Text 25
THEN IN TRIUMPH
by F. L. Parke
There were cars in front of the house. Four of them. Clifford Oslow cut across the
lawn and headed for the back steps. But not soon enough. The door of a big red car opened
and a woman came rushing after him. She was a little person, smaller even than Clifford
himself. But she was fast. She reached him just as he was getting through the hedge.
"You're Mr.Oslow, aren't you?" she said. She pulled out a little book and a pencil and
held them under his nose. "I've been trying to get her autograph all week," she explained. "I
want you to get it f or me. Just drop the book in a mail-box. It's stamped and the address is on
it."
And then she was gone and Clifford was standing there holding the book and pencil in
his hand.
He put the autograph book in his pocket and hurried up the steps.
There was a lot of noise coming from the living-room. Several male voices, a strange
woman's voice breaking through now and then, rising above the noise. And Julia's voice,
rising above the noise, clear and kindly and very sure.
"Yes," she was saying. And, "I'm very glad." And, "People have been very generous to
me."
She sounded tired.
Clifford leaned against the wall while he finished the sandwich and the beer. He left
the empty bottle on the table, turned off the kitchen light and pushed easily on the hall door.
A man grabbed him by the arm and pushed him along the hall and into the parlor.
«Here he is» somebody shouted. "Here's Mr.Oslow!"
There were a half-a-dozen people there, all with notebooks and busy pens. Julia was in
the big chair by the fireplace, looking plumper than usual in her new green dress.
She smiled at him affectionately but, it seemed to him, a little distantly. He'd noticed
that breach in her glance many times lately. He hoped that it wasn't superiority, but he was
afraid that it was.
"Hello, Clifford," she said.
"Hello, Julia," he answered.
He didn't get a chance to go over and kiss her. A reporter had him right against the
wall. How did it seem to go to bed a teller' at the Gas Company and to wake up the husband
of a best-selling novelist? Excellent, he told them. Was he going to give up his job? No, he
wasn't. Had he heard the news that "Welcome Tomorrow" was going to be translated into
Turkish? No, he hadn't.
And then the woman came over. The one whose voice he'd heard back in the kitchen
where he wished he'd stayed.
"How", she inquired briskly, "did you like the story?"
Clifford didn't answer immediately. He just looked at the woman. Everyone became
very quiet. And everyone looked at him. The woman repeated the question. Clifford knew
what he wanted to say. "I liked it very much," he wanted to say and then run. But they
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wouldn't let him run. They'd make him stay. And ask him more questions. Which he couldn't
answer.
"I haven't," he mumbled, "had an opportunity to read it yet. But I'm going to," he
promised. And then came a sudden inspiration. "I'm going to read it now!" There was a copy
on the desk by the door. Clifford grabbed it and raced for the front stairs.
Before he reached the second flight, though, he could hear the woman's voice on the
hall phone. "At last", she was saying, "we have discovered an adult American who has not
read "Welcome Tomorrow". He is, of all people, Clifford Oslow, white, 43, a native ,of this
city and the husband of..."
On the second floor Clifford reached his study, turned on the light over the table and
dropped into the chair before it. He put Julia's book right in front of him, but he didn't
immediately open it.
Instead he sat back in the chair and looked about him. The room was familiar enough.
It had been his for over eighteen years. The table was the same. And the old typewriter was
the one he had bought before Julia and he were married.
There hadn't been many changes. All along the bookcase were the manuscripts of his
novels. His rejected novels. On top was his latest one, the one that had stopped going the
rounds six months before.
On the bottom was his earliest one. The one he wrote when Julia and he were first
married.
Yes, Clifford was a writer then. Large W. And he kept on thinking of himself as one
for many years after, despite the indifference of the publishers. Finally, of course, his writing
had become merely a gesture. A stubborn unwillingness to admit defeat. Now, to be sure, the
defeat was definite. Now that Julia, who before a year ago hadn't put pen to paper, had written
a book, had it accepted and now was looking at advertisements that said, "over four hundred
thousand copies."
He picked up "Welcome Tomorrow" and opened it, as he opened every book, in the
middle. He read a paragraph. And then another. He had just started a third when suddenly he
stopped. He put down Julia's book, reached over to the shelf and pulled out the dusty
manuscript of his own first effort. Rapidly he turned over the crisp pages. Then he began to
read aloud.
Clifford put the manuscript on the table on top of the book. For a long time he sat
quietly. Then he put the book in his lap and left the manuscript on the table and began to read
them, page against page. He had his answer in ten minutes.
And then he went back downstairs. A couple of reporters were still in the living-room.
"But, Mrs. Oslow, naturally our readers are interested," one was insisting. "When," he
demanded, "will you finish your next book?"
"I don't know," she answered uneasily.
Clifford came across the room to her, smiling. He put his arm around her and pressed
her shoulder firmly but gently. "Now, now, Julia," he protested. "Let's tell the young man at
once."
The reporter looked up.
"Mrs.Oslow's new novel," Clifford announced proudly, "will be ready in another
month."
Julia turned around and stared at him, quite terrified.
But Clifford kept on smiling. Then he reached into his pocket and brought out the
autograph book and pencil that had been forced on him on his way home.
"Sign here," he instructed.
NOTES:
parlor – гостинная
teller – кассир в банке
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