Wait Until Spring, Bandini

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Wait Until Spring, Bandini Page 19

by John Fante


  ‘Who is this young man?’ she asked.

  ‘He’s my oldest boy,’ Bandini said.

  The Widow said: ‘Get that horrible thing off my grounds.’

  Ho, so she was that kind of a person! So that was the kind of a person she was! Immediately he made up his mind to do nothing about Jumbo, for he knew the dog was playing. And yet he like to believe that Jumbo was as ferocious as he pretended. He started toward the dog, walking deliberately, slowly. Bandini stopped him.

  ‘Wait,’ he said. ‘Let me handle this.’

  He seized the hammer and studied his pace toward Jumbo, who wagged his tail and vibrated as he panted. Bandini was within ten feet of him before he rose to his hind legs, stretched out his chin, and commenced his warning growl. That look on his father’s face, that determination to kill which rose out of bravado and pride because the Widow was standing there, sent him across the grass and with both arms he seized the short hammer and knocked it from Bandini’s tight fist. At once Jumbo sprang to action, leaving his prey and prowling steadily toward Bandini, who backed away. Arturo dropped to his knees and held Jumbo. The dog licked his face, growled at Bandini, and licked his face again. Every movement of Bandini’s arm brought an answering snarl from the dog. Jumbo wasn’t playing anymore. He was ready to fight.

  ‘Young man,’ the Widow said. ‘Are you going to take that dog out of here, or shall I call the police and have him shot?’

  It infuriated him.

  ‘Don’t you dare, damn you!’

  Jumbo leered at the Widow and showed his teeth.

  ‘Arturo!’ Bandini remonstrated. ‘That’s no way to talk to Mrs Hildegarde.’

  Jumbo turned to Bandini and silenced him with a snarl.

  ‘You contemptible little monster,’ the Widow said. ‘Svevo Bandini, are you going to allow this vicious boy to carry on like this?’

  ‘Arturo!’ Bandini snapped.

  ‘You peasants!’ the Widow said. ‘You foreigners! You’re all alike, you and your dogs and all of you.’

  Svevo crossed the lawn toward the Widow Hildegarde. His lips parted. His hands were folded before him.

  ‘Mrs Hildegarde,’ he said. ‘That’s my boy. You can’t talk to him like that. That boy’s an American. He is no foreigner.’ ‘I’m talking to you too!’ the Widow said.

  ‘Bruta animale!’ he said. ‘Puttana!’

  He spattered her face with spittle.

  ‘Animal that you are!’ he said. ‘Animal!’

  He turned to Arturo.

  ‘Come on,’ he said. ‘Let’s go home.’

  The Widow stood motionless. Even Jumbo sensed her fury and slunk away, leaving his noisome booty before her on the lawn. At the gravel path where the pines opened to the road down the hill, Bandini stopped to look back. His face was purple. He raised his fist.

  ‘Animal!’ he said.

  Arturo waited a few yards down the road. Together they descended the hard reddish trail. They said nothing, Bandini still panting from rage. Somewhere in the ravine Jumbo roamed, the thicket crackling as he plunged through. The clouds had banked at the peaks, and though the sun still shone, there was a touch of cold in the air.

  ‘What about your tools?’ Arturo said.

  ‘They’re not my tools. They’re Rocco’s. Let him finish the job. That’s what he wanted anyway.’

  Out of the thicket rushed Jumbo. He held a dead bird in his mouth, a very dead bird, dead many days now.

  ‘That damn dog!’ Bandini said.

  ‘He’s a good dog, Papa. He’s part bird dog.’

  Bandini looked at a patch of blue in the east.

  ‘Pretty soon we’ll have spring,’ he said.

  ‘We sure will!’

  Even as he spoke something tiny and cold touched the back of his hand. He saw it melt, a small star-shaped snowflake …

  Author’s Note

  Now that I am an old man I cannot look back upon Wait Until Spring, Bandini without losing its trail in the past. Sometimes, lying in bed at night, a phrase or a paragraph or a character from that early work will mesmerize me and in a half dream I will entwine it in phrases and draw from it a kind of melodious memory of an old bedroom in Colorado, or my mother, or my father, or my brothers and sister. I cannot imagine that what I wrote so long ago will soothe me as does this half dream, and yet I cannot bring myself to look back, to open this first novel and read it again. I am fearful, I cannot bear being exposed by my own work. I am sure I shall never read this book again. But of this I am sure: all of the people of my writing life, all of my characters are to be found in this early work. Nothing of myself is there any more, only the memory of old bedrooms, and the sound of my mother’s slippers walking to the kitchen.

  John Fante

  Wait Until Spring, Bandini

  Born in Denver on 8 April 1909, John Fante migrated to Los Angeles in his early twenties. He began writing in 1930 and had numerous short stories published in American magazines. Fante also wrote several collections of short stories and numerous screenplays, including Full of Life and Walk on the Wild Side.

  Wait Until Spring, Bandini was his first published novel and appeared in 1938. It was followed in 1939 by Ask the Dust, also produced as one of the Arturo Bandini cycle of novels. Though he made his living as a screenwriter, Fante was often out of place in a town built on celluloid dreams, and was not truly discovered as a great fiction writer until many years later.

  Stricken with diabetes in the 1950s, Fante died in 1983 at the age of 74. He was posthumously recognised in 1987 with a Lifetime Achievement Award by PEN, Los Angeles. He is now regarded as one of the finest writers of his generation.

  Also by John Fante

  Dago Red (later published as The Wine of Youth: Selected

  Stories of John Fante)

  Full of Life

  The Brotherhood of the Grape

  1933 Was a Bad Year

  West of Rome

  The Road to Los Angeles

  Ask the Dust

  Dreams From Bunker Hill

  The Big Hunger: Stories 1932–1959

  Selected Letters: 1932–1981

  Also published by Canongate

  The Bandini Quartet

  Copyright

  Published in Great Britain in 1999 by Rebel Inc.

  This edition first published in 2007 by

  Canongate Books Ltd, 14 High Street,

  Edinburgh, EH1 1TE

  This digital edition first published in 2009

  by Canongate Books

  Copyright © John Fante, 1938, 1983

  Introduction © Dan Fante, 1999

  All rights reserved

  British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

  A catalogue record for this book is available

  on request from the British Library

  ISBN 978 1 84767 648 1

  www.meetatthegate.com

 

 

 


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