"the wonderful ice cream suit" - читать интересную книгу автора (Bradbury Ray) THE WONDERFUL ICE CREAM SUIT Ray Bradbury It was summer twilight in the city, and out
front of the quiet-clicking pool hall three young Mexican-American men breathed
the warm air and looked around at the world. Sometimes they talked and
sometimes they said nothing at all but watched the cars glide by like black
panthers on the hot asphalt or saw trolleys loom up like thunderstorms, scatter
lightning, and rumble away into silence. "Hey," sighed Martinez at last. He
was the youngest, the most sweetly sad of the three. "It's a swell night,
huh? Swell." As he observed the world it moved very close
and then drifted away and then came close again. People, brushing by, were
suddenly across the street. Buildings five miles away suddenly leaned over him.
But most of the time everything - people, cars, and buildings - stayed way out
on the edge of the world and could not be touched. On this quiet warm summer
evening Martinez's face was cold. "Nights like this you wish . . . lots of
things." "Wishing," said the second man,
Villanazul, a man who shouted books out loud in his room but spoke only in
whispers on the street. "Wishing is the useless pastime of the
unemployed." "Unemployed?" cried Vamenos, the
unshaven. "Listen to him! We got no jobs, no money!" "So," said Martinez, "we got no
friends." "True." Villanazul gazed off toward
the green plaza where the palm trees swayed in the soft night wind. "Do
you know what I wish? I wish to go into that plaza and speak among the
businessmen who gather there nights to talk big talk. But dressed as I am, poor
as I am, who would listen? So, Martinez, we have each other. The friendship of
the poor is real friendship. We-" But now a handsome young Mexican with a fine
thin mustache strolled by. And on each of his careless arms hung a laughing
woman. "Madre mнa! " Martinez slapped
his own brow. "How does that one rate two friends?" "It's his nice new white summer
suit." Vamenos chewed a black thumbnail. "He looks sharp." Martinez leaned out to watch the three people
moving away, and then at the tenement across the street, in one fourth-floor
window of which, far above, a beautiful girl leaned out, her dark hair faintly
stirred by the wind. She had been there forever, which was to say for six
weeks. He had nodded, he had raised a hand, he had smiled, he had blinked
rapidly, he had even bowed to her, on the street, in the hall when visiting
friends, in the park, downtown. Even now, he put his hand up from his waist and
moved his fingers. But all the lovely girl did was let the summer wind stir her
dark hair. He did not exist. He was nothing. "Madre mнa! " He looked away
and down the street where the man walked his two friends around a corner.
"Oh, if just I had one suit, one! I wouldn't need money if I looked
okay." "I hesitate to suggest," said
Villanazul, "that you see Gуmez. But he's been talking some crazy talk for
a month now about clothes. I keep on saying I'll be in on it to make him go
away. That Gуmez." "Friend," said a quiet voice. "Gуmez!" Everyone turned to stare. Smiling strangely, Gуmez pulled forth an
endless thin yellow ribbon which fluttered and swirled on the summer air. "Gуmez," said Martinez, "what
you doing with that tape measure?" Gуmez beamed. "Measuring people's
skeletons." "Skeletons!" "Hold on." Gуmez squinted at
Martinez. "Caramba! Where you been all my life! Let's try you!
" Martinez saw his arm seized and taped, his leg
measured, his chest encircled. "Hold still!" cried Gуmez. "Arm
- perfect. Leg - chest - perfecto! Now quick, the height! There! Yes!
Five foot five! You're in! Shake!" Pumping Martinez's hand, he stopped
suddenly. "Wait. You got . . . ten bucks?" "I have!" Vamenos waved some grimy
bills. "Gуmez, measure me!" "All I got left in the world is nine
dollars and ninety-two cents." Martinez searched his pockets. "That's
enough for a new suit? Why?" "Why? Because you got the right skeleton,
that's why!" "Seтor Gуmez, I don't hardly know
you-" "Know me? You're going to live with me!
Come on!" Gуmez vanished into the poolroom. Martinez,
escorted by the polite Villanazul, pushed by an eager Vamenos, found himself
inside. "Dominguez!" said Gуmez. Dominguez, at a wall telephone, winked at them.
A woman's voice squeaked on the receiver. "Manulo!" said Gуmez. Manulo, a wine bottle tilted bubbling to his
mouth, turned. Gуmez pointed at Martinez. "At last we found our fifth
volunteer!" Dominguez said, "I got a date, don't
bother me-" and stopped. The receiver slipped from his fingers. His little
black telephone book full of fine names and numbers went quickly back into his
pocket. "Gуmez, you-?" "Yes, yes! Your money, now! Бndale!
" The woman's voice sizzled on the dangling
phone. Dominguez glanced at it uneasily. Manulo considered the empty wine bottle in his
hand and the liquor-store sign across the street. Then very reluctantly both men laid ten dollars
each on the green velvet pool table. Villanazul, amazed, did likewise, as did Gуmez,
nudging Martinez. Martinez counted out his wrinkled bills and change. Gуmez
flourished the money like a royal flush. "Fifty bucks! The suit costs sixty! All we
need is ten bucks!" "Wait," said Martinez. "Gуmez,
are we talking about one suit? Uno? " "Uno! " Gуmez raised a finger.
"One wonderful white ice cream summer suit! White, white as the August
moon!" "But who will own this one suit?" "Me!" said Manulo. "Me!" said Dominguez. "Me!" said Villanazul. "Me!" cried Gуmez. "And you,
Martinez. Men, let's show him. Line up!" Villanazul, Manulo, Dominguez, and Gуmez rushed
to plant their backs against the poolroom wall. "Martinez, you too, the other end, line
up! Now, Vamenos, lay that billiard cue across our heads!" "Sure, Gуmez, sure!" Martinez, in line, felt the cue tap his head
and leaned out to see what was happening. "Ah!" he gasped. The cue lay flat on all their heads, with no
rise or fall, as Vamenos slid it along, grinning. "We're all the same height!" said
Martinez. "The same!" Everyone laughed. Gуmez ran down the line, rustling the yellow
tape measure here and there on the men so they laughed even more wildly. "Sure!" he said. "It took a
month, four weeks, mind you, to find four guys the same size and shape as me, a
month of running around measuring. Sometimes I found guys with five-foot-five
skeletons, sure, but all the meat on their bones was too much or not enough.
Sometimes their bones were too long in the legs or too short in arms. Boy, all
the bones! I tell you! But now, five of us, same shoulders, chests, waists,
arms, and as for weight? Men!" Manulo, Dominguez, Villanazul, Gуmez, and at
last Martinez stepped onto the scales which flipped ink-stamped cards at them
as Vamenos, still smiling wildly, fed pennies. Heart pounding, Martinez read
the cards. "One hundred thirty-five pounds . . . one
thirty-six . . . one thirty-three . . . one thity-four . . . one thirty-seven .
. . a miracle!" "No," said Villanazul simply,
"Gуmez." They all smiled upon that genius who now
circled them with his arms. "Are we not fine?" he wondered.
"All the same size, all the same dream - the suit. So each of us will look
beautiful at least one night each week, eh?" "I haven't looked beautiful in
years," said Martinez. "The girls run away." "They will run no more, they will
freeze," said Gуmez, "when they see you in the cool white summer ice
cream suit." "Gуmez," said Villanazul, "just
let me ask one thing." "Of course, compadre." "When we get this nice new white ice cream
summer suit, some night you're not going to put it on and walk down to the
Greyhound bus in it and go live in El Paso for a year in it, are you?" "Villanazul, Villanazul, how can you say
that?" "My eye sees and my tongue moves,"
said Villanazul. "How about the Everybody Wins! Punchboard
Lotteries you ran and you kept running when nobody won? How about the United
Chili Con Carne and Frijole Company you were going to organize and all that
ever happened was the rent ran out on a two-by-four office?" "The errors of a child now grown,"
said Gуmez. "Enough! In this hot weather someone may buy the special suit
that is made just for us that stands waiting in the window of SHUMWAY'S
SUNSHINE SUITS! We have fifty dollars. Now we need just one more
skeleton!" Martinez saw the men peer around the pool hall.
