“Miss Temptation” begins with a description of Susanna, who is living in a small village one summer while performing in the community theater nearby. She is poetically beautiful and seductive, sleeping away half the day before embarking on a sensual, barefoot walk through the village. She is polite to everyone, but the only person she speaks to is the elderly drugstore pharmacist, Bearse Hinkley, who sells her the New York City newspapers each day. After this routine, she returns to the room she is renting over the firehouse.
One day, while buying her newspapers at the drugstore, she is interrupted by Corporal Norman Fuller, who has just returned from a tour of duty in Korea. He has never seen her before, and deliberately turns his squeaky stool towards her before confronting her about the way she walked down the street, like a temptress. He criticizes all American women, calling them the “greatest actresses in the world”. An actress by profession, Susanna does not initially understand his meaning, and thanks him. But he redoubles his sarcasm, blaming her aloud for the way women like her make ordinary men like him feel, like “lonely, ordinary people”. He then storms out, leaving Susanna completely shaken.
After a moment, she runs out of the drugstore and back to her room over the firehouse.
That evening, Norman eats dinner with his widow mother. Norman’s mother tries to start lighthearted conversation, but Norman only sulks, explaining that he has not reconnected with any of his old friends, who have all married since he left. When she suggests he might meet a woman soon, he tells her that he plans to go to divinity school because of an experience he had earlier that day. He then describes how he berated Susanna.
Later that night, Norman strolls towards the firehouse, smoking a cigar.
He joins Bearse Hinkley, who is sitting around feeling nostalgic as he usually does. Norman complains about how women act, saying that he would never want a beautiful daughter. Bearse then tells Norman that Susanna has apparently skipped her show that night, since she never left the firehouse. Norman is surprised and strangely pleased to realize how his outburst impacted her.
The next day at noon, Bearse Hinkley and all the other villagers wait expectantly to see whether Susanna will emerge as usual from her room. Norman himself arrives at the drugstore just before noon, exhausted from a sleepless night spent obsessing his resentment for beautiful women. He and Bearse are surprised when a truck pulls up in front of the firehouse, and two men begin moving Susanna’s things out. When Norman again begins to rant about Susanna, Bearse accuses him of being frightened of the girl.
When Norman rejects the claim, embarrassed to be called out in front of others, Bearse challenges him to deliver Susanna’s newspapers to her. Norman reluctantly agrees.
In the room, Norman finds Susanna dressed conservatively. He is also surprised that the room is bare and boring, hardly the sensual lair he had imagined. After a moment, he admits he did not mean to chase her away, and she confronts him. She explains that she has been up all night imaging conversations with him, and now insists that he was out of line to comment on her appearance. She complains that she has always suffered judgment because of her beauty, and he admits he has always been resentful because he never had a chance with beautiful girls like her. When he suggests that only people with money could attract someone like her, she counters that all a man needs to do is “be friendly”.
When he tries to leave, she insists that he walk down the street with her, in order to redeem her before the village.
Susanna makes Norman wait for her outside the firehouse while she changes. She has decided not to leave after all. In order to deal with his humiliation, Norman pets her cat over and over, repeating “kitty, kitty, kitty”.
Eventually, Susanna emerges, barefoot as usual and dressed in her normal, sensual clothes. She takes his arm and leads him down the street. As they walk, she instructs him to smile to show others that he is not ashamed of her, and he smokes a cigar, quite shaken by the experience.
- Abuse & The Abuser
- Achievement
- Activity, Fitness & Sport
- Aging & Maturity
- Altruism & Kindness
- Atrocities, Racism & Inequality
- Challenges & Pitfalls
- Choices & Decisions
- Communication Skills
- Crime & Punishment
- Dangerous Situations
- Dealing with Addictions
- Debatable Issues & Moral Questions
- Determination & Achievement
- Diet & Nutrition
- Employment & Career
- Ethical dilemmas
- Experience & Adventure
- Faith, Something to Believe in
- Fears & Phobias
- Friends & Acquaintances
- Habits. Good & Bad
- Honour & Respect
- Human Nature
- Image & Uniqueness
- Immediate Family Relations
- Influence & Negotiation
- Interdependence & Independence
- Life's Big Questions
- Love, Dating & Marriage
- Manners & Etiquette
- Money & Finances
- Moods & Emotions
- Other Beneficial Approaches
- Other Relationships
- Overall health
- Passions & Strengths
- Peace & Forgiveness
- Personal Change
- Personal Development
- Politics & Governance
- Positive & Negative Attitudes
- Rights & Freedom
- Self Harm & Self Sabotage
- Sexual Preferences
- Sexual Relations
- Sins
- Thanks & Gratitude
- The Legacy We Leave
- The Search for Happiness
- Time. Past, present & Future
- Today's World, Projecting Tomorrow
- Truth & Character
- Unattractive Qualities
- Wisdom & Knowledge
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