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    Four Freedoms

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      than she ever had after any day’s work on the ranch: the pavement harder

      on her feet and legs than any hardpan; the constant draw of thousands

      of faces passing you on the street, the constant need to look away from

      them if they caught your eye, just as they looked away too; the air filled

      with sounds to be listened to, radios blaring from stores, car horns urgent

      but mostly meaningless, gunshot backfires, police whistles, sirens

      announcing disasters that maybe she should run from but couldn’t see

      (for the first time she became keenly aware that you can shut your eyes

      but you can’t shut your ears). And there were no rooms at the Y.

      “Nothing? I’ve walked a long way. I’ve got a job, starting tomor-

      row.”

      “I’m so sorry,” the woman at the desk said, and she seemed to mean

      it; she was no older than Vi, and badly frazzled. “I can put you on our

      list. I mean people come and go so fast here, you know, they get more

      permanent places, I’m sure there’ll be something soon.”

      “Well,” Vi said, not turning away, hoping she’d somehow be taken

      on as a desperate case and her problem solved, even when the frazzled

      woman moved off to busy herself with other things and avoid Vi’s eyes.

      Vi looked around. Something calming and bounteous about the place,

      a couple of oil portraits, old lady benefactors Vi guessed, the wicker

      furniture and the bookshelves. They had a gymnasium, just for the

      women! Vi thought she could live here forever. But she couldn’t just

      hangdog it here in front of the desk, it wasn’t going to work.

      F O U R F R E E D O M S / 87

      Turning to look for a solution she saw a woman seated in the lobby

      regarding her intently, who then raised two fingers to summon her. Vi,

      with a glance at the receptionist’s back, went to where the woman sat,

      a pretty plump brunette Vi’s age.

      “I know you need a place,” she said to Vi in a hurried undertone.

      “Look, you can stay in my spot. I work the late shift, and you can have

      the bed till I get back.”

      “Really?”

      “Yeah. They don’t like us doing that, though, so you know, mum’s

      the word.”

      Closer to her now, Vi saw that the girl’s eyebrows were carefully

      plucked and redrawn, like a movie star’s, and her makeup done with

      care.

      “Okay?” she said.

      “Oh. Yes,” Vi said. “Yes, sure, thanks so much. My name’s

      Violet.”

      “Terry,” said the girl, and held out a hand, limply ladylike, but the

      nails short and what seemed to be small burns on thumb and knuckle.

      “It’s 302 upstairs. Just go around and down to the gym, then up the

      back stairs from there.”

      “Okay.”

      “See you in a bit. They won’t mind if you rest here. Read a maga-

      zine, something.”

      “Okay.”

      She was gone. Vi watched the seams on her stockings flash: where’d

      she get those? Then carelessly she drifted through the lobby, picked up

      a paper, sat down out of sight of the desk. Women came and went, yak-

      king and laughing and calling to one another, some in work clothes

      and boots or saddle shoes, some in dresses and hats, some toting lunch

      pails or toolboxes. After a while she got up and followed the sign down

      to the overheated gym, which was empty except for a couple of large

      women on stationary bicycles; Vi could hear the echoey splash of the

      pool and smell chlorine. Then up the narrow back stairs to knock at

      the door of 302.

      The room was tiny, a narrow bed, a little dresser with a mirror, a

      white curtain in a window that looked out at nothing. Terry was redo-

      ing her makeup, getting ready to go, she said. She did her lips with a

      88 / J O H N C R O W L E Y

      dark lipstick, not the stick itself but a brush she wiped across the

      obscene little red tip poking from the cartridge. Vi asked her what

      work she did.

      “Welding,” she said. She named the shipyard, famous for its speed,

      a great tycoon had streamlined the works, they called him Sir Launch-

      alot in the papers. Terry plucked a sheet out of a box of Lucky tissues

      and pressed her lips on it. “Where you going?”

      Vi took from her bag the form she’d been given and read the name.

      “Hey, that one’s out on the island,” Terry said into the tiny mirror.

      “You’ll have to take the ferry out.”

      “That’s what they said,” Vi said.

      “Why’d you pick that one?”

      “Well,” Vi said, feeling Shirley in the room too, wondering too, “I

      guess because they said they have a softball league. I thought I could

      play.”

      Terry looked at her without judgment but conveying clearly that Vi

      was a greenhorn and didn’t know the basics. “They all have softball

      leagues,” she said. “And bowling leagues and glee clubs and theatri-

      cals. Anything you want. Anything to make you happy.”

      Vi said nothing, afraid that if she asked further she’d find out she’d

      made a dumb mistake.

      “You play softball?” Terry said kindly. “You like it?”

      “Yes.” Vi decided to make the claim for herself, not be shy. “I played

      on a good team in high school. WPA built the town a diamond and

      stands. We were all-state, 1935. I played at normal school too for one

      year.”

      “Well.” Terry looked at her and nodded, smiling, as though a child

      had told her of some little accomplishment. “Real teams.”