He looked where they looked. He felt his eyes hurry past Vamenos, then come
reluctantly back to examine his dirty shirt, his huge nicotined fingers. "Me!" Vamenos burst out at last.
"My skeleton, measure it, it's great! Sure, my hands are big, and my arms,
from digging ditches! But-" Just then Martinez heard passing on the
sidewalk outside that same terrible man with his two girls, all laughing
together. He saw anguish move like the shadow of a summer
cloud on the faces of the other men in this poolroom. Slowly Vamenos stepped onto the scales and
dropped his penny. Eyes closed, he breathed a prayer. "Madre mнa, please . . ." The machinery whirred; the card fell out.
Vamenos opened his eyes. "Look! One thirty-five pounds! Another
niiracle!" The men stared at his right hand and the card,
at his left hand and a soiled ten-dollar bill. Gуmez swayed. Sweating, he licked his lips.
Then his hand shot out, seized the money. "The clothing store! The suit! Vamos!
" Yelling, everyone ran from the poofroom. The woman's voice was still squeaking on the
abandoned telephone. Martinez, left behind, reached out and hung the voice up.
In the silence he shook his head. "Santos, what a dream! Six
men," he said, "one suit. What will come of this? Madness?
Debauchery? Murder? But I go with God. Gуmez, wait for me!" Martinez was young. He ran fast. Mr. Shumway, of SHUMWAY'S SUNSHINE SUITS,
paused while adjusting a tie rack, aware of some subtle atmospheric change
outside his establishinent. "Leo," he whispered to his assistant.
"Look . . ." Outside, one man, Gуmez, strolled by, looking
in. Two men, Manulo and Dominguez, hurried by, staring in. Three men,
Villanazul, Martinez, and Vamenos, jostling shoulders, did the same. "Leo." Mr. Shumway swallowed.
"Call the police!" Suddenly six men filled the doorway. Martinez, crushed among them, his stomach
slightly upset, his face feeling feverish, smiled so wildly at Leo that Leo let
go the telephone. "Hey," breathed Martinez, eyes wide.
"There's a great suit over there!" "No." Manulo touched a lapel. "This
one!" "There is only one suit in all the
world!" said Gуmez coldly. "Mr. Shumway, the ice cream white, size
thirty-four, was in your window just an hour ago! It's gone! You didn't-" "Sell it?" Mr. Shumway exhaled.
"No, no. In the dressing room. It's still on the dummy." Martinez did not know if he moved and moved the
crowd or if the crowd moved and moved him. Suddenly they were all in motion.
Mr. Shumway, running, tried to keep ahead of them. "This way, gents. Now which of you . .
.?" "All for one, one for all!" Martinez
heard himself say, and laughed. "We'll all try it on!" "All?" Mr. Shumway clutched at the
booth curtain as if his shop were a steamship that had suddenly tilted in a
great swell. He stared. That's it, thought Martinez, look at our
smiles. Now, look at the skeletons behind our smiles! Measure here, there, up,
down, yes, do you see? Mr. Shumway saw. He nodded. He shrugged. "All!" He jerked the curtain.
"There! Buy it, and I'll throw in the dummy free!" Martinez peered quietly into the booth, his
motion drawing the others to peer too. The suit was there. And it was white. Martinez could not breathe. He did not want to.
He did not need to. He was afraid his breath would melt the suit. It was
enough, just looking. But at last he took a great trembling breath
and exhaled, whispering, "Ay. Ay, caramba! " "It puts out my eyes," murmured
Gуmez. "Mr. Shumway," Martinez heard Leo
hissing. "Ain't it dangerous precedent, to sell it? I mean, what if
everybody bought one suit for six people?" "Leo," said Mr. Shumway, "you
ever hear one single fifty-nine-dollar suit make so many people happy at the
same time before?" "Angels' wings," murmured Martinez.
"The wings of white angels." Martinez felt Mr. Shumway peering over his
shoulder into the booth. The pale glow filled his eyes. "You know something, Leo?" he said in
awe. "That's a suit! " Gуmez, shouting, whistling, ran up to the
third-floor landing and turned to wave to the others, who staggered, laughed,
stopped, and had to sit down on the steps below. "Tonight!" cried Gуmez. "Tonight
you move in with me, eh? Save rent as well as clothes, eh? Sure! Martinez, you
got the suit?" "Have I?" Martinez lifted the white
gift-wrapped box high. "From us to us! Ay-hah! " "Vamenos, you got the dummy?" "Here!" Vamenos, chewing an old cigar, scattering
sparks, slipped. The dummy, falling, toppled, turned over twice, and banged
down the stairs. "Vamenos! Dumb! Clumsy!" They seized the dummy from him. Stricken,
Vamenos looked about as if he'd lost something. Manulo snapped his fingers. "Hey, Vamenos,
we got to celebrate! Go borrow some wine!" Vamenos plunged downstairs in a whirl of
sparks. The others moved into the room with the suit,
leaving Martinez in the hall to study Gуmez's face. "Gуmez, you look sick." "I am," said Gуmez. "For what
have I done?" He nodded to the shadows in the room working about the
dummy. "I pick Dominguez, a devil with the women. All right. I pick
Manulo, who drinks, yes, but who sings as sweet as a girl, eh? Okay. Villanazul
reads books. You, you wash behind your ears. But then what do I do? Can I wait?
No! I got to buy that suit! So the last guy I pick is a clumsy slob who has the
right to wear my suit-" He stopped, confused. "Who gets to
wear our suit one night a week, fall down in it, or not come in out of
the rain in it! Why, why, why did I do it!" "Gуmez," whispered Villanazul from
the room. "The suit is ready. Come see if it looks as good using your
light bulb." Gуmez and Martinez entered. And there on the dummy in the center of the
room was the phosphorescent, the miraculously white-fired ghost with the
incredible lapels, the precise stitching, the neat buttonholes. Standing with
the white illumination of the suit upon his cheeks, Martinez suddenly felt he
was in church. White! White! It was white as the whitest vanilla ice cream, as
the bottled milk in tenement halls at dawn. White as a winter cloud all alone
in the moonlit sky late at night. Seeing it here in the warm summer-night room
made their breath almost show on the air. Shutting his eyes, he could see it
printed on his lids. He knew what color his dreams would be this night. "White . . . murmured Villanazul.
"White as the snow on that mountain near our town in Mexico, which is
called the Sleeping Woman." "Say that again," said Gуmez. Villanazul, proud yet humble, was glad to
repeat his tribute. ". . . white as the snow on the mountain
called-" "I'm back!" Shocked, the men whirled to see Vamenos in the
door, wine bottles in each hand. "A party! Here! Now tell us, who wears the
suit first tonight? Me?" "It's too late!" said Gуmez. "Late! It's only nine-fifteen!" "Late?" said everyone, bristling.
"Late?" Gуmez edged away from these men who glared from
him to the suit to the open window. Outside and below it was, after all, thought
Martinez, a fine Saturday night in a summer month and through the calm warm
darkness the women drifted like flowers on a quiet stream. The men made a
mournful sound. "Gуmez, a suggestion." Villanazul
licked his pencil and drew a chart on a pad. "You wear the suit from
nine-thirty to ten, Manulo till ten-thirty, Dominguez till eleven, mysell till
eleven-thirty, Martinez till midnight, and-" "Why me last? " demanded
Vamenos, scowling. Martinez thought quickly and smiled.
"After midnight is the best time, friend." "Hey," said Vamenos, "that's
right. I never thought of that. Okay." Gуmez sighed. "All right. A half hour
each. But from now on, remember, we each wear the suit just one night a week.
Sundays we draw straws for who wears the suit the extra night" "Me!" laughed Vamenos. "I'm
lucky!" Gуmez held onto Martinez, tight. "Gуmez," urged Martinez, "you
first. Dress." Gуmez could not tear his eyes from that
disreputable Varnenos. At last, impulsively, he yanked his shirt off over his
head. "Ay-yeah!" he howled. "Ay-yeee! " Whisper rustle . . . the clean shirt. "Ah . . .!" How clean the new clothes feel, thought
Martinez, holding the coat ready. How clean they sound, how clean they smell! Whisper . . . the pants . . . the tie, rustle .
