Manhattan Transfer (27 page)

Read Manhattan Transfer Online

Authors: John Dos Passos

Ed Thatcher looked up, shook his head and went in through the swinging screen door. Ellen followed him. Inside it smelled of varnish and waitresses. They sat down at a table near the door under a droning electric fan.

‘How do you do Mr Thatcher? How you been all the week sir? How do you do miss?’ The bonyfaced peroxidehaired waitress hung over them amicably. What’ll it be today sir, roast Long Island duckling or roast Philadelphia milkfed capon?’

4 Fire Engine

Such afternoons the buses are crowded into line like elephants in a circusparade. Morningside Heights to Washington Square, Penn Station to Grant’s Tomb. Parlorsnakes and flappers joggle hugging downtown uptown, hug joggling gray square after gray square, until they see the new moon giggling over Weehawken and feel the gusty wind of a dead Sunday blowing dust in their faces, dust of a typsy twilight.

They are walking up the Mall in Central Park.

‘Looks like he had a boil on his neck,’ says Ellen in front of the statue of Burns.

‘Ah,’ whispers Harry Goldweiser with a fat-throated sigh, ‘but he was a great poet.’

She is walking in her wide hat in her pale loose dress that the wind now and then presses against her legs and arms, silkily, swishily walking in the middle of great rosy and purple and pis-tachiogreen bubbles of twilight that swell out of the grass and trees and ponds, bulge against the tall houses sharp gray as dead teeth round the southern end of the park, melt into the indigo zenith. When he talks, forming sentences roundly with his thick lips, continually measuring her face with his brown eyes, she feels his words press against her body, nudge in the hollows where her dress clings; she can hardly breathe for fear of listening to him.

‘The Zinnia Girl’s going to be an absolute knockout, Elaine, I’m telling you and that part’s just written for you. I’d enjoy working with you again, honest… You’re so different, that’s what it is about you. All these girls round New York here are just the same, they’re monotonous. Of course you could sing swell if you wanted to… I’ve been crazy as a loon since I met you, and that’s a good six months now. I sit down to eat and the food dont have any taste… You cant understand how lonely a man gets when year after year he’s had to crush his feelings down into himself. When I was a young fellow I was different, but what are you to do? I had to make money and make my way in the world. And so I’ve gone on
year after year. For the first time I’m glad I did it, that I shoved ahead and made big money, because now I can offer it all to you. Understand what I mean?… All those ideels and beautiful things pushed down into myself when I was making my way in a man’s world were like planting seed and you’re their flower.’

Now and then as they walk the back of his hand brushes against hers; she clenches her fist sullenly drawing it away from the hot determined pudginess of his hand.

The Mall is full of couples, families waiting for the music to begin. It smells of children and dress-shields and talcum powder. A balloonman passes them trailing red and yellow and pink balloons like a great inverted bunch of grapes behind him. ‘Oh buy me a balloon.’ The words are out of her mouth before she can stop them.

‘Hay you gimme one of each color… And how about one of those gold ones? No keep the change.’

Ellen put the strings of the balloons into the dirtsticky hands of three little monkeyfaced girls in red tams. Each balloon caught a crescent of violet glare from the arclight.

‘Aw you like children, Elaine, dont you? I like a woman to like children.’

Ellen sits numb at a table on the terrace of the Casino. A hot gust of foodsmell and the rhythm of a band playing
He’s a Ragpicker
swirls chokingly about her; now and then she butters a scrap of roll and puts it in her mouth. She feels very helpless, caught like a fly in his sticky trickling sentences.

‘There’s nobody else in New York could have got me to walk that far, I’ll tell you that… I walked too much in the old days, do you understand, used to sell papers when I was a kid and run errands for Schwartz’s Toystore… on my feet all day except when I was in nightschool. I thought I was going to be a lawyer, all us East Side fellers thought we were goin to be lawyers. Then I worked as an usher one summer at the Irving Place and got the theater bug… Not such a bad hunch it turned out to be, but it’s too uncertain. Now I dont care any more, only want to cover my losses. That’s the trouble with me. I’m thirtyfive an I dont care any more. Ten years ago I was still only a kind of clerk in old man Erlanger’s office, and now there’s lots of em whose shoes I used to shine in the old days’d be real glad of the opportunity to sweep my
floors on West Forty-eighth… Tonight I can take you anywhere in New York, I dont care how expensive or how chic it is… an in the old days us kids used to think it was paradise if we had five plunks to take a couple of girls down to the Island… I bet all that was different with you Elaine… But what I want to do is get that old feelin back, understand?… Where shall we go?’

