Jonah

Home > Other > Jonah > Page 20
Jonah Page 20

by Louis Stone


  From where they sat they could see a fleet of tramps and cargo-boats lying at anchor on their right. Jonah examined them attentively, and then his eyes turned to the city, piled massively in the sunlight, studded with spires and towers and tall chimneys belching smoke into the upper air. It was this city that had given him life on bitter terms, a misshapen and neglected street-arab, scouring the streets for food, of less account than a stray dog.

  His eye softened as he looked again at the water. As the safest place for their excursions they had picked by chance on the harbour with its fleet of steamers that threaded every bay and cove, and little by little, in the exaltation of the senses following his love for this woman, the swish of the water slipping past the bows, the panorama of rock and sandy beach, and the salt smell of the sea were for ever part of this strange, emotional condition where reality and dream blended without visible jar or shock.

  He turned and looked at the woman beside him. She was silent, looking seaward. He stared at her profile, cut like a cameo, with intense satisfaction. The low, straight forehead, the straight nose, the full curving chin, satisfied his eye like a carved statue. About her ear, exquisitely small and delicate, the wind had blown a fluff of loose hair, and on this insignificant detail his eye dwelt with rapture. This woman’s face pleased him like music. And as he looked, all his desires were melted and confounded in a wave of tenderness, caressing and devotional, the complete surrender of strength to weakness. He wanted to take her in his arms, and dared not even touch her hand. There had been no talk of love between them, and she had kept him at a distance with her air of distinction and superficial refinements. She seemed to spread a silken barrier between them that exasperated and entranced him. Some identity in his sensations puzzled him, and as he looked, with a flash he was in Cardigan Street again, stooping over his child with a strange sensation in his heart, learning his first lesson in pity and infinite tenderness. Another moment and he would have taken her in his arms. Instead of that, he said “I’m putting that line of patent leather pumps in the catalogue at seven and elevenpence, post free.”

  Instantly Clara became attentive.

  “You mean those with the buckles and straps? They’ll go like hot cakes!”

  “They ought to,” said Jonah, dryly. “Post free brings them a shade below cost price.”

  “A shade below cost?” said Clara in surprise. “I thought you bought them at seven and six?”

  “So I do,” replied Jonah; “but add twelve per cent for working expenses, an’ where’s the profit? Packard’s manager puts them in the window at eight an’ six, an’ wonders why they don’t sell. His girls come straight from the factory and buy them off me. They’re the sort I want—waitresses, dressmakers, shophands, bits of girls that go without their meals to doll themselves up. They want the cheapest they can get, an’ they’re always buying.”

  And at once they plunged into a discussion on the business of the Silver Shoe. Clara always listened with fascination to the details of buying and selling. Novelettes left her cold, but the devices to attract customers, the lines that were sold at a loss for advertisement, the history of the famous Silver Shoe that Jonah sold in thousands at a halfpenny a pair profit, astonished her like a fairy-tale that happened to be real.

  One day, while shopping at Jordan’s mammoth cash store, her ear had caught the repeated clink of metal, and turning her head, she stood on the stairs, thunderstruck. She saw a square room lit with electric bulbs in broad daylight. It was the terminus of a multitude of shining brass tubes leading from counters the length of a street away, and, with an incessant popping, the tubes dropped a cascade of gold and silver before the cashiers, silent and absorbed in this river of coin. She felt that she was looking at the heart of this huge machine for drawing money from the pockets of the multitude. The Silver Shoe, that poured a stream of golden coins into the pockets of the hunchback, fascinated her in a like manner.

  They had talked for half an hour, intent on figures which Jonah dotted on the back of an envelope, when they were surprised by a sudden change in the light. The sun was low in the sky, dipping to the horizon, where its motion seemed more rapid, as if it had gathered speed in the descent. The sudden heat had thrown a haze over the sky, and the city with its spires and towers was transformed. The buildings floated in a liquid veil with the unreality of things seen in a dream. The rays of the sun, filtered through bars of crystal cloud, fell not crimson nor amber nor gold, but with the mystic radiance of liquid pearls, touching the familiar scene with Eastern magic. In the silvery light a dome reared its head that might have belonged to an Eastern mosque with a muezzin calling the faithful to prayers. Minarets glistered, remote and ethereal, and tall spires lifted themselves like arrows in flight. On the left lay low hills softly outlined against the pearly sky; hills of fairyland that might dissolve and disappear with the falling night; hills on the borderland of fantasy and old romance.

