The Night Inspector (25 page)

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Authors: Frederick Busch

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BOOK: The Night Inspector
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W
EDNESDAY
, S
EPT
11: The batterer father, like wrath incarnate—Bursting through—And was it
then
the shot was fired?—Only then?—And Stanny, fearful at the pursuit, willing himself away from the world of such sounds?

T
UESDAY
, S
EPT
10: I did not see him with my eyes—I did not sniff like a dog at his breath—Nor did I hear the timbre and tone of his mother’s voice—What a sailor does not see he does not know—It is why some cruel god of the navigators invented heavy fog—The fear of the woman and her daughters through the ultimate day—

W
EDNESDAY
, S
EPT
11: The shot—

T
UESDAY
, S
EPT
10: It seems, now, such a small matter—Lizzie in the kitchen and the washing up undone because the girl was no longer retained—Money being once more an issue with us—With our creditors!—I upstairs in my little room, squinting against the glare of the spirit lamp—Gaslight too
bright at night for my aching eyes—Mal in the small corridor swinging the pistol about, crying “Hey!” and “Ho!” and “Surrender your arms!”—The children shouting for fear, mock fear, I think—And I, emerging from the room to terrify them to silence with my visage and my thoughts, written upon my forehead, I suspect, like Cain’s own brand, of such violence—Lizzie up from her chores to see—True mother, wary of the silence and not the former clattering and chattering—My roaring at them all to see to the dishes—Failure to respect their mother, etc.—Fanny weeping and Stanny struck dumb—Mal’s scowl a mirror to my own, I think—Lizzie silent and suddenly pale—The moment of stillness like the failure of a heart to beat—Our little house suspended in the silence—The swing of my arm as if self-motivated, with not a consideration from my brain—Mal’s pistol, which could have discharged at any or all, spilling from his fingers—His hand at his mouth, a fearful small boy, no man in the Guard with a sword at his belt and a pistol in hand—Fearful small boy—Are you such a poor shabby fellow? Are you a good, honorable one or good-for-nothing? Now you must announce it to me!—Monstrous man to hulk over them and bellow, glower, blink his weak, infernal eyes—

W
EDNESDAY
, S
EPT
11: Lizzie tumbling slowly down the back staircase—Her white, loose thighs exposed—Not recently this naked to my eyes—Her thin cry of surprise, and then the fall—My sense that I had struck her—Probably not—It is not what I would seek to do—My arm upraised, perhaps, would startle her, as happens with horses and dogs—While true that I have spoken harshly to them all—My sense of despair mounting, my need to sleep and sleep not unlike Malcolm’s, I think—The restlessness of the spirit in the Melvilles—My
fury at small provocations, the sign of larger motivations to rage yet unannounced but present in the household and in my heart—Yet no harsh words to Mal upon his late arrival at home—No dire warnings beforehand, nor cruel greetings on the night—The door stove in, the bloody bedclothes and the bled, wounded boy—My girls and Lizzie in their sorrows, I in my own and separate sorrows, and my Stanwix, son, so silent and immense-eyed—The sword on the sash at Malcolm’s side—

The waiter brought us more port. “It’s very good,” Sam said.

“Yes. It is, though—”

“I meant the fortified wine,” Sam said. “However, I would admit to some confidence in what you have just read. What
do
you think?” His face demonstrated a carefully managed blankness, as if he feared to be accused of requiring me to express an approval. While I read, he had set down half a dozen brown stubs of pencil, of various lengths, and he had littered his side of the banquette table with cedar shavings. “If anything, of course,” he said.

“Sam, did he tell you these thoughts?”

“Of course not, Billy. I wrote them. I created them.”

“And you are certain of these insights, then? That he— Sam, how can you know this?”

He opened his mouth as if to speak, then seemed to think better of it, and he laid a finger upon his lips, and he smiled with a gentle, knowing humor. Finally he did speak, but to say only this: “Invention also speaks a certain truth, Billy. Have you not recounted your adventures in battle? And subtly altered what another might term
fact?”

I did not reply. I found that I could not. And so I pressed on. “And why would he think—he so formerly famed for his abilities to recall and construct scenes of vividness and drama—why would he think so illogically? So repetitively? The dates repeated as if only they, of all the thirty
in the month, had meaning. These thoughts are so contradictory and so unverifiable. So speculative, that is to say, Sam. Hysterical! You think of him as crazed?”

