”
“Yeah. ”Forget it.“
“Okay, boss.” She squeezed my arm and smiled. It was a stunner of a smile. There was something in it. Mischief was too weak a word. Evil too
Terry Ravenscroft, Ravenscroft