The Silence on the Shore. Hugh Garner
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“They’re coming anyway, and I don’t want the McKays.”
On Sunday morning Walter emptied half of the expensive liquor (it was Scotch, which he loathed) into another bottle, and drove down to the house where the McKays lived. Edna McKay was dressed and waiting for him when he arrived.
“Look, Mrs. McKay, I can’t take you up to my place today,” he said. “Brenda isn’t feeling well and she’s gone to bed. I thought maybe we could have a drink or two and then go out into the country for a drive. The trees are starting to turn, and I’m sure you’ll enjoy a drive for a change.”
Both the old people had agreed, but Walter knew they hadn’t swallowed his lie. He had carried the old lady out to the car, and they had gone for a long drive through the autumn countryside.
On the way back to the city he had stopped and bought them dinner at a well-known highway restaurant. After dropping them off he had driven through the downtown streets where he had lived as a boy, looking up old landmarks and the addresses where he had once lived. It had been a fairly good residential neighbourhood in those days, but now it was getting semi-slummy and sleazy-looking. It depressed him, so he had driven out to the west end of the city, parked the car, and stood on the platform of a railroad station and watched the trains.
A long manifest freight had pulled west through the station, and he had read the old familiar names of the railroads on the sides of the boxcars, living for a few moments back in the depression days when he had hoboed around the continent like thousands of his generation. Missouri Pacific, KATY, Frisco Lines, C.P.R., Burlington “The Route of the Zephyrs,” “Ship on the Blue Streak,” Canadian National, Wabash, Lehigh Valley, “The Route of Phoebe Snow.”
It was late when he let himself into his darkened house, staring balefully at the empty glasses and the half-eaten plates of sandwiches lying around the living room. In the kitchen he found one shot left in the bottle of Scotch, and poured himself a drink. The slogan on the bottom of an insurance company calendar caught his eye. “What are you doing for your family’s future?”
“Nothing out of the ordinary,” he said. “I’m holding down a crummy job to feed, house, and clothe them, sticking with a wife who doesn’t love me, and trying to instill some basic truths and a sense of values into my kids, who don’t want to listen to me.” He lifted his drink to the eager smiling young couple on the calendar and gulped its contents down.
The McKays had not visited his house again, parrying his invitations with the excuse that Edna was too ill to go out. Two years later the Adamses lost their house across the road and moved away, and he never saw them again.
Jane entered the office with the letter to his lawyers. He read it over and signed it.
“Where’s the one to our friend Mr. Collins?” he asked.
“Did you really want me to type it? I figured you were just blowing off steam.”
He laughed. “You’re one in a million, Janey,” he said.
She picked up the letter he had signed. Then she said, “Bill Lawrence wants to know when you can go over the series on school construction with him?”
“This afternoon, after the conference.”
“Mr. Peele called up. He said he didn’t want to speak to you, but wanted to be sure you knew about the trade editors’ meeting this afternoon.”
“All right, Jane.”
“He said something about your editorial on building strikes and lock-outs in the last issue.”
Walter nodded. “Fine.”
Peele was the trade publications manager. What was up with him? Walter found himself making excuses already for the way he had treated the builders’ lock-outs in the editorial. Matheso-Corbett hid its real conservatism behind a small-l liberalism in Living, but this was not allowed to spill over into the trade publications.
Jane headed for the door, then stopped and turned in his direction. “There was another phone call a few minutes ago,” she said. “From a woman.”
“So, do you think I’m too old and fat to get phone calls from young women?” he asked.
“She wasn’t young and she sounded foreign, maybe German.”
“What did she say?”
“She asked the name of the editor.”
“Yes.”
“I gave her your name. Then she asked where you lived. I had to tell her you had moved yesterday and I didn’t know your new address, but it was on Adford Road.”
“What did she say then?”
Jane shrugged. “She just hung up.”
He laughed but there was annoyance showing behind his laughter. “That would be my landlady,” he said. “Checking on my credentials.”
“Was it all right to say what I did?”
“Sure, Jane. It was okay.”
He stepped to the large window and looked below him at the sun-drenched sidewalk across the street. There were several young men strolling along without topcoats. It would be good to walkin the sun again without a heavy coat. He jammed his hat on his head and left his office.
“I’m going to lunch, Jane,” he said.
“Right, Mr. Fowler.”
As he passed Ivy Frobisher she looked up at him and smiled. Perhaps things weren’t dead between them yet, he thought. Now that things were over between him and Brenda he’d probably discover that the psychological block to casual lovemaking was broken too. Maybe it had only been his moralistic conscience after all.
CHAPTER FOUR
Late in May, Grace Hill placed an ad in the evening newspapers for the room next to Walter’s. It was a bad time of year to rent a furnished room in the neighbourhood, for the university students were on vacation and many transient workers were making their annual exit from the city to jobs in the summer resorts and out-of-town construction projects.
The first day the ad ran there were no applicants for the room, and on the second day there were only two phone calls and one personal application, an old man who found the rent too expensive. On the third day a girl in her late teens and a woman about thirty came to the house together, and asked to see the room.
“You mean you want to rent the room for both of you?” Grace asked the oldest one.
“Yes.”
“But it’s only a single room.”
“If