Mike
Mazurki
Mike sweeps a hamhock fist in the
direction of the buffet where Sylvia
is serving Lou Nova. It claps like summer thunder in his palm. Lou waves,
unable to consider that he is not the object of Mike's gesture. Mike
smiles and shouts, "The great Lou Nova!"All Mike's friends are
great. The great Lou Nova is great for knocking out the great Max Baer in
the first fight ever televised. Lou is a walking history of fashion
shock. His ceaseless jaw ascends into an angora goat on top of a fatted head. He
rips his clothes off the Vasareli rack. The aroma of camphor wafts through
the room and mingles with the corrupt smell of cigars. Inexplicably Lou
recites us a poem, twitching and dodging imaginary fists and screaming
bells, BELLS, BELLS, seething with
anger, buried a breath beneath desperation. His career is over. It is
out of courtesy that not until Lou has gone does
Mike mention roughing up Tyrone Power.Perhaps feeling some contact
insanity from Lou's recital, Mike grabs Korky by the lapels and growls,
"That sonofabitch didn't move at all. He stayed right there. And he
howled like...." The rare bird ruptures into a frightened howl. Then he
smiles and Mike continues; they've done this all before. "So Power cries,
'Get him off me. He's killin' me!' And he runs off the set. So George
Jessel says, 'Mike, goddam it! You hurt my star!' He says, 'What're you
doing?' He says, 'You'll never work for me again.' I say, 'Gee, George,
I'm sorry.' Finally Ty comes down and says, 'I'm sorry.' He says,
'Gentlemen, it was my fault.' And after that, we became friends. I used to
see him at the playgrounds, things like that. But if you hit a star, you
never work again. This much I know." "No shit," choirs Korky in French
with a cockeyed grin.