      “My brothers were stars. Baseball. It was all they cared about. They

      taught me. I’m good.” She tried to say it plainly, as though she’d said

      I’m tall. “Anyway it would be fun to play. I thought.”

      “Sure,” Terry said, popping her lipstick into an alligator bag. “Let

      me tell you how you get out there tomorrow, okay?”

      How many stories she had read of people on journeys—there was

      Kidnapped and there was Alice in Wonderland and Pinocchio and so

      F O U R F R E E D O M S / 89

      many more—and in them the one who’s on the journey meets persons,

      one after the other, who either help or hurt him—sometimes seeming

      to offer help but then turning on him, sometimes gruff or rejecting but

      then kind underneath. Some of them seem to know a secret about the

      traveler, or to want something from him. That’s how the story pro-

      ceeds: sometimes going from bad to good, sometimes bad to worse

      before becoming good again. Her journey wasn’t turning out like that,

      not that she’d expected it to. Everybody was pretty kind but mostly

      preoccupied; you asked them for what you needed and sometimes they

      could give it but mostly not and they passed out of your attention and

      you went on. It didn’t pile up the way it did in books: it was come and

      go, over and gone.

      But Shirley stayed in her consciousness, speaking and questioning

      and a little doubtful, or surprised and admiring; and Terry too, her

      makeup and her burns. And then the three women in black leather at

      the ferry’s rail.

      She’d been early at the dock, making for the streetcar with the

      others, standing on the open platform
    and clinging on, thinking in a

      kind of euphoric fear that at any minute she’d be knocked off and

      tumble down the impossibly steep hill that the little car trundled over,

      bell clanging. The air was rich and cold and watery, nothing she’d seen

      or smelled before, clouds of pale birds—gulls!—descending and aris-

      ing from the sea-edge where she got off. After the crisp brassy trolley

      bell the deep imperious horns, hurry up, she was carried along under

      the noses of high black ships being loaded by sky-flown cranes, and

      through the gate and onto the little ferryboat, cars creeping in three

      lines into its belly and people crowding the decks. Then out onto the

      sea, or the bay at least, black heaving water and the insubstantial city

      seeming to float away behind. Vi held tight, as though she might float

      away too. She saw three women, chums apparently, laughing together,

      one leaning on the rail on her elbows and looking down, one beside her

      hands in her pockets. The three were all dressed alike, in jackets and

      trousers of what could only be black leather, heavy as hides, collars up

      against the smart breeze, and high boots laced with a yard of thong.

      Their hair was covered, except for one’s blond forelock escaping, in

      bright bandannas knotted at the front. And on the back of each jacket

      was sewn or stuck a big red V in shiny cloth, their own idea obviously.

      90 / J O H N C R O W L E Y

      People turned to look at them, intrigued or cheered or a little shocked,

      but they didn’t notice, used to it maybe. Vi had always thought of her-

      self as brave—her pa said so, her teacher, but she knew it anyway—but

      she’d always thought of brave as something you did alone: being alone

      in what you did and doing it anyway was what was meant by being

      brave. Only when she saw those three (and she couldn’t have said it

      then, couldn’t until she’d thought about it, had seen them often in her

      mind, their open faces, joshing one another or looking out over water)

      did she know that there could be a way of being brave together, a few

      together.

      The first thing she’d have to do, they told her and her class of new

      hires, would be to get some good strong boots. Shipyards are just dan-

      gerous places. Dungarees are good but in some jobs you’d be better off

      with a pair of welder’s leathers. You’ll pay for those yourself; you might

      go down to the Army-Navy store, they’ve got the stuff. You’ll have a

      locker and you can keep your work clothes here if you don’t want to

      wear them in the street, lot of girls don’t (Vi thought of Terry, brave

      too). Now come along and we’ll start you with some basic training.

      So she became an arc welder, stitching precut forms together to make

      bulkhead walls and then other parts of ships (“it’s a lot like doing

      embroidery,” their trainer said, as he obviously had said many times to

      women before, but Vi’d never done embroidery so it was no help to

      her), and on the Swing Shift she and others would pick up their rod

      pot, stinger, wire brush for washing off the slag and getting that per-

      fect bead, and the long lead for hooking up to power, looped over your

      shoulder: watch out for somebody cutting into your lead, detaching

      you at the middle and hooking themselves in, hey what the hell! Sixty

      feet overhead the crane car ran on its tracks, the huge steel plates sus-

      pended from it that were chunked in place with that vast noise, the

      welders lowering their masks and moving in. Vi wore her ranch over-

      alls and a sweatshirt of her brother’s, didn’t buy leathers for a while,

      feeling somehow she had to earn them, like a varsity sweater or a jock-

      ey’s silks; but the sparks from a carbon arc off a steel plate could burn

      badly, right through your brassiere—Terry, shaking her head, gave Vi

      cream for the burns.

