Read A Master Plan for Rescue Online
Authors: Janis Cooke Newman
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Literary, #Coming of Age
A
s the wind picked up and the storm that had been threatening began to move across the river into the city, my uncle asked me if I was planning on coming outside again when I couldn’t sleep.
“No,” I told him, shaking my head. “I’m done.”
And I was.
For as Uncle Glenn had been talking, I’d been remembering the day after I got the code-o-graph, the day I’d listened for the sound of Nazi sympathizers in the ocean-y blueness of Good Shepherd. The day I’d believed that if I found one, I would send a message to a made-up person on the radio.
But that was then. I pressed a hand to my chest, feeling how damp the papers had turned in the humidity, how soft they were against my skin. Now I would be sending a message to a real person.
A real person who would surely send a message back. One that said
Y RUUB OT LUU ITE
,
I NEED TO SEE YOU.
• • •
Next morning,
as soon as it was light, I got up and left the apartment. I had my code-o-graph in my pocket and also some paper, in case I found a Nazi right away. I’d also slipped some change out of
My First War Bond
for the subway.
It was hot, and the subway was full of people going to work. I moved through the car, listening for something suspicious—a voice that had beneath it a vibration that jarred me, like music played off-key.
When I finished with one car, I pulled open the door and moved to the next, stopping to stand on the metal platform as the train sped through the warm dark tunnel beneath the city streets. Under my feet, visible in the gap, was the narrow space between the track and the third rail where my father had squeezed himself, a space almost too narrow for a man.
I came aboveground in the places I knew I’d find people. In the street-side crush of Times Square. Beneath the blue-painted dome of Grand Central Station. Among the marble columns of Pennsylvania Station. When I got hungry, I went to the Automat on Eighth Avenue and used up one of my war bond dimes on a piece of coconut custard pie. I sat at a small table in the cold whiteness of the Automat taking the smallest bites I could of the pie and listening to the conversations going on at the tables around me. It was lunchtime and the Automat was filled with workers from nearby offices. Men in summer suits made of seersucker, women in dresses with narrowed skirts, because cotton had to be saved for uniforms.
When the Automat emptied, I went back into the subway. I rode it all the way out to Queens, as far as the stop for the World’s Fair. All through the summer of 1939, my father and I had come out here to take pictures of Johnny Weissmuller swimming through the man-made waterfall inside the Aquacade, watch a robot smoke cigarettes in the Futurama exhibit. On Superman Day, my father had taken me to shake Superman’s hand.
I did all of these things and was back by the time my mother returned from five o’clock Mass, pushing open our apartment door as if it weighed a hundred pounds. She did not ask me where I’d been all day, but I was certain she’d been praying to the chandelier for my safety.
This is what I did the next day, and the next, and every day of that summer.
Not always, but now and then, I heard something in a voice that made me follow someone. The man who stole a copy of
Life
magazine from the newsstand outside Grand Central Station, sliding it under his jacket when the vendor turned away to make change for a woman in a hat, all the while keeping up his conversation about Tiny Bonham’s pitching arm. The man and the woman who exited the Eighth Avenue subway line as if they didn’t know each other, waiting to come together until they were inside the pedestrian tunnel under 59th Street, the man pressing his body against the woman’s, bending hers into the C shape of the wall.
But it was always people with secrets, never Nazis.
Still, I kept looking. When I ran out of money in the
My First War Bond
book, I went down to Aunt May and asked if she needed me to go to Mandelbaum’s for her. Aunt May was still cooking for us, still making those horrible recipes out of
Victory Meat Extenders
—Codfish Casserole and English Monkey, which thankfully did not have any actual meat in it. If Aunt May had already been to the store, I took the change out of my mother’s purse, which she left on a chair near the front door, ready for five o’clock Mass. Since my mother never went anywhere except Good Shepherd, she never seemed to notice.
• • •
I was still looking
at the end of the summer, when my mother went back to her work as bookkeeper for the now-legitimate restaurants and supper clubs that belonged to her father’s former customers. I don’t believe she would have gone back at all, if Mr. Puccini hadn’t knocked on our door every day for two weeks in August, asking about the rent.
For the first few days, she headed out wearing the black dress. Finally, Aunt May came by and said it would do everybody good if she put on something more cheerful.
“I don’t feel cheerful,” my mother told her.
“None of us do,” Aunt May said. “But most of us are at least pretending.”
The next morning when my mother left the apartment in the black dress, Aunt May was waiting for her on Dyckman Street. She took hold of my mother’s black sleeve and made her look up at all the windows where blue Son in Service stars had once hung, blue stars that had more recently been replaced with gold ones.
“You’re not the only widow on the block,” she said, spinning my mother around on the sidewalk. “You’re not even the only one in the building.”
The next morning, my mother put on a brown skirt and a brown blouse. They were the color the leaves on the trees in Fort Tryon Park turn before they give up and fall to the ground at the end of autumn. Aunt May told her it was an improvement, though not much of one.
My mother said it was as much pretending as she was capable of.
She wore some version of that color every day for the rest of the week. Some version of that color for the rest of the month. My mother must have gone out and bought a small wardrobe of clothes the color of dead leaves. It was as if fall had come early to our apartment.
• • •
The Tuesday after Labor Day,
Aunt May handed me five dollars and sent me to the Thom McAn on Broadway to buy new shoes for school. Buying shoes for school was something I’d always done with my father, the two of us taking our time to examine the paired-up samples in the window, standing together on the tiles that spelled out THOM MCAN while I made up my mind, going through the glass door to sit in the velvet seats joined at the arms like the seats at the Alpine movie theater. The Thom McAn shoe salesman always had a mustache and would take off my dirty sneaker with two hands, as if it was something precious, as if he were afraid of dropping it. My father knew that the metal instrument the shoe salesman used to measure my foot was called a Brannock Device. Once, even the Thom McAn shoe salesman hadn’t known that.