‘Why dont we go down to Coney Island then? I’ve never been?

‘It’s a pretty rough crowd… still we can just ride round. Let’s do it. I’ll go phone for the car.’

Ellen sits alone looking down into her coffeecup. She puts a lump of sugar on her spoon, dips it in the coffee and pops it into her mouth where she crunches it slowly, rubbing the grains of sugar against the roof of her mouth with her tongue. The orchestra is playing a tango.

The sun streaming into the office under the drawn shades cut a bright slanting layer like watered silk through the cigarsmoke.

‘Mighty easy,’ George Baldwin was saying dragging out the words. ‘Gus we got to go mighty easy on this.’ Gus McNiel bull-necked redfaced with a heavy watchchain in his vest sat in the armchair nodding silently, pulling on his cigar. ‘As things are now no court would sustain such an injunction… an injunction that seems to me a pure piece of party politics on Judge Connor’s part, but there are certain elements…’

‘You said it… Look here George I’m goin to leave this whole blame thing to you. You pulled me through the East New York dockin space mess and I guess you can pull me through this.’

‘But Gus your position in this whole affair has been entirely within the bounds of legality. If it werent I certainly should not be able to take the case, not even for an old friend like you.’

‘You know me George… I never went back on a guy yet and I dont expect to have anybody go back on me.’ Gus got heavily to his feet and began to limp about the office leaning on a goldknobbed cane. ‘Connor’s a son of a bitch… an honest, you wouldn’t believe it but he was a decent guy before he went up to Albany.’

‘My position will be that your attitude in this whole matter has been willfully misconstrued. Connor has been using his position on the bench to further a political end.’

‘God I wish we could get him. Jez I thought he was one of the boys; he was until he went up an got mixed up with all those lousy upstate Republicans. Albany’s been the ruination of many a good man.’

Baldwin got up from the flat mahogany table where he sat between tall sheaves of foolscap and put his hand on Gus’s shoulder. ‘Dont you lose any sleep over it…’

‘I’d feel all right if it wasn’t for those Interborough bonds.’

‘What bonds? Who’s seen any bonds?… Let’s get this young fellow in here… Joe… And one more thing Gus, for heaven’s sakes keep your mouth shut… If any reporters or anybody comes round to see you tell ’em about your trip to Bermuda… We can get publicity enough when we need it. Just at present we want to keep the papers out of it or you’ll have all the reformers on your heels.’

‘Well aint they friends of yours? You can fix it up with em.’

‘Gus I’m a lawyer and not a politician… I dont meddle in those things at all. They dont interest me.’

Baldwin brought the flat of his hand down on a pushbell. An ivoryskinned young woman with heavy sullen eyes and jetty hair came into the room.

‘How do you do Mr McNiel.’

‘My but you’re looking well Miss Levitsky.’

‘Emily tell em to send that young fellow that’s waiting for Mr McNiel in.’

Joe O’Keefe came in dragging his feet a little, with his straw hat in his hand. ‘Howde do sir.’

‘Look here Joe, what does McCarthy say?’

‘Contractors and Builders Association’s goin to declare a lockout from Monday on.’

‘And how’s the union?’

‘We got a full treasury. We’re goin to fight.’

Baldwin sat down on the edge of the desk. ‘I wish I knew what Mayor Mitchel’s attitude was on all this.’

‘That reform gang’s just treadin water like they always do,’ said Gus savagely biting the end off a cigar. ‘When’s this decision going to be made public?’

‘Saturday.’

‘Well keep in touch with us.’

‘All right gentlemen. And please dont call me on the phone. It dont look exactly right. You see it aint my office.’

