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Flapper: A Madcap Story of Sex, Style, Celebrity, and the Women Who Made America Modern (Page 3 of 3) At the first opportunity, Scott elbowed his way to her side and, finding that her dance card was full for the evening, asked if he might take her out after the country club festivities wound down. The faux East Coast drawl that he studiously cultivated at Princeton just barely concealed his flat Minnesota burr. "I never make late dates with fast workers," she replied sharply in the most properly southern of southern accents. Nevertheless, she gave Scott her telephone number and subtly encouraged him to ply his charms another time. Scott called Zelda at home the next day - and the next day after that, and again every day for the better part of two weeks until she relented. Not that it took a great deal of convincing. Scott was "a blond Adonis in a Brooks Brothers uniform," one of their contemporaries remarked. He was, by Lawton Campbell's estimation, "the handsomest boy I'd ever seen. He had yellow hair and lavender eyes" and a confident swagger that won over even his deepest skeptics. | |||||||||||||||
In her autobiographical novel, Zelda evoked the sensation of dancing with Scott on one of their first dates. "[H]e smelled like new goods," she wrote all those years later. "Being close to him, [my] face in the space between his ear and his stiff army collar was like being initiated into the subterranean reserves of a fine fabric store exuding the delicacy of cambrics and linen and luxury bound in bales." Zelda was jealous of Scott's "pale aloofness," and when she watched him stroll arm in arm off the dance floor with other women, she felt a dull pang of resentment that he was "leading others than [me] into those cooler regions which he inhabited alone." To be fair, Zelda saw to it that Scott did most of the chasing. As one of Montgomery's most popular debutantes, she already enjoyed scores of romantic opportunities from the usual college and business crowds. In normal times, Scott would have faced stiff competition from the likes of Dan Cody, the dashing young scion of a prominent Montgomery banking family, or Lloyd Hooper, an even wealthier son of an even wealthier Alabama line. Now, with America fully mobilized for war and thousands of doughboys in starched uniforms flooding Camp Sheridan, Zelda found herself one of the mostly hotly pursued belles in the state. Army aviators stationed at Camp Taylor honored her with elaborate aerial stunts and flyovers above the Sayre household, until an unfortunate pilot crashed his plane and died in a futile attempt to win Zelda's affections. Army regulars staged a ceremonial drill on Pleasant Avenue in Zelda's honor. Sara Mayfield claimed that when the war ended and all of Montgomery celebrated with a grand parade, "the military police had to break up the stag lines that crowded around her." By her own admission, Zelda's attention wasn't on school that year. There were too many "soldiers in town [and] I passed my time going to dances - always in love with somebody, dancing all night, and carrying on my school work just with [the] idea of finishing it." This fierce competition notwithstanding, within weeks of their first meeting Scott and Zelda fell deeply in love. Each weekend, Scott would hop the rickety old army bus at Camp Sheridan and ride it into downtown Montgomery; from there, he would take a short cab ride to 6 Pleasant Avenue and call on Zelda. They passed their days rocking quietly on the Sayres' front porch swing and sipping cool drinks made of crushed ice and fruit. At night they danced away the hours at the country club, where Scott carved their initials in the front doorpost. Sometimes they strolled arm in arm around the pine groves that encircled the town. Scott joked that by the logic of both Keats and Browning, Zelda was destined to marry him. Good-naturedly, Zelda replied that Scott was an "educational feature; an overture to romance which no young lady should be without." That long Indian summer of 1918 would loom large in both their memories. Writing from her confinement in a mental hospital almost twenty years later, Zelda found that "at this dusty time of the year the flowers and trees take on the aspect of flowers and trees drifted from other summers." The peculiar scent of pine needles evoked memories of "roads that cradled the happier suns of a long time ago." She fondly bade Scott to recall the "night you gave me a birthday party and you were a young lieutenant and I was a fragrant phantom ... it was a radiant night, a night of soft conspiracy and the trees agreed that it was all going to be for the best... . That's the first time I ever said that in my life." Zelda's eighteenth birthday fell on July 24, 1918, less than a month after they first met. If she and Scott didn't consummate their relationship then, it's almost certain they did so before the summer's close. From an early age, Fitzgerald kept detailed scrapbooks that chronicled his life and his works in progress. An entry from 1935, containing notes for a short-story collection, reads: "After yielding she holds Philippe at bay like Zelda + me in summer 1917." It was a slip of memory; he meant 1918. But this lone fragment, and Zelda's later reminiscences, suggest that they slept together sometime before that November, when Scott left for Camp Mills, in New York, to await embarkation for Europe.
Copyright © 2006 by Joshua Zeitz About the Author Joshua Zeitz is a lecturer on American history and fellow of Pembroke College at the University of Cambridge and is a contributing editor at American Heritage. His writing has appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, New Republic, and Forward. He lives in New York and Cambridge, England. More by Joshua Zeitz |
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