Now I walked down Broadway by myself, stood alone on the tiled letters examining the paired shoes, sat in the joined-up chairs with no one next to me. When the shoe salesman, whose upper lip was clean-shaven, placed my baggy-socked foot on the metal plate to measure it, the words
Brannock Device
boomed so loud in my head, I couldn’t hear myself say the style number.
Perhaps the shoe salesman hadn’t heard me right, or perhaps I’d been too distracted thinking about how I didn’t want to be standing out on Broadway with only my two feet on those THOM MCAN tiles, but the shoes the salesman brought me were the same terrible tan color as Aunt May’s Victory Pudding, which was made with molasses and evaporated milk.
“These the ones?” Even the bare-lipped salesman sounded doubtful.
But by that time my throat was so closed up, I could only nod.
He slipped the shoes over my socks, and I walked around on the thick Thom McAn carpet. The shoes were stiff and rubbed against my heels.
“How do they feel?”
“Fine,” I croaked.
• • •
When I got home,
I left the shoes in my room, buried beneath the folded layers of tissue paper. Then I turned on the radio and tried filling my head with cowboys and flying men in capes. But I couldn’t picture anything except myself sitting in the front row of a sixth-grade classroom wearing the tan-colored Thom McAns, squinting at the blackboard as a version of Miss Steinhardt chalked down facts about the Emancipation Proclamation, while finally—finally!—a Nazi spy slipped into the Automat for a piece of cream pie, or a Nazi saboteur hurried across Grand Central Station on his way to Croton to poison the water supply.
I pushed around the food Aunt May left us—Boiled Tongue with Horseradish Sauce—and then threw myself in front of the Silvertone again, radio serials unspooling from the speakers beside my head, unable to conjure up a picture of anything except me, trapped inside P.S. 52 as the Nazis I’d been searching for all summer strolled by the windows.
Around nine o’clock, somebody knocked on our door.
It was Harry Jupiter, wearing a rumpled jacket and a hat that looked as if he’d sat on it. I hadn’t seen Harry Jupiter since my father’s wake, since he’d stumbled around our apartment looking as if it was only his glass of rye whiskey keeping him upright.
I asked him if he wanted to come in, but he shook his jowls like he was afraid there might still be an empty coffin in our living room.
“I have something for you.”
He dug around in both pockets of his rumpled jacket until he came up with a photograph.
“I’m sorry it took me so long.”
He passed it over to me.
I pushed my glasses onto the top of my head and brought the photograph close to my face. It was the picture of me standing on the roof with nothing but the wide, blue sky behind me.
“I found it when I got around to printing the Silverman twins.”
It had been a long time since I’d seen my entire face without glasses. Every now and then I tried to see it, standing in front of the bathroom mirror with the glasses in my hand. But to see anything clear without glasses, I had to put my face so close to the glass, I could only catch pieces of myself.
Yet here in this photograph was my whole face—without glasses.
I pushed the glasses back onto my face and looked up at Harry Jupiter. His blue eyes were watery.
“Thanks,” I told him.
He nodded, and began to shuffle down the dim hallway.
“Why now?” I said to his back.
He turned.
“Why did you finally get around to printing the Silverman twins now?”
Harry Jupiter shrugged. “I came across the note from your father asking me about the darkroom. Must have been buried under the negatives on my desk.”
I looked down at the photograph in my hand. The photograph delivered by Harry Jupiter, who had not been up here in all the weeks since we’d waked my father with an empty coffin. Harry Jupiter, who never came across anything buried under the negatives on his desk.
I shut the door. This photograph was a message.
My father
knew
.
Likely he’d followed me. Perhaps watched me in the cold brightness of the Automat eating a slice of coconut custard pie in small bites, or sat in the next subway car as I rode the train to Flushing, where the two of us had gone to shake Superman’s hand. It would only have taken one time. One time for my father—who could read strangers, after all—to understand what I’d been doing all summer, and why.
And once I’d deciphered this part of my father’s message, I knew why he’d left the note that sent Harry Jupiter up to Dyckman Street with it at the exact time he had.
I went to the kitchen and got the scissors, cut away just enough of the wide, blue sky to make the photograph fit into the little window of my code-o-graph. Then I slid out Captain Midnight’s face and replaced it with my own.
The next morning, I walked out into the September wind wearing the stiff, new Thom McAns that were the color of Aunt May’s Victory Pudding, and carrying my leather schoolbag as if I was on my way to P.S. 52. At the corner, I turned in the opposite direction and headed toward the subway.
• • •
Weeks went by
and nobody from P.S. 52 tried to get in touch with us.
Once I ran into Mrs. Krinsky from apartment 1A, coming out of Mandelbaum’s with an armful of groceries, and she asked me where I was going in such a hurry.
“School,” I told her.
“Isn’t it that way?” She pointed with her chin.
“I’m going to a special school. For people with bad eyes.”
“You’d better hurry then,” she said, clutching her bags to her chest, as if they might cover her embarrassment.
And a couple of times, I thought I spotted a very small man smoking a cigarette following me as I slipped into the subway at the corner of Broadway and Dyckman Street. But I could never trust my eyes, and he seemed very small for a man, so I figured I’d imagined him.
It’s possible a call came when no one was in the apartment—or that my mother never picked up the phone—because every time it rang, she hurried away from it, as if that would prevent any bad news from finding her. And if a letter had been sent, it’s possible it was lost in the mail. It was wartime after all, and there was a lot of mail. It’s also possible that nobody at P.S. 52 wanted to talk to us about the reason I hadn’t returned to school. Nobody wanted to come to our apartment and knock on our door and ask if it was about what had happened in the 42nd Street subway station.