The new office is two interconnecting rooms where I sit in die back one watching out on the endless white tiled wall of a warehouse. Brought Miss Martin with me. Had a going away party too. Sportsmen from The Game Club. A buffet. With beer, wine and tidbits. It was disastrous. Matilda trooped in to Thirty Three Golf Street drunk with several celestial friends and danced with my topper and hardly anything else. Dispersing the less hardy guests.
I got letters. Delivered by post, by hand, by elephant by G.o.d. I objected to some of the innuendo.
i Electricity Street We are firm in our wish that the year is immaterial.
George Smith Room 604, Dynamo House Owl Street Dear Sir, Do not pretend not to know who we are.
Yours faithfully, JJJ. & The a.s.sociates P.S. We a.s.sume you were attending a funeral.
And to answer these this month of March I sat chilly and wagging my feet on a capstan on a wharf the end of Owl Street. Feeling easier out under the open sky.
Room 604 Dynamo House Owl Street i Electricity Street Dear Sir, I require details to establish identification. How many eyes have you all got.
Yours sincerely, G. Smith P.S. Also be glad if your next letter were accompanied by a brief medical history.
On Wednesday, some days later a note was slipped under the front office door.
i Electricity Street Our former comments in this heading will suffice.
Room 604 Dear Sir, We can do without your cra.s.s attempt at jocularity. We inform you that our appointees have been instructed to inst.i.tute moves. In the light of the seriousness of the situation and in case you are under any illusion we inform you that we are in the possession of two eyes each.
Yours faithfully, JJ.J. & The a.s.sociates (Global) P.S. There is no need to go into our medical history.
Grey Thursday afternoon to spell out a reply to J.J.J. from room 604, Dynamo House.
t.u.r.dsday JJ.J. & a.s.sociates (Global) i Electricity Street Dear Sir, Watch out.
Yours sincerely, G. Smith (Local) P.S. I am also blessed with two headlamps, which I should be glad to focus on your medical history.
And on this day. At her plywood desk with a slender vase of chrysanthemums, Miss Martin"s shoulders slumped forward and she burst into tears over her typewriter. George Smith went to her. Her hair brown and full round her head. Placing a hand across her back, the little acorns of her spine.
"Mr. Smith, I"m sorry."
"It"s all right, Miss Martin. Don"t worry. Yon cry." cry."
"Mr. Smith, I don"t want to ever let you down. Bnt I"m scared."
"Is it the office here."
"I suppose I"m just getting used to the long anonymous halls and staircases. It"s not like Golf Street. I shouldn"t cry like this. But Mr. Smith I feel the whole world is horrible and mean. And the letters."
"Miss Martin, don"t you fret That"s not your worry. Here try my hanky."
"Thanks."
"Give a good blow. That"s it."
"I"ll wash and iron it."
"Nonsense, you keep it now."
"I read in the paper that poor boy was shot to death. Just because he recognised someone on the subway train."
"Miss Martin, you musn"t take things so seriously. Now wipe these away. Feel better."
"Such a nice smell your hanky."
""Lemon."
"I like it. I feel better now and Mr. Smith this letter just came registered special delivery."
Mount Ararat March iyth My Dear George, I write to you alas for some material aid. At the moment I am completely banjaxed. I am trying desperately to escape from this G.o.d forsaken place to make a fresh start in the new world. I hope you will be able to a.s.sist me in this. We hear that you are now very successful and a happy family man and I am glad. Can you wire as much money as you can reasonably afford to departing Pa.s.senger" Volta Steamship Lines-to their office here or there will get me, and mark it "hold for collection." You will never know how much you will have saved my life. And may G.o.d protect you as He has not yours truly*
See you soon, BONNIFACE.
Smith folding the letter carefully, putting it back in its envelope. Miss Martin with liquid wide whites around her eyes. In this room where one is waiting for something awful to happen. Cedric, the awful Bonniface, Clementine. College cla.s.smate. Amateur historian of his own recent history. No fear Miss Martin. A friend. It"s my turn for tears.
Miss Martin coming each morning to room 604, Dynamo House at nine. She put on a little burner for coffee. She rode two hours on the train. Said it went over bridges and bridges and the salt water was covered all along the sh.o.r.e in ice. She told me how the workmen put boards on the train and it stopped at the middle of the bridge way out over the water and they climbed out in the wind, boards on their shoulders. And her house. Her little tiny bedroom. Wind whistled round it all the night. Heat came up in the morning with pipes creaking. And when very sad she would go down the street in the early morning along the row of empty boarding houses, grey and shuttered up and look out across the flat sea. To watch a sun red and cold coming up. Her ears would sting. Then get on the train, sit on the slippery seats, see the people get in. Same ones sometimes. Until it would get like sardines. Then climbing up out with a crowd, crossing the park by the ferry terminus and through the shadowy streets to the little world of room 604. And the grand dad clock would chime. And nine canes in the cane rack.
