by Jerry
But he only nodded. Used to live there, he agreed politely, and waited for me to go on. There was nothing else to do; I began at the beginning and told him what I’d seen. Gruener listened in silence, staring across the yard. I couldn’t tell what he was thinking.
Well, he said, smiling, when I finished, it’s all news to me. Didn’t know there was a ghost of my former self wandering around 9M. Don’t tell the landlord, or they’ll be charging one of us extra rent.
His voice broke on the last word. I turned to look at him, and his expression had collapsed. His mouth gaped; his eyes stared. Then—I was horrified—two tears squeezed out from the corners of his eyes, and he covered his face with his hands. No, no, no, he moaned in a whisper, oh, let me alone.
The old man sat there, his elbows on his knees, his face buried in his hands, breathing slowly and deeply, getting hold of himself. Presently, turning to face me, he sat erect again, dropping his hands, and the muscles of his face were controlled once more, and he stared at me, his eyes sick. You’re seeing something—I have no idea why—that I try every day of my life not to think of. I paced that apartment once. I stared out that window, just as you saw me. His face twisted, and he shook his head. I can still see it—the way that street looked in the dead of night. Hateful, hateful.
For half a minute he sat, his eyes wide and staring; but he had to go on now—we both knew that—and I waited. Quietly, he said, I was trying to make up my mind to kill myself. He glanced at me.I wasn’t despondent; nothing like that. It was simply and obviously the only possible conclusion to my life.
The old man sat back in his chair, his hands on the arms. I was once nearly president of one of the largest investment firms in the world. I got there by hard work, as I often told people, and it was true. But I didn’t say that I got there, also, on other men’s backs. I was and am a selfish man; I knew it, and I was proud of it. Nothing and no one ever stood in the way of what I wanted, not my wife, or even my son—and he’s paying for that now, and always will, though that’s another story.
The old man reached out and tapped my arm with a curved forefinger. I justified it, boy. If a man can’t take care of himself, it is no one else’s concern; I said that all my life, and practiced it. I became chief clerk of my firm, manager, junior vice-president, senior vice-president and had the presidency in my grasp, and what happened to those who stood in my way was their affair, not mine. He smiled sadly. But I, too, stood in someone’s way, I discovered; someone like me, only smarter still.
And instead of the presidency, I was suddenly out of the firm—out of a job and absolutely broke. By then, fortunately, I was a widower, but my home in the country was lost, and the rent was paid on the small apartment I used in the city during the week, for only nine more days, after which I had to move.
In less than a single week’s time, I was suddenly facing the choice of dependency, of actual charity or of ending my life; and the way I had lived demanded the latter. But I couldn’t quite do it.
Contempt for himself was plain in his eyes as Gruener looked at me. I almost could, he said. I had it planned: sleeping tablets, with a note marked private, and mailed the evening before to an old friend, Dr. William Buhl. The note would have told Buhl what I’d done and why, and would have requested him to certify my death as heart failure. Whether he would have done so, I can’t say; I could only hope that he would.
Instead—he spat the word out with sudden loathing—I moved in here with my son and his family. He shrugged. Oh, they were glad to have me, Lord knows why, though it meant extra expense, and they had to take the baby—he nodded at the boy—into their bedroom to make room for me.
But if you think that’s what bothered me, you’re wrong. No, it was this: from a busy, prosperous man with considerable prestige in his occupation, I was suddenly turned into a nobody, living in a child’s bedroom. He shook his head in disgust, and added, Baby-sitting in the evenings, for the first six or eight years, helping with the dishes, reading the morning paper, listening to the radio in my bedroom with the Donald Duck wallpaper, sitting out here in the sun. That’s been the absurd end to my life, just as I knew it would be when I made my decision.
Smiling bitterly, Gruener said, And now you know what I was pondering, staring down through the windows of apartment 9M when somehow you saw me. I had the chance to justify the whole philosophy of my life—to be on top or forget the whole thing. But during two nights I could not achieve the courage to do it. And on the following night, I knew I had to. I stood there, I remember, staring down at that dismal street, hoping for help.
Almost superstitiously, I stood hoping for some little sign, the least encouragement from somewhere or anywhere. That is all I needed, I am certain, to tip the balance in the right direction. But of course there was no sign; it was up to me alone. When the night began to end, I had to make my own decision, and you see what I chose. The old man stood up. Why you should see my ‘ghost’ or whatever it was, I don’t know.
I STOOD, too, and we strolled toward the end of the yard. But they say, he added, that a particularly intense human experience can sometimes leave behind some sort of emanation or impression on the environment it happened in. And that under the right conditions it can be evoked again, almost like a recording that is left behind in the very air and walls of the room.
We reached the high wood fence and leaned on it, and Mr. Gruener turned to me, smiling a little. Maybe that’s what happened, boy. You, too, were up in the night in that very room. You, too, were pondering some problem, and maybe those were the right conditions: a sort of similarity of atmosphere that for a few moments could reach out and, like a delicate, beautifully tuned radio, bring back whatever impression my agonizing experience had made there. Or, he said, losing interest, and turned back into the yard, maybe somehow it brought back the actual time itself, and you really saw me, solid and real. Perhaps you saw back through time itself, to twelve years before; I really don’t know.
