It was very quiet and still that afternoon.
Then, suddenly, Martin began to hum. It surprised me, I don't know why exactly, but it was as if he had just ripped off his shirt and turned around and showed me his wings; or an extra pair of arms. I was careful not to look up: I knew there wasn't anybody else upstairs.
The melody swam through the heat and dust. But it wasn't ordinary humming, not at all. Each note was hit accurately and the piece was continued from its beginning to its end. When the notes got too high, or too low, he simply switched octaves. And it sent a shiver through me, because what he hummed was Beethoven's Pat hetique Sonata. Right straight through, transposed beautifully.
After a pause it began again, this time the fugue from Bloch's Concerto Grosso. And then some Bach I couldn't recognize.
This little man, who couldn't even put a book on a shelf right, who ran around like a half-killed chicken, like a scared mouse, singing to himself now, his eyes lost completely--they couldn't actually belong to the sad bundle of wet sticks and white skin!--this little man, singing and humming, so powerfully, so lovingly, that you forgot about him and you heard the music as it was written, the pianos, the violins, the flutes; and you heard every note, every note.
I never let him know that I heard, of course. I just listened, and whenever there were no customers, he would start. Today, In the Hall of the Mountain King; tomorrow, Adoramus Te Christe; the next day, Liebestod. Giant music and small music, Beethoven and Chopin, Moussorgsky and Jannequin and Mozart and Mendelssohn.
Finally, I couldn't take it any longer. I wormed a lunch out of Steinberg, the boss, and I pumped him, discreetly. It was disappointing, in a way . . . I'd hoped for more. In another way, it was not so disappointing.
Steinberg told me about how Martin Gershenson had once been the leading music critic for a newspaper in Germany.
About how he had once been married and how, one day, he and his family had been carried from their home and put into different concentration camps; and how Martin had escaped and learned, much later, that his wife and his two children had been executed.
How he had wandered the cities of the earth, afterwards . . .
From music critic to stockboy. I began trying to find him again, and once I tried whistling, something by Rachmaninoff. I got half-way through. He didn't pause for a moment. But he stopped singing.
Dust carefully, Martin! Go unload that shipment of Rand McNalley's, please, Martin! Don't forget to turn out the lights!
A smile, a jump, a running.
And a little reproachful look in those eyes, asking me why, why did I have to take his music away from him?
Gently and quietly--maybe once or twice a murmured, "Schnell? Oh, ja ja!" Gently and quietly, as quaint and funny as Gepetto, a funny character out of the comic pages, always rushing, taking the jokes of others, and smiling only at the children who came up with their mothers.
When he learned a little English, we tried him on a few customers. But he got red and frightened and nervous, and the cash register terrified him--he wouldn't touch it--so we had to take him off the job. He didn't complain.
And I kept wondering, why? With eyes like those, why was he so beaten and so frightened, so willing to fit any mold like hot lead?
"Don't worry," they used to say to me. "Forget it--he's happy. Leave him alone."
So I did.
Until I heard his music again. Something by Bloch, slow and full of sadness. He twisted each note and squeezed it and wrung out its sadness.
Outside, the rain washed over our thin roof like gravel. I was listening to the rain and to Martin's music, and thinking, when I heard the heavy footsteps on the stairs. At the same instant, Martin Gershenson quieted, and there was only the sound of those footsteps, slow and heavy.
The man wasn't unfamiliar to me: he'd been in a couple of times before, I remembered dimly. Now he wore a thick checkered overcoat, soggy with rain, and a wet gray hat.
"Yes, sir," I said to him. "Can we help you?"
"Perhaps," he said. There seemed to be a slight accent; that, or his English was too perfect. "I am looking for a nice set--I mean in good condition--of Eliot. George Eliot. Do you have that?"
