by Lore Segal
“Thanks!” said Ilka.
“The butcher on the corner of Broadway speaks German. This is my number. Call me. I’ll call you. I’ll come in for a day as soon as my exams are over. Will you be all right?”
* * *
—
Minutes after Fishgoppel had run to catch the train back to New Haven, Ilka took the elevator down and burst into the streets of New York, which looked like the streets she remembered from her childhood Vienna—the same flat, staid, gray façades except that here, in front of her, walked a real American couple, having an American conversation. Ilka accelerated and walked close behind them and perfectly understood the old man saying, “Because I wear proper shoes in which a person can walk.” The old woman said, “Because you don’t have bunions.” The man said, “Because I wear proper shoes,” and Ilka recognized that it was German they were speaking, with the round Viennese vowels cushioned between relaxed Viennese consonants.
When she got back, the telephone was ringing: Would Fishgoppel collect for the United Negro College Fund?
“I will collect. I am the cousin from Fishgoppel,” said Ilka: Ilka wanted to see the inside of an American home.
The nameplate outside apartment 6-A said “Wolfgang Placzek.” He handed her fifty cents through the cracked door. While 6-B went to look for change, Ilka put her head inside the foyer and saw the little green marble boy extracting the same splinter from his foot, on the same tree stump, on the same round lace doily on which he had sat in Ilka’s mother’s foyer in Vienna. The woman came back. “Nix! Nothing,” she said. It did her grief but her man was not to house. Six-C was Fishgoppel, and 6-D would not open; the voice through the peephole came from Berlin. It did her grief but her sister had a stroke had and was to bed.
“How?” Ilka asked the woman at the employment agency, who told Ilka to come back when she had practiced her English. “With whom shall I praxis? You are the only American I met in New York? The onlies others I met are in my English class, which are yet other outlanders, which know always only other outlanders, which know yet lesser English as I!”
The woman on the other side of the desk drew her head back from Ilka’s complaining. She was a stout woman with a lot of useless bosom and looked as if there was some complaining she might do, give her a chance. “New York,” she said to Ilka, “is not America, like all you people always think.”
When Fishgoppel came to town to see how Ilka was getting on, Ilka complained that New York was not America. Fishgoppel frowned, did some mental arithmetic, and offered Ilka a week’s trip West.
* * *
—
Ilka practiced her English on the train conductor. He leaned over the back of the seat in front of the girl and asked her to guess how long he had been on this Denver–Los Angeles run. “Excuse please?” Ilka smiled the self-conscious smile she knew from her mirror, and regretted. It exposed her two long front teeth with the little gap between that made her look, she believed, like a friendly village simpleton. Ilka was a thin girl. In certain lights her hair matched the color of her eyes. After she acquired the word Ilka thought herself khaki, but interesting. Ilka thought she was interesting. She smiled sweetly, apologetically at the round, pink-faced conductor; he looked like a healthy old baby. He held up three left and two right fingers.
“Thirty-two years on this same run!”
“Aha!” said Ilka.
“Know it like”—he pointed into his pocket—“like the”—he held up the palm of his hand and pointed at it. “I’ll be back,” he promised.
Ilka looked out. The land was level as the primordial waters before the creation of breath disturbed its surface, uninterrupted by objects, man-made or natural, as far as the ruler-straight horizon west and north and east, except outside the window, on the left, where a grid of apartment buildings formed a small, perfectly square city. Its near perimeter coincided with the platform of the railroad. The train stopped when it had aligned Ilka with Main Street, at the far end of which a mountain, like a giant purple ice-cream cone, stood upside down on the perfectly flat world. Ilka wanted somebody to turn to and say, “I don’t believe this!” She might have imagined that she had imagined this Atlantis onto the desert floor but for the details, which were not in her experience to engender: bars, bowling alleys, barber shops, eating places with neon signs that ran and jumped and stopped, and switched from pastel greens to pastel yellows to pinks leached out by the tail end of daylight.
