As soon as holden gets off the train in New York in Chapter 9, Holden wants to call someone and seems especially to want to call Jane, but he is apparently too nervous ,he claims not to “feel like it” and runs through a long list of people he could contact instead but then he remembers he's not supposed to call anyone until they know he's been expelled.
It seems like He has a obsession in ducks. His obsession with the ducks in Central Park, which he first mentioned when he was back at old Mr. Spencer's house, comes up again. He asks the cabbie, "'You know those ducks in that lagoon right near Central Park South? That little lake? By any chance, do you happen to know where they go, the ducks, when it gets all frozen over? Do you happen to know, by any chance?'" Chapter 9, pg. 60 and the driver just ignores him.
Holden is feeling depressed and Te hotel doesn't seem to cheer him up as The bellboy is an old man with a comb-over, "a gorgeous job for a guy around sixty-five years old." (pg. 61)
Once he is in the hotel room Holden decides to call Faith Cavendish, a woman a guy from Princeton said "didn't mind doing it once in a while...." (pg. 63) She's angry to be bugged by a stranger in the middle of the night, but warms up after a bit. She wont agree to have drinks with him that night and Holden, who needs some instant satisfaction more than anything else, turns down her offer to meet for drinks the next day. Holden instantly regrets turning her down. And this is where the chapter ends.
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