Read The Death of William Posters Online
Authors: Alan Sillitoe
âThat's a story you made up,' she said, pouring his coffee.
âI know. They're all true enough. I think them up when I'm walking.' They sat by the fire. She suspected he was trying to charm her, but was disturbed more by her suspicion than by the fact that it might be justified. He obviously didn't think about what he said, she decided. âThis is a comfortable house,' he remarked, âI'm enjoying tonight.'
âSo am I,' she admitted, âin a strange way.'
âThat countryside was getting me down. It's too green. The road's hard and the sky's too grey. I favour a warm room and the supper I've just had.' To spoil it, his feet ached for the walking they'd do tomorrow. He couldn't thumb any more lifts, as if the man's accusation of begging free transport had broken one part of his spirit, only to have strengthened another that had just become visible to him. âIt's hard to imagine you not getting lonely though, on these nights.'
She was glad of his curiosity. It comforted her, since it was too rare these days. Yet it was also too brusque and offhand, not only that he might not be sincere in it, but that he might be forgetting that they had only just met, and that such curiosity was premature. Still, she had asked him in â for a cup of tea â and in spite of its short time ago she felt no shyness in talking, mainly because she was only talking out of herself, on the understanding that he would be gone in the morning. In any case, he seemed amiable, almost interesting, though somewhat more remote than a person often is when you stop them in the street to ask a direction.
Relaxed and comfortable by the fire, another part of him was out on the wide spaces of the road, blinded by sky and distance. âI haven't always lived alone,' she said. âI was married twelve years, until I split up a while ago, to a typical middle-class Englishman, an advertising copywriter â someone who sat in an office all day in Holborn thinking up slogans that would sell soap powders or a correspondence course in bricklaying.'
Her phrases gave way to a ticking clock, a noise which made the silence deeper than itself. âYou chose him,' Frank said.
âI made a mistake.'
âSo did he. So did I. It's a marvel to me how many people make mistakes.'
âYou have a sense of humour. But I was tired of the useless life I was leading. It got so that I didn't need him and he didn't need me. He was a sort of father to Kevin, but even that didn't weigh when I decided to leave. Being a housewife in London with a charwoman and an au pair wasn't enough. I was a trained nurse, and was needed in a village like this, by ordinary people who want some sort of looking after. I think everybody should do useful work. I hate idleness or pretence.'
âSo do I.'
âTell me about your work. I've never met anyone who worked in a factory, not to talk to.'
âIn what way? I'm what they used to call a mechanic, but I was beginning to see further than the end of my nose. I was also what the gaffers called “a bit of a troublemaker”, but for years they were baffled by me because I was also a good worker. I could set anybody's tools and take their machine apart as well as the chargehand, and I had many hints that if I stopped being such a keen member of the union, life would be easier for me as far as getting on went. But I saw too much injustice to accept that. I knew which side of the fence I stood on, and still do. I made many others see it as well. They had a favourite trick at our firm of starting on the coloured blokes when they wanted to reduce work rates, but I got the whole shop out once over this, a stoppage they didn't forget because they had to give in over it. People think factory life is a bed of roses, but it needn't be as bad as the gaffers make it. I loved the work â though I didn't realize how much till now. But I can't go back to it, not for a good while.'
âYou'll go back to it,' she said, âlike I had to come back to this work after so long away.' She liked people of integrity, but wasn't sure that she liked his brand of it, so foreign to all the things she had been brought up to believe.
âWhat do you do on these long nights?' he asked. âI didn't see any dance halls on my way into the village.'
âI keep a journal when I can. I read, listen to music, make dresses sometimes, knit. I'll show you where you're to sleep.'
The stairs were steep, straight up, and narrow, and he followed a few steps behind. The long cardigan gave her figure a squarish, rather old-fashioned look, though the shape of her legs and the unmistakable sway above them redeemed her femininity. When she stopped on the tiny landing, there was some hesitation in her face. He was tempted to put out his arms, kiss her if she responded. But they had been talking too long which, for the moment, killed him with hesitation.
She pointed to the bedroom opening to the, right: âGo in, and I'll get you some blankets. There's only one sheet, so you'll have to double it.'