Ilka’s conductor returned: a ninety-minute stopover. He handed her down the steps. And that was how Ilka Weissnix from Vienna came to stand in the middle of the New World, she thought. Ilka thought she was in Utah, and she thought Utah was dead in the heart of America.
Ilka was intensely excited. She ran up the platform until it stopped across from the long, low building which formed the northwest corner of the tiny city. The low building was made of a rosy, luminescent brick and quivered in the blue haze of the oncoming night—it levitated. The classic windows and square white letters, saying AMERICAN GLUE INC., moved Ilka with a sense of beauty so out of proportion to the object, Ilka recognized euphoria. It knocked out her common sense of time. Afraid of being left behind, but more afraid of missing what more there might be to be seen, Ilka turned and ran close alongside the train until the platform stopped across from the shack that held this northeast end of town down upon the desert the way one of those little gummed corners fixes your snapshot in its place on the page of your album. A neon sign read LARR’s B R ND EATS.
With the reluctance of one who puts a foot out into an alien element, Ilka stepped off the platform, crossed the dirt road, and, with a palpitating heart, depressed the handle of the door.
* * *
—
The barman went on wiping his glass mug with an agitated white dishcloth, but the huge American on the stool swiveled to see who had walked in. Ilka, feeling looked at, ducked into the booth nearest the door. By the time she had settled and raised her self-conscious village smile, the American on the bar stool had returned to his conversation with the barman. Ilka felt ever so faintly hurt. There were women—Ilka knew this—who got looked at longer. Anyway, this was an older man, a very large, stout man, with a look of density, as if he were heavier, pound by pound, than other men of equal bulk. His grizzled hair was cut peculiarly short. It was flattened against the large skull in a way the girl did not understand. His skin had a yellow hue, the nose was flat and the mouth wide—like a frog’s, Ilka would have thought, if it had not been for a look about him of weight, of weightiness, like a Roman senator, thought Ilka.
Anyway, what Ilka had come West for was American conversation and she listened and thought the barman said, “Coming down cats and dogs.” Thinking she hadn’t listened properly, Ilka listened harder. The barman said, “This kid I knew in high school’s dad is in this cab coming down Lex I think it was.”
The man on the bar stool said, “This is in New York?” which Ilka understood. Encouraged, she leaned forward to really listen, and the barman said, “Where else is there? Guess the brakes quit on the guy. This kid’s dad. He lost his thumb, busted both legs, left side of his face is all chewed up, and this pip of a shyster out of nowhere is running alongside the stretcher, says he can get him a lump sum in compensation, which is what I’m telling you is what you have to have, once in your lifetime, give you an opportunity.”
Ilka was trying to connect “shyster” (the English cognate, presumably, of the German scheissen with the “er” suffix meaning “one who shits,” a “shitter”) and “lump” (as in a mattress) plus “sum” (the mathematical result of totting up), and missed everything the barman said after that. Ilka gave up. She studied the red plastic booth in which she sat. Ilka thought that the back seats out of two automobiles had been placed face to face. Three booths times two back seats—that was six red automobiles!
The barman said, “Got the wife to sue for deprivation of sexual excess, is it?”
“Access?” suggested the older man
on the stool.
“You name it, he sued for it.” The barman walked around the bar and was coming toward Ilka. “Physicaltormentalanguishdiminishedre-productivity what’ll it be?” he asked her.
“Excuse please?” Ilka said and smiled at him with her apologetic teeth and shook her head and said, “I can not yet so well English.”
The barman, who seemed worn to bone and nerve by a chronic high of exasperation, raised his chin like a dog about to howl and said, “You want a drink?”
“Please, coffee,” said Ilka.
“Coffee!” howled the barman in a voice outside the human range of sound, walked back around the bar, and disappeared through a door into a region beyond Ilka’s sight and outside the range of her imagination. She pictured a blackness out of which the barman’s voice went on with what he was saying to the man on the bar stool: “This kid’s dad I was telling you comes out the hospital, lost his hearing in one ear—or wishes he lost it, is what he used to tell us kids, so he wouldn’t hear this noise all the time like someone was pissing inside his ear, loud like Niagara.”
