“Aa! Wodda yuh wan’ us tuh play?”
“Yuh c’n play lottos.”
“I don’ wanna play lottos,” he whined.
“Den play school den.”
“I don’ wanna play school.”
“Den don’ play nuttin!” she said with finality.
A large bubble of saliva swelled from Yussie’s lips as he squeezed his face down to blubber. “I’ll tell mama on you!”
“Tell! She’ll give yuh a smack!” She whirled threateningly on David. “Wadda you wanna play?”
“I don’ know,” he drew back.
“Doncha know no games?” she fumed.
“I—I know tag an’ I know, I know hide an’ gussee’.”
Yussie revived. “Let’s play hide an’ gussee’.”
“No!”
“You too!” he coaxed desperately. “C’mon, you too.”
Annie thought it over.
“C’mon I’ll be it!” And immediately, he leaned his face against the edge of a bureau and began counting. “G’wan hide!” he broke off.
“Wait!” shrilled Annie, hopping off. “Count twenny!”
David scurried behind the arm chair.
He was found last and accordingly was “it” next. In a little while the game grew very exciting. Since David was somewhat unfamiliar with the arrangement of the house, it chanced that several times he hid with Yussie when Annie was it and with Annie when Yussie was it. They had crouched together in barricaded corners and behind the bedroom door.
However, just as the game was reaching its greatest pitch, Mrs. Mink’s voice suddenly called out from the kitchen.
“Yussele! Yussele, my treasure, come here!”
“Aa!” from somewhere came Yussie’s exasperated bleat.
David, who was “it” at the time, stopped counting and turned around.
“Yussie!” Mrs. Mink cried again, but this time shriller.
“Can’t do nuttin’,” complained Yussie, crawling out from under the bureau. “Waddayuh want?” he bellowed.
“Come here. I want you to go down stairs for a minute.”
Annie, evidently aware that the game was over for the time being, came out of the adjoining bedroom. “He has to go down?”
“Yea,” diffidently. “Fuh bread.”
“Den we can’t play.”
“No. I’m gonna go back tuh my modder.”
“Stay hea,” she commanded, “We gonna play. Waid’ll Yussie comes back.”
The voices from the kitchen indicated that Yussie had been persuaded. He reappeared, dressed in coat and hat. “I’m goin’ down,” he announced, and went out again. An uncomfortable pause ensued.
“We can’t play till he comes back,” David reminded her.
“Yes, we can.”
“Wot?”
“Wotcha want.”
“I don’t know wot.”
“Yuh know wot.”
“Wot?”
“Yuh know,” she said mysteriously.
That was the game then. David congratulated himself on having discovered its rules so quickly.
“Yea, I know,” he answered in the same tone of mystery.
“Yea?” she peered at him eagerly.
“Yea!” he peered at her in the same way.
“Yuh wanna?”
“Yea!”
“Yuh wanna den?”
“Yea, I wanna.” It was the easiest game he had ever played. Annie was not so frightening after all.
“W’ea?”
“W’ea?” he repeated.
“In the bedroom,” she whispered.
But she was really going!
“C’mon,” she motioned, tittering.
He followed. This was puzzling.
She shut the door: he stood bewildered in the gloom.
“C’mon,” she took his hand. “I’ll show yuh.”
He could hear her groping in the dark. The sound of an unseen door opening. The closet door.
“In hea,” she whispered.
What was she going to do? His heart began to race.
She drew him in, shut the door. Darkness, immense and stale, the reek of moth balls threading it.
Her breathing in the narrow space was loud as a gust, swooping down and down again. His heart throbbed in his ears. She moved toward him, nudged him gently with the iron slat of her brace. He was frightened. Before the pressure of her body, he retreated slightly. Something rolled beneath his feet. What? He knew instantly, and recoiled in disgust—the trap!
“Sh!” she warned. “Take me aroun’.” She groped for his hands.
He put his arms about her.
“Now let’s kiss.”
His lips touched hers, a muddy spot in vast darkness.
“How d’you play bad?” she asked.
“Bad? I don’ know,” he quavered.
“Yuh wan’ me to show how I?”
