pa'ge EigNf ,T ER S P 1? CT I V s. lk--Lp JL " A-0 JL -A By Katherine Ruddy F AYE didn't have much to worry about, the neighbors said. Faye was a very fortunate girl. She had lovely clothes, - perhaps not as many or as expensive ones as some of her friends whose families put every- thing on their back, but plenty of clothes for any girl. After all, you know, beauty is as beauty does. She was quite popu- lar-everyone knew her, and almost everyone liked her, mostly because they had known her all their lives, and there didn't seem to be much reason for not liking her. She had dates on weekends- just Friday and Saturday nights, of course. It isn't a good idea for a young girl to go out on school nights. And such a wonderful family-they all got along so well. Mrs. Martin was so sweet--rather quiet, but Mr. Martin made uo for it. Honestly, that nan could tell funny stories for hours on end. He had a marvelous sense of hu- mor,-and such a strong personality. He was such a good influence on the children. Just made the family one- a real united group. If families were all as agreebale as the Martins, would not life be pleasant? --. Faye, was walking home from school. She was in the eleventh grade. and right now she felt good, as any high school student would, about the 95 she'd gotten in Chemistry. It was Feb- ruary. and the day was cold. The wind reddened her bare legs, and then made little white spots in the red. She would be glad to get warm. It was very cold, but it was like any other day. She had gone to school and a few interesting things had happened but not very many. She would be going to a class dance that night, because it was Friday. Now, she just wanted to get into the warm house. The house was ordinary, too. Like most of the houses on the street, or even in the city, it was built of a drab brick with a bare stretch of front where, every spring neighbors met on a com- mon, barren, grassless ground for the common and usually fruitless purpose of making the grass grow. She hurried up the front steps and found her key in her purse with tingling fingers and un- locked the door. It was afternoon, and the door was locked. Mr. Martin belived in keeping everything locked all the time. It was the best thing to do. When you left doors unlocked, it got around in the underworld; things like that did, he said. He had heard. Mrs. Martin called, "Faye?" "Yeah, it's me." "Well, it's about time you got home." She wasn't scolding. That was just something she always said when one of the children came in. "Where's Bill?" she asked. "I don't know." "Wasn't he over at school?" "I suppose so. I just didn't see him." "He should have been home long ago. Daddy told him to take out the ashe' and put some coal on the fire. He hasn't been home all day." "Nope, I haven't seen him." Faye was reading the funnies. One of her legs was thrown over an arm of the chair. and she spoke in a mumbly, annoyed voice. She didn't like to be disturbe when she read the funnies." 'Daddy'll make the same old fuss. I get so sick of it. Why can't that boy get any place on time?" Mrs. Martin hated arguments, but there was not a great deal of concern in her voice. There were so many in this house. One got used to them. Faye knew there would be as argument, too. But she wasn't worry- ing. It wouldn't be very serious, she thought: just the same old thing, with Daddy shouting at Bill, and Bill not saying much, but getting very red and doing what he had forgotten-silently. She always wanted to kick her father when he bawled Bill out. -In the stomach, she decided, and she wonder- ed what would happen if she ever did it. Whenever lie was .angry he puffed out and pointed at nothing in particiu- lar very dramatically. It looked funny. Whenever he saw Faye smiling at these time/ he was even angrier and told her to wipe that smile off her face. Mary, her younger sister, sat across from Faye on the couch. She had a book in her hand, but she hadn't looked at it for several minutes. Not since Mrs. them in themselves, but he always said such stupid things, and made such an ass of himself, and was so noisy. She wondered if quiet, sensible Mr. Lorn, the father of her best friend, ever shout- ed and said stupid things. Her mother was clattering the dishes in the kitchen where she was fixing supper. Mr. Martin carried the bag in to her before he had even taken off his hat and coat. Faye could hear them as they talked. "Bill home?" irti o/ en I walked through waste alone And in the wide sky, like the sun I hung A great round smiling God-face. Through the waste-lands from the prairies Dragging footsteps in the hot sands, Staring always upward, smiling At the God-face. Walking through the parched sands, Saying praises to the God-face; Panting "Water, water . ." and the God-face Smiled and nodded. Muttering and gasping hotly, afraid of sand, Afraid of looking down, I followed The retreating image; toward the Smiling nodding God-face. "Water!" I screamed. And the God-face Smiled and nodded And retreated. "Water!" . . . and the God-face crinkled, Shattered in a thousand pieces. Now the sky is blue and blank and farther, And I suck my own blood. Look downward, fool, and see the sand Is growing green things, Flowing water. --Carol