. . the suspenders. Whisper . . . now Martinez let loose the coat, which fell
in place on flexing shoulders. "Ole! " Gуmez turned like a matador in his wonderous
suit-of-lights. "Ole, Gуmez, ole! "
Gуmez bowed and went out the door. Martinez fixed his eyes to his watch. At ten
sharp he heard someone wandering about in the hall as if they had forgotten
where to go. Martinez pulled the door open and looked out. Gуmez was there, heading for nowhere. He looks
sick, thought Martinez. No, stunned, shook up, surprised, many things. "Gуmez! This is the place!" Gуmez
turned around and found his way through the door. "Oh, friends, friends," he said.
"Friends, what an experience! This suit! This suit!" "Tell us, Gуmez!" said Martinez. "I can't, how can I say it!" He gazed
at the heavens, arms spread, palms up. "Tell us, Gуmez!" "I have no words, no words. You must see,
yourself! Yes, you must se-" And here he lapsed into silence, shaking his
head until at last he remembered they all stood watching him. "Who's next?
Manulo?" Manulo, stripped to his shorts, leapt forward. "Ready!" All laughed, shouted, whistled. Manulo, ready, went out the door. He was gone
twenty-nine minutes and thirty seconds. He came back holding to doorknobs,
touching the wall, feeling his own elbows, putting the flat of his hand to his
face. "Oh, let me tell you," he said.
"Compadres, I went to the bar, eh, to have a drink? But no, I did
not go in the bar, do you hear? I did not drink. For as I walked I began to
laugh and sing. Why, why? I listened to myself and asked this. Because. The
suit made me feel better than wine ever did. The suit made me drunk, drunk! So
I went to the Guadalajara Refriterнa instead and played the guitar and
sang four songs, very high! The suit, ah' the suit!" Dominguez, next to be dressed, moved out
through the world, came back from the world. The black telephone book! thought Martinez. He
had it in his hands when he left! Now, he returns, hands empty! What? What? "On the street," said Dominguez,
seeing it all again, eyes wide, "on the street I walked, a woman cried,
'Dominguez, is that you?' Another said, 'Dominguez? No, Quetzalcoatl,
the Great White God come from the East,' do you hear? And suddenly I didn't
want to go with six women or eight, no. One, I thought. One! And to this one,
who knows what I would say? 'Be mine!' Or 'Marry me!' Cararnba!
This suit is dangerous! But I did not care! I live, I live! Gуmez, did it
happen this way with you?" Gуmez, still dazed by the events of the
evening, shook his head. "No, no talk. It's too much. Later. Villanazul .
. .?" Villanazul moved shyly forward. Villanazul went shyly out. Villanazul came shyly home. "Picture it," he said, not looking at
them, looking at the floor, talking to the floor. "The Green Plaza, a
group of elderly businessmen gathered under the stars and they are talking,
nodding, talking. Now one of them whispers. All turn to stare. They move aside,
they make a channel through which a white-hot light burns its way as through
ice. At the center of the great light is this person. I take a deep breath. My
stomach is jelly. My voice is very small, but it grows louder. And what do I
say? I say, 'Friends. Do you know Carlyle's Sartor Resartus? In that
book we find his Philosophy of Suits . . .'" And at last it was time for Martinez to let the
suit float him out to haunt the darkness. Four times he walked around the block. Four
times he paused beneath the tenement porches, looking up at the window where
the light was lit; a shadow moved, the beautiful girl was there, not there,
away and gone, and on the fifth time there she was on the porch above, driven
out by the summer heat, taking the cooler air. She glanced down. She made a
gesture. At first be thought she was waving to him. He
felt like a white explosion that had riveted her attention. But she was not
waving. Her hand gestured and the next moment a pair of dark-framed glasses sat
upon her nose. She gazed at him. Ah, ah, he thought, so that's it. So! Even the
blind may see this suit! He smiled up at her. He did not have to wave. And at
last she smiled back. She did not have to wave either. Then, because he did not
know what else to do and he could not get rid of this smile that had fastened
itself to his cheeks, he hurried, almost ran, around the corner, feeling her
stare after him. When he looked back she had taken off her glasses and gazed
now with the look of the nearsighted at what, at most, must be a moving blob of
light in the great darkness here. Then for good measure he went around the
block again, through a city so suddenly beautiful he wanted to yell, then
laugh, then yell again. Returning, he drifted, oblivious, eyes half
closed, and seeing him in the door, the others saw not Martinez but themselves
come home. In that moment, they sensed that something had happened to them all. "You're late!" cried Vamenos, but
stopped. The spell could not be broken. "Somebody tell me," said Martinez.
"Who am I?" He moved in a slow circle through the room. Yes, he thought, yes, it's the suit, yes, it
had to do with the suit and them all together in that store on this fine
Saturday night and then here, laughing and feeling more drunk without drinking
as Manulo said himself, as the night ran and each slipped on the pants and
held, toppling, to the others and, balanced, let the feeling get bigger and
warmer and finer as each man departed and the next took his place in the suit
until now here stood Martinez all splendid and white as one who gives orders
and the world grows quiet and moves aside. "Martinez, we borrowed three mirrors while
you were gone. Look!" The mirrors, set up as in the store, angled to
reflect three Martinezes and the echoes and memories of those who had occupied
this suit with him and known the bright world inside this thread and cloth.
Now, in the shimmering mirror, Martinez saw the enormity of this thing they
were living together and his eyes grew wet. The others blinked. Martinez
touched the mirrors. They shifted. He saw a thousand, a million white-armored
Martinezes march off into eternity, reflected, re-reflected, forever,
indomitable, and unending. He held the white coat out on the air. In a
trance, the others did not at first recognize the dirty hand that reached to
take the coat. Then: "Vamenos!" "Pig!" "You didn't wash!" cried Gуmez.
"Or even shave, while you waited! Compadres, the bath!" "The bath!" said everyone. "No!" Vamenos flailed. "The
night air! I'm dead!" They hustled him yelling out and down the hall. Now here stood Vamenos, unbelievable in white
suit, beard shaved, hair combed, nails scrubbed. His friends scowled darkly at him. For was it not true, thought Martinez, that
when Vamenos passed by, avalanches itched on mountaintops? If he walked under
windows, people spat, dumped garbage, or worse. Tonight now, this night, he
would stroll beneath ten thousand wide-opened windows, near balconies, past
alleys. Suddenly the world absolutely sizzled with flies. And here was Vamenos,
a fresh-frosted cake. "You sure look keen in that suit,
Vamenos," said Manulo sadly. "Thanks." Vamenos twitched, trying to
make his skeleton comfortable where all their skeletons had so recently been.
In a small voice Vamenos said, "Can I go now?" "Villanazul!" said Gуmez. "Copy
down these rules." Villanazul licked his pencil. "First," said Gуmez, "don't fall
down in that suit, Vamenos!" "I won't." "Don't lean against buildings in that
suit." "No buildings." "Don't walk under trees with birds in them
in that suit. Don't smoke. Don't drink-" "Please," said Vamenos, "can I sit
down in this suit?" "When in doubt, take the pants off, fold
them over a chair." "Wish me luck," said Vamenos. "Go with God, Vamenos." He went out. He shut the door. There was a ripping sound. "Vamenos!" cried Martinez. He whipped the door open. Vamenos stood with two halves of a handkerchief
torn in his hands, laughing. "Rrrip! Look at your faces! Rrrip!"
He tore the cloth again. "Oh, oh, your faces, your faces! Ha!" Roaring, Vamenos slammed the door, leaving them
stunned and alone. Gуmez put both hands on top of his head and
turned away. "Stone me. Kill me. I have sold our souls to a demon!" Villanazul dug in his pockets, took out a
silver coin, and studied it for a long while. "Here is my last fifty cents. Who else
will help me buy back Vamenos' share of the suit?" "It's no use." Manulo showed them ten
cents. "We got only enough to buy the lapels and the buttonholes." Gуmez, at the open window, suddenly leaned out
and yelled. "Vamenos! No!" Below on the street, Vamenos, shocked, blew out
a match and threw away an old cigar butt he had found somewhere. He made a strange
gesture to all the men in the window above, then waved airily and sauntered on.