He was a large person, thick-handed and rough-fleshed. Chinless, the neck fat drooled over his collar and swung loosely. His lips were dry and white and seemed joined by membrane when closed. But I think it was his nose that made me dislike him. Crooked, set at an angle on his face as if not quite tight on a pivot, the bridge broken and mashed against the white fat of upper cheeks. His eyes were merely eyes, soft as eggs. Perhaps a trifle small.
"I'll see," I said. Then I called, "Martin! Would you please see if we have a mint set of Eliot?" By this time the little man could understand English quite well.
"Ja--" His feet padded quickly over the floor, stopped, turned, were still.
The man was smiling. "Personally," he said, "I think the old lady is very funny, but there is a friend of mine that fancies her. A woman friend, of course. You know?"
Martin came running. Halfway across the room, he stopped. He appeared to stare, for a moment.
"We do not have this in stock," he said to me.
"No Eliot at all?" I asked.
"No," he said, paused another second, staring, and then went rushing back down the aisle into the back.
The big man was chuckling. "Well," he said, "perhaps no Eliot at all is the better present to my friend!" He thumbed through one of our special hand-tooled copies of Tristram Shandy.
"I'm sorry, sir," I said. "We're usually not so low in stock. But if you'd care to leave your name and address, we'll let you know when it--"
"It's all right," the man said, not lifting his eyes from the book. "I will come in again some time."
"If there's anything else we can do for you -
"Sangorsky," he said. "Good leather." His fat hands rubbed the red morocco binding.
"Yes. As you can see, we have the book marked at a considerable reduction--"
"You don't have this Eliot that I want, do you?"
"No sir. But, I tell you what. We can order it and it would only take a few days. Why don't you let us have your name and address and we'll contact you?"
He walked about examining the books. Then he lit a cigarette.
"Pencil," he said.
I gave him a pencil and he wrote down his name--John S. Parker--and his address.
"Yes, sir, we'll let you know the minute--"
"All right. You let me know." He pulled down a large Skira volume, glanced at it, put it back. He rubbed his nose. "It is wet out," he said.
"It sure is. Not bookstore weather."
"You let me know, young man."
He turned and went down the stairs.
It was soon very quiet again, except for the rain.
Martin was padding about in the back. Slowly; not fast, like always before.
I thought about the look on his face when he had caught sight of the new customer, about the man's strangeness, his accent; I thought about concentration camps.
Then, suddenly, I knew. I knew beyond all doubt.
Martin had found what he was looking for.
Later, at home, I built the story in my mind. I dressed it up, gave it plot and structure.
I even wrote the newspaper headline:
MAN BRUTALLY SLAIN IN APARTMENT!
And the picture, not a good one, but clear enough to make out the fat face and the crooked nose.
I composed the story with a sick feeling, the feeling you get when you hear of the death of someone you know--not necessarily a friend--just anyone you've ever seen or spoken with.
A man identified as John S. Parker was found dead in his apartment at 734 No. Sweetzer early yesterday evening by his landlady. Parker was the victim of a brutal attack by an unknown assailant. According to the police report, he was hacked fifty-three times with an axe about the face, neck and chest. There were evidences of other atrocities: cigarette burns about the legs and ar
mpits, deep bruises in the abdominal region. No motive for the crime known . . .
Later reports--it was Sunday: I had plenty of time to construct the drama-- revealed further information. The murdered man's name was not John Parker. It was Carl Haber. And he was in America illegally. Hiding. Because he had once been Colonel Carl Haber, and he had once run the show at one of the smaller concentration camps in Germany--one of the missing cogs in that well-oiled machine, the Third Reich. Missing until now.
The papers had the full story for their evening editions.
Haber, nee Parker, had slipped into the country by the kind offices of a friend in Venezuela. He had some money. He loved books. He had taken an apartment, a small bachelor's, and lived the quiet life of a retired businessman, a widower, perhaps.
And this man with the crooked nose and the fat neck had waited, for the world to forget about the millions of human beings he had helped consign to the lime kilns and the brick ovens and the shower rooms with hot-and-cold running carbon monoxide.
