Browse Subject Headings
The Fisher King : A Novel
The Fisher King : A Novel
Click to enlarge
Author(s): Marshall, Paule
ISBN No.: 9780684869704
Edition: Reprint
Pages: 224
Year: 200110
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 22.39
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Chapter 1 "Had the brass-face to come round me playing the Sodom and Gomorrah music!" The old woman they said was his great-grandmother stood eyeing him from behind the locked iron gate to the basement of her house. She had ordered that he be brought to see her as soon as he arrived, if not the same day, then the one following. In either case, he was to visit her first, she''d said, before any of the other relatives, and certainly before "the old-miss-young" across the street at No. 258 Macon. And the visit was to last a full hour. She had insisted on that also. Yet minutes had passed and she had made no move to open the gate and let him in. Nor had she spoken as yet, even though Hattie who had brought him over for the visit and was standing waiting behind him had politely greeted the woman and introduced him when she answered the bell.


"Hello, Mrs. Payne, it''s Hattie," she''d said. "Hattie Carmichael? You might not recognize me it''s been so long, so many years.And this is Sonny. His name''s Sonny." Not a word. Her rheumy, clouded-over eyes immediately latching onto his face, the woman hadn''t said a word. Nor had she so much as glanced at Hattie.


He waited, puzzled, Hattie behind him, her height and bulk shielding him from the wind that had followed them into the bare front yard of the house. A late March wind that was behaving as if it were still the depths of winter. On the way over, it had buffeted them past the houses lining either side of the long street. They were row houses the like of which he had never seen before, all of them four stories tall under lowering, beetle-browed cornices, all of them hewn out of a dark, somber reddish-brown stone, and all with high stoops of a dozen or more steps slanting sharply down from the second story to the yard. Because of the raised, high-stepping stoops, the brown uniform houses made him think of an army goosestepping toward an enemy that was a mirror image of itself across the street. Then there was the heavy wrought-iron basement gate under the side of each stoop, identical to the one rearing up just inches from his face. A dungeon gate with arrowhead bars like spears. He liked it.


Liked also the marching houses. Castles. Something about them reminded him of the castles and fortresses he was good at drawing. The woman he''d been told was his great-grandmother continued her silent scrutiny of him. For his part, he had already noted as much of her as he cared to, from the battered old-lady hat on top of her uncombed hair down to the none-too-clean housedress to be glimpsed under a long, shapeless cardigan that was as heavy as a coat hanging on her tall bony frame. The few buttons left on the sweater were all in the wrong holes and there were food stains on it as well as on the dress. Like a two-year-old, he thought, who didn''t know how to dress or feed itself good. Worse, there was her hand.


You''re not to stare Hattie was always admonishing him. This time he couldn''t help it. There was nothing wrong with the woman''s right hand. That was okay. But behind the tall bars of the gate, her left hand kept up a trembly dance at her side. Did he really want someone like her for a relative? "Is something wrong, Mrs. Payne?" Hattie''s voice at his back. "Have you changed your mind? Should I maybe bring him back another day?" A cut-eye.


The woman finally acknowledged Hattie''s presence with a single venomous cut-eye and returned her gaze to his face. It came to Sonny then: the gate wouldn''t open, the visit would not take place, so long as Hattie stood drawn up behind him as if waiting to barge into the house the moment he was admitted. She was not, it had been agreed, to be part of the visit. The man who had met them at the airport two days ago and driven them in his big, fast car to this strange place called Brooklyn -- his great-uncle Edgar the man had called himself -- had prevailed upon Hattie to let him visit the woman alone. That''s another thing the great-grandmother woman had insisted on. He was to be alone with her. Not even the man, who was her son, was to be present. "You don''t mind, do you?" the man had asked him.


"A big boy like you." "No," he had lied. "I warn you, she''s old and acts a little odd at times, but you''re not to let it bother you. After all, she''s family and blood." "There''re all kinds of family and blood''s got nothing to do with it!" Hattie. She had sounded to Sonny as if ready to take him and herself right back home on the plane that had brought them. The man had hastily agreed with her. Now she was saying to the woman, and she was no longer being polite, "All right, Mrs.


