The Sibyl's Mistake
A NovelBy Edward WilsoniUniverse, Inc.
Copyright © 2010 Edward Wilson
All right reserved.ISBN: 978-1-4502-5030-6 Contents
INTRODUCTION............................................ixI. ARRIVALS.............................................1II. LET THE GAMES BEGIN.................................15III. THE LAST DAYS OF POMPEII...........................26IV. COCKTAILS AT EIGHT..................................38V. THE RIDE TO THE ABYSS................................59VI. TAKE OFF THE MASK...................................70VII. BOOGALOO...........................................89VIII. OVER THE WAVES....................................104IX. LIGHTHOUSE OF THE MEDITERRANEAN.....................124X. FLAMEOUT.............................................144XI. OLD WINE INTO NEW BOTTLES...........................158POSTSCRIPTUM............................................161ACKNOWLEDGMENTS.........................................163
Chapter One
ARRIVALS
Traffic noises came up from the street below, and a light wind blew in from the Mediterranean. In the near distance, shipping on the bay was very active in the morning sunlight, streaking its surface with the wakes of arriving and departing freighters, cruise ships, and ferries that ran to other mainland ports and some islands. Above the bay, Vesuvius loomed high on the left and below it the shoreline curved away to the right in a parabola that ended with the Sorrentine Peninsula tip and then lined up again at Capri, an offshore continuation on a submerged ridge. The sweep of Siren Land.
Frank Bones paused briefly to admire the view from the window and again felt very pleased with himself to be in Naples. He put a last reprint box on the bookshelf and then took a break from unpacking his research library. Today officially was the first day of his sabbatical year from the university at Berkeley. Last week, he had come in on the long but uneventful flight from San Francisco to move into his new condo. The household goods and books that he had boxed and shipped finally had arrived, late but intact, and were nearly installed.
Less than a year ago, Bones had been on his beloved motorcycle on a pursuit from California down the Baja California peninsula on what he considered to be a mission of justice to redress a personal physical injury deliberately inflicted on him as an act of domination by a previously trusted young man. His long association with the Code of the San Francisco-based gay, sadomasochistic, motorcycle gang named the Blackguards, to which they both belonged, required such action, especially since he had been the mentor of the perpetrator who was seeking membership. The ultimate indignity was that the younger man had proposed to demonstrate his worthiness for membership by unexpectedly overpowering Bones, his nominal master.
When that matter was settled in Mexico to his satisfaction, Bones resigned from the Blackguards, partly because his years of membership had dulled his original enthusiasm to quiet boredom with the entire group, especially the rigid regimentation which attended everything. Bones wanted a new life.
He already had a tenured professorship at the University of California at Berkeley and a strong intellectual interest in his special field, fossil plants. This, combined with a fascination for the geologic history of the Campania area of Italy, in which Naples is located, and an understanding of its great research potential because its fossil plant record was so exquisitely preserved, led him to decide to transfer to the University of Naples in order to make the study of this flora the research project of the remainder of his career. He was a good field man and a well-known researcher, spoke and read Italian fluently, and had little difficulty acquiring a one-year Visiting Professorship with teaching and publishing responsibilities. He hoped to be able to turn this into a permanent position—difficult, he knew, but not impossible.
His age - middle forties - would permit him potential time to accomplish these goals and free him from the relatively insubstantial competition of younger academics, both important to any committees considering him for employment at the University of Naples. He also anticipated the possibility - even the likelihood - of the arrival in Naples of his younger Blackguard former colleague, especially since they were uncle-nephew and his present whereabouts were known by family. However, Bones was preparing for such an eventuality with a view to preventing it from interfering with his ambition.
Bones left the bookshelves, walked to the kitchen, poured a cup of coffee, carried it out to the narrow balcony, and sat down in one of the white plastic chairs. Ordinarily he was unaffected by such mundane things, but he admitted to himself that the view of the city, the coast, the harbor, the islands, and the seas beyond was one of staggering beauty. He knew too that it was the view that partly had led him to select this condo. It was partly the views that had attracted the earliest inhabitants, then the Greeks, Romans, and subsequent Neapolitans. The Romans had built enormous seaside villas nearby for the views and the convenience of proximity to the sea. Some of these had their own pools in which fish and shellfish were raised for food. A few still existed as ruins. Naples had had its ups and downs, its invasions and raids, its changes of governments, but had somehow survived all of them. The view, of course, always was intact.
Royalty occupied the palaces, money flowed in from commerce and taxes, and prosperity was the norm during the Kingdom of Two Naples years. Maria Christina, Marie Antoinette's sister, had been queen, a palace that rivaled Versailles had been built, Admiral Nelson was a hero to the populace, and Lord and Lady Hamilton - the famous Emma - were important personages. Foreign writers were seduced by Naples into writing effusively such phrases as "see Naples and die" and "Naples is a paradise." Young gentlemen from England finished their educations with a European tour, of which Naples was a major highlight.