A camp bed lay under the window, and in one corner a tank of four goldfish on a table. It had been the kid's room; shelf of books, a football, boxing gloves, crayons and paint tin, whistles and Dinky toys jumbled into a tea chest. The walls were whitewashed â the first time he'd seen it used for other than ceilings â and it made the small cottage bedroom look bigger than it was. âA nurse in the next village is standing in for me,' she said, dropping his blankets, âso I'm off for the next three days. Which means that I'm not getting up till nine in the morning, so you can just let yourself out early. Slam the door behind you to make sure it locks.'
âI can't thank you enough. I was done-for when I knocked at your door.'
âYou looked it,' she smiled. âI must say. I expect you're tired now, as well.' They shook hands. âIf I don't see you, good luck.' Then she went out, closing the door.
That was quick, he thought. She couldn't get out fast enough. As if I might jump her here by the fish tank, and me on my last legs at that, though I've knee-trembled on no legs at all before now. It was hard to tell whether she wanted me to or not. It was hard to tell whether I wanted to as well. And on that, he was sleeping.
4
It was half past six and still dark, and a driving, wind-crazed rain rattled the windows. Gutters and drainpipes shuttled it musically across the garden path and Frank listened to its stream of consciousness from the warmth of his camp bed, hoping it might stop before he set out towards Lincoln. His first thought on waking was always, nowadays: âWhere am I?' The less comfortable his night's lodging, the quicker came the answer. The space between oblivion and full consciousness was always disturbing, a basalt twilit vacuity, such a depth of neutrality that it was alien and torment to him. In factory days there was no space between deep sleep and dressing, and this new zone had crept into his experience since leaving them.
He stood on the landing. Outside, rain scattered its pellets across shining slates and the heavy blackening evergreen of autumn. No sound came from the nurse's room and, shoes in hand, he stepped softly down stairs that creaked, vibrating so strongly into every room that he expected her door to flick open.
The kitchen was cold, in spite of the single burner left glowing, so he switched on others and set a kettle to boil, washed dishes from the previous night to the futile dizzying beat of Light Programme light music coming from an eye-level radio. An
S O S
message before the news requested Mr Albert Handley, last heard of at Skegness in 1943, to please ring Leicester Infirmary where his mother Mrs Clara Handley was dangerously ill. The dragnet was out for some poor bastard who lit off nearly twenty years ago, and even if he wanted to ignore this message he couldn't because his mates at work this morning would say: âHey, Bert Handley, is that you the wireless meant? Hard luck about your poor mam. When are you going? There's a train at eleven-five.' And maybe poor Albert will spit on his luck, or change his job, or hotfoot it back to his mam's, just to see her out as a good son should. Which only goes to show how you can never be left alone.
A loud fry-up drowned the news. He sat to breakfast at the kitchen table, hoping the sky would run out of rain and let him walk dry-shod over the wolds. An hour had slid by since opening his eyes, and at this speed he wouldn't be leaving till four o'clock. Newspapers flapped through the letterbox. He lit a cigarette, put up his feet to read. The
Mirror
and
The Times
. Out of curiosity he looked at
The Times
first: adverts on the front page, and most of the back ones full of stock exchange and company reports. A property firm made a profit of seventeen million, and a woman had lost her dog.
Eight o'clock. The kettle on again. Her larder was well stocked with the essentials of life. It didn't seem right to leave without saying good-bye and thank you after she'd picked him up off the doorstep half dead from exposure and crippled feet, nursed him back to life even though he was a stranger. What a legend! Talking so much last night, it seemed as if he'd known her for years, even though he hadn't been to bed with her. She was handsome as well as generous, an unbeatable combination which only came to him forcefully on the point of leaving.