Payne, I get the message. I''m leaving. But I''ll be back for him in an hour, if not before. He''s to meet his other great-grandmother this morning too, y''know. She''s got as much right to him as anybody else around here!" Then, bending down to hug him from behind, Hattie repeated the instructions she''d given him earlier: if there was a problem or he didn''t like it or if anything happened to upset or frighten him he was to phone her and she''d come get him right away. To prevent the woman from understanding, she had switched from English to French. Or what with Hattie passed for French. Terrible.


Sonny hadn''t realized just how terrible was the scrambled, make-do French she spoke until he started school. Did he have the slip of paper with the number where they were staying in his pocket? "Oui," he said; and deeply offended by the cutting look she''d been dealt, Hattie, his fathermothersisterbrother and all the "kin" he''d ever known, was gone. The moment she turned out of the yard, the woman unlocked the dungeon gate. It took her a while because of the trembly hand. That done, she spoke for the first time. "Come out the cold, nuh!" Inside, fearful but curious, he followed her down a long dim hallway that wasn''t much warmer than outside. And that had a smell. The basement or ground floor of the woman''s house had a dank, musty, stale-kitchen smell and there was so little light that for all his curiosity he couldn''t see much of anything except shadows, large, unwelcoming shadows observing him on either side.


He kept close on the woman''s heels. As if to make up for the time lost waiting for Hattie to leave, she was moving at a stiff but urgent shuffle. Midway down the hall, a walled-in staircase loomed up to their right and, without bothering to check on him behind her, she started up the steps. She climbed, one halting baby step at a time, while he hung back at the bottom, unable to see where to place his foot the darkness on the walled-in stairs was so dense. "Come ''long, nuh!" He scrambled blindly up. Yelling at him! Annoyed, he would''ve sneaked a look under her dress to get back at her had there been any light. It was wrong, but he would have done it anyway. Upstairs, on the second floor, another long hall led back toward the front of the house.


There was somewhat more light here, although it only served to reveal a shameful state of neglect and dirt everywhere. Cracked and peeling walls. Large turds of dust like tumbleweed. Overhead, the rusted pipes of a defunct sprinkler system lined what had once been a beautiful coffered ceiling. Underfoot, the filthy hall runner was worn clear through to the floorboards down its center. He would tell Hattie on her: that she had yelled at him and that she kept her house no better than she kept herself. Near the front of the hall, she came to a halt at the foot of a wide staircase leading to the two upper floors of the house. Then, abruptly: "Turn off the lights and the blasted radios up there!" The woman suddenly shouting like a drill sergeant up the dark and silent stairs.


"You think I own Con Edison? Damn roomers! You''s more trouble than profit!" Before he could see the lights or hear the radios for himself, he was bounding after her over to an elaborately carved double door on their left. As was true of all the woodwork in the hall, the joined doors had clearly not been polished in years; nevertheless they were still handsome, stately, tall, reaching almost to the high ceiling, the kind of doors he''d seen only in a church. These, the woman opened. Or rather, she made them disappear. With what seemed to him an abracadabra motion of her hands -- including the shaky one -- on the handles, she sent both halves of the great door rumbling out of sight. Magic. True, he saw the metal track in the floor and the long slender pockets in either wall, yet it nonetheless seemed like something magical she alone had done. He was suddenly less annoyed with her.


Through the wide doorway, the old woman ushered Sonny into a shuttered, airless living room filled to overflow with an assortment of shabby, mismatched furniture, none of it arranged in any order. A living room that had originally been a formal Victorian front parlor, although now it looked like a dark, dusty warehouse or a secondhand furniture store that hadn''t had a sale in years. Moving with even greater urgency, she led him through the clutter over to an old upright piano that had an unusually high front. Out of everything in the room the piano alone stood dusted and polished. There she stopped. "Take off yuh coat, nuh." His new coat. Hattie had bought it for him only days ago with money from the check sent her by the man who had met them a.



To be able to view the table of contents for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...
To be able to view the full description for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...
Browse Subject Headings