And then, following the unification of Italy, the capital was moved to Rome, tax revenues were sent there too, and the city fell into depression. World War II was especially hard on the Neapolitans, with the fleeing Germans even burning the old city hall records. Advancing American soldiers found squalor and starvation in the bombed-out city.
But today, thought Bones, Naples is largely avoided by Americans who come to see the ruins of Pompeii on day tours from Rome or from cruise ships, and perhaps tour the Naples museum to see the artifacts, and then flee, having been filled with old stories of filth, poverty, and crime in the streets, all highly exaggerated. Naples still is beautiful, proud, and recovering from war and political neglect. Industry is active, the harbor is filled with ships, and the people look prosperous. It is the face of this recovered Naples that the politicians and inhabitants turn tentatively to the world today.
A knock at the door interrupted Bones' musings and he rose to go answer it.
* * *
The airport terminal in Naples is surprisingly small for a famous city of more than a million people. It has no "Welcome to Naples" atmosphere, just a scruffy functionalism. There is no inkling of the celebrated views, and it is located in one of the most crime-ridden sections of the city. Arrival at the airport, whether by air or land, is so unpropitious that it may arouse anxiety in new visitors who have been bombarded with stories of ripoffs and muggings in the city.
William Weston took a deep breath as his taxi left the terminal for his hotel, assuring himself that part of his dark mood was due to fatigue from the long flight and not just from exposure to the dreary airport. Still, he could not help comparing the neighborhoods they drove through after leaving the airport entrance with the slums that he had seen in Mexico. He closed his eyes for a moment as the taxi merged from the airport streets into a freeway. He unexpectedly dropped off to sleep. When he awoke a few minutes later, they were speeding along a seaside road. He sat up, looked around, recognized what could only have been Capri on the horizon, and then smiled, reassured. Yes, this would be a good trip. He had not been mistaken to come. Nepenthe. He was here. Let the adventure begin.
* * *
The Prime Numbers' flight had come in on time. They had settled into their hotel. Some had been for a walk on the nearby seaside street, others had taken naps, and now all thirty of them were having a drink in the little hotel bar before going out to a first dinner in Naples. Harry and George were at a table for two.
"Yes, nice to meet you too. I did see you on both flights, you know, but you were in first class and I was in tourist."
"Listen, Harry," said George, "you should have come with us for that walk. First down a little street right out of a movie set, then across a pretty park and the highway to a seaside sidewalk. What views—Vesuvius, Capri, the ships, the people, the air. I never expected that it really would be so glorious."
"Well, that's why we're here, I think. For the glory. When did you join the Prime Numbers, George?"
"Ah, yes, that. I moved to Palm Springs from San Francisco about a year ago. Retired bank manager. I heard there was a local gay men's social group called Prime Numbers of the Desert for older gay men `and those who admire them.' I knew nobody, so I tried it and liked it. Mark's idea of a group of us seeing the Naples he knows seemed great, so here I am." Harry tilted his glass and drained the last of the wine. "Nice drink."
"Actually, George, the Prime Numbers is a national group of older gay men, with chapters in several states and tens of thousands of members. It is a godsend for people like us who retire and need a sense of purpose, especially if the retirement involves a move to a strange place. But wait, here we go, I think. It looks like Mark is about to say something."
* * *
Ethel Burns, an American of early middle age, was on a tour again, this time a moderately expensive Mediterranean cruise. As the huge ship passed between the breakwaters that form the long entrance into the Naples harbor, she stood with a group on the windy upper deck admiring the view of the approaching city. Jane, a fellow tour member next to her, who had been telling Ethel about her grandchildren, smiled and changed the subject.
"And now, Ethel my dear, enough of my boring grandmother stories. Tell me something about yourself. Is your husband with you?"
"Oh, no." Ethel replied. "I'm a widow."
Ethel always said she was a widow when she was on a tour. Her mother back in Des Moines had advised that as being the simplest solution to the embarrassing truth that her husband had left her for a man and moved with him to San Francisco. In Des Moines, of course, everyone knew the story, although they rarely mentioned it now to her, and over time her mother's friends largely had stopped patting her hand in sympathy whenever they met her with the usual kiss on the cheek. Still, it was a subject gossips would not let die, especially since her husband, John, had been a popular minister of their suburban church.
"Oh, I'm sorry. I hope you're not offended," said her neighbor.
"No, no. It's been some time now. I'm mostly resigned to it. Still, I do like to get away sometimes, like this trip. Very pleasant, isn't it? The sea, the air, the nice cabins, the service."
A double blast from the ship's horn startled them both. It was followed by a public address announcement about the ship's imminent docking in Naples and then a recording of a tenor singing "Funiculi, Funicula" in a reedy voice. Ethel and Jane said good-byes, parted, and joined the streams of other passengers returning to their cabins to change for a day ashore.
