“Some other time, Nat, I have to do something now.”
“For instance?”
“Some other time,” she said.
“Why not?” Nat answered amiably.
When he had hung up, Helen stood at the phone, wondering if she had done right. She felt she hadn't.
Ida entered the kitchen. “What did he wantâNat?”
“Just to talk.”
“He asked you to go out?”
She admitted it.
“What did you answer him?”
“I said I would some other time.”
“What do you mean âsome other time?'” Ida said sharply.
“What are you already, Helen, an old lady? What good is it to sit so many nights alone upstairs? Who gets rich from reading? What's the matter with you?”
“Nothing's the matter, Mama.” She left the store and went into the hall.
“Don't forget you're twenty-three years old,” Ida called after her.
“I won't.”
Upstairs her nervousness grew. When she thought what she had to do she didn't want to, yet felt she must.
They had met, she and Frank, last night at the library, the third time in eight days. Helen noticed as they were. leaving that he clumsily carried a package she took to contain some shirts or underwear, but on the way home Frank flung away his cigarette, and under a street lamp handed it to her. “Here, this is for you.”
“For me? What is it?”
“You'll find out.”
She took it half-willingly, and thanked him. Helen carried it awkwardly the rest of the way home, neither of them saying much. She had been caught by surprise. If she had given herself a minute to think, she would have refused it on grounds that it was wise just to stay friends; because, she thought, neither of them really knew the other. But once she had the thing in her hands she hadn't the nerve to ask him to take it back. It was a medium-sized box of some sort with something heavy in itâshe guessed a book; yet it seemed too big for a book. As she held it against her breast, she felt a throb of desire for Frank and this disturbed her. About a block from the grocery, nervously saying good night, she went on ahead. This was how they parted when the store window was still lit.
Ida was downstairs with Morris when Helen came into the house, so no questions were asked. She shivered a little as she unwrapped the box on her bed, ready to hide it the minute she heard a footstep on the stairs. Lifting the carton lid, she found two packages in it, each wrapped in white tissue paper and tied with red ribbons with uneven bows, obviously by Frank. When she had untied the first present, Helen gasped at the sight of a long, hand-woven scarfârich black wool interlaced with gold thread. She was startled to discover that the second present was a red leather copy of Shakespeare's plays. There was no card.
She sat weakly down on the bed. I can't, she told herself. They were expensive things, probably had cost him every penny of the hard-earned money he was saving for college. Even supposing he had enough for that, she still couldn't
take his gifts. It wasn't right, and coming from him, it was, somehow, less than not right.
She wanted then and there to go up to his room and leave them at the door with a note, but hadn't the heart to the very night he had given them to her.
The next evening, after a day of worry, she felt she must return them; and now she wished she had done it before Nat had called, then she might have been more relaxed on the phone.
Helen got down on her hands and knees and reached under the bed for the carton with Frank's scarf and book in it. It touched her that he had given her such lovely thingsâso much nicer than anyone else ever had. Nat, at his best, had produced a half-dozen small pink roses.
For gifts you pay, Helen thought. She drew a deep breath, and taking the box went quietly up the stairs. She tapped hesitantly on Frank's door. He had recognized her step and was waiting behind the door. His fists were clenched, the nails cutting his palms.
When he opened the door and his glance fell on what she was carrying, he frowned as though struck in the face.
Helen stepped awkwardly into the little room, quickly shutting the door behind her. She suppressed a shudder at the smallness and barrenness of the place. On his unmade bed lay a sock he had been trying to mend.
“Are the Fusos home?” she asked in a low voice.
“They went out.” He spoke dully, his eyes hopelessly stuck to the things he had given her.
Helen handed him the box with the presents. “Thanks so much, Frank,” she said, trying to smile, “but I really don't think I ought to take them. You'll need every cent for your college tuition in the fall.”
“That's not the reason you mean,” he said.
Her face reddened. She was about to explain that her mother would surely make a scene if she saw his gifts, but instead said, “I can't keep them.”
“Why not?”
It wasn't easy to answer and he didn't make it easier, just held the rejected presents in his big hands as if they were living things that had suddenly died.
“I can't,” she got out. “Your taste is so nice, I'm sorry.”
“Okay,” he said wearily. He tossed the box on the bed and the Shakespeare fell to the floor. She stooped quickly to pick it up and was unnerved to see it had opened to “Romeo and Juliet.”
“Good night.” She left his room and went hastily downstairs. In her room she thought she heard the distant sound of a man crying. She listened tensely, her hand on her throbbing throat, but no longer heard it.
Helen took a shower to relax, then got into a nightgown and housecoat. She picked up a book but couldn't read. She had noticed before signs he might be in love with her, but now she was almost sure of it. Carrying his package as he had walked with her last night, he had been somebody different, though the hat and overcoat were the same. There seemed to be about him a size and potentiality she had not seen before. He did not say love but love was in him. When the insight came to her, at almost the minute he was handing her the package, she had reacted with gooseflesh. That it had gone this far was her own fault. She had warned herself not to get mixed up with him but hadn't obeyed her warning. Out of loneliness she had encouraged him. What else, going so often to the library, knowing he would be there? And she had stopped off with him, on their walks, for pizzas and coffee; had listened to his stories, discussed with him plans for college, talked at length about books he was reading; at the same time she had been concealing these meetings from her father and mother. He knew it, no wonder he had built up hopes.