Bundy "Yes, she told me. But she didn't tell me why you weren't home." "I didn't have time," "Why didn't you make time?" "I just didn't have time. I've been over at the library since school let out." "It isn't such a distance that you couldn't have come home for a few minutes to put a couple of shovels of coal on the fire." "Well, my gosh, anyone around here could do that. I've been working at the library all afternoon." "So you want Mother to run up and down stairs all day, besides doing house- work for you. And you probably weren't at the library, either." "I'n not a liar." "Don't talk back to me, you little snip." Bill was 18 and about five foot ten. "When I was your age I was haul ing wood for six families and doing my schoolwork, too. "But, SIm not a liar." "Don't you say that, again. You're a dirty little liar, and you're so lazy you stink." Faye heard Mary gasp, and then the little girl ran up the stairs, two at a time. The door to her room upstairs slammed. Her mother was still in the kitchen and the noise of dishes was still audible. Faye could imagine her mother's face as she had seen it so many times before on these occasions. It would be rigid, and her mouth would be thin with the pressure of her teeth. It did no good for her to say anything. That only made Mr. Martin think that they were both against him, and he shouted even more. Her father had risen to his feet to face the boy. They weren't far apart, and Faye was becoming frightened, her- self, now. She wanted to run upstairs as Mary had done and cover her eyes with the bedspread and put her hands tight over ier ears. But if she did, she might miss something. She decided she would stay. "Now get downstairs and take care of that furnace. And put a couple of shovels of coal on the fire. Go on, get down there fast." Mr. Martin was us- Mg that dramatic, pointing finger, again. Faye thought she had never seen anything so loathsome in her life. She hated him. She got the feeling again of wanting to kick him. Yes, in the stom- ach. It would hurt the most there--the way he was hurting Bill. But she had never seen Bill so angry, either. He didn't move. His face was very red. Finally, he said, again, 'I'm not a liar." Mr. Martin took another sten toward him. "Don't let me hear you say that, again. And get down those stairs!" Fury blurred his voice, and he raised his arm. Bill kept looking at him for several sec- onds more; then he looked away and started slowly for the door to the base- ment. His dragging steps seemed to en- rage his father further. The man sud- denly stepped forward and kicked him. Bill kept on walking toward the door. When he got there he Turned around and said quietly, "Damn you." He was crying. Then he went down the steps. Her father didn't move, just stood and looked at the half-open door. Faye was surprised when he didn't start after Bill again. He just stood. She had an empty feeling in her stomach, and she, wanted to do something or say some- thing desperate. Bot why should she be unhappy? She was a very fortunate girl. This happen- ed in every family. Everybody quarreled and nothing ever really happened. Fights were always forgotten, weren't they? Mr. Martin turned back to his chair and picked his paper up slowly. "Now, maylbe we'll get some heat around here," he said. Martin had talked about there being an argument. Faye could see her out of the corner of her eye. She looked fright- ened. Whenever there was a fight in the house Mary went up to her room and lay on the bed, face down, until it was over. She was only twelve, and Faye decided that she wasn't old enough to have gotten used to the arguments. Looking at the girl's pale face, she felt sorry for her, but she couldn't under- stand her. Heavens, if a person got ex- . cited about every fight in this house, he'd never have a minute's peace. Be- sides they didn't mean anything. The doorbell rang twice, long and hard. It was Mr. Martin; you could always tell. Faye went to the door, opened it, said, "Hi, Daddy", kissed him, and took the other evening paper out of the paper sack he was carrying. Mr. Martin said, "Hello, honey. Don't get in my way, now. Look out ! These are eggs, and they cost money." That was the way it always was. Just like any other home. Faye liked her father, except when he got in one of those arguments. Not that she minded "No, he had work to do at school, I think." "He hasn't touched the furnace, I suppose?" "Np, he hasn't been home all day, I said." "We could all freeze around here, as far as he's concerned. He isn't working, either. Probably wasting his time some- where." Her mother didn't say anything. Faye recognized the technique, for she used it often. If she was silent long enough and gave her husband time to cool down, he was in less of a mood to argue when Bill came in. Mr. Martin had taken off his hat and coat and was reading the evening paper by the time Bill got home. He came in whistling, a notebook under his arm. "Hi," he said, His father used no preliminaries. "Yes, 'Hi"', he repeated. "Have you been down to the furnace today?" Bill put the notebook down careful- ly and started to pull his shoulder out of his jacket, "No, I haven't been home all day. Didn't mother tell you?"