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    Four Freedoms

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      typewriter table that pulled out and sprang into rigidity with a snap, a

      secret cash drawer within a drawer—it was the first item of furniture

      Prosper recognized as his own, as in fact him in another mode; it

      appeared in his dreams for years, altered as he was himself.)

      Mert and Fred didn’t appear for this job themselves (they disdained

      and shrank from the women as much as the women did from them),

      but eventually a couple of fellows in derbies and collarless shirts arrived

      in a horse-drawn van and unloaded a cheap and vulgar but serviceable

      and brand-new set of furniture of the right type, don’t ask how

      acquired, and swapped it for Bea’s and May’s parents’ old moveables,

      which they carted away without a word.

      “Why don’t you like Uncle Mert and Uncle Fred?” Prosper asked

      them as he ate the egg they cooked him every morning, themselves

      taking nothing but coffee.

      The two turned toward each other, that wide-eyed how-shall-we-

      respond look he’d seen before, then to Prosper again.

      “First of all,” May said, “they aren’t really your uncles. Mert’s your

      mother’s cousin, and I don’t even know what Fred is.”

      Prosper didn’t know why that would exclude them from the wom-

      en’s world, and spooned the orange yolk from his egg. Now and then

      when he’d walked out with his father, he’d been taken into a diner or a

      garage to meet the two men, and those three had smoked a cigar

      together and talked of matters Prosper didn’t understand, his father

      F O U R F R E E D O M S / 141

      laughing with them and at the same time somehow shy and cautious,

      as though in their debt. He wondered now.

      “They hang around down with that icehouse gang,” May said.

      “You don’t want to know.”

      But he did. Icehouse?

      “They’re not bad, ” Bea said, always ameliorative. “It’s not that we

      don’t like them. It’s just.”

      “They have their uses,” May said regally, and she and Bea laughed

      together.

      Their place was too small to fit a wheelchair in, even if they could

      have afforded one, but May had a wheeled office chair, a model 404D,

      the Steno Deluxe, sent over from the business, and Prosper got good at

      navigating the space of the downstairs in it, moving quickly hand over

      hand from chair back to door frame to dresser like Tarzan sailing

      through the jungle on his vines. The women had to roll up and put

      away the rug, the beautiful Chinese rug, for him. Prosper only later

      understood how many such things they did, how many little costs they

      bore, all willingly paid. He had set them a problem, and they would

      solve it: for a time, they had to think up something new almost every

      day, and Prosper would try it, and at day’s end they’d congratulate

      themselves and Prosper that that was done—Prosper had taken a bath

      and got out by himself, Prosper had been taken to the hospital for the

      sores on his feet, Prosper was going to go to school—and the next day

      face another.

      They got him to school with the help of Mary Mack, who knocked

      one day at the door, appearing like the Marines (May said), face shin-

      ing, having lost track of her client when he left the hospital—no one

      had told her! She invited May and Bea to share her astonishment at

      this, though they knew (and knew Miss Mack knew) that it was they

      themselves who had told no one that Prosper had got out—but well!

      Back again now, offering help, kidding Prosper (mute with bliss to be

      in her radiance again) about playing hooky. Yes of course he’d go to

      school. A few years back the progressives on the school board had

      passed a resolution, and the city an ordinance, stating that every child

      capable of being educated in the public schools ought to be, and accom-

      modations must be made in the school, or at home for those unable to

      reach the school. And Miss Mack knew that the school to which Pros-

      142 / J O H N C R O W L E Y

      per would now be going had set up a special classroom that the cripples

      and wheelchair-bound children could reach. There was a sort of ramp,

      she said, such as wheelbarrows or hand trucks might use, and once

      inside there were no stairs to climb. Prosper had kept up with his les-

      sons while in the hospital, hadn’t he? Well his teachers would decide

      when he got there whether to advance him or keep him back. And how

      (May and Bea almost in unison asked) was he to get to and from this

      school? Miss Mack drew from her belted black leather satchel the

      papers for May or Bea to sign, Prosper’s guardians as they now were or

      would become, so that Prosper could ride the special bus that would go

      around the district for the children who could not walk to school.

      “I could walk,” Prosper said with offhand certainty.

      “It’s a long way,” said Mary Mack. She looked long into Prosper’s

      eyes, and he looked into hers, deep dark blue and larger than seemed

      possible, somehow in his gazing absorbing her divinity unmediated.

      “Maybe you should save your strength.”

      “All right,” Prosper said, unreleased.

      “At first, anyway,” said Mary Mack.

      “All right,” Prosper said.

      So when September came, there Prosper would go, and what would

      come of that the women tried to imagine—how he would be regarded,

      whether kindly or disdainfully, and how he would get on included with

      a classful of children in his own case or maybe worse—but they couldn’t

      imagine, really, and Fenix all that summer was dull or hostile, unre-

      sponsive, maybe jealous of the new child in the family.