  And as they watched, surprised out of themselves by this magic play of light, the sun’s rim dipped below the skyline, a level lake of blood, and the fantastic city melted like a dream. The pearly haze was withdrawn like a net of gossamer, and the magic city had vanished at a touch. The familiar towers and spires of Sydney reappeared, silhouetted against the amber rim of night; the hills, robbed of their pearly glamour, huddled beneath a belt of leaden cloud; the harbour waters lay flat and grey like a sheet of polished metal; light clouds were pacing in from the sea.

  They stared across the water, silent and thoughtful, touched for a moment with the glamour of a dream. The sound of a cornet, prolonged into a wail, reached them from the deck of a Manly steamer. At intervals the full strength of the band, cheerful and vulgar, was carried by a gust of wind to their ears.

  “Oh, I would like to hear some music!” cried Clara. “Something slow and solemn, a dirge for the dying day.”

  Jonah turned and looked at her curiously, surprised by the gush of emotion in her voice. He started to speak, and hesitated. Then the words came with a rush.

  “I could give yer a tune meself, but I suppose yer’d poke borak.”

  “Give me a tune? I never knew you could sing,” said Clara, in surprise.

  “Sing!” said Jonah, in scorn. “I can beat any singin’ w’en I’m in good nick.”

  “Whatever do you mean?” said Clara. She was surprised to see that the habitual shrewd look had gone out of his eyes. He looked half ashamed and defiant.

  “Yer remember w’en I first met yer in the shop I mentioned that I could do a bit with the mouth-organ?”

  “The mouth-organ?” said Clara, smiling. “I thought only boys amused themselves with that.”

  “No fear!” cried Jonah. “I ’eard a bloke at the Tiv. play a fair treat. That’s ’ow I come to git this instrument,” and he tapped something in his breast pocket. “Kramer’s ’ad to send ’ome for it, an’ I only got it this afternoon. I’ve bin dyin’ to ’ave a go at it, but I always wait till I git the place to meself. It wouldn’t do for the ’ands to see the boss playin’ the mouth-organ.”

  He took the instrument out of his pocket, and handed it to Clara with the pride of a fiddler showing his Strad. Clara looked carelessly at the flat row of tubes cased in nickel-silver.

  “Exhibition concert organ with forty reeds,” said Jonah.

  Again Clara looked at the instrument with a slightly disdainful air, as an organist would look at a penny whistle.

  “Well, play something,” she said with a smile.

  Jonah breathed slowly into the reeds, up and down the scale, testing the compass of the instrument. It was full and rich, unlike any that she had heard in the streets. Presently he struck into a popular ballad from the music-hall, holding the organ to his mouth with the left hand. With his right he covered the pipes to control the volume of sound as a pianist uses the pedals. When he had finished, Clara smiled in encouragement, with a secret feeling that he was making himself ridiculous. She looked across the water, wishing he would put the thing away an
d stop this absurd exhibition. But Jonah had warmed up to his work. He was back in Cardigan Street again, when the Push marched through the streets with him in the lead, playing tunes that he had learned at the music-halls.

  In five minutes Clara’s uneasiness had vanished, and she was listening to the music with a dreamy languor quite foreign to her usual composure. Her mind was filled with the fantastic splendour of the sunset; the fresh salt air had acted like a drug; and the sounds breathed into the reeds made her nerves vibrate like strings. Strange, lawless thoughts floated in her mind. The world was meant for love, and passionate sadness, and breaking hearts that healed at the glance of an eye. And as her ear followed the tune, her eyes were drawn with an irresistible movement to the musician. She found him staring at her with a magnetic look in his eyes.

  He was no longer ridiculous. The large head, wedged beneath the shoulders, the projecting hump, monstrous and inhuman, and the music breathed into the reeds set him apart as a sinister, uncanny being. She frowned in an effort to think what the strange figure reminded her of, and suddenly she remembered. It was the god Pan, the goat-footed lord of rivers and woods, sitting beside her, who blew into his pipes and stirred the blood of men and women to frenzies of joy and fear. There was fear and exultation in her heart. A pagan voluptuousness spread through her limbs. Jonah paused for a moment, and then broke into the pick of his repertory. And Clara listened, hypnotized by the sounds, her brain mechanically fitting the words to the tune:

  “Come to me, sweet Marie, sweet Marie, come to me!