“Jesus!” the man on the stool said. “That could drive a man to drink.”
“Only thing would drown it out was trumpets turned with the volume all the way up. See,” said the barman, “this is hi-fi coming in. This guy. He buys every damn book, reads up in all the magazines and goes into audio with his lump sum in compensation, makes a mint with his own home in Bayshead, but you don’t get a lump sum,” said the barman, coming out with Ilka’s coffee, “you don’t got a opportunity I don’t care what anybody is going to tell you.”
“Isn’t that the truth,” said the stout older man. And raising his voice to the tenor pitch that best carried into the booth by the door, where the young blonde sat watching him, he said, “The problem, as I see it, is how you’re going to put your idea over.”
“My idea?” said the barman.
“I can introduce it for you in the next session of the United Nations, or were you thinking in terms of an amendment to the Bill of Rights?”
Ilka was surprised at the high, hilarious note coming from such a heavy, older man.
“Was I thinking…?” said the barman.
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men, blah blah blah, have the unalienable right to a lump sum?”
“Once in your lifetime,” said the barman, “is all I’m saying to you.”
“See if I understand you, now, this is for white only, or for colored as well?”
“Listen! I ain’t prejudiced. I’m New York!” said the barman. “Ain’t I standing here? Ain’t I talking with you like you are a person? You want me, I’ll make you a sandwich.”
“Jesus God!” the man on the stool said gaily. “Imagine every one of us black sons of a gun going to have an equal opportunity, same as any white man in the land, to get our thumbs, legs, and eardrums busted! Let me check this out with you now: everybody has to first get pretty much chewed up, is what you’re saying?”
“That’s what it’s compensation for! The way I figure you don’t get something for nothing, but how it is now you get nothing period.”
“It’s an idea will revolutionize the economy!”
“It is? It will?” The barman looked nervous.
“Sure!” the man on the stool said. He crossed one ankle over the other, effecting a quarter turn in Ilka’s direction. “Say you take the Social Security money for the year X and, instead of pissing it away on the poor, the old, and the sick, you divvy it up—let’s say three thousand bucks apiece, to every baby born in that same year, black and white, and—stick with me here—the government invests each baby’s three thousand at, say, five percent, till the baby gets to be twenty-nine—or would you say thirty-five?”
“Thirty-five has more horse sense,” said the barman.
“Okay. Now,” said the man on the stool, “when the baby is thirty-five they cut off its thumbs, break its legs, pierce its eardrums, and hand it the lump sum of…” He patted his breast pocket, took out an envelope, and said, “You got a pencil there? Thank you. Three thousand at five percent times thirty-five compounded”—the man on the stool did arithmetic for a while—“dollars fifteen thousand seven hundred and sixty!” he said triumphantly.
The barman looked agitated. “And the poor, old, sick folks?”
“What poor, old, sick folks!” cried the man on the stool. “They got their lumps when they were thirty-five and made a mint! They own their own homes, colored, whites, everybody! In Bayshead!”
“I guess,” said the barman.
Ilka was studying the expanse of the older man’s tweed back—an autumnal mix of heather flecked with rust, with mauves and greens…Ilka had observed the same easy angle of the wrist of the hand which held the cigarette in other men, and in women, too. She thought it connoted the carnal know-how of which she despaired for herself. Ilka could see the man’s tongue laughing. She had never seen a grown person laugh so loudly for such a long time, with the mouth so wide open. Now he raised his right hand. He was beckoning. Ilka turned to see who might have come in the door to claim the gesture, but there was no one behind her; she turned back with her conscious smile, trusting it to double for an acknowledgment, if he meant her, or for a general complaisance, in case he did not.
“You ever get yours?” the man was asking the barman.
