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    Four Freedoms

    Page 25
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      F O U R F R E E D O M S / 183

      “You think I’m not behind the war effort?” Mert asked Prosper. “Is

      that it? You know I fought for this country? Same as your dad. I can

      show you my medals. Good Conduct.”

      “Ha ha,” said Fred.

      “It’s not that,” Prosper said.

      “You don’t think you can do it? That’s what I need to know.”

      “I don’t know. Maybe. But I don’t want to.”

      Mert turned away to gaze out the somewhat clouded window of the

      office (he liked it clouded) and put his fists on his hips. “Hell of a

      note,” he said, sounding wounded. “Well. Hell with it. Let’s knock off

      for the day.”

      More or less in silence, they closed the office: called out good nights

      and instructions to the night people, rang up the ice shed on the house

      telephone (Mert cranking the magneto with what seemed fury to Pros-

      per) and told them the office was locking up, finally turning the sign in

      the glass of the door from open to closed.

      Not much was said during the ride back to downtown. Finally Mert

      threw his arm over the seat and looked back at Prosper. “You can have

      it your way, son,” he said. “But I’ll just tell you something. There might

      not be any other work for you around the place. If you can’t do this.”

      Stony-faced. Prosper tried to cast his own face in stone.

      “Just think about it,” Fred said into the rearview mirror.

      “He’s thought about it,” Mert said, still regarding Prosper. “So

      where can we drop you?”

      “Um.” He didn’t want to go back to the Mayflower Beauty Salon,

      but he didn’t want to be too far from home either. “Drop me at the

      Paramount,” he said.

      “Going to the movies?” Mert said. “Man of leisure?”

      That required a dignified silence.

      “What’s playing?” Fred asked.

      “Dunno.”

      They turned on Main. The theater was a ways from Bea and May’s,

      but Prosper’d done it before. Late on a winter afternoon and no one

      much going in. Fred let the car idle there—no one would be doing

      much of that from then on. The marquee advertised No Room at the

      Inn along with The Invisible Agent, newsreels and Selected Short

      Subjects.

      184 / J O H N C R O W L E Y

      “You’re a good kid, Prosper,” Mert said. He pulled out a money clip

      and plucked a couple of bills from it, then one more. “You do what you

      think you got to.”

      Prosper shook Mert’s hand, then reached over and shook Fred’s. He

      got out of the car with the usual clatter of braces and crutches. Hadn’t

      they themselves, his uncles, taught him what Honor required? Wasn’t

      it this? And what the heck was he going to do now to make money?

      The second feature was just beginning when he entered into that

      soothing darkness, violet hued, lit by the shifting scenes bright and

      dim. He paused at the top of the long flight of broad steps—easy

      enough to manage but not if you couldn’t see them; the usher, silhou-

      etted against the huge heads on the screen, was showing someone to a

      seat, momentary ghost of a flashlight pointed discreetly downward.

      Prosper waited for him to come back up and light his way.

      But it wasn’t a him—it was an usherette, as they were called, women

      and girls taking the jobs of drafted boys, solemn in her big dark uni-

      form. Tumble of black curls beneath her cap. She turned on the dim

      flashlight and was about to walk him down when he stepped forward,

      Swing Gait, and she halted: then, surely a breach of the usher’s code,

      she lifted the light right up to his face.

      “Prosper?” she whispered.

      Blinded, he still knew whose voice he’d heard. The soft dry burr of

      it. She lowered the lamp, but he stood dazzled. She touched his arm

      and turned him away from the screen and back out toward the foyer.

      “Prosper,” she said again when they were in the light.

      “Hi, Elaine.”

      “Are you okay?”

      “I’m fine.”

      She gazed upon him. “I haven’t seen you.”

      “I’m around. The same place.”

      “I moved out,” she said. “Things happened. I have a room.”

      “Okay.”

      “Who did that to your hair?”

      “What? Oh.”

      That face, the eyebrows lifting in a worried query that she seemed

      already to know the sad answer to—Is it mortal? Will we never

      return? Is all lost?—when she wasn’t actually asking anything and

      F O U R F R E E D O M S / 185

      wasn’t sad. “Listen,” she said. “I get off in an hour. Sit in the back.

      I’ll see you then.”

      As though they’d agreed to this a long time ago. That was the sign,

      he was as yet unused to noticing it but he was learning: that sensation

      that the future has already happened and is only bringing itself about

      in staging these present moments.

      He went back in and sat down. He lit a cigarette, after determining

      that a little ashtray was attached to the seat in front of him: one thing

      hard for him was stamping out a burning end from a seated position.

      The picture was well under way now. The grandson of the original

      Invisible Man had inherited his grandfather’s secret formula, and the

      Nazis and the Japs were teamed up to steal it. The Invisible Agent pes-

      ters and pulls funny tricks on the bad guys; the audience watched in

      silence. It occurred to Prosper that the Agent must be damn cold—only

      without his clothes was he altogether invisible.