He was silent, terrified.
“Yuh must ask me,” she said. “G’wan ask me.”
“Wot?”
“Yuh must say, Yuh wanna play bad? Say it!”
He trembled. “Yuh wanna play bad?
“Now, you said it,” she whispered. “Don’ forget, you said it.”
By the emphasis of her words, David knew he had crossed some awful threshold.
“Will yuh tell?”
“No,” he answered weakly. The guilt was his.
“Yuh swear?”
“I swear.”
“Yuh know w’ea babies comm from?”
“N-no.”
“From de knish.”
-Knish?
“Between de legs. Who puts id in is de poppa. De poppa’s god de petzel. Yaw de poppa.” She giggled stealthily and took his hand. He could feel her guiding it under her dress, then through a pocket-like flap. Her skin under his palm. Revolted, he drew back.
“Yuh must!” she insisted, tugging his hand. “Yuh ast me!”
“No!”
“Put yuh han’ in my knish,” she coaxed. “Jus’ once.”
“No!”
“I’ll hol’ yuh petzel.” She reached down.
“No!” His flesh was crawling.
“Den take me ’round again.”
“No! No! Lemme oud!” he pushed her away.
“Waid. Yussie’ll t’ink we’re hidin’.”
“No! I don’ wanna!” He had raised his voice to a shout.
“So go!” she gave him an angry push.
But David had already opened the door and was out.
She grabbed him as he crossed the bedroom. “If you tell!” she whispered venomously. “W’ea yuh goin’?”
“I’m goin tuh my mamma!”
“Stay hea! I’ll kill yuh, yuh go inside!” She shook him.
He wanted to cry.
“An’ don’ cry,” she warned fiercely, and then strove desperately to engage him, “Stay hea an’ I’ll tell yuh a story. I’ll let yuh play fiuhman. Yuh c’n have a hat. Yuh c’n climb on de foinichuh. Stay hea!”
He stood still, watching her rigidly, half hypnotized by her fierce, frightened eyes. The outer door was opened. Yussie’s voice in the kitchen.
A moment later, he came in, breathlessly stripping off his coat.
“I god a penny,” he crowed.
“Yuh c’n play fiuhman, if yuh wan’,” she said severely.
“No foolin’? Yeh? H’ray! C’mon, Davy!”
But David held back. “I don’ wanna play.”
“C’mon,” Yussie grabbed a sheet of newspaper and thrust it into his hands. “We mus’ make a hat.”
“G’wan make a hat,” commanded Annie.
Cowed and almost sniffling, David began folding the paper into a hat.
He played listlessly, one eye always on Annie who watched his every move. Yussie was disgusted with him.
“David!” his mother’s voice calling him.
Deliverance at last! With a cry of relief, he tore off the fireman’s hat, ran down the frontroom stairs into the kitchen.
His mother was standing; she seemed about to leave. He pressed close to her side.
“We must go now,” she said smiling down at him. “Say good night to your friends.”
“Good night,” he mumbled.
“Please don’t hurry off,” said Mrs. Mink. “It’s been such a pleasure to have you here.”
“I really must go. It’s past his bed time.”
David was in the van stealthily tugging his mother toward the door.
“This hour I have been in heaven,” said Mrs. Mink. “You must come often! I am never busy.”
“Many thanks.”
They hurried down the drafty stairs.
“I heard you playing in the frontroom,” she said. “You must have enjoyed your visit.”
She unlocked the door, lit the gas lamp.
“Dear God! The room has grown cold.” And picking up the poker, she crouched before the stove, shook down the dull embers behind the grate. “I’m glad you enjoyed yourself. At least one of us has skimmed a little pleasure out of this evening! What folly! And that Mrs. Mink. If I had known she talked so much, drays could not have dragged me up there!” She lifted the coal scuttle, shook some coal vehemently into the stove. “Her tongue spun like a bobbin on a sewing machine—and she sewed nothing. It’s unbelievable! I began to see motes before my eyes.” She shook her head impatiently and put down the coal scuttle. “My son, do you know your mother’s a fool? But you’re tired, aren’t you? Let me put you to bed.”