Now Miss Martin sits all forlorn. Her voice tired. The vein trembling across her wrist. Shaves the hair off her legs. Grey wool dress with short sleeves. She is twenty six years old. From there step down into years of waiting. For marriage. Light hair on her light skin. Her face up close, new born, all fuzz and peachy. Her lids and lashes lay down over her eyes as she thinks. Want sometimes to gather her up in my arms. Say, little girl you"re safe while I hold you. And instead I ask her let"s go out. Take a walk in the park.
George Smith leading Miss Martin across the lobby of Dynamo House. Past the great gla.s.s covering all the little names of firms right through the alphabet. And at S. There is George Smith, room number 604. Fourth Floor. And down the wide steps. Across the busy street. Pa.s.sing the little cemetery by the church. Needle spire like a toothpick. Might have had a little plot in there had I been in time a hundred years ago.
Into the park by the barge office. Drizzling rain. Sky dark and heavy. Ferries squeezing along the greased pilings and clanging against the little metal bridge of sh.o.r.e. Cars start engines and off they come. Others go taking the people home to the lights across the water. And a monstrous ship pa.s.sing down the river. Little circle of people on the fan tail. Two figures pointing and waving at the park. Hear the vessel"s engines. Feel them on the soles of the feet, shaking the ground. Pa.s.sengers1 streamers fall away and land on the water. Gay tidings in the mist.
"Miss Martin, a majestic sight."
"I"d love to go on a ship."
"Yes."
"Mr. Smith, it"s letting off steam."
"Hooting bye bye. Takes you away from a lot of things."
"Mr. Smith, you say that so sadly."
"Come, Miss Martin and we"ll get something to eat."
Two figures crossing the windy park. Miss Martin taking Smith"s arm over the street. And inside where wieners were being turned on a hot skillet behind the steamed gla.s.s. Always wanted to have the const.i.tution to eat these fearlessly, perhaps with a gla.s.s of orange. I know it will warm up Miss JMartin. Her ears, just showing out of her hair, tinged with red.
Mr. Smith and Miss Martin taking a table in this eatery. A cross section of humanity. One belching secretly over his decoy coffee. Two secretaries with side plates of buns they peruse. A waitress with black hair and large searchlights. Going round the restaurant straightening her hair, training her huge beams on the goggle eyed. The other waitress slipping out among the customers with a broom flashing among the legs. To scare up dust for hay fever and sprinkle debris on the cups of coffee. The chef roasting, slipping coins into an oversized trouser cuff.
And as George Smith stood at the counter to get his cups of coffee and plates of wieners in a roll, there was a hissing sound. Growing louder and louder in the coffee machine. Chromium steaming tank. Now starting to scream. Customers looking up. Counter boy deftly moving away as the sides of the tank were bulging. The quietest customer of all, huddled over a decoy cup of coffee was up like a flash and out the door. Two secretaries screamed and held their ears. Miss Martin ducked over. George Smith cowering. The chef trembling behind a display of doughnuts. As Smith could see the decoy coffee drinker now safely on the other side of the street, with his hands up round his eyes like binoculars to witness the thunderclap.
All tense. Waiting. Crouched. Come in here to renew. To give Miss Martin fuel for her tummy. And find a little team of barefaced shirkers. Bent upon feathering thek own nests at the expense of the absent proprietor. If you don"t shut your eyes to some things, the cheating and chiseling that goes on would drive you out of your wits. Now we"re to be blasted to kingdom come. And I"ve not made a will.
The unmerry group frozen at positions of hopeful safety. Beep. A tiny pop from the coffee machine, a whistle and wheeze. A final whimpering into silence* The all clear. Customers slowly stand again. Smile. Old friends now. The decoy coffee drinker returning from across the street. He takes a look through the gla.s.s in at the now silent cylinder. Pushes open the door. Nods to these embattled wiener patrons. Sits down on a stool and emits a nervous laugh. Ha ha. Girl with mountains gives the peaks a twitch. Whoosh. An avalanche. Endangering anyone making the way up the slopes.
Miss Martin finishing her wiener licks her lips. Wipes away a little crumb of meat. Her nose red round the nostrils. And shiny just at its tip with a flat spot like streamlining. Tiny ship sails round her mind. Stopping at ports where perhaps I am some naughty foreigner. And just four days ago I was pa.s.sing outside a great department store. Suddenly stopped. Recognised a face on all the manikins in the battery of windows. Wearing spring evening gowns, swim suits and negligees. Miss Tomson. Figure and face. Same slight puzzled look around the eyes, same blue, same blond and careless flinging out of limbs. Find her standing there. All night in plaster looked at by the empty street. And Miss Martin here is not a Miss Tomson nor a Shirl. And were one to enter a kiss in her ear. Make her thrash legs in the air, cause mayhem. Pant as Shirl did on the carpet, the neighbors hearing her out in thek gardens, while tending cabbage. Or thek own ears. Of corn.
George Smith and Miss Martin walked back towards Owl Street. Pa.s.sing in front of the great grey darkness of the custom house. The little round park of green in the middle of the road. Miss Martin feeling better for her wieners and coffee. Smith silent and protective. No boyfriend to take her out at night. Said she curled up with a magazine while her mother cooked the supper.