There was actually no comment to make, and all I could think of was, Well, you made the right decision.
He stopped suddenly, there on the grass. No, I did not! I’ve been a useless burden! He walked on again, toward the chairs. My son is no moneymaker and never will be; he didn’t even have a telephone when I came; so I had one installed, paying for it from the little income I still have. Pathetic, isn’t it? He smiled as we sat down. Still trying to be somebody, even if no more than a name in a telephone book. Originally, I suppose, I had some idea that one of the firms would eventually be after me, in what capacity I don’t know, and I wanted to be sure they could find me.
No, he said belligerently, I know now what I knew then: these extra years have meant nothing to me. And I also know now what I didn’t even consider then: what these years have meant to my son, his wife and that child. He nodded at the boy across the yard. I think he’d have a brother or sister now, if I could have done to myself what I did to others. As it is, there simply wasn’t room for another baby, nor quite enough money. But without me, there would have been. I feel now what I would once have been incapable of feeling: that I deprived a grandchild of being born; a whole life was lost in exchange for something that should never have been—a few more useless years for me.
Quickly, anticipating my objections, he cut them off, ending the conversation. Well, he said, nodding at the boy, at least it’s been good watching him grow and develop; he’s a nice boy, and one of the few things I’m proud of.
It’s obvious, of course—and was obvious to me on the way back to Manhattan, through the rest of that day at the office and all through that evening—that in a sense I had seen a ghost of my future self, there at my apartment windows. Through the accident of occupying Gruener’s apartment, I had somehow seen—how or why I couldn’t imagine—what I might become myself.
But still, sitting and pretending to read that night, while Louisa knitted, my problem was a long way from the easy, obvious-at-a-glance dilemma of somebody else. I sat remembering the faces
of men in my office—and they’re in every office—who have reached their middle thirties, with their big chance lost somewhere in the past. At some point or another it dawns on them, and from then on, you can see it in their eyes that the confident ambition of their youth is never going to be fulfilled.
Shakespeare said it; I remembered the quotation vaguely, and got up and went to the bookshelves for our one-volume complete Shakespeare, and finally found the quotation in Julius Caesar.There is a tide in the affairs of men, Brutus says, which taken at the flood leads on to fortune; omitted, all the voyage of their life is bound in shallows and in miseries. On such a full sea are we now afloat, and we must take the current when it serves, or lose our ventures.
HE WAS right, damn it! I sat there knowing it. You’re not handed a promotion for being a good boy, for doing your work conscientiously or for always getting to the office on time! You’re not handed it at all; you’ve got to make it and take it. And you’ve got to recognize the time for it and grab it while it’s there.
Of course I was awake again that night. I dragged myself out to the davenport, and of course I saw Gruener’s ghost again; and this time I got mad. I swear I hadn’t even been thinking of him. I lay flat on my back, staring at the ceiling, and for a long time I was tempted to steer Ted Haymes off his idea and kiss my chance of stealing his job good-by. It was the peace of mind waiting for me the instant I’d decided that tempted me; the good feeling I knew would come flooding over me. I wanted that, and I knew it would sustain me for days and weeks. But at the back of my mind lay the question: Then what? Two or three more years as assistant before, finally, past thirty, I somehow made sales manager? Just a little too late, a little too old to be a candidate still for the really important jobs at the top?
Lying there smoking in the dark, I hated Ted Haymes. He deserved nothing from me! The man was no good; was I going to sacrifice Louisa for him? I knew suddenly what was the matter with me. I was one of the timid people who want life to work out like a story, and when it doesn’t, they retreat from it and call their timidity virtue.
There is a tide in the affairs of men, and this was mine and might never come again, and all of a sudden, in a flood of hot feeling, I was going to take it. I sat up on the davenport, shaken and deeply excited, knowing that from now on I was a different, tougher man, and I actually muttered out loud, giving myself a sort of miniature pep talk. Do it! I told myself. Damn it, go ahead; all it takes is nerve. I felt pretty good, actually, and I started to get up, thinking I might even wake Louisa and tell her about it. And that’s when I noticed Gruener’s fat ghost in his crummy old bathrobe, standing at the windows again.
I was coldly furious; not scared in the least; and I really think I might have gone over to him and tried to do something about getting rid of him, though I don’t know what. But he turned just then and once more crossed the room, avoiding the invisible barrier, and walked down the hall toward the bathroom, and then I remembered what Gruener had told me. He’d been up three nights with his problem, and now I’d seen him three nights, and I was certain this was the end of it. And it was. I went to bed then, and I’ve never seen Gruener’s ghost since.
Have you ever noticed that once you decide you’re going to give someone the business, you can’t wait to start? And you can’t lay it on too strong. Next morning at the office, I felt a kind of tough, hard cockiness about my decisions, and I asked Ted to lunch. He’s a wise guy, a sneerer, and I actually had a ghost story I could prove; undoubtedly I was the first man in history who had the ghost himself to back up his story, and Ted was the man I wanted to back out on a limb, and then break it off.