Kneeling down before him, she began unbuttoning his shoes. When she had pulled his stockings off, she lifted his legs, examined them a moment, then kissed each one. “Praise God, your body is sound! How I pity that poor child upstairs!”
But she didn’t know as he knew how the whole world could break into a thousand little pieces, all buzzing, all whining, and no one hearing them and no one seeing them except himself.
VIII
WHEN David awoke the next morning, it seemed to him that he had been lying in bed a long while with eyes open but without knowing who or where he was. Memory had never been so tardy in returning. He could almost feel his brain fill up like a bottle under a slow tap. Reluctant antennae groped feebly into the past. Where? What? One by one the shuttles stirred, awoke, knit morning to night, night to evening. Annie! Oh! Desperately he shook his head, but could not shake the memory out.
The window.… Snow still falling through the dull light of the alley, banked whitely against the sill, encroaching on the pane. David stared a while at the sinking patterns of the flakes. They fell with slow simplicity if you watched them, swiftly and devious if you looked beyond. Their monotonous descent gave him an odd feeling of being lifted higher and higher; he went floating until he was giddy. He shut his eyes.
From the street somewhere, came the frosty ring of a shovel scraping the stony sidewalk, a remote and drowsy sound.
All this stir when the world seemed trying to sleep, saddened him. Why did anyone have to clear away the snow; why did anyone disturb it? He would rather the snow were on the ground all year. The thin sound of the shovel gave him a feeling of sluggish resentment. He drew his legs up and bent his head toward his knees. Warm bed-clothes, the odor of sleep.
He would have dozed again, but the door opened. His mother came in and sat down at the edge of the bed.
“Asleep?” she asked, then bent down and kissed him. “It’s time to get up for school.” And sighing, she threw back the bed-clothes, and pivoted him to a sitting posture on the bed. He whimpered drowsily, then rose, shivering when his feet touched the cold floor and followed her. The kitchen was warm. She slipped his night gown from over his head and helped him dress. When he was washed and combed, he sat down to breakfast. He ate listlessly and without relish.
“You don’t seem to be very hungry?” she inquired. “You’ve hardly touched the oatmeal. Would you like more milk?”
“No. I’m not hungry.”
“An egg?”
He shook his head.
“I shouldn’t have kept you up so late. You look weary. Do you remember the strange dream you had last night?”
“Yes.”
“How did such a strange dream come to you?” she mused. “A woman with a child who turned loathsome, a crowd of people following a black-bird. I don’t understand it. But my, how you screamed!”
Why did she have to remind him of it again. The vigil afterwards waiting for sleep. Annie!
“Why did you kick the table so?”
“I don’t know.”
“Is it a growing pain?” she laughed. “But they say those happen only in sleep. Are you awake?” She looked at the clock. “Just a little more milk?”
“No.”
“You’ll have more at lunch then,” she warned. “But it’s time now you were going.” She fetched his leggings and kneeling down buttoned them on. “Shall I go with you?”
“I can go by myself.”
“Perhaps you ought to wait for Yussie or his sister.”
The very thought made him shudder inwardly. He knew he would run from them if he met them. He shook his head.
“Will you go right into the school and not stay too long in the snow?”
“Yes.” He let down the furry ear-laps of his cap as he put it on. His books were on the wash-tub.
“Good-bye, then,” she stooped to kiss him. “Such an indifferent kiss! I don’t think you love me this morning.”
But David offered no other. He took one step through the door, started with fear, remembering. He turned. “Mama, will you leave the door open till—till I’m gone—till you hear me down-stairs?”
“Child! What’s wrong with you? Very well, I will. Does that dream still hover in your mind?”
“Yes,” he felt relieved that she had given him an excuse.
“You had better go now. I’ll wait in the door-way.”
Feeling ashamed of himself and yet not a little supported by her presence in the doorway, David hurried out. At the bottom of the stairs the cellar door was still shut. He eyed it with horror, his heart quickening in his bosom.
“Mama?” he called.
“Yes.”
