The Railway Police and the Last Trolley Ride (18 page)

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Authors: Hortense Calisher

Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Short Stories (Single Author)

BOOK: The Railway Police and the Last Trolley Ride
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But under the trees, the air was surely black, in a patent-leather night with a gloss whose source could no longer be seen, and the ground was dry. Jim saw his own coat, miraculous on the ground, and couldn’t remember laying it there. Then it was the moment that the locusts stopped, and in that buzzing silence, he thought he remembered everything else.

He could see the barge-canal, the lock bearded with green at the waterline, then the pocked brick and the flower-stuck crannies of the sides—if the barge was coming up in the lock—or the waving weeds on the lock’s broad lip, even under the crossbeam of the gate, if the barge was sinking down. He could see the linkage, like an overhead wire or an underwater length of line, between trolleys and barges, though what it meant he couldn’t say, or why it was a woman, the frittering women, who made him see it; she and this were fathoms deep. The war names came on now as never before and tumbled through his kisses, from Verdun to Chateau-Thierry, all the great plaque-names he had never been at, down at the bottom the faintest script of those he had—and all telling him what up to now he had avoided: that it was his lot, his common lot to have to choose between terror and charm in all the moments of life past and to come—either to remember blood and death, to rise on their crests toward acts of atonement and change he knew he was not capable of—or to sink, sink, in the arms of the daily, under the daily charm. He remembered the washlines of that spring, and their mystery; what was the message of daily life, of a profundity that never stopped?

As he wrestled there, the town came and stood at his side, almost as if it needed to have people break out and away from its conversations—even lived by it. By how much or how often a man himself broke out of it, was that how his life was made?

And all the time, there was Emily hot as roses under him, learned in all that Europe hadn’t taught him, or virginally born to it. She made him feel as if she was on the barge—a figurehead of those lost certainties—and he was on the land. The doubletalk that belonged to life was inside her. He reached it. She played him up and down like a ball on a fountain, and all the time, he saw the seriousness of her eyes.

When they came back to where the four cars were still lined up on the track, with the electric lights on again inside, they managed to attach themselves to a noisy young group just coming out of the woods from another direction, their trumped-up catcalls and banter fake even to themselves. “Why—” he whispered to Emily, doing it for the intimacy—“the woods are full of us.” Looking back, he whispered to her, “Anyway, we’ve left the town there.” He was bold enough to say so, if somewhat darkly, to the mate, not a week later, when certain preparations were already in order. Whatever Emily thought, they had stepped back into the car just then, and she had turned majestic, her cotton dress somehow straight as tin again; that he had slipped beneath it surely no one would believe. Nothing showed on him he felt sure, not even to his friend. When things go so right, a man’s flesh—and I suppose a woman’s—feels calm and even, doesn’t it? Only the mind, mindless to its roots, is drenched.

The interior of their car, left in the pall of one red lamp, had changed. Now that the current was back on, it was bathed in yellow light reflected from all that varnished wood and cane, portaled by the in-pressing dark. In other ways too, it was like a picture. The mate and Lottie were the center of it. They hadn’t changed their seat, instead seemed to have grown there, with big hamper and box beside them, or was it that the balance of the car—old wives and young, widows and a few men either old or woman-humbled—had turned to or gathered round them? The mate glanced up once as the others trooped in; he was talking. All were listening to him. Lottie’s eyes were gleaming, and her fresh mouth too; though candy was circulating from a big goldpaper box beside her, no one would know she ever ate the stuff, except for the heap of candypapers in her lap, between her demurely draped knees. The mate had been telling them what people ate and drank in the county of Lancashire where he was a boy, such talk being a way to the hearts of many, as well to one. He had been discoursing for some time.

“They’ll offer you tea, luv,” he was saying—to everybody, or to one. “And they’ll offer you what they call ‘ornaments’ with it. ‘Ornaments, luv?’ they’ll say.” His voice was charming, self-charming. “And what’ll they mean by this?” He roared it.

Just then, Emily and Jim sat down in the seat across the aisle, and they and the others who were trickling in, immediately they were seated, turned round to watch him.