He no longer struck me as pleased. A frown had imposed itself upon his mouth, and I saw a kind of boy’s pouting in his expression, as if I had failed him, and perhaps of a purpose. He worked at a pencil’s sharp point as if to perfect it, and of course he pressed too far and was required to begin again. He scraped rather than whittled, and the sound of the pocket knife’s blade against the pencil was a nervous scratching. I thought of damp dogs working with their claws against their ears.

“I am sorry,” I said. “You know that I have only affection for you, and the best of hopes for your career. I do seek to comprehend. But, Sam, where is the truth of it, if one entry for September tenth is so different from that which follows soon after, but which is also labeled the tenth of September? Not, of course, that I know anything of authorship. Clearly, since you have thus done it, thus it is achieved. I apologize for my outburst. I am baffled and, when I am in that state, I become almost frightened—perhaps too aggressive, let us say, in my posing of questions, Sam.”

His face was crimson, and I did not know whether with disappointment in my response, or anger at my myopia, or pleasure in my being all at sea.

“And—may I ask you another question without risking our friendship?”

“Never at risk,” he said.

I turned a page and pointed, moving the notebook over to him.

He read aloud: “ ‘He is careful not to display tenderness, most especially in regard to himself. Yet I view him as the most stung, the most wounded of men, a tattered spirit in need of much repair.’ ”

I asked, “Would that be your summary of him? A tattered spirit?”

“Of someone,” he said, smiling, then restoring the notebook to its place in his coat.

“And those—forgive me—puzzling notations?”

“Entries in a log, as one might find in the belongings of a sailor.”

“A log! So he records the events of his voyage, you say.”

“On an inner ocean, Billy.”

“Just so,” I said.

He laughed a quick hiccup of an unhappy laugh, then shut himself into silence, smiling without pleasure at his port, and then drinking it off.

Yesterday morning, I dreamed them both and woke often, fearful each time that I would open my eyes to see M, face a blur behind the screening beard, and Sam, his face a banner of friendship, beside my bed, his notebook in hand, awaiting me. Each time I woke, I kept my eyes squeezed shut. Finally I slept through to the forenoon, although I was troubled with dreaming of the huge cylinder of the pistol, slowly and inevitably grinding around. The night had ended at Mrs. Hess’s near dawn, with the clientele asleep upstairs or departed for home. Delgado, in the pantry at the back, had set down Vichy water and Madeira and a small, very heavy round Dutch cheese. While two of the girls lounged and lolled—Rachel in bloomers, undervest, and bright green shoes; Tillie in her gown with the straps down along her arms—Jessie sat beside me, wrapped in her figured blue-and-white robe, with her golden fingers clasped on the table beside her drink. Delgado stood beside the long refectory table and shook his arm in its black broadcloth jacket; a gravity knife slid into his hand, and he shook it once and the sharp, stubby blade emerged. He reached for the cheese, sealed in red wax, and began to peel it like a mango the size of a cannonball. Tillie, who was Rachel’s lover, slowly ground her head with its thick, red hair up and back in the lap of Rachel, who sat, while Tillie sprawled, in a kind of deacon’s bench against the wall.

Jessie said to Delgado, “Was it a busy night, then?”

He kept the wax coming in a single strip. “A bit less than crowded. How was the great man’s dinner?”

She clasped and unclasped her hands, then she shrugged.

“Did he mind his manners?” Delgado asked.

“He never had any to mind,” she said. “His idea of elegant dining is to hire a whore to chew his beefsteak and spit it into his mouth.”

Tillie said, “Yum,” and turned her head to nibble at Rachel, who slapped her, but did not push her face away.

“You’re lucky,” Delgado said, “if that’s all he requires. So I hear.”

“So you know. And it was not all that he required. Could I have whiskey, do you think, instead of this ladies’ drink?”

“Locked it all away, Jessie. Madeira’s not bad. This is a good one.”

She nodded and drank.

The pantry grew silent. I listened to the gas hiss behind its pink, bright globe. I listened to the scrape of Delgado’s knife between the rind of the cheese and the strip of red wax; it dropped, and I heard it strike the floor, though Delgado, for all his effort, seemed not to mind. He simply started another strip, and the cheese continued to appear. Tillie yawned and moved her head in Rachel’s lap.

Jessie said, “I am not going to talk about the dinner, in case anyone is waiting.”

No one spoke.

I watched her compress her lips, cause her brow to go flat, her eyes to open wider. When her smooth, glowing features were composed, she turned to me. “I would, if you wanted me to.”

I said, “I’d just as soon not.”

She nodded. “I would have, too. Are we any further along in—”

I put my finger to my ludicrous, artificial mouth and she closed her own. Delgado looked up. Rachel asked, “What are you two hatching?”