      Elaine went past the row where he sat, a woman and a man in tow.

      An invisible woman, that would be an idea for a picture. Naked,

      and you’d know it, but you’d see nothing.

      He thought of Elaine, in his braces, on the floor of his aunts’ house.

      Exchange of selves, his for hers, why would she have wanted that? And

      why his? However many eyes there were on him every day as he did

      this or that, walked a block, took a stool in a diner, went through a

      door, he often felt himself to be invisible. Like the Invisible Agent:

      people could see the suit and hat and gloves, and nothing of what was

      inside them. No matter that they stared.

      He felt her slide into the seat behind him. “I’m off,” she whispered,

      leaning over. “Come with me. I have to change.”

      Making as little noise as he could, he stood and left the row to

      follow her; the few in adjoining rows glancing up with interest, maybe

      one or two thinking he was being expelled, no cripples allowed. He

      went after her into the foyer and around to the far side and through a

      door that seemed to be just part of the wall. It opened to a hot shabby

      corridor lit by bare bulbs. Dim hollow voices of the picture could be

      heard . I pity the Devil when you Nazis start arriving in bunches!

      “Here,” she said.

      It was a dressing room, a couple of blank lockers, a sink, a clothes

      rack of pipe where uniforms hung. Steam hissed from the radiator. She

      186 / J O H N C R O W L E Y

      turned her back to him to take out the stud from her collar, then pulled

      the whole celluloid shirtfront with collar and tie attached out
    from her

      uniform jacket and tossed it down on a bench.

      “Elaine,” he said, and she turned to him; he could see that she’d

      worn nothing beneath the dickie, too hot maybe. As though he’d said

      much more than her name she came to him, and he knew it was time to

      put his arms around her, but that was hard; propping himself with one

      crutch he wrapped her in the other arm, still holding its crutch. She

      somehow melted into him anyway, partly supporting him, breasts soft

      against him. Then she seemed not to know what came next, forgetting

      or unable to predict, and she drew away, undoing the frogs of her uni-

      form coat.

      “Turn around,” she said, and he did; when after a time he turned

      back he found she had put on a shirtwaist dress, was barelegged in

      white anklets, and he felt a piercing loss. She put on a dark thick coat

      and a shapeless hat. “We’ll go out the back.”

      She took him out around the back of the stage, and for a moment

      Prosper could see that the great screen was actually translucent, and

      the picture of two lovers projected on the front shone through to be

      seen, reversed, by no one.

      They came out into the alley, scaring a lean cat from a garbage pail.

      She lived many blocks away, in the opposite direction from Bea and

      May’s. They didn’t speak much as they walked, just enough so as not to

      appear strange to each other marching in urgent silence toward what-

      ever it was, but what little from their shared past they might have spoken

      about ought not to be said now: that was obvious to both of them.

      “So what happens to the Jap? In that picture.”

      “He commits Harry Carey.”

      “Oh.”

      Though the cold air burned his throat, he was wet with sweat

      beneath his coat by the time she said “Here.” The place was heart-

      sinkingly tall, a long pile of stairs with steeper than normal risers that

      climbed as though up a castle wall to a front door high above. He

      despaired. But Elaine then took him through a side gate (beware of

      the dog) and around to the back, a short winter-dry yard where an

      umbrella clothesline leaned like a blasted tree, and into a door. “Up,”

      she said softly. “Don’t be loud.”

      F O U R F R E E D O M S / 187

      It was only a half-flight, though the banister was flimsy and the

      steps mismatched. How her room was fitted onto or into the house in

      front never came clear to him, though he tried later to draw a plan.

      The door at the top of the stairs led into a minute kitchen no bigger

      than a closet, and that to a bedroom. Elaine pulled a chain that lit a

      green-shaded lamp above the dark bed.

      She turned to him then. He was breathing hard from exertion, and

      she seemed to be also, her mouth a little open and her face lifted to his.

      Her eyes huge and certain. He would come to learn—he was learning

      already—that these moments, different as each one was from all the

      others, were all more like one another than they were like any in the

      rest of his life: they were like the moment in some movies when a scene

      changes in an instant from black and white into color, and everything

      is the same but now this picture has become one of those rare ones that

      are colored, it joins that richer life, and for a time you live in it, until

      the gray real world comes back again.

      Night. Negotiating in the dark the way out of her room and down the

      half flight of treacherous stairs holding the splintery banister, knowing

      there were things—tools, trash, boxes, a cat—he couldn’t see. He

      bumped at length into the door outward, and pushed it open (beware

      of that dog) and made it out to the street. He saw at the block’s end the

      cigar store right where he remembered it being, where there would be a

      telephone. Mert’s bills in his pocket, enough for a while, but not for

      taxis every day. He felt a sudden anguish, he wanted to turn back now

      and climb those stairs again, there was something left undone there or

      not completed, it twisted within him painfully in the direction of her

      room even as he pushed himself down the block: something he’d never

      felt before, and seeming to be installed deeply now.