“What’ll they mean?” he asked in a smaller voice, like an actor. He flicked one glance at the pair in the opposite seat, then did not look at them again. “Why—” he said, in the big voice “—why, they’ll mean whisky, or rum!” He turned to Lottie. Sitting down next one another, their eyes were just even, he being short legged but long waisted, her waist being where one could not quite tell. “That’s what they’ll say, luv,” he said to her, and for her only. “‘Will you have ornaments?’”

But if nobody therefore looked at Jim or Emily, or seemed to search for other miscreants, this didn’t mean nobody knew, or wasn’t going to gossip about such walks in the woods, later. If they let it go for now, this was because another morsel had been handed them, more tangible, and—wrapped in candypaper as it was—more palatable. This way the town could claim itself audience only to what happened in ways which were seemly. This way, the proprieties were kept—and the mate and Lottie were assisted by them. And no one at that time, not even Jim and Emily, took their need of such assistance as a sign. For in the sight of all, as is said in the marriage service—in the golden, interior light of half-past ten of an August voyage, in that arkful of people, idly waiting among the crumbs and the children sleeping like pigeons, waiting to ride home again—as well as to endorse, countenance and recall by date any and all contracts or other engagements entered upon during said voyage—in the sight of all, Lottie and the mate were holding hands. As the motormen signaled one to the other, and the train of cars was off again, this time to ride silkily all the way home, the mate stretched an arm straight across the back of their seat, but the hand dangling on her shoulder, and began singing. He had a light baritone voice, sweet enough to be a tenor’s had he been Irish, and he was singing the catch he’d begun the morning with.

“Four
arms,
two necks, one
wreathing,
” he sang, “Four lips, two hearts, one
breathing;
fa
la-a-ah,
fa la-a-ah, fa la la la la
la!

Through all the bypasses of the night, the whippoorwill starts, and once a stop and an owl-call, as we went banging through the countryside, he sang it. “Four lips that
mul-ti-ply,
all in-ter-change-a-bly!” and after a while some in the car answered him: “Fa fa-ah-a, fa la-ah-a, fa la la la la
la!
” There was the special smell; combined with the clinging odor of fritters, it made a perfume they knew they were never going to smell again. The lights were out again now, but only for the babies’ sakes; the motorman’s searchlight, cast on the tracks, seemed the other end of a glowworm—a trolley car is long. Deep in its well somewhere, a voice called out, “This is the life!” and another answered, “This
is
life,” and a third one said, “Oh, razzmatazz,” and none was identified—who speaks in his own voice? But everybody knew what was meant; we were just as smart in those days—in our Greek-revival farmhouses, which we didn’t even know bore the name—and before, back to the days of Greeks a-riding the Aegean, in what was probably called the last trireme. People have that kind of dull knowledge built in the bones by time; it’s only poetry and uncomfortable when they mention it. Or song. So they rode on, and at last came the solemn forever, the stop. It was the last time, the last in life or eternity, and each leaned back in his seat with the pleasure of one who had survived even that. People make these solemn ceremonies for themselves of course, just the way they have to cast back and cast back over an event of love, to help remember they’ve had it.

Short of weddings not one’s own, somebody said—or funerals ditto, somebody added—all were agreed it was a perfect experience. And so, Jim and the mate named Jim and the sisters Pardee had their audience, captive to them as they were captive to it, and this was the way, with a fa and a la, two and two made four.

Weddings are supposed to be all the same, it being the long, long road winding away from them that counts. We ought to describe these two nevertheless, leaving you, the fruit of them, to judge.

Lottie, as the elder, was to be married first—“Did you know she was older, Jim?” asked the mate, and when Jim nodded slowly, the mate came back with: “Oh, not that it matters, I’ve still got the edge on her; it’s only that sometimes, it’s hard to believe.” He was leaning in his old place for talk, in the dining-room archway of the little house they shared, and he looked less burly than usual; the worries of approaching matrimony had scored dark circles under his eyes.

“Emily does—look older,” said Jim carefully. During these intervening weeks, though confidences had come to a standstill for the moment, in a queer way this had further ripened the friendship; since the old, dangerous nights in French territory, they hadn’t been so tender and sparing of each other’s feelings and needs.

