Et in Arcadia ego;
"I too was in Arcadia"
In Arcadia Damian Dastagna consumed his breakfast in the breakfast-nook with a warm, congenial feel of a man sure of victory. He loved victories and though he was scarcely what one might call a hard-boiled chap by dint of habit, he saw himself as a master of fisticuffs against the evils of life. There were certainly evils enough in the world. Wickedness. Vice. Sin. He often bragged about how he could twist fickle Fate this way or that, all through marvelous cunning on his part. Just now, for example, Damian felt that he had brought about his hardest, no doubt his loftiest, struggle for a beneficial and economic future to a close. To have married Claudine Nicholas,
"Creepy Claudine,"
as her more intimate friends called her, in the howling storm of hostility that her family had flung up at him; all this in spite of her unaffected indifference to men, was indeed an accomplishment that had required more than a bit of pluck and daring-do on his part. He had pried his new wife away from the City, with its salons and speakeasies, away from all her
"gay flapper"
friends -- odd girls and twilight lovers the lot of them, as far as Damian was concerned -- and out to a remote farmhouse-estate called Arcadia.
It was more than just any farmhouse, however, it had been in the Nicholas dynasty as a summer residence for over a hundred years.
"... and you will never get Claudine to go anywhere but there," old man Nicholas had said when his much despised son-in-law had inquired. "Arcadia's roots grow deep inside her, even more than the City could ever hope for. One can understand what holds her to Arcadia, but the City?" the old man had simply shrugged his shoulders as if he knew nothing about Roaring Twenties, cocaine or flappers.
"Vice is nice," Damian thought, but wisely he kept those thoughts to himself.
The truth of the matter was, however, that there was something about the farm and its rolling, heavily wooded hills that unnerved Damian. His grandmother would have said that there was a witching -- a savage wildness -- about Arcadia that would certainly not appeal to stuffy Nantucket tastes. Damian looked down upon what he called
"the countryside"
in the same manner that certain gentlemen-bachelor friends of his would romanticize golf courses: a great way to get out into ol' Mother Nature now and then but thank the Pope and the Holy Ghost that there were gates to keep all the undesirables out. Of late he had grown bored with the City, a feeling he had never known before. Perhaps it ws because Claudine was known everywhere the couple went, and many places he was not allowed to go. Despite her reputation of being a little ...
"funny,"
as his grandmother would have also said, he had found himself growing a tad bit jealous over her notoriety. She knew Lucille Bogan, Gladys Bentley and Tallulah Bankhead. She had even been in attendance at the legendary Clam House Club when Ma Rainey sang:
"I went out last night with a crowd of my friends; They must've been women, 'cause I don't like no men. It's true I wear a collar and a tie, I like to watch the women as they pass by..."
How was a husband to compete against that? He had watched with satisfaction, then, at the gradual fading in his wife's eyes of what he called the
"Bulldagger Blues"
hunger as the hills, the heather and the orchards that made up the Arcadia estate all closed in around them as they bounced along in her splendid old Tin Lizzie, a T-Model Ford, hitting every pot hole in the bumpy roads.
Now, peering out the breakfast-nook window munched his blackberry jam and toast he peered at a low hedge of uncared for fire-brand fuchsia, beyond that were steep slopes of heather and clover. Everywhere one looked bracken cascaded down into the dark. The buildings were constructed upon a series of cavernous, stone catacombs, none knew how old, now all overgrown with oak and ivy. Just the other day Damian had started reading a book written by some mad fellow from the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn that seemed to declare that Nature's open savagery against mankind was a direct result of Man's inability to understand and know all the horrors of unseen that surrounded him. Damian had said
"poppycock!"
at that and chucked the book out the bouncing car's window. But now as he gazed at the landscape he shuddered and did not know why.
"It
is
very wild," he said to Claudine, who had joined him, "one could almost suppose you might turn a corner and run into some ancient nightmare you read about in books, like that horrible old Pan, dancing away across the glen."
"I don't think Pan spends much time in upstate New York," his wife had said in her soft, monotone voice.
"O well, too bad for him. I'm sure all those poor, daffy gods must have a devil of time in this market, since no one believes in them anymore."
"Some do."
"Hmm?"
There were times when it occurred to Damian that he had no idea who he had just married. Claudine Nicholas was at once emotionally removed from him and sexually adventurous, in equal measures. When they went out in public she wore her trademark tux and top hat and would lean in and touch his leg or arm as she talked to her friends, often sliding her hand right up his thigh and then across his crotch. Each time she did so, Damian's misery and excitement deepened in equal measures. Sex with a woman was terrifying to him, but it was the sort of terror he never wanted to stop.