He sprang from the steps, three at a time, more than he had ever tried before, stumbled to his knees, dropping his strap of books, but the next moment shot to his feet again, and sped like a hunted thing to the pale light of the doorway.
The silent white street waited for him, snow-drifts where the curb was. Footfalls silent. Before the houses, the newly swept areas of the sidewalks, black, were greying again. Flakes cold on cheek, quickening. Narrow-eyed, he peered up. Black overhead the flakes were, black till they sank below a housetop. Then suddenly white. Why? A flake settled on his eye-lash; he blinked, tearing with the wet chill, lowered his head. Snow trodden down by passing feet into crude, slippery scales. The railings before basements gliding back beside him, white pipes of snow upon them. He scooped one up as he went. Icy, setting the blood tingling, it gathered before the plow of his palm. He pressed it into a ball, threw it from one hand to the other until he dropped it.
He turned the first corner at the end of the street, turned the second. Would it be there again? He quickened his pace. It was still hanging there beside the doorway. This was the third day he had seen it, and each time he had forgotten to ask what it meant. What could it mean? The green leaves were half concealed in snow; even the purple ribbon was covered. The poor white flowers looked frozen. He stared at them thoughtfully and passed on.
He turned the last corner. Voices of children. School a little ways off, on the other side of the street.
If he saw Annie there, what would he do? Look away. Walk by—
Must cross. Before him at the corner, children were crossing a beaten path in the snow. Beside him, the untrodden white of the gutter. He stopped. Here was a place to cross. Not a single footprint, only a wagon rut. Better not. The ridge of snow near the curb was almost as tall as himself. But none had crossed before. It would be his own, all his own path. Yes. He
took a running jump, only partly cleared the first ridge, landed in snow almost as high as his knees. Behind him several voices called out, jeering, but he plunged forward, plunged forward to the lower level. Shouldn’t have done it! He would be all covered with it now, wet. But how miraculously clean it was, all about him, whiter than anything he knew, whiter than anything, whiter. The second ridge was packed harder than the first; he climbed up, almost sank, jumped for safety to the other side, hastily brushed himself off. Sidewalk snow, riddled with salt, tramped down by the feet of children, reddened with ashes, growing dirtier as it neared the school.
At the sound of laughter, he looked up. In front of him, straddled two boys, vying with each other, each squirting urine as far ahead as he could. The water sank in a ragged channel, steaming in the snow, yellowing at the margins.
Sidewalk snow never stayed white. The school door. He entered.
Walk by if he saw her, hurry by.…
IX
THE three o’clock bell sounded at last. Dismissed, he hurried through the milling crowd of noisy children. He had seen neither Yussie nor Annie, and now, as at lunch time, he darted ahead of the other children for fear of being overtaken by either.
It had stopped snowing, and although clouds still dulled the light, the air was warmer than it had been in the morning. Beside the curb, snow-forts squatted, half built during the lunch recess, waiting completion. A long sliding-pond stretched like a black ribbon in the gutter. Where the snow had been swept from the sidewalks, treacherous grey patches of ice tenaciously clung.
* * *
He went as swiftly as he could, picking his way. From time to time, he glanced hastily over his shoulder. No, they weren’t there. He had outstripped them. He turned a corner, stopped in midstride, staring at the strange sight before him; cautiously he drew near.
A line of black carriages listed away from the snow-banked curb. He had seen such carriages before. But what was that in front of the house, that curious one, square and black with windows in its sides? Black plumes on the horses. Why those small groups of people beside the doorway whispering so quietly and craning their necks to look inside the hallway? Above the street, in all the nearby houses, windows were open, men and women were leaning out. In one of these a woman gesticulated to some one behind her. A man came forward, furtively grinning, patted her jutting hips and wedged into the space beside her. What were they all staring at? What was coming out of that house? Suddenly he remembered. The flowers had been there! Yes he knew the doorway. White, flattened pillars. Flowers! What? He looked about for someone to ask, but he could see no one his own age. Near one of the carriages, stood a small group of men, all dressed alike in long black coats and tall hats. The drivers. They alone seemed unperturbed, yet even they spoke quietly. Perhaps he could hear what they said. He sidled over, straining his ears.