“Ah—it’s not looks.” The mate spoke judiciously also, now that each was speaking of his partner’s choice. “That’s a wonderful girl you’ve got there.”

“There’s no one like her,” said Jim with a deep laugh he couldn’t help; he was stunned by her, enthralled. He and she were meeting daily in all the places that were open to rural lovers, building themselves the kind of private legend that never hurts a marriage; he had climbed out of her window; they had slept naked in leaves. Often he had climbed in his own window at dawn. Lottie might have kept herself from knowing what her sister surely didn’t speak of, but the mate couldn’t help knowing of it.

“Ah, that’s where I differ.” All this ah-ing was part of the mate’s new manner, as practical master of his own romance. “Lottie’s—like everyone else. And I shan’t mind that, you see. It’ll be a help.” He waggled his forelock, where once he might have clapped Jim’s shoulder. “But
she’s
just right for
you,
you old dreamer. Whatever you do.” This was the first casual reference to another decision—to split their business destiny—since the decision had been made. “So we’re both satisfied.”

It was the uneasiest conversation they had ever had between them, but still the mate lingered.

“Goes a bit heavy on the eats,” he said. There was no doubt of course as to of which sister he spoke. He looked over at Jim—gawking there by the mantelpiece as if he was pinned to it. “But that’s good for the milk then, Jim, isn’t it?”

“The milk?” It took Jim a blush to understand. “I suppose,” he said then, imitating the mate’s heavy manner. “Seems to be I have heard that. Yes, I suppose. And beer too, they have to drink, don’t they.” Mercifully the phone rang—as it did a lot these days—interrupting this exchange on nursing mothers. From the way the mate answered, it was Lottie, and Jim signaled quickly, as usual, for the mate to take the car. A car was still conspicuous; he and Emily went shanks’ mare. Lottie and the mate went much to restaurants. So, here too, as the mate said, everybody was satisfied.

Later though, to Emily, Jim spoke of his own doubts, though delicately, not mentioning the milk. For you must understand that though he and she might not be every conventionally plighted couple of those days, socially, just the same, they were living through a state of being which is almost unknown now. In those days, the “engagement period” was as much a part of the common experience, and with actions and emotions proper to it, as is today the state of being divorced. It was the time when the male, being usually the less innocent, had to act it the more, while the woman formally took over the future of their days. Was he being less responsible than the mate? “Children—” he said. “Of course, we’ll have them. But I have to tell you something.” He hesitated. “I—never really think of them much. To tell the truth, I never think of them at all.” Was he unnatural?

Truly there must have been few like her, for she only laughed, as he told the mate later. “It’s because we daren’t,” she said. But a few more days later, speaking of her sister and the mate—which Jim didn’t mention to the mate, though Lottie may have—she said, “I don’t want to think about
them;
that’s who I don’t want to think of. I’ve told Lottie that!” Jim was left to wonder why, and to chalk it up to engagements. When he asked her, she said only again “I’d rather not think about them at all.”

Despite which, the wedding was a double one. All the considerations which throng at such times had forced it. Counting in Oriskany, there were three houses to be disposed of, and two jobs. Here money came into it, with a bouncing surprise. The Pardees were indeed fairly poor now, but by the cleverly twisted will of a father not inclined to trust too long in horses or women, as soon as his daughters married men acceptable to the will’s trusteeship—and who would doubt that Jim and the mate would be—each girl would be ten thousand dollars rich. It was a will which mightn’t have held water if tried in court elsewhere—even as drawn by Sand Spring’s most prominent lawyer, whose partner was a trustee—but recall that in those small days, the town was the court. After that disclosure, came the effects, each to each, of that much money. Oriskany, the mate’s choice just as the idea of a garage had been, clearly fell to the mate; with Lottie’s dowry he could buy it on his own—and begin. Jim liked the Pardee house well enough, the more so for its being on water; he and Emily would take it, with fair compensation to the other two of course, and think awhile whether to sell, or stay and somehow make use of the land. The mate, because of the needs of his house, would have to give up his surveyor’s job; for the same reason, Jim would keep his factory one. The mate would need the car. All four would work together beforehand to put both houses in order, tidy for destiny—and dynasty. Jim’s house, the house of the two men’s bachelordom, would be sold.

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