  Not because your face is fair, love, to see;

  But your soul, so pure and sweet,

  Makes my happiness complete,

  Makes me falter at your feet, sweet Marie.”

  The vulgar, insipid words rang as plainly in her ears as if a voice were singing them. Jonah stopped playing, and stared at her with a curious glitter in his eyes. She felt, in a dazed, dreamy fashion, that this was the hunchback’s declaration of love. The hurdy-gurdy tune and the unsung words had acted like a spell. For a space of seconds she gazed with a fixed look at Jonah, waiting for him to move or speak. She seemed to be slipping down a precipice without the power or desire to resist. Then, like a fit of giddiness, the sensation passed. She stumbled to her feet and ran wildly down the rocky path to the wharf where the ferry-boat, glittering with electric lights, like a gigantic firefly, was waiting at the jetty.

  20

  MRS PARTRIDGE MINDS THE SHOP

  Chook caught the last tram home, and found Pinkey asleep in bed with a novelette in her hand. She had fallen asleep reading it. The noise of Chook’s entry roused her, and she stared at him, uncertain of the hour. Then, seeing him fully dressed, she decided that it was four o’clock in the morning, and that he was trying to sneak off to Paddy’s Market without her. She was awake in an instant, and her face flushed pink with anger as she jumped out of bed, indignant at being deprived of her share of the unpleasant trip to the markets. Three times a week she nerved herself for that heartbreaking journey in the raw morning air, resolved never to let Chook see her flinch from her duty. As she started to dress herself with feverish haste, Chook recovered enough from his astonishment to ask her where she was going.

  “To Paddy’s, of course,” she replied fiercely. “Yer sneaked off last week on yer own, an’ cum ’ome so knocked out that yer couldn’t eat yer breakfast.”

  A cold shiver ran through Chook. Her mind was affected, and in a flash he saw his wife taken to the asylum and himself left desolate. Then he understood, and burst into a roar.

  “Git into bed again, Liz,” he cried. “Ye’re walkin’ in yer sleep.”

  “Wot’s the time?” she asked, with a suspicious look.

  “Five past twelve,” said Chook, reluctantly.

  “An’ ye’re only just come ’ome! Wot d’ye mean by stoppin’ out till this time of night?” she cried, turning on him furiously, but secretly relieved, like a patient who finds the dentist is out.

  “The play was out late, an’ we…” stammered Chook.

  As he stammered, Pinkey caught sight of a rip in his sleeve, and looking at him intently, was horrified to see his lip cut and bleeding. She gave a cry of terror and burst into tears.

  “Yer never went to no play; yer’ve bin fightin’,” she sobbed.

  “No, I ain’t, fair dinkum,” cried Chook. “I’ll tell yer ’ow I come by this, if yer wait a minute.”

  “Yer never cut yer lip lookin’ at the play; yer’ve gone back ter the Push, as Sarah always said yer would.”

  “I’ll screw Sarah’s neck when I can spare the time,” said Chook, savagely.

  Chook, the old-time larrikin, had turned out a model husband, but, for years after his marriage, Mrs Partridge had taken a delight in prophesying that he would soon tire of Pinkey’s apron-strings and return to the Push and the streets. And now, although Waxy Collins and Joe Crutch were in jail for sneak-thieving, their places taken by younger and more vicious scum, Pinkey thought instantly of the dread Push when Chook grew restive.

  “No,” said Chook, deciding to cut it short, “I tore me coat an’ cut me lip gittin’ away from the Johns at Paddy Flynn’s alley.”

  Pinkey turned sick with fear. The two-up school was worse than the Push, and they were ruined.

  “I knew it the moment I set eyes on yer. Yer’ve been bettin’ again, an’ lost all yer money. Yer’ve got nothing left for the markets, an’ the landlord’ll turn us out,” she cried, seeing herself already in the gutter.

  “Yes, I lost a bit, but I pulled up, an’ I’m a couple of dollars to the good,” said Chook, feeling in his pocket for some half-crowns.