Somehow, the five men could not move away from
the window. They were crushed together there. "I bet he eats a hamburger in that
suit," mused Villanazul. "I'm thinking of the mustard." "Don't!" cried Gуmez. "No,
no!" Manulo was suddenly at the door. "I need a drink, bad." "Manulo, there's wine here, that bottle on
the floor-" Manulo went out and shut the door. A moment later Villanazul stretched with great
exaggeration and strolled about the room. "I think I'll walk down to the plaza,
friends." He was not gone a minute when Dominguez, waving
his black book at the others, winked and turned the doorknob. "Dominguez," said Gуmez. "Yes?" "If you see Vamenos, by accident,"
said Gуmez, "warn him away from Mickey Murrillo's Red Rooster Cafй. They
got fights not only on TV but out front of the TV too." "He wouldn't go into Murrillo's,"
said Domlnguez. "That suit means too much to Vamenos. He wonldn't do
anything to hurt it." "He'd shoot his mother first," said
Martinez. "Sure he would." Martinez and Gуmez, alone, listened to
Dominguez's footsteps hurry away down the stairs. They circled the undressed
window dummy. For a long while, biting his lips, Gуmez stood
at the window, looking out. He touched his shirt pocket twice, pulled his hand
away, and then at last pulled something from the pocket. Without looking at
it,. he handed it to Martinez. "Martinez, take this." "What is it?" Martinez looked at the piece of folded pink
paper with print on it, with names and numbers. His eyes widened. "A ticket on the bus to El Paso three
weeks from now!" Gуmez nodded. He couldn't look at Martinez. He
stared out into the summer night. "Turn it in. Get the money," he said.
"Buy us a nice white panama hat and a pale blue tie to go with the white
ice cream suit, Martinez. Do that." "Gуmez-" "Shut up. Boy, is it hot in here! I need
air." "Gуmez. I am touched. Gуmez-" But the door stood open. Gуmez was gone. Mickey Murrillo's Red Rooster Cafй and Cocktail
Lounge was squashed between two big brick buildings and, being narrow, had to
be deep. Outside, serpents of red and sulphur-green neon fizzed and snapped.
Inside, dim shapes loomed and swam away to lose themselves in a swarming night
sea. Martinez, on tiptoe, peeked through a flaked
place on the red-painted front window. He felt a presence on his left, heard breathing
on his right. He glanced in both directions. "Manulo! Villanazul!" "I decided I wasn't thirsty," said
Manulo. "So I took a walk." "I was just on my way to the plaza,"
said Villanazul, "and decided to go the long way around." As if by agreement, the three men shut up now
and turned together to peer on tiptoe through various flaked spots on the
window. A moment later, all three felt a new very warm
presence behind them and heard still faster breathing. "Is our white suit in there?" asked
Gуmez's voice. "Gуmez!" said everybody, surprised.
"Hi!" "Yes!" cried Dominguez, having just
arrived to find his own peephole. "There's the suit! And, praise God,
Vamenos is still in it!" "I can't see!" Gуmez squinted,
shielding his eyes. "What's he doing? " Martinez peered. Yes! There, way back in the
shadows, was a big chunk of snow and the idiot smile of Vamenos winking above
it, wreathed in smoke. "He's smoking!" said Martinez. "He's drinking!" said Dominguez. "He's eating a taco!" reported
Villanazul. "A juicy taco," added Manulo. "No," said Gуmez. "No, no, no .
. ." "Ruby Escuadrillo's with him!" "Let me see that!" Gуmez pushed
Martinez aside. Yes, there was Ruby! Two hundred pounds of
glittering sequins and tight black satin on the hoof, her scarlet fingernails
clutching Vamenos' shoulder. Her cowlike face, floured with powder, greasy with
lipstick, hung over him! "That hippo!" said Dominguez.
"She's crushing the shoulder pads. Look, she's going to sit on his
lap!" "No, no, not with all that powder and
lipstick!" said Gуmez. "Manulo, inside! Grab that drink! Villanazul,
the cigar, the taco! Dominguez, date Ruby Escuadrillo, get her away. Бndale,
men!" The three vanished, leaving Gуmez and Martinez
to stare, gasping, through the peephole. "Manulo, he's got the drink, he's drinking
it!" "Ay! There's Villanazul, he's got
the cigar, he's eating the taco!" "Hey, Dominguez, he's got Ruby! What a
brave one!" A shadow bulked through Murrillo's front door, traveling fast. "Gуmez!" Martinez clutched Gуmez's
arm. "That was Ruby Escuadrillo's boy friend, Toro Ruiz. If he finds her
with Vamenos, the ice cream suit will be covered with blood, covered
with blood-" "Don't make me nervous," said Gуmez.
"Quickly!" Both ran. Inside they reached Vamenos just as
Toro Ruiz grabbed about two feet of the lapels of that wonderful ice cream
suit. "Let go of Vamenos!" said Martinez. "Let go that suit! " corrected
Gуmez. Toro Ruiz, tap-dancing Vamenos, leered at these
intruders. Villanazul stepped up shyly. Villanazul smiled. "Don't hit him. Hit
me." Toro Ruiz hit Villanazul smack on the nose. Villananul, holding his nose, tears stinging
his eyes, wandered off. Gуmez grabbed one of Toro Ruiz's arms, Martinez
the other. "Drop him, let go, cabrуn, coyote,
vaca! " Toro Ruiz twisted the ice cream suit material
until all six men screamed in mortal agony. Grunting, sweating, Toro Ruiz
dislodged as many as climbed on. He was winding up to hit Vamenos when
Villanazul wandered back, eyes streaming. "Don't hit him. Hit me!" As Toro Ruiz hit Villanazul on the nose, a
chair crashed on Toro's head. "Ai! " said Gуmez. Toro Ruiz swayed, blinking, debating whether to
fall. He began to drag Vamenos with him. "Let go!" cried Gуmez. "Let
go!" One by one, with great care, Toro Ruiz's
banana-like fingers let loose of the suit. A moment later he was ruins at their
feet. "Compadres, this way!" They ran Vamenos outside and set him down where
he freed himself of their hands with injured dignity. "Okay, okay. My time ain't up. I still got
two minutes and, let's see - ten seconds." "What!" said everybody. "Vamenos," said Gуmez, "you let
a Guadalajara cow climb on you, you pick fights, you smoke, you drink, you eat
tacos, and now you have the nerve to say your time ain't up?" "I got two minutes and one second
left!" "Hey, Vamenos, you sure look sharp!"
Distantly, a woman's voice called from across the street. Vamenos smiled and buttoned the coat. "It's Ramona Alvarez! Ramona, wait!"
Vamenos stepped off the curb. "Vamenos," pleaded Gуmez. "What
can you do in one minute and" - he
checked his watch - "forty seconds!" "Watch! Hey, Ramona!" Vamenos loped. "Vamenos, look out!" Vamenos, surprised, whirled, saw a car, heard
the shriek of brakes. "No," said all five men on the
sidewalk. Martinez heard the impact and flinched. His
head moved up. It looks like white laundry, he thought, flying through the air.
His head came down. Now he heard himself and each of the men make a
different sound. Some swallowed too much air. Some let it out. Some choked.
Some groaned. Some cried aloud for justice. Some covered their faces. Martinez
felt his own fist pounding his heart in agony. He couid not move his feet. "I don't want to live," said Gуmez
quietly. "Kill me, someone." Then, shuffling, Martinez looked down and told
his feet to walk, stagger, follow one after the other. He collided with other
men. Now they were trying to run. They ran at last and somehow crossed a street
like a deep river through which they could only wade, to look down at Vamenos. "Vamenos!" said Martinez.
"You're alive!" Strewn on his back, mouth open, eyes squeezed
tight, tight, Vamenos motioned his head back and forth, back and forth,
moaning. "Tell me, tell me, oh, tell me, tell
me." "Tell you what, Vamenos?" Vamenos clenched his fists, ground his teeth. "The suit, what have I done to the suit,
the suit, the suit!" The men crouched lower. "Vamenos, it's . . . why, it's okay!
" "You lie!" said Vamenos. "It's
torn, it must be, it must be, it's torn, all around, underneath? " "No." Martinez knelt and touched here
and there. "Vamenos, all around, underneath even, it's okay!" Vamenos opened his eyes to let the tears run
free at last. "A miracle," he sobbed. "Praise the saints!"