He opened the back door and slopped out tea leaves. Daylight and rain showed a garden ending at a meadow, a clump of trees on the rise of it like a secret meeting of amateurish burglars whispering to decide which house to do tonight. The garden was dug over in patches, other parts gone to bush and speckled weedgrass, a few dead potato heads overlapping what remained of a path. A good plot â with a few months' loving care, strong arm and boot. He remembered his night in the hut on Harry's allotment before leaving Nottingham. The soil and damp smell was the same. But then, at that time, there had still been the scent of stubbled wheat and fallen poppy heads, potato tops, snapped runner beans and updug soil, vanishing scents of a receding summer that barely penetrated his rubbed-out brain as he zig-zagged towards the hut.
He had wakened to Harry's spade rhythmically shifting soil outside. There was no one else he could visit after his goodbye to Nancy, so he'd left his car at Bobber's Mill, drunk half the whisky neat between switching off the ignition and opening the door, then cut across the maze of gardens towards Harry's. He let himself in with the spare key under the waterbarrel, sat on a stool and finished off the whisky, then slid to the floor.
He had twelve eyes in his face all trying to look into one another and, when succeeding, only meeting twelve more staring back into each fragmentation, and then into his heart calling him a bloody fool like the opening mouths of ten million goldfish. He pulled a hand to his face, sensing he could put his head in the crook of his arm and crush it like a walnut. Nothing remained but the fleshless knot of his headache, a fizzled-out brain. He stood up to find a cigarette, but fell down again, head thumping painlessly against the floor, a rubber ball dropped by somebody else.
Harry said: âI see you've had a drink or two?' A fist came from Frank's guts: that's the way to talk! Harry the railway shunter out of contact with the acid and battery world; or was it just sarcasm? He was too far in to tell. Harry lit a paraffin lamp, stepping around as if Frank were a normal feature of the hut floor, some garden novelty such as a little boy pissing in a fish tank taken in out of the rain. Frank lay waiting until the anchoring ropes of earth and moon unknotted themselves from his head. He watched Harry pump a primus, and promise tea, while all he could do was tap his ankle and croak: âWater!' when he bent down to hear what he wanted.
âIt'll make you sick,' Harry said. âTea'll be O.K. â if you drink it slow.'
âWater!' Frank said, as if covered in sand. Someone rammed a javelin into his mouth. It stretched from throat to belly and burned like prime acid. He wanted to cough or be sick, jettison it from him, but was unable to make the effort, and in any case if he did all his life's guts would go with it. He was sure of that, waited for his own heat to melt the metal of the javelin, so that he could dare to move again and one day stand up. When he tried, the earth spun in and blacked him out.
âThis is no joke,' Harry said. âYou might not be at death's door, but you're at the bloody side-entrance if you ask me. Was anybody mixing your booze?'
âGive me some water.'
âYou'll get some as soon as this kettle boils, so hold on.' He closed the hut door and sat on a stool looking down at his guest. âYou can take an Aspro as well, and have something to eat. There ain't much I ain't got in this hut. Home from home. Ida's been on her holidays this last week, and I slept here a couple of times, so you're lucky we're well provided for. I've got some sardines and a chunk of bacon on that shelf, and some yesterday's bread.'
Frank's eyes were closed; the words âbacon' and âsardines' made him retch, but it stopped at that, though ever-ready Harry pushed a piece of sacking at his head: âUse that if you've got to.'
The clean aromatic smell of hot tea came to him, worse than the idea of oil-dripping sardines, though still the javelin stayed lodged in his body when another set of spasms jerked up from his stomach. âThat's what drink does,' Harry handed him a cup of tea, âfills you full of bile. You ought to keep off it. Want summat to eat?'
âAy, give me a deathcake â and a cup o' quick poison while you're at it.' He groaned, rolled away from the white heat of the flaring lamp. âYou been in a fight?' Harry wanted to know.
âOnly with myself. I'm still in it.'
âNow you're being funny.'
âDo you ever think about the future, Harry?'
âEh? Get this.'
âWater. I'm drowning in lung fluid and stomach piss but I'm thirsty as if I've worked a week in soot-dust. My breath's a blowlamp.' He tried to light a cigarette, choked, and lay back down, felt, in spite of feeling weak, sick and near death's outward fires, as if his interior had been renewed after destruction, and the experience of scorched guts and humiliated stomach had somehow rejuvenated his heart and soul. Never before had so much happened in one day, and the thought made him laugh.