But somebody hadn't forgotten.
One of the city's sensational sheets got a hold of a picture of Haber's body. You couldn't look at it for long.
It was impossible to believe that one man could have had the strength or the fury or the hatred to do what was done to Haber.
The blood-smeared thing in the photograph--I saw it as clearly as if I had been holding it in my hand--wasn't human. It was a pile of carrion, like a dog after a truck has run over it, or like meat that's been picked over by hawks.
And the unknown assailant . . . Who could tell?
I thought of nothing all day but this one thing, of Martin, little ineffectual Martin, with his musician's hands bloody, the vengeance out of him.
Next day I scrutinized the papers. They told of a disaster at sea. They spoke of senators and dogs and starlets. But they did not speak of John S. Parker.
Well, I thought, not even aware of my disappointment, well, perhaps he's biding his time. Perhaps tomorrow.
Things were the same at work. I recall that I considered that ironic--that things should be the same. Martin was there as usual, not smiling, not frowning, hurrying up and down the aisles of books with his broom, hurrying just as fast as his short legs would carry him--Switch! Switch!--and the dust clouds after him, plumed and rolling. Martin, with his clown's suit and his bushy brows and his bright ferret's eyes caught in their pasty prisons…
Outside, it was raining, the same rain that had fallen when 'John S. Parker' came to buy his set of Eliot. It was a gravel-spray on the roof, a steady monotonous dripping, drumming.
"Good morning, Martin," I said.
Stop; turn; silent smile; then, quick, back to the sweeping.
Somehow, I don't think I was surprised to hear him sing--although I ought to have been surprised. He did, softly, from the back of the store. Melodies in a minor key, sad, haunting, and so full of these things that when the customers came in they stopped and looked up from their books and listened, strangely moved.
All day he sang, as he might breathe. The second movement for the Eroica, the Allegretto from the Seventh symphony, Block and Dvorak and Tchaikovsky and Mahler, over and over, while he worked.
And I wanted to go to him and shake his hand grimly and tell him that I knew and understood, understood completely, and therefore did not blame him. I wanted to let him know that he could trust me. I would betray his secret to no one, and John S. Parker's unknown assailant would remain unknown, forever.
But, of course, I didn't say these things. I merely waited, watching the little man, listening to him, studying his face to see if it would give any hint of what lay beneath. I thought of him with the axe in his hands, swinging the axe, repaying the beefy German in full,
And the day wore on.
Next morning I got the first paper off the stand. I'd spent a sleepless night, tossing, arguing that it was better this way; that I must not call the police and spoil things.
But there was nothing in the paper. Or in any other paper.
And the day was the same.
I decided then that Parker's body had not been discovered yet. That was the answer. It was lying crumpled where Martin had left it three days ago! So I suffered through the hours and drove straight to the address Parker had given me.
It was a small stucco apartment, neat, old, respectable.
I knocked on the door, trembling.
John Parker opened the door. "Yes?" he said, his voice heavily accented. "Yes?"
"We have a lead on those Eliot's," I said. "I happened to be passing by and thought you might like to know."
"Thank you, young man. That was nice. Thank you."
I looked at him as one would at a corpse suddenly brought to life, his wounds made well, his torn flesh whole.
Then I went home and tried to laugh.
But laughing is a lonely thing when you've no one to share the joke. So I went back outside and drank whiskey until I couldn't think about the little man.
Next day Martin didn't show up for work. He called up and said he was sick.
He never came back.
But John Parker did. The big man with the crooked nose still comes up to browse through the books, every now and then. I chat with him: he even calls me Len now. But I don't like him. Not a bit.
Because he makes me think of Martin. Because he makes me wonder if I'd been so wrong, after all, if my imagination had run quite so wild.
Perhaps Martin did find what he had been looking for. And perhaps, once finding it, he had decided it was not worth having, or that he lacked the strength to keep it. And perhaps John S. Parker is something more than John S. Parker.