He quieted at last "The car?" "Hit and run." Gуmez suddenly
remembered and g!ared at the empty street. "It's good he didn't stop. We'd
have-" Everyone listened. Distantly a siren walled. "Someone phoned for an ambulance." "Quick!" said Vamenos, eyes rolling.
"Set me up! Take off our coat!" "Vamenos-" "Shut up, idiots!" cried Vamenos.
"The coat, that's it! Now, the pants, the pants, quick, quick, peуnes!
Those doctors! You seen movies? They rip the pants with razors to get them off!
They don't care! They're maniacs! Ah, God, quick, quick!" The siren screamed. The men, panicking, all handled Vamenos at
once. "Right leg, easy, hurry, cows!
Good! Left leg, now, left, you hear, there, easy, easy! Ow, God! Quick!
Martinez, your pants, take them off!" "What?" Martinez froze. The siren shrieked. "Fool!" wailed Vamenos. "All is
lost! Your pants! Give me!" Martinez jerked at his belt buckle. "Close in, make a circle!" Dark pants, light pants flourished on the air. "Quick, here come the maniacs with the razors!
Right leg on, left leg, there! " "The zipper, cows, zip my zipper!"
babbled Vamenos. The siren died. "Madre mнa, yes, just in time! They
arrive." Vamenos lay back down and shut his eyes. "Gracias." Martinez turned, nonchalantly buckling on the
white pants as the interns brushed past. "Broken leg," said one intern as they
moved Vamenos onto a stretcher. "Compadres," said Vamenos,
"don't be mad with me." Gуmez snorted. "Who's mad?" In the ambulance, head tilted back, looking out
at them upside down, Vamenos faltered. "Compadres, when . . . when I come
from the hospital . . . am I still in the bunch? You won't kick me out? Look,
I'll give up smoking, keep away from Murrillo's, swear off women-" "Vamenos," said Martinez gently,
"don't pronsise nothing." Vamenos, upside down, eyes brimming wet,
Martinez there, all white now against the stars. "Oh, Martinez, you sure look great in that
suit. Compadres, don't he look beautiful? " Villanazul climbed in beside Vamenos. The door
slammed. The four remaining men watched the ambulance drive away. Then, surrounded by his friends, inside the
white suit, Martinez was carefully escorted back to the curb. In the tenement, Martinez got out the cleaning
fluid and the others stood around, telling him how to clean the suit and,
later, how not to have the iron too hot and how to work the lapels and the
crease and all. When the suit was cleaned and pressed so it looked like a fresh
gardenia just opened, they fitted it to the dummy. "Two o'clock," murmured Villanazul.
"I hope Vamenos sleeps well. When I left him at the hospital, he looked
good." Manulo cleared his throat. "Nobody else is
going out with that suit tonight, huh?" The others glared at him. Manulo flushed. "I mean . . . it's late.
We're tired. Maybe no one will use the suit for forty-eight hours, huh? Give it
a rest. Sure. Well. Where do we sleep?" The night being still hot and the room
unbearable, they carried the suit on its dummy out and down the hall. They
brought with them also some pillows and blankets. They climbed the stairs
toward the roof of the tenement. There, thought Martinez, is the cooler wind,
and sleep. On the way, they passed a dozen doors that
stood open, people still perspiring and awake, playing cards, drinking pop,
fanning themselves with movie magazines. I wonder, thought Martinez. I wonder if - Yes! On the fourth floor, a certain door stood open. The beautiful girl looked up as the men passed.
She wore glasses and when she saw Martinez she snatched them off and hid them
under her book. The others went on, not knowing they had lost
Martinez, who seemed stuck fast in the open door. For a long moment he could say nothing. Then he
said: "Josй Martinez." And she said: "Celia Obregуn." And then both said nothing. He heard the men moving up on the tenement
roof. He moved to follow. She said quickly, "I saw you
tonight!" He came back. "The suit," he said. "The suit," she said, and paused.
"But not the suit." "Eh?" he said. She lifted the book to show the glasses lying
in her lap. She touched the glasses. "I do not see well. You would think I
would wear my glasses, but no. I walk around for years now, hiding them, seeing
nothing. But tonight, even without the glasses, I see. A great whiteness passes
below in the dark. So white! And I put on my glasses quickly!" "The suit, as I said," said Martinez. "The suit for a little moment, yes, but
there is another whiteness above the suit." "Another?" "Your teeth! Oh, such white teeth, and so
many!" Martinez put his hand over his mouth. "So happy, Mr. Martinez," she said.
"I have not often seen such a happy face and such a smile." "Ah," he said, not able to look at
her, his face flushing now. "So, you see," she said quietly,
"the suit caught my eye, yes, the whiteness filled the night below. But
the teeth were much whiter. Now, I have forgotten the suit." Martinez flushed again. She, too, was overcome
with what she had said. She put her glasses on her nose, and then took them
off, nervously, and hid them again. She looked at her hands and at the door
above his head. "May I-" he said, at last. "May you-" "May I call for you," he asked,
"when next the suit is mine to wear?" "Why must you wait for the suit?" she
said. "I thought-" "You do not need the suit," she said. "But-" "If it were just the suit," she said,
"anyone would be fine in it. But no, I watched. I saw many men in that
suit, all different, this night. So again I say, you do not need to wait for
the suit." "Madre mнa, madre mнa! " he
cried happily. And then, quieter, "I will need the suit for a little while.
A month, six months, a year. I am uncertain. I am fearful of many things. I am
young." "That is as it should be," she said. "Good night, Miss-" "Celia Obregуn." "Celia Obregуn," he said, and was
gone from the door. The others were waiting on the roof of the
tenement. Coming up through the trapdoor, Martinez saw they had placed the
dummy and the suit in the center of the roof and put their blankets and pillows
in a circle around it. Now they were lying down. Now a cooler night wind was
blowing here, up in the sky. Martinez stood alone by the white suit,
smoothing the lapels, talking half to himself. "Ay, caramba, what a night! Seems
ten years since seven o'clock, when it all started and I had no friends. Two in
the morning, I got all kinds of friends . . ." He paused and
thought, Celia Obregуn, Celia Obregуn. ". . . all kinds of friends,"
he went on. "I got a room, I got clothes. You tell me. You know
what?" He looked around at the men lying on the rooftop, surrounding the
dummy and himself. "It's funny. When I wear this suit, I know I will win
at pool, like Gуmez. A woman will look at me like Dominguez. I will be able to
sing like Manulo, sweetly. I will talk fine politics like Villanazul. I'm
strong as Vamenos. So? So, tonight, I am more than Martinez. I am Gуmez,
Manulo, Dominguez, Villanazul, Vamenos. I am everyone. Ay . . . ay . . ."
He stood a moment longer by this suit which could save all the ways they sat or
stood or walked. This suit which could move fast and nervous like Gуmez or slow
and thoughtfully like Villanazul or drift like Dominguez, who never touched
ground, who always found a wind to take him somewhere. This suit which belonged
to them but which also owned them all. This suit that was - what? A parade. "Martinez," said Gуmez. "You
going to sleep?" "Sure. I'm just thinking." "What?" "If we ever get rich," said Martinez
softly, "it'll be kind of sad. Then we'll all have suits. And there won't
be no more nights like tonight. It'll break up the old gang. It'll never be the
same after that." The men lay thinking of what had just been
said. Gуmez nodded gently. "Yeah . . . it'll never be the same . . .
after that." Martinez lay down on his blanket. In darkness,
with the others, he faced the middle of the roof and the dummy, which was the
center of their lives. And their eyes were bright, shining, and good
to see in the dark as the neon lights from nearby buildings flicked on, flicked
off, flicked on, flicked off, revealing and then vanishing, revealing and then
vanishing, their wonderful white vanilla ice cream summer suit. THE WONDERFUL ICE CREAM SUIT Ray Bradbury It was summer twilight in the city, and out
front of the quiet-clicking pool hall three young Mexican-American men breathed
the warm air and looked around at the world. Sometimes they talked and
sometimes they said nothing at all but watched the cars glide by like black
panthers on the hot asphalt or saw trolleys loom up like thunderstorms, scatter
lightning, and rumble away into silence. "Hey," sighed Martinez at last. He
was the youngest, the most sweetly sad of the three. "It's a swell night,
huh? Swell." As he observed the world it moved very close
and then drifted away and then came close again. People, brushing by, were
suddenly across the street. Buildings five miles away suddenly leaned over him.