“Surely not eggs,” Jessie said. Rachel giggled and Tillie affected to snore.

“Cheese,” Delgado said. He placed it on the table and cut crescent-shaped
pieces for the girls. “Sir?” he said to me, but I declined. One side of his face, near the nose, was shiny and pocked, and I would have bet that he’d been peppered with birdshot. I thought it remarkable that he’d survived. No doubt he thought me remarkable for similar reasons.

Jessie brought the chunk of hard orange cheese to her mouth and it rested against her lips, but she could not admit it between them. She lowered the cheese to the table and softly shook her head. Delgado raised his full, black eyebrows, then let them drop. Sam Mordecai, back at the Astor asleep, if he were present would have slowly drawn his notebook and opened it and set it upon his lap; then, with a child’s self-pardoning smile, he would have set his stub of pencil scratching at the pages, setting down that silent exchange and all its implications.

William Bartholomew, trader and assassin, settled for gently touching the back of Jessie’s golden hand and sitting within his mask while the night leaked out. William Bartholomew, stalking the streets as if he were in charge of them, peering through his eyeholes at cats leaping in a mound of very ripe garbage at the mouth of an alley at Seventy-ninth Street, made his way down to the Five Points and his bed. Whatever Delgado and Jessie had meant, I thought, by their exchange of glances, she had been through a ghastly night. I summoned grotesque pictures, and then I fought to banish them. In every one, Jessie’s powerful haunches, the secrets of her thighs, were at the service—at the command—of paunchy men of business who were lollipopped, no doubt, while they chewed at their cigars. It was Jessie kneeling before them, was it not? But so small, as it were, a matter would not have driven her into such a sickened silence. I saw them using tableware and worse upon the girls. I heard the noises that they made.

A man with a filthy, unshaved face, half out of his clothing, obviously paralyzed by drink, lay across the street at Seventy-first. I stood above him, for I wanted to deliver a series of blows with my boot to his ribs. I did not know him, but I was atremble with the urge to wound someone.

He opened his eyes in mid-snore, and he looked up. I could not imagine what he thought, in the green glow of the gas lamp, he saw.

“Father Jesus!” he cried. “I’ll stop. I’ll never drink again. Don’t take me off!”

“This is the last chance I’ll give,” I intoned.

“Never a drop by the Mother of God!”

“Go home,” I told him.

He rolled onto his hands and his knees, then edged sideways to the stanchion of the lamp and pulled himself to his feet. I pointed east, and he went that way, tripping and sliding, although of course I had no idea where he might live. A fast cabriolet, its window blinds pulled down, almost struck him, and it seemed to me that two squat, bearded sailors, nearly as drunk as he, were altering their course to follow in his steps; he was hardly out of danger, I thought.

A family from India, it seemed—the father wore a dirty turban, his wife a sari of bright, stained yellow—were moving their household at dawn, along the railroad embankment at Hamilton Square at the corner of East Sixty-fifth. She carried a sleeping infant, swathed in blue, in her slender, hairy left arm; in her right, she steadied on her shoulder a long, thick wooden rod that rested, before her, on the shoulder of her man. To it were fastened deep baskets containing clothing, perhaps foodstuffs, implements, little wooden boxes round and square, and several sets of garments, some slippers and shoes. The father carried a sleeping child of two or so upon his other shoulder. They marched a peculiar dancing march to the rhythm established by the swinging weight of their household goods. They walked, in alternating darkness and light, communicating, so it seemed, through the distribution and redistribution of their burden. He, as he passed me, smiled; she, drawn and woeful, affected not to see me, although I watched her eyes widen as her view of me improved.

At the time of which I speak, you could enter Harry Hill’s dance hall, on Houston Street, for twenty-five cents. Men and women alike were welcomed, but they had to pay, receive a little dish of oysters, and move upstairs toward the music. The wooden floorboards cracked and groaned beneath the dancers’ weight, and everyone danced. Men in
white-and-blue-striped sailor’s jerseys circulated among the guests and they quickly compelled those not dancing, for more than one song’s duration, to leave. It was all very respectable, and although I did not any longer dance, and of course I did not parade my visage in the hope of making female friends, it had never occurred to me that Hill’s was anything but respectable. On behalf of workingmen and -women, I had always been appreciative. It took Jessie, of course, with her restrained and largely uninflected voice to tell me that on the floor above the music, a partial third floor—it did not run the breadth of the building—there were clean, inelegant private rooms where dancers might, for more than twenty-five cents, lock the door and make love—make, that is, whatever they were driven to.

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