And perhaps not.
I'm afraid I'll never know. But I'm also afraid that I'll never forget the little man with the bright eyes and the hurrying feet and the sad face.
I hope he's still taking his medicine, wherever he is.
* * *
THE CARNIVAL
* * *
The cool October rain and the wind blowing the rain. The green and yellow fields melting into grey hills, into grey sky and black clouds. And everywhere, the smell of autumn drinking the coolness, the evening coolness gathering in leaves and wheat alfalfa, running down fat brown bark, whispering through rich grass to tiny living things.
The cool rain, glistening on earth and on smooth cement.
"Come on, Lars, I'll beat you!"
"Like fun you will!"
Two boys with fresh wet faces and cold wet hands.
"Last one there is a sissy!"
Wild shouts through the stillness and a scrambling onto bicycles. A furious pedaling through sharp pinpoints of rain, one boy pulling ahead of the other, straining up the shining cement, laughing and calling.
"Just try and catch me now, just try!"
"I'll catch you all right, you wait!"
"Last one there is a sissy, last one there is a sissy!"
Faster now, flying past the crest of the hill, faster down the hill and into the blinding rain. Faster, small feet turning, wheels spinning, along the smooth level. Flying, past outdoor signs and sleeping cows, faster, past strawberry fields and haystacks, little excited blurs of barns and houses and siloes.
"Okay, I'm going to beat you, I'm going to beat you!"
A thin voice lost in the wind.
"I'll get to the trestle 'way before you, just watch!"
Lars Nielson pushed the pedals angrily and strained his young body forward, gripping the handlebars and singing for more speed. He felt the rain whipping through his hair and into his ears and he screamed happily.
He closed his eyes and listened to his voice, to the slashing wind and to the wheels of his bicycle turning in the wetness. Whizzing baseballs in his head, swooping chicken hawks and storm currents racing over beds of light leaves.
He did not hear the small voice crying to him, far in the distance.
"Who's the sissy, who'll be the sissy?" Lars Nielson sang to the whirling world beside him and his legs
pushed harder and harder.
His eyes were closed, so he did not see the face of the frightened man. His ears were full, so he did not hear the screams and the brakes and all the other terrible sounds. The sudden, strange unfamiliar sounds that were soft and quiet as those in his mind were loud.
He pushed his young legs in the black darkness, harder, faster, faster…
The room was mostly blue. In the places where it had not chipped and cracked, the linoleum floor was a deep quiet blue. The walls, specially handpattered, were soft greenish blue. And the rows of dishes on high display shelves, the paint on the cane rockers, the tablecloth, Mother's dress, Father's tie--all blue.
Even the smoke from Father's pipe, creeping and slithering up into the thick air like long blue ghosts of long blue snakes.
Lars sat quietly, watching the blue.
"Henrik." Mrs. Nielson stopped her rocking.
"Yes, yes?"
"It is by now nine o'clock."
Mr. Nielson took a large gold watch from his vest pocket.
"It is, you are right. Lars, it is nine o'clock."
Lars nodded his head.
"So." Mr. Nielson rose from his chair and stretched his arms. "It is time. Say goodnight to your mama."
"Goodnight, Mama."
"Goodnight."
"So."
Mr. Nielson took the wooden bar in his big hands and pushed the chair gently past the doorway and down the hall. With his foot he pushed the door open and when they were inside the bedroom, he pulled the string which turned on the electric light.
He walked to the front of the chair.
"Lars, you feel all right now? Nothing hurts?"
"No, Papa. Nothing hurts."
Mr. Nielson put his hands into his pockets and sat on the sideboard of the bed.
"Mama is worried."
"Mama shouldn't."
"She did not like for you to be mean to the dog."
"I wasn't mean."
"You did not play with it. I watched, you did not talk to the dog. Boys should like dogs and Mama is worried. Already she took it away."
The Howling Man Page 50