But most of the time everything - people, cars, and buildings - stayed way out
on the edge of the world and could not be touched. On this quiet warm summer
evening Martinez's face was cold. "Nights like this you wish . . . lots of
things." "Wishing," said the second man,
Villanazul, a man who shouted books out loud in his room but spoke only in
whispers on the street. "Wishing is the useless pastime of the
unemployed." "Unemployed?" cried Vamenos, the
unshaven. "Listen to him! We got no jobs, no money!" "So," said Martinez, "we got no
friends." "True." Villanazul gazed off toward
the green plaza where the palm trees swayed in the soft night wind. "Do
you know what I wish? I wish to go into that plaza and speak among the
businessmen who gather there nights to talk big talk. But dressed as I am, poor
as I am, who would listen? So, Martinez, we have each other. The friendship of
the poor is real friendship. We-" But now a handsome young Mexican with a fine
thin mustache strolled by. And on each of his careless arms hung a laughing
woman. "Madre mнa! " Martinez slapped
his own brow. "How does that one rate two friends?" "It's his nice new white summer
suit." Vamenos chewed a black thumbnail. "He looks sharp." Martinez leaned out to watch the three people
moving away, and then at the tenement across the street, in one fourth-floor
window of which, far above, a beautiful girl leaned out, her dark hair faintly
stirred by the wind. She had been there forever, which was to say for six
weeks. He had nodded, he had raised a hand, he had smiled, he had blinked
rapidly, he had even bowed to her, on the street, in the hall when visiting
friends, in the park, downtown. Even now, he put his hand up from his waist and
moved his fingers. But all the lovely girl did was let the summer wind stir her
dark hair. He did not exist. He was nothing. "Madre mнa! " He looked away
and down the street where the man walked his two friends around a corner.
"Oh, if just I had one suit, one! I wouldn't need money if I looked
okay." "I hesitate to suggest," said
Villanazul, "that you see Gуmez. But he's been talking some crazy talk for
a month now about clothes. I keep on saying I'll be in on it to make him go
away. That Gуmez." "Friend," said a quiet voice. "Gуmez!" Everyone turned to stare. Smiling strangely, Gуmez pulled forth an
endless thin yellow ribbon which fluttered and swirled on the summer air. "Gуmez," said Martinez, "what
you doing with that tape measure?" Gуmez beamed. "Measuring people's
skeletons." "Skeletons!" "Hold on." Gуmez squinted at
Martinez. "Caramba! Where you been all my life! Let's try you!
" Martinez saw his arm seized and taped, his leg
measured, his chest encircled. "Hold still!" cried Gуmez. "Arm
- perfect. Leg - chest - perfecto! Now quick, the height! There! Yes!
Five foot five! You're in! Shake!" Pumping Martinez's hand, he stopped
suddenly. "Wait. You got . . . ten bucks?" "I have!" Vamenos waved some grimy
bills. "Gуmez, measure me!" "All I got left in the world is nine
dollars and ninety-two cents." Martinez searched his pockets. "That's
enough for a new suit? Why?" "Why? Because you got the right skeleton,
that's why!" "Seтor Gуmez, I don't hardly know
you-" "Know me? You're going to live with me!
Come on!" Gуmez vanished into the poolroom. Martinez,
escorted by the polite Villanazul, pushed by an eager Vamenos, found himself
inside. "Dominguez!" said Gуmez. Dominguez, at a wall telephone, winked at them.
A woman's voice squeaked on the receiver. "Manulo!" said Gуmez. Manulo, a wine bottle tilted bubbling to his
mouth, turned. Gуmez pointed at Martinez. "At last we found our fifth
volunteer!" Dominguez said, "I got a date, don't
bother me-" and stopped. The receiver slipped from his fingers. His little
black telephone book full of fine names and numbers went quickly back into his
pocket. "Gуmez, you-?" "Yes, yes! Your money, now! Бndale!
" The woman's voice sizzled on the dangling
phone. Dominguez glanced at it uneasily. Manulo considered the empty wine bottle in his
hand and the liquor-store sign across the street. Then very reluctantly both men laid ten dollars
each on the green velvet pool table. Villanazul, amazed, did likewise, as did Gуmez,
nudging Martinez. Martinez counted out his wrinkled bills and change. Gуmez
flourished the money like a royal flush. "Fifty bucks! The suit costs sixty! All we
need is ten bucks!" "Wait," said Martinez. "Gуmez,
are we talking about one suit? Uno? " "Uno! " Gуmez raised a finger.
"One wonderful white ice cream summer suit! White, white as the August
moon!" "But who will own this one suit?" "Me!" said Manulo. "Me!" said Dominguez. "Me!" said Villanazul. "Me!" cried Gуmez. "And you,
Martinez. Men, let's show him. Line up!" Villanazul, Manulo, Dominguez, and Gуmez rushed
to plant their backs against the poolroom wall. "Martinez, you too, the other end, line
up! Now, Vamenos, lay that billiard cue across our heads!" "Sure, Gуmez, sure!" Martinez, in line, felt the cue tap his head
and leaned out to see what was happening. "Ah!" he gasped. The cue lay flat on all their heads, with no
rise or fall, as Vamenos slid it along, grinning. "We're all the same height!" said
Martinez. "The same!" Everyone laughed. Gуmez ran down the line, rustling the yellow
tape measure here and there on the men so they laughed even more wildly. "Sure!" he said. "It took a
month, four weeks, mind you, to find four guys the same size and shape as me, a
month of running around measuring. Sometimes I found guys with five-foot-five
skeletons, sure, but all the meat on their bones was too much or not enough.
Sometimes their bones were too long in the legs or too short in arms. Boy, all
the bones! I tell you! But now, five of us, same shoulders, chests, waists,
arms, and as for weight? Men!" Manulo, Dominguez, Villanazul, Gуmez, and at
last Martinez stepped onto the scales which flipped ink-stamped cards at them
as Vamenos, still smiling wildly, fed pennies. Heart pounding, Martinez read
the cards. "One hundred thirty-five pounds . . . one
thirty-six . . . one thirty-three . . . one thity-four . . . one thirty-seven .
. . a miracle!" "No," said Villanazul simply,
"Gуmez." They all smiled upon that genius who now
circled them with his arms. "Are we not fine?" he wondered.
"All the same size, all the same dream - the suit. So each of us will look
beautiful at least one night each week, eh?" "I haven't looked beautiful in
years," said Martinez. "The girls run away." "They will run no more, they will
freeze," said Gуmez, "when they see you in the cool white summer ice
cream suit." "Gуmez," said Villanazul, "just
let me ask one thing." "Of course, compadre." "When we get this nice new white ice cream
summer suit, some night you're not going to put it on and walk down to the
Greyhound bus in it and go live in El Paso for a year in it, are you?" "Villanazul, Villanazul, how can you say
that?" "My eye sees and my tongue moves,"
said Villanazul. "How about the Everybody Wins! Punchboard
Lotteries you ran and you kept running when nobody won? How about the United
Chili Con Carne and Frijole Company you were going to organize and all that
ever happened was the rent ran out on a two-by-four office?" "The errors of a child now grown,"
said Gуmez. "Enough! In this hot weather someone may buy the special suit
that is made just for us that stands waiting in the window of SHUMWAY'S
SUNSHINE SUITS! We have fifty dollars. Now we need just one more
skeleton!" Martinez saw the men peer around the pool hall.
He looked where they looked. He felt his eyes hurry past Vamenos, then come
reluctantly back to examine his dirty shirt, his huge nicotined fingers. "Me!" Vamenos burst out at last.
"My skeleton, measure it, it's great! Sure, my hands are big, and my arms,
from digging ditches! But-" Just then Martinez heard passing on the
sidewalk outside that same terrible man with his two girls, all laughing
together. He saw anguish move like the shadow of a summer
cloud on the faces of the other men in this poolroom. Slowly Vamenos stepped onto the scales and
dropped his penny. Eyes closed, he breathed a prayer. "Madre mнa, please . . ." The machinery whirred; the card fell out.