Turning the corner of Owl Street, Smith stopped and bought a bag of roasted peanuts. Threw one high in the air, caught it neatly in the mouth. Miss Martin chuckling, wide eyed, stopping in the noisy thick traffic of the street. Sad the world made such a din. One whole afternoon sitting in Dynamo House, hot water bottles hanging over each ear. Go to the mausoleum while still alive and live in it. Withstanding the regulations that say you must be dead. A pity. Be quiet there, on the marble, satin pillow under head. And through the tall iron fence round the cemetery, Shirl would point, level the finger, hire attorneys, fat necked to recite off laws and say I can"t do what I"m doing.
"Miss Martin, I like your eyes."
Smith viewing the way ahead. Then stealing a glance at Miss Martin who was all eyes cast down. Whispering in Smith"s heart were little words, nearer my G.o.d to thee, and please, never force me to wear shoes of gra.s.shopper skin. For leaping high out of all the terrible traps set everywhere these days.
The lights on in the blocks of windows. Tune of afternoon sadness. Sky all threatening and dark. Wind picking up the torn newspaper in the gutter. Outside these merchant banks, houses of exchange. Sugar, cotton and fish. And approaching the wide steps of Dynamo House set back from the street and overshadowed by two tall buildings on either side. Miss Martin and George Smith slowly climbed the steps.
Half way up. Great blobs of rain fall Rumble of thunder. Lightning streaking blue on the buildings. Miss Martin stopped and caught George Smith by the arm. Two figures stepping from behind a pillar in front of Dynamo House. Smith raising an arm across his face. Blinding camera flash bulbs. Smith and Miss Martin running into the entrance. Across the lobby and to the stairs. Pounding feet behind them. And more flashes of cameras. And shouts.
"That"s him."
Smith had Miss Martin"s hand. Speeding up one two three flights. Making one abrupt detour on the fourth. Where Smith pulled open a door just off the landing.
"Into this mop closet, Miss Martin, fast."
"G.o.d."
"That"s it."
"Will we fit, Mr. Smith."
"Got to."
"But they"ll find us."
"No they won"t. I"ve got the key. Lock us in."
"G.o.d."
"Miss Martin I"m not making you too uncomfortable. My foot"s in this pail. Quiet now. I hear them."
Feet outside the mop closet. Two of them stopping to tug on the door. Locked. Moving onward. Silence. Heavy breathing. Had they put an ear to the key hole.
"Am I stifling you Miss Martin. I"m terribly sorry about this."
"I"m all right, Mr. Smith."
"Just get my foot out of this pail. Hold it. I hear feet again. They"re coming back this way."
"Mr. Smith why do they want our picture."
"Hush now."
Smith raising hand to signal silence. In the near blackness. So close to Miss Martin. Closest I"ve ever been. Her breath smells sweetly. And hear her heart pounding. Nearly taste her. And feel her too. Twin precious things pressing against my arm. A tugging at the door k.n.o.b of this mop cupboard once more. Strange, so many times I pa.s.sed this closet, and said there"s a little harbour in a storm.
Feet moving off again. Sounds like four pairs. Or five. Some of the rags in here are odiferous. Touched Miss Martin"s lips with my finger. Face to face in the black. Feet on the landing. Voices. Confused. The pounding they make down the steps is too loud to be trusted. No hoof hoodwinks me. Somehow all I could see of them as they jumped out were their ears. And they had noses too. Of newshounds.
"Are they going Mr. Smith."
"May be a ruse. Are you all right. Like to move your arm over. Wretched pail. My foot"s deeper in it than ever. Never get it off. And be caught for sure."
"I"ll push back further."
"No don"t Miss Martin. If I can just get my foot loose. Be all right. Then we can get out of here."
"I don"t mind."
"Soon we"ll need air."
"I still don"t mind."
Smith"s ears twitching. At that last remark. A tingle and glow rears up at the bifurcation of the legs. With the little room in here, hardly any s.p.a.ce for expansion. It will stand up and she"ll ask what it is. Many mops, Miss Martin and handles too. My hand feels her hair. What"s this. Not again.
"Miss Martin. Tears. I feel tears."
"Tes."
"Why."
"I don"t know."
"Are you scared in here with me."
"No."
"Were you frightened by those men."
"No."
"Is it something I"ve done or said."
"No."
"Why do you cry."
"I just don"t know, Mr. Smith. I have to."
Smith reaching a knuckle under the eye. Picking up a tear. Feel her lips. Opening. Taking in George Smith"s finger between her teeth. Whole knuckle of the hand. Biting and nibbling. And her voice all choked. With fingers in her mouth. And whispering.
"Mr. Smith I dreamt about you last night."
"You did."
"Yes. You were standing on a hill. And I was at the bottom of the street. And they were trying to capture you. And they held you. And at the bottom of the hill old women held me and I started to cry."