And closer at hand, another man yelped shrilly: “Be-jeezis, don’t ever tell me they’re no good!”
The woman looking out at Madeline was somewhat slipshod, but had amiability written all over her broad, good-natured face. She had evidently grown used to immeasurable decibels of noise and it no longer had any effect on her placidity. She was holding an orange-pop bottle in one hand and a bottle opener poised in the other. Madeline read the word “Yes?” from her pleasantly up-cornered lips.
“Would you be interested in contributing something to the multiple-sclerosis fund?” Madeline rattled off. “Any amount you care to give will be appreciated.”
“I can’t hear you,” the woman shouted.
“The multiple-sclerosis fund!” Madeline yelled back.
“I still can’t hear you!” the woman screeched.
Madeline let her arms sag limply. “I can’t yell any louder. I’ve used up all my voice.”
“Wait a minute,” the woman said. Or at least lip-formed. She turned her head around. “Vince!”
“Ball one,” came back hollowly in answer.
“Vince, I’m talking to you! There’s somebody at the door. Tone that thing down a minute, so I can find out what she wants.”
This time an injured but stentorian baritone managed to penetrate the sound barrier. “Top of the ninth, five-all, two men on base, and she asks me to tone it down!”
But Madeline didn’t wait for any more. She quietly but firmly closed the door again, from the outside, and went away.
It was a basement furnished room, and even as she stepped down from the sidewalk into the enclosed areaway it fronted on, a sense of foreboding overcame her. She even halted a moment and made a half turn as if to get back onto the sidewalk again. Then she overrode her hesitancy and crossed to the arched brownstone doorway set in under the high stoop, and rang. She could hear the faint ring deep inside the house somewhere. If personal risk was going to deter her, she told herself, then she shouldn’t have embarked on this odyssey in the first place. There was bound to be risk now and then along the way. Risk was to be expected. There had been risk attached to the Dell Nelson business and she’d come through that all right.
A dim bulb lit up behind the iron-barred basement door, and a man came into view.
She didn’t like the barred effect the door created between them. It suggested prison, confinement, restraint, something she wasn’t able to quite put her finger upon. Danger, that was it. It suggested some sort of latent danger, as if you were facing someone kept apart from you for his own good.
His face wasn’t what troubled her. There was nothing in it to suggest malevolence. It had deep lines in it, at the brow and around the eyes, not the lines of age but of punishing experience. But its overall aspect was a grim stoicism that took what it got, asked no quarter, and sought no retaliation.
He was anything but trim of appearance. He had on a rumpled shirt open at the neck, a pullover sweater that badly needed dry cleaning, and a pair of dingy slacks that needed pressing. He hadn’t shaved today, even if he had yesterday. His hair was light brown and tumbled. His eyes were a darker brown, and looked as though they’d seen a lot of things they wished they hadn’t.
Something inside her told her that if he wasn’t the one she was looking for, he came closer to being it than anyone else she’d come across yet.
“Yeah?” he said.
“Do you want to contribute to the multiple-sclerosis fund?”
“Why don’t they get up a fund for me sometimes?” he said, dourly. “I could use one too.”
“Well—” she faltered. “That’s not the point. The point is—”
He reached out and opened the grillwork door. “Do you want to come in and tell me about it?”
It was an invitation that even a seventeen-year-old novice would have backed away from in mistrust. It wasn’t even put forward artfully or adroitly. It made no promises of immunity, not even false ones meant to be broken. She even saw him glance past her shoulder, as if to see whether there was anyone else around out there.
And yet somehow the very baldness of his technique had the reverse effect of not driving her away, of arousing her interest. This was the very sort of man that might have inspired a wife to want him dead. Maybe something like this had happened to Starr. To others, that is to say, while he was married to Starr and she had to stand by looking on. He had every earmark of the professional rapist.
“You’re Mr. Herrick?”
“Mr. Herrick, right.”
“We keep lists of the people we call on back at our headquarters, Mr. Herrick. I have you down for my last call of the day,” she said pointedly. “So if I don’t report back afterward—”
“What makes you think you won’t report back afterward?”
“Nothing — so far.”
They eyed one another steadily for a moment, each one trying to dominate. Then his eyes lost, and slid edgewise. They came right back again, but hers had had their victory. With that, she stepped past him and turned into the basement hallway. Without looking around she knew he had put out his hand to reclose the iron gate. “Would you mind leaving that open,” she said, “while I’m in here?”
He gave a sniff of laughter. “You won’t have to leave in that much of a hurry.”
The room was about what she’d expected it to be. A sagging cot against the wall, which he slept on. A couple of wood-backed chairs, of unsure stability. A table with a smoldering cigarette gnawing its way into its rim to join the dozens of other indented burns that ringed it around. A gas ring hooked to a jet and parked on a shelf. A number of copper beer cans in two positions, upright and prone. Meaning full and empty. A calendar on the wall, but it was the wrong year and the last leaf had never been torn off: December 1960. Yesterday’s newspaper and the day before yesterday’s newspaper, neither of them yet thrown out. Last month’s magazine (For Men Only), ditto. On the wall opposite the calendar, a photograph of a soldier in a flowerpot helmet, with a girl leaning her head against his shoulder.
Not much else.
Lives, she realized, are lived in such rooms. Some lives.
There was one other thing, though, of undetermined connotation, which caught her eye. There was a standpipe over in one corner, running through from floor to ceiling. Alongside it was a small steam radiator with a flat piece of tin nailed over it. On this lay a monkey wrench. She noticed a curious thing about the standpipe, which she couldn’t identify at first. It seemed to have a metal ring or “collar” encircling it at one point, and from this hung a short chain, at the end of which there was another ring or band. But this one was open at one end, and was not encircling the standpipe but was hanging down flat alongside it.
Suddenly it dawned on her what the complicated design was. It was a pair of handcuffs, fastened by one cuff to the pipe. And the other one, the open one, what was that for? Something made her go a little cold inside.
“How much do you want me to give?” he said, putting his hand to the baggy pocket of a moldy sweater hanging from a nail. This one was a coat-sweater with sleeves, but they had big holes at the elbows that seemed to peel outward.
“Give whatever you feel you can afford,” she said. Then, because it was a good opportunity, she rang the question in. “Are you married?”
“Not this minute.”
It was beginning to shape up more and more, she told herself.
He handed her a five-dollar bill. “Here,” he said grudgingly, and repeated the ancient wisecrack: “Don’t say I never gave you anything.”
“But are you sure you can spare this?” She couldn’t resist glancing around a second time at the squalid room.