      Bea and May usually spent their week’s vacation at a modest resort

      in the mountains, eating vegetarian meals and doing exercises under

      the instruction of a swami, but this year they saw that they’d have to be

      right there in their own hot house, which they hoped wasn’t a sign of

      things to come for them. They played Hearts and cribbage and they

      listened to the radio and brought home books for Prosper from the

      library. Carefully, one of them on each side of him, they took walks

      around the block, returning in a sweat and feeling as though they’d

      walked every step of the way in his braces themselves. Once in the

      humid night May wept in Bea’s arms, and couldn’t say why: at the

      change in their lives that would be forever, at that poor child’s losses,

      at his heartbreaking good cheer, at everything.

      5

      Sometime late in that summer, Prosper made a discovery: his mother

      and father were kept in the house, in the big closet under the stair.

      Curious and aimless in the hot afternoon, he’d started open-

      ing doors and peeking into drawers, learning the place, and this

      one last: that smaller-than-normal door, the door with the angular top,

      many a house he’d live in afterward would have one, and he’d always

      find them sinister. And in there in the dusty shadows, amid the boxes

      and a fur coat and a busted umbrella, stood or sat the great gray

      Hoover vacuum cleaner his mother had pushed and pulled all morning

      twice a week. It was the same one: th
    ere was the scar mended with

      thread where once the bag had caught on a protruding banister nail

      and torn. And close beside it, matrimonially close, his father’s two

      leather sample cases, still shut up, buckled and strapped, just as they

      had been in the closet beneath the stair in his old home.

      Prosper slid from his rolling chair to the floor and crept into the

      closet, just far enough so that he could snag one of the cases; he dragged

      it out, feeling as though it might have grabbed him instead and pulled

      him in. It was heavier than he would have thought, too heavy almost to

      carry, and his father had carried both, at least from cab to train sta-

      tion, station to hotel, up the stairs of businesses where he talked to

      prospects. Prosper knew about that. But somehow he had never known

      144 / J O H N C R O W L E Y

      just what it was his father had sold. The story about selling, about car-

      rying and talking and traveling, didn’t include that; or if it had, it

      hadn’t been anything he could speculate about, objects or matter only

      usable in the grown-up world, in business, none of his business though.

      He tugged at the straps, which had first to be pulled tighter in order to

      be released; when they were undone the catch on the top could be

      unsnapped, and then the case fell into two, all revealed. In the pockets

      and holders and clips were paints in lead tubes, and brushes in gradu-

      ated sizes, beautiful pencils not yellow but emerald green, tucked into

      a looped belt like cartridges. In other compartments or layers, small

      pads and sheets of differing papers coarse to smooth. A case of pen

      nibs, all different, from hairstreak-fine to broad as chisels. Other pens

      whose use he couldn’t grasp, elaborate heavy compasses, a dozen tools

      even more obscure. A thick catalog that showed all those things and

      also drafting tables, T squares, cyclostyle machines, airbrushes, gray

      pictures of gravely smiling men in bow ties using them.

      Commercial Artist’s Supplies was what he sold. The name of the

      company and his father’s were on the cards tucked into a special holder

      at the case’s top. Prosper could feel the raised lettering on the card

      under his finger, as though the words were made of black paint drib-

      bled on with supernal precision. Cable COMARTSCO. The second

      case, when in a state of strange excitement he extracted and opened it

      too, contained more and different things, including three boxes of col-

      ored pencils of the kind Bea and May had given him, each full of pen-

      cils in more exquisitely graduated colors. For an instant he heard his

      father’s voice.

      He restored the contents as carefully as he could, shut them up, and

      pushed them back beneath the stair beside the Hoover. For a couple of

      days he said nothing, at once elated and oppressed by his discovery;

      but then, at dinner, he slyly turned the topic to his father and his work,

      those big cases he used to carry, what were those? And his aunts both

      jumped up at once, went to pull the cases out, glad for him, glad he had

      thought of them, glad he wanted to look into them, go ahead! Bea

      pulled out from one of the nested compartments a paper book called

      Teach Yourself Commercial Art & Studio Skills, and Prosper accepted

      it from her with a turn of his heart and a warmth in his throat he

      hadn’t known before.

      F O U R F R E E D O M S / 145

      So the great cases went into his room. Bea and May said that the

      company’d asked for them back but Prosper’s mother’d never got to it,

      and it seemed they’d sent an angry letter while she was in the hospital,

      and then they’d quietly gone out of business themselves. If Prosper

      wanted a T square and a board they’d have to find them elsewhere.