The strange thing was there were times she felt she liked him very much. He was, in many ways, a worthwhile person, and where a man gave off honest feeling, was she a machine to shut off her own? Yet she knew she mustn't become seriously attracted to him because there would be trouble in buckets.
Trouble, thank you, she had had enough of. She wanted now a peaceful life without worryâany more worries. Friends they could be, in a minor key; she might on a moonlit night even hold hands with him, but beyond that nothing. She should have said something of the sort; he would have saved his presents for a better prospect and she would not now be feeling guilt at having hurt him. Yet in a way he had surprised her by his apparent depth of affection. She had not expected anything to happen so quickly, because, for her, things had happened in reverse order. Usually she fell in love first, then the man, if he wasn't Nat Pearl, responded. So the other way around was nice for a change, and she wished it would happen more often, but with the right one. She must go, she decided, less to the library; he would then understand, if he didn't already, and give up any idea of having her love. When he realized what was what he would get over his pain, if he really felt any. But her thoughts gave her no peace, and though she tried often, she could still not concentrate on her books. When Morris and Ida trudged through her room, her light was out and she seemed to be sleeping.
As she left the house for work the next morning, to her dismay she spied the carton containing his presents on top of some greasy garbage bags in the stuffed rubbish can at the curb. The cover of the can apparently had been squeezed down on the box but had fallen off and now lay on the sidewalk. Lifting the carton cover, Helen saw the two gifts, loosely covered with the tissue paper. Angered by the waste, she plucked the scarf and book out of the crushed cardboard box and went quickly into the hall with them. If she took them upstairs Ida would want to know what she had, so she decided to hide them in the cellar. She turned on the light and went quietly down, trying to keep her high heels from clicking on the stairs. Then she removed the tissue paper and hid the presents, neither of which had been harmed, in the bottom drawer of a broken chiffonier in their bin. The dirty tissue paper and red ribbons she rolled up in a sheet of old newspaper, then went upstairs and pressed it into the garbage
can. Helen noticed her father at the window, idly watching her. She passed into the store, said good morning, washed her hands and left for work. On the subway she felt despondent.
After supper that night, while Ida was washing dishes, Helen sneaked down into the cellar, got the scarf and book and carried them up to Frank's room. She knocked and nobody answered. She considered leaving them at the door but felt he would throw them away again unless she spoke to him first.
Tessie opened her door. “I heard him go out a while before, Helen.” Her eyes were on the things in her hands.
Helen blushed. “Thanks, Tessie.”
“Any message?”
“No.” She returned to her floor and once more pushed the gifts under her bed. Changing her mind, she put the book and scarf in different bureau drawers, hiding them under her underwear. When her mother came up she was listening to the radio.
“You going someplace tonight, Helen?”
“Maybe, I don't know. Maybe to the library.”
“Why so much to the library? You went a couple days ago.”
“I go to meet Clark Gable, Mama.”
“Helen, don't get fresh.”
Sighing, she said she was sorry.
Ida sighed too. “Some people want their children to read more. I want you to read less.”
“That won't get me married any faster.”
Ida knitted but soon grew restless and went down to the store again. Helen got out Frank's things, packed them in heavy paper she had bought on her way home, tied the bundle with cord, and took the trolley to the library. He wasn't there.
The next night she tried first his room, then when she was able to slip out of the house, again the library, but found him in neither place.
“Does Frank still work here?” she asked Morris in the morning.
“Of course he works.”
“I haven't seen him for a while,” she said. “I thought he might be gone.”
“In the summer he leaves.”
“Did he say that?”
“Mama says.”
“Does he know?”
“He knows. Why you ask me?”
She said she was just curious.
As Helen came into the hall that evening she heard the clerk descending the stairs and waited for him at the landing. Lifting his hat, he was about to pass when she spoke.
“Frank, why did you throw your two presents into the garbage?”
“What good were they to me?”
“It was a terrible waste. You should have got your money back.”
He smiled in the corners of his mouth. “Easy come, easy go.”
“Don't joke. I took them out of the rubbish and have them in my room for you. They weren't damaged.”
“Thanks.”
“Please give them back and get your money. You'll need every penny for the fall.”
“Since I was a kid I hate to go back with stuff I bought.”
“Then let me have the sales checks and I'll return them during my lunch hour.”
“I lost them,” he answered.
She said gently, “Frank, sometimes things turn out other than we plan. Don't feel hurt.”
“When I don't feel hurt, I hope they bury me.”
He left the house, she walked up the stairs.
Â
Over the week end Helen went back to crossing off the days on the calendar. She found she had crossed nothing
since New Year's. She fixed that. On Sunday the weather turned fair and she grew restless. She wished again for Nat to call her; instead his sister did and they walked, in the early afternoon, on the Parkway.
Betty was twenty-seven and resembled Sam Pearl. She was large-boned and on the plain side but made good use of reddish hair and a nice nature. She was in her ideas, Helen thought, somewhat dull. They had not too much in common and saw each other infrequently, but liked to talk once in a while, or go to a movie together. Recently Betty had become engaged to a CPA in her office and was with him most of the time. Now she sported a prosperous diamond ring on her stylish finger. Helen, for once, envied her, and Betty, as if she had guessed, wished her the same good luck.