‘Might be wiretappin goin on too. Those fellers wont stop at nothin. Well see ye later Joey.’

Joe nodded and walked out. Baldwin turned frowning to Gus.

‘Gus I dont know what I’m goin to do with you if you dont keep out of all this labor stuff. A born politician like you ought to have better sense. You just cant get away with it.’

‘But we got the whole damn town lined up.’

‘I know a whole lot of the town that isnt lined up. But thank Heavens that’s not my business. This bond stuff is all right, but if you get into a mess with this strike business I couldn’t handle your case. The firm wouldnt stand for it,’ he whispered fiercely. Then he said aloud in his usual voice, ‘Well how’s the wife, Gus?’

Outside in the shiny marble hall, Joe O’Keefe was whistling
Sweet Rosy O’Grady
waiting for the elevator. Imagine a guy havin a knockout like that for a secretary. He stopped whistling and let the breath out silently through pursed lips. In the elevator he greeted a walleyed man in a check suit. ‘Hullo Buck.’

‘Been on your vacation yet?’

Joe stood with his feet apart and his hands in his pockets. He shook his head. ‘I get off Saturday.’

‘I guess I’ll take in a couple o days at Atlantic City myself.’

‘How do you do it?’

‘Oh the kid’s clever.’

Coming out of the building O’Keefe had to make his way through people crowding into the portal. A slate sky sagging between the tall buildings was spatting the pavements with fiftycent pieces. Men were running to cover with their straw hats under their coats. Two girls had made hoods of newspaper over their summer bonnets. He snatched blue of their eyes, a glint of lips and teeth as he passed. He walked fast to the corner and caught an uptown car on the run. The rain advanced down the street in a solid sheet glimmering, swishing, beating newspapers flat, prancing in silver nipples along the asphalt, striping windows, putting shine on the paint of streetcars and taxicabs. Above Fourteenth there was no rain, the air was sultry.

‘A funny thing weather,’ said an old man next to him. O’Keefe grunted. ‘When I was a boy onct I saw it rain on one side of the
street an a house was struck by lightnin an on our side not a drop fell though the old man wanted it bad for some tomatoplants he’d just set out.’

Crossing Twentythird O’Keefe caught sight of the tower of Madison Square Garden. He jumped off the car; the momentum carried him in little running steps to the curb. Turning his coatcollar down again he started across the square. On the end of a bench under a tree drowsed Joe Harland. O’Keefe plunked down in the seat beside him.

‘Hello Joe. Have a cigar.’

‘Hello Joe. I’m glad to see you my boy. Thanks. It’s many a day since I’ve smoked one of these things… What are you up to? Aint this kind of out of your beat?’

‘I felt kinder blue so I thought I’d buy me a ticket to the fight Saturday.’

‘What’s the matter?’

‘Hell I dunno… Things dont seem to go right. Here I’ve got myself all in deep in this political game and there dont seem to be no future in it. God I wish I was educated like you.’

‘A lot of good it’s done me.’

‘I wouldn’t say that… If I could ever git on the track you were on I bet ye I wouldn’t lose out.’

‘You cant tell Joe, funny things get into a man.’

‘There’s women and that sort of stuff.’

‘No I dont mean that… You get kinder disgusted.’

‘But hell I dont see how a guy with enough jack can git disgusted.’

‘Then maybe it was booze, I dont know.’

They sat silent a minute. The afternoon was flushing with sunset. The cigarsmoke was blue and crinkly about their heads.

‘Look at the swell dame… Look at the way she walks. Aint she a peacherino? That’s the way I like ’em, all slick an frilly with their lips made up… Takes jack to go round with dames like that.’

‘They’re no different from anybody else, Joe.’

‘The hell you say.’

‘Say Joe you havent got an extra dollar on you?’

‘Maybe I have.’

‘My stomach’s a little out of order… I’d like to take a little something to steady it, and I’m flat till I get paid Saturday… er
… you understand… you’re sure you dont mind? Give me your address and I’ll send it to you first thing Monday morning.’

‘Hell dont worry about it, I’ll see yez around somewheres.’

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