  “Well, give it to me,” said Pinkey, “an’ I’ll go straight termorrer and pay ten shillings on a machine.”

  “Wot would yer ’ave said if I’d won ten or fifteen quid?” asked Chook.

  “I should ’ave said ‘Buy Jack Ryan’s ’orse an’ cart, an’ never go near a two-up school again’,” said Pinkey, thinking of the impossible.

  “Well, I won the dollars, an’ I’ll do as yer say,” cried Chook, emptying his pockets on the counterpane.

  As Chook poured the heap of gold and silver on to the bed, Pinkey gasped, and turned deadly white. Chook thought she was going to faint.

  “It’s all right, Liz,” he cried. “I’ve ’ad a good win, an’ we’re set up fer life.”

  He was busy sorting the gold and silver into heaps, first putting aside his stake, two pounds ten. There were fifteen pounds twelve shillings and sixpence left. Pinkey stared in amazement. It seemed incredible that so much money could belong to them. And suddenly she thought, with a pang of joy, that no longer would she need to nerve herself for the cruel journey to the markets in the morning. Chook would drive down in his own cart, and she would be waiting on his return with a good breakfast. They had gone up in the world like a rocket.

  The marriage of Pinkey, three years ago, had affected Mrs Partridge like the loss of a limb. For over two years she had been chained to the same house, in the same street, with the desire but not the power to move. Only once had she managed to change her quarters with the aid of William, and the result had been disastrous. For the first time in his life William had lost a day at Grimshaw’s to move the furniture, and for six months he had brooded over the lost time. This last move had planted them in Botany Street, five minutes’ walk from Chook’s shop. At first Mrs Partridge had fretted, finding little consolation in the new ham-and-beef shop on Botany Road; and then, little by little, she had become attached to the neighbourhood. She had been surprised to find that entertainment came to her door unsought, in the form of constant arrivals and departures among the neighbours. And each of them was the beginning or the end of a mystery, which she probed to the bottom with the aid of the postman, the baker, the butcher, and the tradesmen who were left lamenting with their bills unpaid. Never before in her wanderings had she got so completely in touch with her surroundings.

  But from habit she always talke
d of moving. She could never pass an empty house without going through it, sniffing the drains, and requesting the landlord to make certain improvements, with the mania of women who haunt the shops with empty purses, pricing expensive materials. Every week she announced to Chook and Pinkey that she had found the very house, if William would take a day off to move. But in her heart she had no desire to leave the neighbourhood. It was an agreeable and daily diversion for her to run up to the shop, and prophesy ruin and disaster to Chook and Pinkey for taking a shop that had beggared the last tenant, ignoring the fact that Jack Ryan had converted his profits into beer. Chook’s rough tongue made her wince at times, but she refused to take offence for more than a day. She had taken a fancy to Chook the moment she had set eyes on him, and was sure Pinkey was responsible for his sudden bursts of temper. She thought to do him a service by dwelling on Pinkey’s weak points, and Chook showed his gratitude by scowling. Pinkey, who had been a machinist in the factory, was no hand with a needle, and Mrs Partridge commented on this in Chook’s hearing.

  “An’ fancy ’er ’ardly able to sew on a button, which is very dangerous lyin’ about on the floor, as children will eat anythin’, not knowin’ the consequences,” she cried.

  Chook pointed out that there were no children in the house to eat stray buttons.

  “An’ thankful you ought to be for that,” she cried. “There’s Mrs Brown’s baby expectin’ to be waited on ’and an’ foot, an’ thinks nothin’ of wakin’ ’er up in the night, cryin’ its heart out one minute, an’ cooin’ like a dove the next, though I don’t ’old with keepin’ birds in the ’ouse as makes an awful mess, an’ always the fear of a nasty nip through the bars of the cage, which means a piece of rag tied round your finger.”

  Here she stopped for breath, and Chook turned aside the torrent of words by offering her some vegetables, riddled with grubs, for the trouble of carrying them home. She considered herself one of Chook’s best customers, having dealt off him since their first meeting. Every market-day she came to the shop, picked out everything that was damaged or bruised, and bought it at her own price. She often wished that Pinkey had married a grocer.

 

‹ Prev