      F O U R F R E E D O M S / 91

      Off-hours she looked for a room, but it was tight. You couldn’t just

      get a room in some cheap portside hotel, it looked bad, a girl in a flop-

      house, but sometimes when she found a house with a sign in the

      window, room for rent, she’d be told it was taken already, only to

      find out later that some man had come after her and got it, tough luck

      sweetheart. After a week of sneaking into Terry’s room at the Y she got

      lucky, the union found her a room to share in an old mansion down-

      town that had been swept into a bad neighborhood in the Depression

      and never recovered, cut up into small rooms sharing the vast marbled

      baths, a dusty ballroom on the third floor where the women danced

      and got in trouble. Her new roommate had been sharing with her sister,

      but her sister’s husband had been invalided out and she’d gone home to

      care for him. She’d left behind her gloves, Vi’s now if she wanted them,

      her good lunch box, and an Indian motorcycle, an ancient one-lunger

      on which the two of them had got to the docks each day, now to be Sis

      and Vi’s transportation, each of them in their welding gear and black

      turbans, Vi up behind so tall she could see over the driver’s head: roll-

      ing onto that ferry where she’d first seen that trio with the V-sign on

      their backs, herself one of them now.

      Pretty soon she started playing ball.

      8

      After the first tryouts Dad said to her: “You’ve played some.”

      “Some.”

      “Okay. You want to pitch.”

      “If I can.”

      He smiled. “You can,” he said, “if you can. You certainly may.”

      Hearing that the man who’d be coaching her team (and a couple of

      others too) was called Dad, she’d expected a grizzled codger, tobacco

      chewer, old-timer. Dad wasn’t old; he was an engineer, with a wife and

      kids, doing necessary war work. The ball teams were his relaxation. He

      spoke little and smiled less, and Vi had to keep herself from staring at

      him, trying to figure him out. She’d find out later that he’d noticed that.

      Everyone who signed up to play was sorted randomly into the four

      women’s teams the shipyard fielded—the Rinky-dinks, the Steel Ladies,

      the Stingers, the Bobtails. Just about anybody was allowed to play, but

      a rough order was apparent, and if you were better than the team you

      were put in, Dad pushed you into a different position on another one,

      where maybe you wouldn’t look good for a while, so nobody’d feel

      jealous, and then he’d give you the position you could really play, and

      the team would rise in the standings.

      They played not out on the island where the shipyard was, but at a

      little ballpark on the mainland, three diamonds laid out regulation

      F O U R F R E E D O M S / 93

      softball style, where there was a constant rotation as shifts began and

      ended, some teams practicing, others playing. They played each other,

      they played teams from the other shipyards and war plants, they played

      the WAVEs from the base, they played a team from the government

      offices and one from the port authority. Vi was amazed at how seri-

      ously most people took it, as seriously as they took their jobs. The

      Stingers (her team) had uniforms, baggy and gray but uniforms,
    and

      Dad wouldn’t allow you to play in a game if you weren’t suited up—

      sometimes Vi heading for a game straight from her rooming house had

      to wear hers on the trolley out to the field, and back again sweaty and

      bedraggled and feeling foolish. The whole of downtown was no larger

      than a ranch, but getting around in it took forever, trolleys and buses

      and on feet weary from a day’s work. It was hard, and the game the

      women played was played more fiercely than Vi had ever played it, no

      kindness in it, no forgiveness for errors, no encouragement yelled out

      by the other team just to be nice. She loved it that way. It was great to

      learn you could weld, learn you could drive a crane a hundred feet over

      the shop floor, or run a drill press as big as a double bed, but playing

      real ball was even better. Vi thought so.

      She’d never really had a coach before, but she could tell Dad was

      hardest on the players he thought were the best; they were all playing

      just for fun, supposedly, but Dad played to win as if it weren’t. He caught

      Vi out for being lackadaisical, for letting runners steal bases because she

      didn’t check, for smiling, for giving away her pitch in the way she stood,

      the way she composed her face—he said she looked one way when she

      threw a fastball and a different way for a curve. She didn’t believe him,

      or didn’t believe it could matter, and laughed, but his face was stony.

      “Softball’s a game of thinking,” he said. “You gotta think, Vi.

      Because the ball goes so slow, and can’t go far. They say baseball’s a

      game of thinking too, but then along comes Ruth or Williams and it

      turns out it’s a game of muscle after all. But softball’s a thinking game

      all the time. And the pitcher’s the player that’s thinking the game.”

      “I think.”

      “You think too much. When you think. I can read you like a book.”

      He made her pitch to him, hitting pitch after pitch, lightly laying

      them out behind her, to right field, left field. The harder she tried the

      easier it seemed for him to do it.

      94 / J O H N C R O W L E Y

      “Come on, girl. Fool me. Trip me up, take me out. What are you

      waiting for?”

      Dad could make her want to cry, but he could also make her refuse

      to cry: she looked back at him, her eyes slits like his, gum clenched in

      her jaw. Her arm ached. She threw as hard as she could until at last she

     


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