Vamenos opened his eyes. "Look! One thirty-five pounds! Another
niiracle!" The men stared at his right hand and the card,
at his left hand and a soiled ten-dollar bill. Gуmez swayed. Sweating, he licked his lips.
Then his hand shot out, seized the money. "The clothing store! The suit! Vamos!
" Yelling, everyone ran from the poofroom. The woman's voice was still squeaking on the
abandoned telephone. Martinez, left behind, reached out and hung the voice up.
In the silence he shook his head. "Santos, what a dream! Six
men," he said, "one suit. What will come of this? Madness?
Debauchery? Murder? But I go with God. Gуmez, wait for me!" Martinez was young. He ran fast. Mr. Shumway, of SHUMWAY'S SUNSHINE SUITS,
paused while adjusting a tie rack, aware of some subtle atmospheric change
outside his establishinent. "Leo," he whispered to his assistant.
"Look . . ." Outside, one man, Gуmez, strolled by, looking
in. Two men, Manulo and Dominguez, hurried by, staring in. Three men,
Villanazul, Martinez, and Vamenos, jostling shoulders, did the same. "Leo." Mr. Shumway swallowed.
"Call the police!" Suddenly six men filled the doorway. Martinez, crushed among them, his stomach
slightly upset, his face feeling feverish, smiled so wildly at Leo that Leo let
go the telephone. "Hey," breathed Martinez, eyes wide.
"There's a great suit over there!" "No." Manulo touched a lapel. "This
one!" "There is only one suit in all the
world!" said Gуmez coldly. "Mr. Shumway, the ice cream white, size
thirty-four, was in your window just an hour ago! It's gone! You didn't-" "Sell it?" Mr. Shumway exhaled.
"No, no. In the dressing room. It's still on the dummy." Martinez did not know if he moved and moved the
crowd or if the crowd moved and moved him. Suddenly they were all in motion.
Mr. Shumway, running, tried to keep ahead of them. "This way, gents. Now which of you . .
.?" "All for one, one for all!" Martinez
heard himself say, and laughed. "We'll all try it on!" "All?" Mr. Shumway clutched at the
booth curtain as if his shop were a steamship that had suddenly tilted in a
great swell. He stared. That's it, thought Martinez, look at our
smiles. Now, look at the skeletons behind our smiles! Measure here, there, up,
down, yes, do you see? Mr. Shumway saw. He nodded. He shrugged. "All!" He jerked the curtain.
"There! Buy it, and I'll throw in the dummy free!" Martinez peered quietly into the booth, his
motion drawing the others to peer too. The suit was there. And it was white. Martinez could not breathe. He did not want to.
He did not need to. He was afraid his breath would melt the suit. It was
enough, just looking. But at last he took a great trembling breath
and exhaled, whispering, "Ay. Ay, caramba! " "It puts out my eyes," murmured
Gуmez. "Mr. Shumway," Martinez heard Leo
hissing. "Ain't it dangerous precedent, to sell it? I mean, what if
everybody bought one suit for six people?" "Leo," said Mr. Shumway, "you
ever hear one single fifty-nine-dollar suit make so many people happy at the
same time before?" "Angels' wings," murmured Martinez.
"The wings of white angels." Martinez felt Mr. Shumway peering over his
shoulder into the booth. The pale glow filled his eyes. "You know something, Leo?" he said in
awe. "That's a suit! " Gуmez, shouting, whistling, ran up to the
third-floor landing and turned to wave to the others, who staggered, laughed,
stopped, and had to sit down on the steps below. "Tonight!" cried Gуmez. "Tonight
you move in with me, eh? Save rent as well as clothes, eh? Sure! Martinez, you
got the suit?" "Have I?" Martinez lifted the white
gift-wrapped box high. "From us to us! Ay-hah! " "Vamenos, you got the dummy?" "Here!" Vamenos, chewing an old cigar, scattering
sparks, slipped. The dummy, falling, toppled, turned over twice, and banged
down the stairs. "Vamenos! Dumb! Clumsy!" They seized the dummy from him. Stricken,
Vamenos looked about as if he'd lost something. Manulo snapped his fingers. "Hey, Vamenos,
we got to celebrate! Go borrow some wine!" Vamenos plunged downstairs in a whirl of
sparks. The others moved into the room with the suit,
leaving Martinez in the hall to study Gуmez's face. "Gуmez, you look sick." "I am," said Gуmez. "For what
have I done?" He nodded to the shadows in the room working about the
dummy. "I pick Dominguez, a devil with the women. All right. I pick
Manulo, who drinks, yes, but who sings as sweet as a girl, eh? Okay. Villanazul
reads books. You, you wash behind your ears. But then what do I do? Can I wait?
No! I got to buy that suit! So the last guy I pick is a clumsy slob who has the
right to wear my suit-" He stopped, confused. "Who gets to
wear our suit one night a week, fall down in it, or not come in out of
the rain in it! Why, why, why did I do it!" "Gуmez," whispered Villanazul from
the room. "The suit is ready. Come see if it looks as good using your
light bulb." Gуmez and Martinez entered. And there on the dummy in the center of the
room was the phosphorescent, the miraculously white-fired ghost with the
incredible lapels, the precise stitching, the neat buttonholes. Standing with
the white illumination of the suit upon his cheeks, Martinez suddenly felt he
was in church. White! White! It was white as the whitest vanilla ice cream, as
the bottled milk in tenement halls at dawn. White as a winter cloud all alone
in the moonlit sky late at night. Seeing it here in the warm summer-night room
made their breath almost show on the air. Shutting his eyes, he could see it
printed on his lids. He knew what color his dreams would be this night. "White . . . murmured Villanazul.
"White as the snow on that mountain near our town in Mexico, which is
called the Sleeping Woman." "Say that again," said Gуmez. Villanazul, proud yet humble, was glad to
repeat his tribute. ". . . white as the snow on the mountain
called-" "I'm back!" Shocked, the men whirled to see Vamenos in the
door, wine bottles in each hand. "A party! Here! Now tell us, who wears the
suit first tonight? Me?" "It's too late!" said Gуmez. "Late! It's only nine-fifteen!" "Late?" said everyone, bristling.
"Late?" Gуmez edged away from these men who glared from
him to the suit to the open window. Outside and below it was, after all, thought
Martinez, a fine Saturday night in a summer month and through the calm warm
darkness the women drifted like flowers on a quiet stream. The men made a
mournful sound. "Gуmez, a suggestion." Villanazul
licked his pencil and drew a chart on a pad. "You wear the suit from
nine-thirty to ten, Manulo till ten-thirty, Dominguez till eleven, mysell till
eleven-thirty, Martinez till midnight, and-" "Why me last? " demanded
Vamenos, scowling. Martinez thought quickly and smiled.
"After midnight is the best time, friend." "Hey," said Vamenos, "that's
right. I never thought of that. Okay." Gуmez sighed. "All right. A half hour
each. But from now on, remember, we each wear the suit just one night a week.
Sundays we draw straws for who wears the suit the extra night" "Me!" laughed Vamenos. "I'm
lucky!" Gуmez held onto Martinez, tight. "Gуmez," urged Martinez, "you
first. Dress." Gуmez could not tear his eyes from that
disreputable Varnenos. At last, impulsively, he yanked his shirt off over his
head. "Ay-yeah!" he howled. "Ay-yeee! " Whisper rustle . . . the clean shirt. "Ah . . .!" How clean the new clothes feel, thought
Martinez, holding the coat ready. How clean they sound, how clean they smell! Whisper . . . the pants . . . the tie, rustle .
. . the suspenders. Whisper . . . now Martinez let loose the coat, which fell
in place on flexing shoulders. "Ole! " Gуmez turned like a matador in his wonderous
suit-of-lights. "Ole, Gуmez, ole! "
Gуmez bowed and went out the door. Martinez fixed his eyes to his watch. At ten
sharp he heard someone wandering about in the hall as if they had forgotten
where to go. Martinez pulled the door open and looked out. Gуmez was there, heading for nowhere. He looks
sick, thought Martinez. No, stunned, shook up, surprised, many things. "Gуmez! This is the place!" Gуmez
turned around and found his way through the door. "Oh, friends, friends," he said.