      Meanwhile the women had to return to work, and it was just too

      hard to bear thinking of him all alone in the house, for he couldn’t be

      a latchkey child, couldn’t run to the park or hop on the streetcar to the

      natatorium (they were sure of that). So they asked around the neigh-

      borhood for someone who might be induced to come and visit him,

      play Parcheesi in the cool of the darkened house, draw and paint, sit on

      the porch and drink Coca-Cola; and because they were the persons

      they were they didn’t think not to accept when a neighbor lady in pity

      assigned her daughter, a year and more older than Prosper, to do this

      service. And because Prosper was coming to be the person he was, he

      made no objection.

      Her name was Elaine, dark and soft; strangely slow and languid she

      seemed to Prosper, her fingers moving more tentatively or cautiously to

      do any task than his would: he would watch fascinated as she opened a

      box of crackers or brought forward her skirt from behind her as she sat.

      “What happened to you?” she asked when the grown-ups had all

      left them. He had got on his braces to meet her.

      “I fell out of an airplane,” Prosper said. He’d had no idea he would

      say that until he heard it. “I’ll probably get better.”

      She seemed not to hear it anyway. She went on looking at the steel

      bars that came out from Prosper’s pant legs and went underneath his

      shoes.

      “Would you like a soda pop?” he asked. He couldn’t perceive that

      she heard this either. Prosper, who was stared at a lot by different

      people in different ways, was learning methods of distracting their

      gaze, bringing it up to his face, even throwing it off him. Elaine’s he

      seemed not to be able even to pull up. It wasn’t one of the usual faces

      Prosper knew (but as yet had no name for, couldn’t say he knew): it

      wasn’t the cheerful I-see-nothing-out-of-the-way one, or the repelled-

      but-fascinated one, or the poor-animal-in-trouble one (head tilted, eyes

      big with pity). Elaine just looked, and went on looking. After a time

      she arose, in her unwilled way, and came to where he stood. He was

      146 / J O H N C R O W L E Y

      unsure what she intended; should he step away? Was she headed for

      another room, the door out, did she mean to bean him? He’d never

      seen such an unknowable face. She stopped before him and squatted.

      He stood still. She lifted up the cuff of his trouser to see the shaft of the

      brace.

      “How high up do they go?”

      “Here.” He touched his thigh. She looked up to where he touched,

      then at his face, and then, as though snapping out of something, she

      stood, turned, and walked away, and proposed a game, and said the

      African violets needed watering, and that she herself would be entering

      the eighth grade come September, and so went on talking for much of

      the day in a steady soft uncrossable stream.

      The next day when she came he was sitting in his office chair. He

      hadn’t been able to remember, when he woke, what she looked like,

      but now he could see that what made her face confusing was the way

      her eyebrows were made, lifting up from their outer edges toward the

      middle, as though she were perpetually asking a question.

      “Why aren’t you wearing those things?”

      “The braces? They’re hot. This is easier. Would you like a soda


      pop?”

      She stood regarding him without responding, listening maybe to

      her own thoughts. Looking around in her slow absent-watchful way

      she saw his braces, propped against his bed in the parlor he occupied.

      She went in, and he followed on the chair. She squatted before the

      braces as she had before Prosper, and examined with her slow fingers

      the leather straps, the metal bars, the pad that covered his knee.

      “Do they hurt?” she said.

      “No. They make you sweat. You have to wear long socks. Stocki-

      nette.”

      “Stockinette,” she said, as though she liked the word. “Are they

      hard to put on?”

      “Not for me.”

      “Let me see.”

      “Okay,” he said. Who would have thought someone would ask him

      that? But he didn’t mind; it was about his only trick. He slid from the

      wheeled chair and to the floor. “I have to take my trousers off,” he said.

      Without getting up, Elaine turned herself around. Prosper worked

      F O U R F R E E D O M S / 147

      off his pants where he sat, and took the long tubes of stockinette from

      the bed where he’d tossed them. Elaine, who had been peeking around

      to see, now turned, too fascinated not to. Prosper worked the long

      stockings up over his legs, then took one of the two frames, lifted his

      leg with his hands and fitted it inside. Then the other. He worked his

      feet into the Buster Browns that were attached at the bottoms. He

      wished it didn’t take so long, he’d like to speed through it like charac-

      ters in movie cartoons can do, a momentary blur of activity and it’s

      done. He began the buckling, and Elaine came closer.

      “Do they have to be tight?”

      “Oh yes,” he said. When his shoes were tied he said, “Now watch

      this.” He reached out for a crutch, also propped there by the bed, rolled

      himself to his side, and with a hand on the floor pushed himself up,

      then pulled up farther on the crutch’s crossbar till he was standing up.

      “See? Easy.”

      “You didn’t put your pants on.”

      “Oh. I usually do.” He laughed, but she didn’t; once again she

      seemed to remember herself, rose and left the room, and when he had

      got the braces off and his pants on again he found her primly seated in

      the window seat with a magazine.

      Since she evidently liked him better when his braces were on, he

     


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