All the King's Men - Robert Penn Warren [35]
But by the time I was standing in front of a door at one end of the cross hall and was looking up at another tin sign, and knew from it that I had arrived at the one-man leper colony of Mason City.
The leper was sitting in the room, not doing anything, all by himself. There wasn’t anybody to sit and spit and jaw with him under his electric fan.
“Hello,” I said, and he looked up at me as though I were a spook and the word I had used were in a foreign language. He didn’t answer me right off, and I figured he was like one of those fellows who gets marooned on a desert island for twenty years and when the longboat is beached and the jolly tars leap out on the sand and ask him who the hell he is, he can’t say a word because his tongue is so rusty.
Well, Willie wasn’t that bad off, for he finally managed to say hello, and that he remembered me from our meeting in Slade’s place a few months back, and to ask me what I wanted. I told him, and he grinned a grin more wistful than happy and asked me why I wanted to know.
“The editor told me to find out,” I said, “and why he wants me to find out only God knows. Maybe it is because it is news.”
That seemed to be enough to satisfy him. So I didn’t tell him that beyond my boss the managing editor there was a great high world of reasons but to a fellow like me down in the ditch it was a world of flickering diaphanous spirit wings and faint angel voices I didn’t always savvy and stellar influences.
“I reckon it is news,” Willie allowed.
“What’s been going on around here?”
“I don’t mind telling you,” he said. He began telling me and he finished telling me about eleven o’clock that night that Lucy Stark, after she had put the kid to bed, and me sitting with him in the parlor out at his pappy’s place, where he had asked me to spend the night, and where he and Lucy ordinarily lived in the summer and where they were going to live that winter too instead of in a room in town because Lucy had just been fired from her teaching job for the coming year and there wasn’t any reason to be in town and be spending good money for rent. And there was very likely to be another reason for there not being any reason to stay in town, for Willie was coming up for re-election and his chances looked about as good as the chances of a flea making a living of a carved marble lion on a monument. He had only got the job in the first place, he told me, because Dolph Pillsbury, the Chairman of the Board of County Commissioners, was a sort of secondhand relative of old Mr. Stark, by marriage or something, and Pillsbury had had a falling-out with the other fellow who wanted to be Treasurer. Pillsbury about ran the county, he and the Sheriff, and he was sick of Willie. So Willie was on his way out, and Lucy was already out.
“And I don’t care if I am,” Lucy Stark said, sitting there in the parlor, sewing by the lamp on the table where the big Bible and the plush-bound album were. “I don’t care a bit if they won’t let me teach any more. I taught six years, counting that term I was out and having little Tommie, and nobody ever said I wasn’t all right, but now they write me a letter and say there’re complaints about my work and I don’t show a spirit of co-operation.”
She lifted her sewing and bit off the thread in the way women do to make your flesh crawl. When she leaned over, the light hit her hair to show up the auburn luster lurking in the brown which the operator of the recently established Mason City Beauty Shoppe hadn’t been entirely able to burn out with the curling tongs when she gave the marcel treatment. It was too bad about Lucy’s hair even if the luster was still there. She was still girlish then, about twenty-five but not looking it, with a nice little waist coming straight up out of the satisfactory and unmeager hips and a nice little pair of ankles crossed in front of the chair, and her face was girlish, with soft, soothing contours and large deep-brown eyes, the kind that makes you think of telling secrets in the gloaming over a garden gate when the lilacs are in bloom along the picket fence of the old homestead. But her hair was cut off at about neck level and marcelled the way they did it back then, which was a shame because the face she had was the kind that demanded to be framed by a wealth of long and lustrous-dusky tresses tangled on the snow-white pillow. She must have had plenty of hair, too, before the massacre.