“It was a Sunday evening; he had left a cocktail
party in a Washington Square apartment and had decided to walk a few blocks up
Fifth Avenue before he took a bus. As he was passing the Brevoort, Joan called
to him. She was with a man at one of the tables on the sidewalk. She looked
cool and fresh, and the man appeared to be respectable. His name, it turned
out, was Pete Bristol. He invited Jack to sit down and join in a
celebration….They had dinner and drank champagne with their dinner. They drank
more champagne afterward and then went over to the Lafayette and then to two or
three other places. Joan had always been tireless in her gentle way. She hated
to see the night end, and it was after three o'clock when Jack stumbled into
his apartment. The following morning he woke up haggard and sick, and with no
recollection of the last hour or so of the previous evening. His suit was
soiled and he had lost his hat. He didn't get to his office until eleven. Joan
had already called him twice, and she called him again soon after he got in.
There was no hoarseness at all in her voice.”—John Cheever, “Torch Song,” from The Stories of John Cheever (1978)
This being Halloween, it’s appropriate to discuss
this elegant exercise in Jamesian horror and ambiguity. Along with the usual
notes of beauty and wistfulness associated with John Cheever, there’s a sense throughout that something more
is deeply wrong here. There’s a dead giveaway even in the second sentence: “She
always wore black, and he (Jack) was always given the feeling, by a curious
disorder in her apartment, that the undertakers had just left.” Over a year
later, when he comes to the apartment of the woman he nicknames "The Widow" again, there is “a death rattle in the lock”
when he rings the doorbell.
The dominant impression of a John Cheever short
story is of a mid-20th century suburbanite seeking elation and grace
at a party that inevitably ends with someone, usually the male protagonist,
getting drunk, flirtatious, stupid and even violent. Jack Lorey, a WWII vet who
knows Joan Harris from their Midwestern small town, could be a kind of literary
counterpart to Mad Men’s Roger
Sterling in his surface charm, serial marriages and slow-dawning realization
that he has let his life slip away. Except that Roger does not come within the
sights of an emotional vampire after a series of debauches.
In the preface to his Library of America horror
anthology, American Fantastic Tales, Peter Straub identifies an instinct
associated with terror and the uncanny dating back to the Puritans: “the
surrender or collapse of the individual will.” Particularly in its latest
season, Mad Men has shown how this
collapse has undermined Roger, Don Draper, and other males on the show. That psychic
deterioration has been a long time coming. So does the unraveling of Jack
Lorey.
You might think it entirely coincidental that Roger’s
secretary on Mad Men shares the same
name as the big, healthy woman who may well be far more in Cheever’s
much-anthological story. But remember that, as the seminal series about the
Sixties begins, Don Draper lives in Ossining, the town at the heart of Cheever
Country.
Cheever has been labeled “the Chekhov of the suburbs,”
but the other nickname for him, “the Ovid of Ossining,” sounds, in instances
such as “Torch Song,” more appropriate—testimony to the astonishing
metamorphoses experienced by his characters when they are fully in the grip of
desires beyond their control.
The heartache underlying so much of his fiction
derives from the vast distance between the states of grace sought by his men
(and they are, overwhelmingly, men) and the circumference of everyday life.
That distance also accounts for the element of the fantastical in his work. No
less than “The Enormous Radio” and “The Swimmer,” “Torch Song” mixes the real
and the surreal.
At the same time, the mounting terror in the story
also results from an ambiguity at its heart: how much of Jack’s final lashing
out against his longtime female friend as a “lewd and searching shape of death”
comes from an actual realization of her true nature versus the distorted
psychological understanding of a diseased man?
Joan has a habit of picking one drunk, drug addict,
consumptive, and general abuser after another. Yet, for all her bad luck, she
hardly seems to have aged.
“Torch Song,” like so much of Cheever’s fiction,
clearly reflects the author’s misogyny. If Joan Harris is, in fact, a
psychological vampire who drains her male victims of their energy and life
essence, if not of their physical blood, then the violent ways they act to
expunge her from their lives become justified, in their twisted way of
thinking. Thus, “Torch Song” has become anthologized not just in horror
anthologies, but even at least one on domestic violence (Mark Spilka’s ironically titled Eight Lessons in Love: A Domestic Violence Reader).
Posthumous revelations about Cheever’s private life
have led some to see this tale as a manifestation of his sexual orientation.
By this reckoning, the numerous lovers of Joan that keep dying are,
symbolically, fellow homosexuals that the closeted Cheever would have regarded
as sick. An interesting, but probably too reductive, take on a tale that mounts in ambiguity and dread from first to last.