THE
CITY OF
“Haben Sie
eine Zigarette?”
The question, although it took retired
Judge Harold
J. Hudson a moment to decipher it, awoke him from the semi-stupor into
which he
had drifted. The voice was low, husky, and inviting.
“I don’t speak German,”
“Nor do I; I speak Austrian,” the woman
returned,
“but I will speak any language you desire for a cigarette.”
Her voice was husky, probably from too
many
cigarettes. Her words slipped so softly from her brightly painted lips
that
“Sorry, I don’t smoke,”
“You are Amerikaner?”
“Yes.”
“You do not smoke?” The woman made it
sound as if
everyone of consequence smoked.
“No.”
“You for someone wait?” the soft voice
asked,
preventing him from returning to the stupor with which he was trying to
become
familiar.
“Yes,” he
replied, “I am waiting.” His own voice, sharp and strained, startled
him. The
disturbing ache behind his eyes that never seemed to entirely vanish
these
days, returned with increasing force, causing his brain to ache in
empathy.
“In Wien,
one does not
need to wait alone,” the woman offered, blending Austrian and English
with easy
facility. He was forced to look at the woman with deeper penetration.
She was
small, no taller than Betty Ruth, dark and bundled in a fur-collared
coat held
close about her body to keep out the pervasive fog. She wore highly
polished
high-heeled boots. The hair peeping out from beneath her cap was black
in the
dim light. Her eyes were dark, heavily mascaraed and deeply shadowed --
most
likely a woman of the streets. A smile, tentative and ready to vanish
at the
first frown, tilted the corners of her lips. No doubt she did have more
in mind
than a cigarette; how much more, he had no intention of discovering.
She
reminded him too much of his Betty Ruth. The dark eyes studied him
intently, as
if she read more in his face than he had any intention of anyone
reading; as if
she could see the agony of indecision that lay behind his own
slate-gray
irises.
“I have no need of
company.”
Even as he said it, he knew it was untrue. He was tired of being alone;
tired
of waiting for life to decide what his future held; tired of waiting
for his
mistress to make up her mind whether she wanted to share her life with
his or
go on with her acting career; and tired of waiting for J. Paul to show
up at
this rendezvous to tell him why he was so desperately needed in J.
Paul’s
latest and no doubt extra-legal scheme.
“Your woman, she is young?” Beneath the
Austrian’s
heavy paint was an attractive face; beneath the coat was probably a
warm and
comforting body--a perfect excuse to abandon this agony of waiting. Her
English
was surprisingly good, but then, the language ability of the Austrians
no
longer surprised him. This woman of the streets undoubtedly knew
several
languages as well as he knew English.
She automatically assumed he was waiting
for a woman.
“Yes,” he surprised himself by replying. “She is young, and impetuous
and most
unpredictable; but it is not for her that I wait.”
“The young ones are always unpredictable.
You would
do better with an older woman.” The woman sighed, bringing his thoughts
back to
the fog-dampened street. She bundled her coat closer about her ripe
body, an
indication that the interview was at an end and an opportunity for
dalliance
was lost. As she turned to continue her solitary way, she looked back
over her
shoulder, her heavy-lidded eyes masked by the darkness. “Hüten
Sie sich vor
dem dicken Mann.”
“Beg pardon?” said confused
“Beware the fat man,” she warned, then
resumed her
solitary way, to be swallowed by the fog.
To avoid the pressure of his thoughts, he
turned to
examine the alcove in which he sheltered. The door was wood, heavy,
solid wood.
The glass was thick and dark with the impenetrable darkness of immense
distance. Was the glass painted? It could be, yet it seemed not. There
was a
feeling of great depth behind the glass. The walls that abutted the
door were
stone -- solid, heavy, and capable of spurning the most ambitious of
attackers.
The doorframe was made of thick timbers, equally heavy and strong. Why
would a
hotel need to spurn attackers? Was it only the pervasive fog that
colored the
wall, creating malignancy where none in fact existed?
“Zigarette?”
Another soft voice
spoke at his
elbow. If he stayed here much longer, he would have to stock cigarettes
for
passers-by. The City would probably require him to obtain a vendor’s
license.
This time the voice was male, with a
Slavic accent.
The man himself had a Slavic accent. He was no taller than the woman,
thin,
almost emaciated. He wore an old-fashioned fedora. Beneath the brim,
his large
round eyes watched
“Do I look like you?”
“Was?” The man was puzzled, yet he
persevered.
“Zigarette?”
“It’s important, you know, that I know. I
have a
feeling that I look far too much like you. I’m sorry, I have no
cigarettes.”
The visitor fished a large cigar from his
coat
pocket. “Nein,” he replied, and then continued in English, as if
the
subject fascinated him despite his better judgment. “The eyes; the eyes
look as
if they have too much seen. My eyes have too much seen.”
“Only the eyes?”
“The eyes, especially the eyes.” The
little man
watched him hopefully.
“Thank God for that.”
The man made a
production of
lighting his cigar with a large gold lighter.
“Sorry about the cigarettes; about not
having any, I
mean,” apologized
“Deep-set eyes. Always I have a weakness
for deep-set
eyes. I wish I had her seen.” The man sighed deeply, relishing the pain
of his
loss. “Hüten Sie sich vor Dickmann,” the curious fellow
half-whispered,
then with small rapid steps, disappeared into the fog. He faded quickly
in the
darkness of the fog-shrouded street.
“Beware
of
Fatman.” What a curious warning. What could a fat man possibly have to
do with
him? He knew no fat men in
Once more he sighed. Betty Ruth Jordan was
unfortunately quite capable of doing things on her own. J. Paul Renault
only
needed help when one of his schemes escaped his control.
The massive door behind him opened. A
large hand in
an immaculate sleeve reached out, grabbed the scruff of his neck and
hauled him
into the dark interior.
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This page last updated on January 29, 2005
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