“Worse luck,” said the barman. “I was in construction, damn near killed in this cave-in. Man, it was a mess! See, here’s what I’m telling you, now. When they used to hand me my thirty bucks Saturday nights, by Monday morning—like you said—I pissed it away, what else is there? But you put five thousand smackeroos into my hand, I’m a capitalist! I’m going to hang on to every last lousy buck! I’m going to make something out of myself, right?”
“What did you do?”
“I read where they were building this four-lane highway, and I come out here, I see the surveyors with my own eyes! Outside this window! I figure I buy cheap—the big money wants to be on Main—do it up nice, like New York. You can’t tell now, but ten years back this was a real sharp place. I figured every one of the fellers be coming in here for his breakfast, lunch, a home away from home and booze it up nights for the three or whatever years it’s going to take them to build me a highway up to my front door, I sell out at a price, go back—open myself a classy joint on Third Avenue, how can I lose?”
“So what happened?” asked the man on the stool.
“They built the highway four miles the other side of town, is what happened.”
“You going to sell out, then?”
“To who? Are you going to be fool enough to take my monkey and put it on your back? Are you? No, you are not!”
“You got the custom from the railroad,” the man said.
“Oh, right!” the barman said. “There’s the ten-forty-five a.m. Denver–L.A. and the twelve-fifteen L.A.–Denver, and the five-forty you got off of, and the eight p.m. the lady came on”—he indicated Ilka watching in her booth—“that connects with the dinky at nine-forty. Maybe a couple rednecks drop in for a beer and put two nickels in the juke. You want another bourbon?”
“Maybe the lady will join me?”
He meant me, thought Ilka, gratified. It was me he beckoned.
“Will you have a drink?”
“Thanks, no,” she said. “I must soon again back into my train. Thanks!”
But the man had risen and was standing with a nice formality next to his bar stool. It took Ilka a moment of time to extricate her feet from under the table and walk across the floor. The man waited until she had seated herself before resuming his place. He offered her a cigarette. “Thanks, no.” Ilka did not smoke. Ilka did not drink.
“Yes, you do,” said the American.
“Likör makes me—how do you say that in English?” Ilka did him a charade and he said, “Liquor makes you throw up? No, it doesn’t.” To the barman he said, “The lady will have a Black and White diluted with a little water, start her
off nice and easy. I’ll teach you how to drink,” he told Ilka.
“You are living here?” Ilka asked him.
“Christ no!” the man said. He told Ilka that he was en route from California to New York for a brand-new start and had stopped off for one last, big bender.
“Speak, please, slower,” said Ilka.
“I’m going to tie one on,” explained the man. It was here that he asked Ilka what in the name of the blessed Jehoshaphat she was doing in Cowtown, Nevada, which Ilka had mistaken, and was, for years to come, to persist in mistaking, for Utah. Ilka told him she was looking for the real America. “New York,” she explained, “is not the real.”
“Well, this is,” the man on the stool said. His left hand, which held an easy cigarette between fore and middle fingers, performed a baroque motion that seemed to take in the air around them, the bar they sat in, the drink on the bar top, around which his other hand lay loosely curled, and ended in a downward direction, pointing to his own person, at his considerable stomach, including the genitals—or maybe not?
Ilka said, “Except the woman from the employment agency you are my first real American.”
“Of the second class,” said the big man.
Ilka shook her head and smiled. “I am understanding always lesser and lesser.”
It was here Carter Bayoux introduced himself. He said, “I’m a wonderful teacher.”
“I am Ilonka Weissnix,” said Ilka. “And I want to learn”—and Ilka, too, made an inclusive gesture—“this all.”
They shook hands. He said, “Let me buy you a sandwich. What do you like?”
Ilka smiled inside her glass and said, “I ken not yet the names of the American sandwich.”
“You make Reubens?” the man asked the barman.
“Do fish swim?” is what Ilka thought the barman replied before he disappeared back into his private darkness.