This story is a little longer but I've decided to keep it in one piece to avoid losing the rhythm. It's told in the First Person from the viewpoint of Ellen and because it's set in 1963 I've tried to keep the language as real as possible. The inspiration behind this story came from a picture of a ticket to the dinner JFK was supposed to attend the night of the 22nd. The assassination provides the backdrop to this intimate encounter between two women. The novels written by Bannon are also real and while we might find them stereotypical these days, back in the 1960s they were one of the few ways women could find out more about lesbians.
The ancients have faded into history but their tales have been relayed through countless generations, defying for the most part the attempts to destroy them, and over the last few months since President Kennedy was slain I have revisited many of those old tales. Like many I am still trying to make sense of an American version of the old Greek tragedies. There are many fine stories but the one that inspires me the most is the story of the Phoenix, reborn in the ashes of its own destruction. It speaks to my heart though I know it to be a myth. I too am like the Phoenix, rising out of the ashes of Camelot as I wing my way across the Atlantic.
My name is Eleanor Edwina Macarthur but most folks call me Ellen and some I suspect may use other unmentionable names, harlot, fallen woman, and lesbian. The truth is I am all of these things and I hold these names to my breast for it is only in embracing adversity that we truly begin to grow. Kennedy once said, we do these things not because they are easy but because they are hard. I know he did not mean my own situation but I am grabbing at stray sentences and taking them into myself the better to understand my situation.
It is hard to believe this started in the second week of January, 1963. I was the school librarian at Austin High, the home of the Maroons and if all had gone according to the neat plan laid out in my daydreams I would have married George Steele, a geography teacher at the school. He was on my mind the morning she was led into the library by one of the administration staff. Her name was Michelle Gates, she was a stunning beauty, the daughter of an American in the diplomatic corps and a French expatriate. Her mother gifted her with dark brown wavy hair and sculptured good looks, but from her father she inherited a keen intellect. At at the time I thought her a rather snobbish woman with a foreign accent, albeit a well dressed woman in prim skirt suit and as old Betty Young introduced us I had the impression she was looking down on me.
"Eleanor is our librarian," she smiled, "and despite her youth she has proved quite adept at finding information for our faculty."
"Charmed," Michelle removed a white glove and extended her hand, "I have always loved libraries, without knowledge what are we but ignorant beasts?"
The phrase brought a frown to my face. Had she quoted from some yet to be credited source or was this something original? She released my hand and looked at Betty.
"I should look around first?"
"Of course, go right ahead," she replied, "Eleanor will see you out," she fixed her eyes on me.
"It would be a pleasure," I replied.
Her inspection of the library was all too brief and she didn't seem to be too interested in the books. I made a half hearted attempt at a joke about our 'eclectic' selection that rivals the best European libraries.
"It is as I expected for an American high school," she put a book back on the shelf, "just enough information to whet their appetite but nothing to satiate their hunger."
"Is there nothing to inspire you?" I twirled a lock of hair around my finger nervously.
She looked at me and for a moment it was like she was looking right through me as she selected a copy of
Oliver Twist.
"The Feminine Mystique was one I found most enlightening," she looked down at
Oliver Twist,
"the critics decry it for mentioning the unmentionable but Oliver Twist was considered equally scandalous. Imagine the horror of the syphilitic old men in their clubs being likened to parasites," she turned the book over to read the back cover.
"Writers have always been at the forefront of change, for it is they who imagine a world that does not exist and create an idea for us to bring into being," she smiled at me.
"What is your favorite book?"
I thought of several and eventually came up with
To Kill A Mockingbird,
more to make myself sound more intelligent but it caused her to raise her elegantly styled eyebrows.
"Interesting," she put the book back, "and what did you think of Atticus Finch?"
"He was a good man."
"Are you a segregationist or a desegregationist?"
It was a loaded question even at this school. My workplace had only recently admitted colored students to the dismay of the segregationists and some of them worked at the school. Most people in my circle of friends skirted around the issue, hoping that by some miracle they might wake up and discover the problem had resolved itself. My father thought it a stupid idea but mom was a little more liberal, although she too had voted for Nixon in the last election.
"I think it's a good thing to desegregate public places, although my father disagrees," I added a moment later.
"I agree," she turned and looked around, "perhaps one day books by colored writers will fill these shelves as well," and with that she stepped forward, leaving me to follow on behind. I wanted to know more about France. Did they segregate people according to color? How were they dealing with the communist menace? Instead all I managed was, "did you buy that outfit in Paris?"
"London," she stepped outside, "although I have seen similar in Paris."
I was about to farewell her when she turned and nodded.
"Walk with me."
It was only when we were some distance from the building that she finally exhaled rather noisily and took out a packet of cigarettes.
"That was the most tedious interview I think I have ever endured," she lit the cigarette and offered me the packet, "I thought I was being interviewed for President of the United States."
"I'm sorry," I took a cigarette and accepted the light, "everyone's a little paranoid about Reds and homosexuals and probably foreigners although Austin is quite liberal."
"That's why I chose Austin," she stopped beside a blue Ford convertible, "at least here I might get some decent conversation that doesn't revolve around crop prices and steers."
"We talk about lots of things in Austin," I felt the color in my cheeks, "art, history and other things besides," I trailed away as she unbuttoned her jacket to reveal more of the elegant white blouse.