In the restaurant booth he listened, true to type, with an amused and pitying sneer on his face, and I wondered why I’d ever thought twice about giving him even the least consideration. I didn’t tell him, of course, what I’d actually been worrying over at night, but the rest was accurate, and occasionally, as I talked, he’d shake his head in mock pity, his idea of fine, rich humor. Then, when I finished, I let him sound off. I let him bray that mule laugh and listened patiently while he spouted theories about hallucinations, the ability of the mind to fool itself and the kind of glib psychiatric jargon people like Ted talk these days. He was the first of the many people who have assured me that I “dreamed” or “imagined” Gruener’s ghost.
I let him rave, clear through dessert, knowing he was squirming to get back to the office and tell everybody, with a phony worried look, that I was “working too hard,” and then wait for them to ask why. Finally, when he’d talked enough, I had him. I challenged him to go out to Gruener’s with me that evening, and he had to say yes; he’d insulted me too much to say anything else. Then we just sat there, drinking coffee and stealing looks at each other.
People like Ted have a sort of low animal cunning, and pretty soon his eyes narrowed, and, excusing himself, he got up. A minute later he was back, beckoning slyly with his forefinger, like a stupid kid. He led me out to the telephone booth, and there, lying open at the G’s, was a Brooklyn directory. Show me, he said.
It wasn’t there. The name Harris L. Gruener simply was not in the telephone book, that’s all; and that afternoon at the office, people smiled when I went by, and once, when I was standing at the water cooler, someone called Boo! in a quavering, very comical voice. It might sound funny, but it drove me crazy—I knew what I’d seen—and a million dollars in cash couldn’t have stopped me from doing what I did; I walked out of that office and headed for Brooklyn.
To my everlasting relief, the house was still there, looking just the same, and when I pushed the button, the musical chime sounded inside. No one answered; so I walked around at the side, and, sure enough, there was the rusty wire gate, and there was young Mrs. Gruener hanging out a wash. The boy was there, too, playing catch with another kid, and I felt so relieved I waved and called, Hi!very exuberantly.
Mrs. Gruener came over, and I said, Hello. She answered grudgingly, the way housewives do when they’re busy, as though I were a salesman or something. Mr. Gruener home? I said.
No, she answered, he’s at work, and I wondered why we had to go through that routine again and wondered if she were stupid or something.
No, I mean Mr. Gruener, Sr. Harris L., that is.
This time she really looked suspicious and didn’t answer for several seconds. Then, watching my face, her voice flat, she said, Mr. Gruener is dead.
She got her reaction; I was stunned. When? I managed to say, finally. I’m terribly sorry. When did it happen?
Her eyes narrowed. Who are you, mister? And what do you want?
I didn’t know what to say. Don’t you remember me?
No. Just what do you want, anyway?
I could hardly think, but there was something I suddenly had to know. I’m an old friend of his, and . . . didn’t know he died. Tell me—please tell me—when did he die?
In a cold, utterly antagonistic voice, she said, He died twelve years ago, and all his ‘old friends’ knew it at the time.
I had to get out of there, but there was one more thing I had to say. I could have sworn I’d seen him later than that. Right here, too; and you were here at the time. You’re sure you don’t remember me?
She said, I certainly am. Far as I know, I never saw you before in my life, and I knew she was telling the truth.
I’VE quit looking up Harris L. Gruener in Brooklyn telephone books, because it’s never there. But it was. It was there once, and I saw it; I didn’t “dream” or “imagine” it, and all the Ted Haymeses in the world can’t make me think so, and I’ll tell you why! I phoned the doctor Gruener had mentioned. Why, yes, he said—he sounded like a nice guy—the cause of Gruener’s death is public information; you could read it on the death certificate. Harris Gruener died of heart failure, twelve years ago.
I know it’s not proof, I know that, but—don’t you see? Out of the hundreds of cases that doctor must have treated in twelve years’ time, why did he remember this one instantly? U
nless there is something about it that will make it stick in his mind forever.
I know why, I know what happened. There in my living room, on that third night, knowing he had to make up his mind, Harris Gruener stood staring down at the street. For him it was twelve years ago—1940—and he stood waiting for a sign that would help him to do what he felt he had to. For me it was the present; and as I lay there a decision rose up in me, and I said suddenly, intensely, Do it! Damn it, go ahead; all it takes is nerve. And across the years, across whatever connection had been briefly evoked between us, Gruener heard. He heard it, perhaps, at only a whisper, or only in his mind.
But Gruener did hear it, I know, and, more than that, he understood what perhaps I did not—that, morally, it was a decision for suicide. Do it! he heard me say, and he of all people knew what that meant, and—he did it. He turned then, I am certain, back again in the year 1940, and he walked to the bathroom where the sleeping tablets were. Then he wrote a note to William Buhl, dropped it down the mail chute out in the hall and went to bed for the last time.
DON’T ask me how it happened, or why—ask Einstein. I don’t know if time shifts sometimes; if events that have already happened can be made to happen again, this time in another way. I don’t know how it could happen; I only know that it did.