“Edna told you what we wanted?”
“Cleaning,” he said. “You’ve got some junk to move?”
“And moving—”
Two thuds, and two men’s loud laughing was joined by a woman’s.
They both looked down at the Acrilan.
“—to an apartment higher up in the building,” she said. “The floors, the walls of these buildings are so thin. Everything goes through. Everything.” When she looked up, he thought: Why is she so uncomfortable…am I making her uncomfortable? She said, “We want you to help clear out the place upstairs. It’s on the nineteenth floor, at the other end of the hall. It has a balcony. We thought that would be nice. We don’t have a balcony in this apartment.”
“Hey, Momma, is—”
He recognized her when she was half into the hall.
“Yes, June?”
“Oh…” which wasn’t recognition, though she held the wall and blinked at him. Her yellow hair swung to hit her shoulders. She frowned by the green wall, just paler than the carpet. “Is Bobby here?”
“I sent him down for some bread.”
“Oh,” again, and into her room.
“I’m,” pausing all he looked back at her, “Mrs. Richards. My husband, Arthur, will be here very soon now. But come in, and I’ll explain just what we want done.”
The living room was all picture windows. Beyond half-raised Venetian blinds, a hill of patchy grass rolled between several brick high-rises.
“Why don’t you sit—” her finger fell from her chin to point—“there.”
“I didn’t get a chance to wash too well, this morning, and I’m pretty messy,” then realized that was just the reason she’d picked that particular chair. “No thanks.”
“You’re living…?
“In the park.”
“Sit down,” she said. “Please. Please sit down.”
He sat, and tried not to pull his bare foot behind his sandal.
She balanced at the edge of the L-shaped couch. “19-A where we want to move is, well frankly, a mess. The apartment itself is in good condition, the walls, the windows—so many windows got broken. We wrote to Management. But I wouldn’t be surprised if they’ve lost the letter. Everything’s so inefficient. So many people have left.”
A rattling, with thumps, moved outside in the halclass="underline" then, someone punched the door!
While he tried to fix his surprise, tattered whispers outside raveled with laughter.
Mrs. Richards sat straight, eyes closed, small knuckles against her stomach, her other hand mashing the couch. The loose flesh between the ligaments over her collar pulsed either with slow heart beats or quick breathing.
“Ma’am…?”
She swallowed, stood up.
They punched again: he could see the chain shake.
“Go away!” Her hands were claws now. “Go away! I said go away!”
Footsteps—three or four pair, one, high heels—chattered to echo.
“Mother…?” June rushed in.
Mrs. Richards opened her eyes, her mouth, and took a breath. “They’ve done that—” turning to him—“twice today. Twice. They only did it once yesterday.”
June kept raising and lowering her knuckle to and from her mouth. Behind her the wall was covered with rough green paper, shelves of plants in brass pots, unwaterably high.
“We’re going to move into another apartment.” Mrs. Richards took another breath and sat. “We wrote to Management. We haven’t got an answer, but we’re going to anyway.”
He put his notebook on the table beside the chair and looked at the door. “Who are they?”
“I don’t know. I don’t know; I don’t care. But they’re about—” she paused to pull herself together—“about to drive me mad. I think they’re…children. They’ve gotten into the apartment downstairs. So many people have left. We’re going to move upstairs.”
June kept looking over her shoulder. Her mother said: “It must be very difficult for you, living in the park.”
He nodded.
“You’ve known Mrs. Brown a while? It’s nice of her to send somebody to help. She goes out, meets people. Myself, I just don’t feel safe walking around the city.”
“Mother hardly ever goes out,” June said, very fast, yet still with the hesitancy he remembered from last night.
“It isn’t safe, and I don’t see any reason for a woman to take that sort of chance. Perhaps if I were someone else I wouldn’t feel that way.” She smiled. Her hair was salted brown, recently and simply done. “How long can you work?”
“As long as you want, I guess.”
“I mean how many hours? Today?”
“The rest of the day, if you want. It’s pretty late now. But I’ll come earlier tomorrow.”
“I’m talking about the light.”
“Light?”
“The lights aren’t working in most of the apartments.”
“Oh, yeah. Well, I’ll work till it gets dark. What time is it now?”
“The clocks.” Mrs. Richards turned up her hands. “The clocks have stopped.”
“Your electricity’s out?”
“All except one outlet in the kitchen. For the refrigerator. And that goes off too sometimes.”
“In the hall, there’s a light on. And the elevator’s working. You could run a cheater in.”
Mrs. Richards looked puzzled.
“An extension cord. From the hall light, into your apartment. That would give you some electricity.”
“Oh.” Lines deepened in her forehead. “But then we’d lose the hall light, wouldn’t we? We have to have some light in the hall. That would be just too—”
“You get a double socket. You put a bulb in one and run a cord from the other, under the door.”
“From the hall?”
“Yeah. That’s what I was talking about.”
“Oh.” She shook her head. “But the hall lights aren’t on our utilities bill. Management wouldn’t be very happy about that. They’re strict here. You see, the hall lights, they’re on another—” Her hands fluttered—“meter. I don’t think we could do that. If someone saw…” She laughed. “Oh no, this isn’t that kind of place.”
“Oh,” he said. “Well, you’re moving. So I guess you don’t have to. The apartment you’re going to has electricity?”
“One of the things we have to find out. I don’t know yet.” Her hands went back together in her lap. “Oh, I hope it does!”
“I’ll work till it gets dark, Mrs. Richards.”
“Very good. Oh, yes, that’ll be fine. At least you’ll be able to get started today.”
“Maybe you better ask your husband about the extension cord. I could do it for you. I used to be a super.”
“Were you?”
“Yeah. And I could do it, no trouble.”
“I will…” She pinched at her skirt, noticed, then smoothed it. “But I don’t think Management would go along with that. Oh no, I don’t think so at all.”
The door bell rang twice.
“That’s Bobby!” from June.
“Ask who it is!”
“Who is it?”
Muffled: “Me.”
The chain rattled loose.
“Okay, I got your—”
June interrupted him: “You know they came back and did it again! You didn’t see anybody, in the halls, did you?”
“No…?” Bobby’s questioning was toward the living room. “Who’s he?”
Bobby (fourteen?) was holding a loaf of bread too tightly. Around his left wrist, in a bright bracelet, were half a dozen loops of the optical chain.
“Come in, Bobby. This is a young man Edna Brown sent over.”
“Gee.” Bobby stepped into the living room. Blond as his sister, where her features suggested shyness, his sharper nose, his fuller mouth hinted belligerence. Under his arm was a newspaper. “Are you just living out in the street, huh?”