      Why was she the way she was? Women with their clothes on could

      be utterly unlike themselves when they were without them, even those

      who were unwilling to take all or even most of them off, who made

      him paw through the folds of fabric like an actor fumbling through a

      stage curtain to come out and say something important. But none so

      far had been as different as Elaine. She’d lain still as he unbuttoned her

      buttons and his, mewing a little softly, a mewing that grew stronger

      188 / J O H N C R O W L E Y

      when he’d got her last garments off, hard to do with no help at all. She

      lay still and naked then making that sound, as though something

      dreadful were about to happen to her that she was powerless to resist;

      she closed her eyes while he unbuckled his braces, she covered her eyes

      even for a moment with her hands, and then remained still, tense as a

      strung wire, while he attended to her. He tried to speak, tell her they

      had to be you know careful, but she wouldn’t listen, drew him over

      atop her, parting her legs and pressing him down. But once he had

      gone in—swallowed up almost by the enveloping hot wetness—she

      held him still so he wouldn’t move, made sounds of protest if he tried,

      almost as though he hurt her, and herself lay unmoving too except for

      small tremors that racked her, seemingly unwanted. He almost whis-

      pered Hey what the heck Elaine to make her behave in some more

      familiar way but actually could say nothing, and after what seemed a

      very long time she lifted her legs and circled him tightly; she murmured

      something as though to herself, a word or two, and he felt a sudden

      sensation of being grabbed or enveloped from within as by a hand. It

      was so startling and unlikely that he nearly withdrew, and did cry out,

      and so did she, even as he was held and ejaculating. And at that she

      began pushing him out and away, gently and then more forcefully;

      when he was separated she rolled over so that she faced away from

      him, and pulled the coverlet over herself.

      Elaine? he’d said.

      All right, she’d said, not turning back. Go away now, she’d said. I’ll

      see you maybe at the theater tomorrow.

      So.

      He guessed that if she’d got herself knocked up today he’d have to

      marry her. The cab he called rolled up to the door of the cigar store

      where he stood next to a dour wooden Indian, and Prosper checked to

      see if it was driven by that same old fool who’d once mocked him, but

      of course it wasn’t. He’d marry her and somehow they’d live, maybe in

      that tiny room. For an instant he knew it would be so and that he

      wanted nothing more, and how could that be? How could it?

      8

      Without his uncles’ wages and the odd bill they’d slip him for

      this or that ser vice, Prosper was back in the Mayflower, but

      May and Bea couldn’t give him the money he needed if he

      was going to be seeing Ela
    ine: though she seemed to want

      nothing from him, that only made him think she really did. So he went

      to work for The Light in the Woods. They needed people. He didn’t

      have much of a choice. At least it appeared he wouldn’t have to support

      a wife and child: after an uneasy week (he was uneasy, she seemed

      somehow bleakly indifferent) he knew that.

      The Light in the Woods (Prosper’d first heard about it from Mary

      Mack, and then from the teacher of his special class at school) had for

      years been giving work to people with impairments who couldn’t com-

      pete for jobs with other workers. They were blind or almost blind, they

      were deaf or crippled or untrainable, they were spastics or aged alkies

      with tremors. They were put to work making simple things like coco

      matting or brushes, or they picked up and refurbished discarded cloth-

      ing or toys or furniture for resale, packed boxes or did contract labor

      assembling things for local factories—anything that almost anybody

      could do but nobody could make a living doing. For years The Light in

      the Woods had been losing work: in the Depression, standards had

      changed about what jobs an able-bodied person would willingly do.

      190 / J O H N C R O W L E Y

      Supported by charitable giving, they’d kept their workers on through

      those years, guaranteeing them their fifty cents a day even when there

      wasn’t much to do. Now business was booming again: there were sud-

      denly lots of jobs that nobody would do who could do anything else. A

      new age of junk had dawned; shortages of materials for war industries

      meant we were constantly urged to save them, bring them to collection

      centers for reuse and reclamation—rubber and scrap metal and fats

      and tin cans (wash off the labels, cut off both ends and smash them

      flat). Old silk stockings could be made into parachutes; new ones soon

      became unavailable. Use it up, wear it out, make it do, do without. In

      Prosper’s city the collection and sorting of discards and donated matter

      was contracted out to The Light in the Woods, and the outfit opened a

      larger warehouse in the industrial district to handle it all. When Pros-

      per made the trip downtown to the War Mobilization Employment

      Office, that’s where he was sent. All he had to do was sign up for the

      special bus service that The Light in the Woods had arranged to circle

      the city and bring in their people who couldn’t get there on their own.

     


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