They hadn't spoken in the car from north of Allenton to the bypass around Philadelphia on their way south from Hamilton College in Clinton, New York, on Interstate 476. The argument hadn't been a new one. It had been going on all semester, where Neal Jacobs was a creative writing program professor at Hamilton College and Bud Washington was his junior-year teaching assistant and protégé. Bud, a young black man from the streets of Harlem in New York, had come to Hamilton on a football scholarship and intending to major in physical education to become a high school coach, but he had shown a writing talent that had motivated Neal Jacobs to have his major changed to creative writing and to move out of the dorm, into his house—and into his bed. This didn't impede the junior from playing football and hanging on to his scholarship through the year.
"I don't know why you're sending me away—why you keep shoving the Columbia University program at me. Why do you want to get rid of me? Haven't I done everything you want? Don't I please you in bed? Is there someone else? Trevor Ingram?"
"No, of course not, Bud," Jacobs had said as they sped south on I-476 in Jacobs's Lexus coupe, with Bud driving. "There's a scholarship worth more for you there and you don't have to play football to get it. You can concentrate on the writing."
"I like playing football. And I'm doing fine on the scholarship I have."
Jacobs sighed. "You need more than what I can give you here," he countered. "You have a true talent of your own. You need to apply all of your efforts to that."
This was said in exasperation and a sense of loss. No, Neal didn't want Bud to leave him. Yes, Bud was everything Neal could want. A talent like this young man came to a writing program, as good as it was, and into Neal's tutelage rarely, if ever. And Bud was everything Neal could want in bed—so much more than he could expect, at sixty-four, from a twenty-year-old divinely built young black man.
It was just . . . but the conversation was over again, Neal could tell, from the set, hurt look on Bud's face. He just turned away in the passenger seat to watch the Pennsylvania area growing housing developments and sprawling between Allenton and Philadelphia speed by.
South of Philadelphia, after they had turned onto I-95, Jacobs broke the silence.
"In a few miles, you'll have to decide whether to take I-95 through Wilmington or I-495 east around Wilmington along the Delaware River. The direct route to the hotel would be I-95, but I'd like you to take I-495, by the river, please."
"Fine," Bud said tersely. He didn't ask why, a signal that he was still pouting and didn't want to talk about it.
They took the bypass highway to the east when they came to the split. In a few miles, Neal spoke up again. "At the Edgemoor exit, take it to the east please. I want to stop for few minutes before we go into town to the hotel."
"Fine," Bud said, again saying it in a clipped tone. But when they'd made this maneuver and he wound up at the entrance of a large, but closed, industrial plant on the banks of the Delaware River with no place else to go off that exit to the east, he couldn't keep himself from saying more when Jacobs spoke.
"Stop here for a few minutes, please." After saying this and Bud had come to a stop at the obviously permanently closed entrance into the plant, identified by a sign as the DuPont Edgemoor Facility, and opened the door to get out of the car.
"What is this? It's just a big, ugly plant. And it looks like it's closed."
"Yes, it's closed. It was a DuPont pigment production plant," Jacobs said. "It closed two years ago, in 2015." He got out of the car, moved around to the front, and leaned back on the vehicle, his eyes trained on the gunmetal gray chunks of buildings, chimneys, and fretwork of piping. The raw-edged river was seen in glimpses between the ugly buildings and snaking of pipes. Bud got out of the driver's seat and came around to the front of the car to stand next to Jacobs. He noted the slight smile, but faraway look, in Jacobs's eyes.
"What?" he asked after a few minutes. "What do you see? Why did we stop here?"
Jacobs had gotten this faraway look off and on over the previous couple of weeks, after he'd told Bud they'd be coming to the University of Delaware, where Jacobs had been a student studying English composition. He'd been invited to speak at a creative writing conference being held at the university in Newark, just south of Wilmington, and had said he wanted Bud to come with him. They'd be staying at the stately old Hotel DuPont in Wilmington's city center.
"I'm looking beyond this plant and back in time," Jacobs said. "I'm looking at Ellerslie. I'm trying to clear all of this mess away in my mind and see Ellerslie."
"Ellerslie?" Bud asked.
"Yes. Ellerslie was an estate that once was right here, on the banks of the Delaware. The house dated to the mid-1800s. F. Scott Fitzgerald and his wife, Zelda, rented the house in the late 1920s. He had burned through the money he got from writing
The Great Gatsby
and he wasn't having much success in writing screenplays. They were partying hard in New York instead. They came here for him to rest, regroup, and to work his way out of writer's block."
"And did that work?"
"No, not really. Living here was too much like living the great Gatsby life in Egg Harbor on Long Island—the same hedonist one flapper society party folding into the next. He produced nearly nothing while they were here—other than, I guess, giving him inspiration for future writing and a life of dissipation and alcoholism."
"So, living here wasn't all that helpful to him."