* * *
John Campbell had called friends in Naples soon after he had signed a contract to write the score and libretto for a Broadway musical about Woodstock. The friends had a cliffside estate in the west end of Naples in Posillipo, an upscale neighborhood on a hill above the bay. They had rented their very private guesthouse below the main house, with a good grand piano, to John, his wife Mary, and their daughter Helen for three months so that John could work on the musical without interruptions. Mary put eleven-year-old Helen in a local school to learn Italian and make friends with neighborhood girls.
This afternoon, John was at the piano, composing. He would play a few bars, stop to write it down, a few more bars, writing again, on and on. Outside on the garden lawn, his daughter and a dozen new Italian girlfriends from the school ran around and seemed to scream loudly at everything.
"Mary," John called to his wife in the kitchen. "Mary, please ask the girls to be a little quieter. I can't work very well with all this noise."
Mary went to the door and said, "Helen, don't scream."
Helen screamed.
"Please, Helen, don't scream."
The girls all screamed and laughed.
Helen formed them into a line and said, "Scream, scream, scream."
The girls screamed, screamed, screamed.
John joined Mary in the doorway and said, "Now, look here."
The girls screamed and laughed. "Dance," shouted Helen. "Dance and scream."
Helen joined the line and they all danced and screamed, "I scream, you scream, we all scream."
Then, with one last scream, they dropped into frozen curtsies that would make a ballerina proud.
Helen announced, "I'm teaching them to scream in English." And they all ran giggling down the garden steps and disappeared.
"I'm so sorry, dear. I will get this under control," said Mary sheepishly.
"Listen, Mary," John replied with his hand on his chin, "I might use that. Can you get them to do it again?"
* * *
After his arrival at the airport and taxi ride to the Hotel Vesuvio, William Weston had slept the remaining day and entire night through. He woke mid-afternoon in his luxurious suite, reportedly the one in which Caruso had died, and ordered a very late breakfast sent up. William liked older grand hotels, even though they sometimes were a little seedy. He had not looked forward to staying with his fellow Prime Numbers at the modestly priced little hotel that had been taken for them. When volunteers were requested to stay elsewhere because of overcrowding, he quickly had accepted, explaining that his hotel, the Vesuvio, was close by. It was a waterfront hotel in the Santa Lucia district, once a grand tour destination. Breakfast arrived with such good coffee that it wakened him thoroughly. He bathed, dressed, found his address book, and punched in a number on the bedside telephone.
"Marutus Taylor, please ... Oh, he's not ... Yes, William Weston ... He is? ... Five o'clock ... Yes, of course I can. I will be there at five ... Thank you. Good-bye."
Mutual friends had recommended that he look up Marutus Taylor whom they said was brilliant, handsome, and affable. Taylor was a Juilliard graduate with a brief performing career as a concert pianist prior to joining the San Carlo Opera as artistic director. So, in a few hours he was to meet the man himself for a drink at his home.
William had been unattached since his lover's death five years previously. The lover had been much older—indeed, William was still in his teens when they had been introduced on the gay beach in Santa Monica. The man was handsome, middle-aged, wealthy, had been everywhere and knew everyone, and was highly educated. He and William were attracted to one another almost instantly, and William had moved into his Santa Monica Canyon house within the week. The parents caused no trouble, recognizing the potential benefit to William. Over the next years, the two men traveled extensively, and William had enrolled in design schools in Los Angeles and New York. He had an innate flair for putting together seemingly disparate things that immediately turned into beautiful objects. The lover had similar tastes and encouraged William.
Eventually, William was able to apply his talent to events, starting with simple dinner parties at home based on the numerous gay Hollywood ones that he and his lover attended frequently. Over time, his dinner parties grew into larger and much more complex affairs that his imagination fueled—say, dinner guests arriving on the Santa Monica beach by a helicopter landing in a circle of bonfires and then being driven in limos up the nearby canyon to the house—and on into anniversaries for gay friends and then to marriages, receptions, and birthdays for gay and straight friends-of-friends, and ultimately to varied national conventions. Along the way, he became a Certified Special Event Professional and belonged to the International Special Event Society, which gave him access to vast numbers of event supplies at wholesale prices and a pool of talented assistants. He bought a studio in the industrial area of Santa Monica south of Olympic, a ten-minute drive from the house, in which many of the decorations were put together and many supplies were stored.
It amused him to block out an event in his mind, transfer it to paper, get the approval of the people giving it, hire talented assistants to do the footwork, see that everything was delivered and installed properly, and then stand by to ensure that nothing went wrong. Aside from delayed deliveries and inclement weather, there had been surprisingly few failures. It was fun for him, gave him a sense of purpose and accomplishment, brought him considerable praise, and—for a time—he enjoyed collecting the advance and final fees and paying the suppliers and staff. Now, he had a personal assistant who handled most of the money but only after close consultations with William. His fees were surprisingly large, and he kept them that way because it gave him a sense of personal pride; although, by this time, he did not need the money. Indeed, his tax accountant often pointed out to him that he lost an unreasonable amount of the fees to taxes because of his wealth and high tax bracket. Nevertheless, he would not hear of setting up a corporation just for tax purposes.
(Continues...)
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