"Friends, what an experience! This suit! This suit!" "Tell us, Gуmez!" said Martinez. "I can't, how can I say it!" He gazed
at the heavens, arms spread, palms up. "Tell us, Gуmez!" "I have no words, no words. You must see,
yourself! Yes, you must se-" And here he lapsed into silence, shaking his
head until at last he remembered they all stood watching him. "Who's next?
Manulo?" Manulo, stripped to his shorts, leapt forward. "Ready!" All laughed, shouted, whistled. Manulo, ready, went out the door. He was gone
twenty-nine minutes and thirty seconds. He came back holding to doorknobs,
touching the wall, feeling his own elbows, putting the flat of his hand to his
face. "Oh, let me tell you," he said.
"Compadres, I went to the bar, eh, to have a drink? But no, I did
not go in the bar, do you hear? I did not drink. For as I walked I began to
laugh and sing. Why, why? I listened to myself and asked this. Because. The
suit made me feel better than wine ever did. The suit made me drunk, drunk! So
I went to the Guadalajara Refriterнa instead and played the guitar and
sang four songs, very high! The suit, ah' the suit!" Dominguez, next to be dressed, moved out
through the world, came back from the world. The black telephone book! thought Martinez. He
had it in his hands when he left! Now, he returns, hands empty! What? What? "On the street," said Dominguez,
seeing it all again, eyes wide, "on the street I walked, a woman cried,
'Dominguez, is that you?' Another said, 'Dominguez? No, Quetzalcoatl,
the Great White God come from the East,' do you hear? And suddenly I didn't
want to go with six women or eight, no. One, I thought. One! And to this one,
who knows what I would say? 'Be mine!' Or 'Marry me!' Cararnba!
This suit is dangerous! But I did not care! I live, I live! Gуmez, did it
happen this way with you?" Gуmez, still dazed by the events of the
evening, shook his head. "No, no talk. It's too much. Later. Villanazul .
. .?" Villanazul moved shyly forward. Villanazul went shyly out. Villanazul came shyly home. "Picture it," he said, not looking at
them, looking at the floor, talking to the floor. "The Green Plaza, a
group of elderly businessmen gathered under the stars and they are talking,
nodding, talking. Now one of them whispers. All turn to stare. They move aside,
they make a channel through which a white-hot light burns its way as through
ice. At the center of the great light is this person. I take a deep breath. My
stomach is jelly. My voice is very small, but it grows louder. And what do I
say? I say, 'Friends. Do you know Carlyle's Sartor Resartus? In that
book we find his Philosophy of Suits . . .'" And at last it was time for Martinez to let the
suit float him out to haunt the darkness. Four times he walked around the block. Four
times he paused beneath the tenement porches, looking up at the window where
the light was lit; a shadow moved, the beautiful girl was there, not there,
away and gone, and on the fifth time there she was on the porch above, driven
out by the summer heat, taking the cooler air. She glanced down. She made a
gesture. At first be thought she was waving to him. He
felt like a white explosion that had riveted her attention. But she was not
waving. Her hand gestured and the next moment a pair of dark-framed glasses sat
upon her nose. She gazed at him. Ah, ah, he thought, so that's it. So! Even the
blind may see this suit! He smiled up at her. He did not have to wave. And at
last she smiled back. She did not have to wave either. Then, because he did not
know what else to do and he could not get rid of this smile that had fastened
itself to his cheeks, he hurried, almost ran, around the corner, feeling her
stare after him. When he looked back she had taken off her glasses and gazed
now with the look of the nearsighted at what, at most, must be a moving blob of
light in the great darkness here. Then for good measure he went around the
block again, through a city so suddenly beautiful he wanted to yell, then
laugh, then yell again. Returning, he drifted, oblivious, eyes half
closed, and seeing him in the door, the others saw not Martinez but themselves
come home. In that moment, they sensed that something had happened to them all. "You're late!" cried Vamenos, but
stopped. The spell could not be broken. "Somebody tell me," said Martinez.
"Who am I?" He moved in a slow circle through the room. Yes, he thought, yes, it's the suit, yes, it
had to do with the suit and them all together in that store on this fine
Saturday night and then here, laughing and feeling more drunk without drinking
as Manulo said himself, as the night ran and each slipped on the pants and
held, toppling, to the others and, balanced, let the feeling get bigger and
warmer and finer as each man departed and the next took his place in the suit
until now here stood Martinez all splendid and white as one who gives orders
and the world grows quiet and moves aside. "Martinez, we borrowed three mirrors while
you were gone. Look!" The mirrors, set up as in the store, angled to
reflect three Martinezes and the echoes and memories of those who had occupied
this suit with him and known the bright world inside this thread and cloth.
Now, in the shimmering mirror, Martinez saw the enormity of this thing they
were living together and his eyes grew wet. The others blinked. Martinez
touched the mirrors. They shifted. He saw a thousand, a million white-armored
Martinezes march off into eternity, reflected, re-reflected, forever,
indomitable, and unending. He held the white coat out on the air. In a
trance, the others did not at first recognize the dirty hand that reached to
take the coat. Then: "Vamenos!" "Pig!" "You didn't wash!" cried Gуmez.
"Or even shave, while you waited! Compadres, the bath!" "The bath!" said everyone. "No!" Vamenos flailed. "The
night air! I'm dead!" They hustled him yelling out and down the hall. Now here stood Vamenos, unbelievable in white
suit, beard shaved, hair combed, nails scrubbed. His friends scowled darkly at him. For was it not true, thought Martinez, that
when Vamenos passed by, avalanches itched on mountaintops? If he walked under
windows, people spat, dumped garbage, or worse. Tonight now, this night, he
would stroll beneath ten thousand wide-opened windows, near balconies, past
alleys. Suddenly the world absolutely sizzled with flies. And here was Vamenos,
a fresh-frosted cake. "You sure look keen in that suit,
Vamenos," said Manulo sadly. "Thanks." Vamenos twitched, trying to
make his skeleton comfortable where all their skeletons had so recently been.
In a small voice Vamenos said, "Can I go now?" "Villanazul!" said Gуmez. "Copy
down these rules." Villanazul licked his pencil. "First," said Gуmez, "don't fall
down in that suit, Vamenos!" "I won't." "Don't lean against buildings in that
suit." "No buildings." "Don't walk under trees with birds in them
in that suit. Don't smoke. Don't drink-" "Please," said Vamenos, "can I sit
down in this suit?" "When in doubt, take the pants off, fold
them over a chair." "Wish me luck," said Vamenos. "Go with God, Vamenos." He went out. He shut the door. There was a ripping sound. "Vamenos!" cried Martinez. He whipped the door open. Vamenos stood with two halves of a handkerchief
torn in his hands, laughing. "Rrrip! Look at your faces! Rrrip!"
He tore the cloth again. "Oh, oh, your faces, your faces! Ha!" Roaring, Vamenos slammed the door, leaving them
stunned and alone. Gуmez put both hands on top of his head and
turned away. "Stone me. Kill me. I have sold our souls to a demon!" Villanazul dug in his pockets, took out a
silver coin, and studied it for a long while. "Here is my last fifty cents. Who else
will help me buy back Vamenos' share of the suit?" "It's no use." Manulo showed them ten
cents. "We got only enough to buy the lapels and the buttonholes." Gуmez, at the open window, suddenly leaned out
and yelled. "Vamenos! No!" Below on the street, Vamenos, shocked, blew out
a match and threw away an old cigar butt he had found somewhere. He made a strange
gesture to all the men in the window above, then waved airily and sauntered on.
Somehow, the five men could not move away from
the window. They were crushed together there. "I bet he eats a hamburger in that
suit," mused Villanazul. "I'm thinking of the mustard." "Don't!" cried Gуmez. "No,
no!" Manulo was suddenly at the door. "I need a drink, bad." "Manulo, there's wine here, that bottle on
the floor-" Manulo went out and shut the door. A moment later Villanazul stretched with great
exaggeration and strolled about the room. "I think I'll walk down to the plaza,
friends." He was not gone a minute when Dominguez, waving
his black book at the others, winked and turned the doorknob. "Dominguez," said Gуmez. "Yes?" "If you see Vamenos, by accident,"
said Gуmez, "warn him away from Mickey Murrillo's Red Rooster Cafй. They
got fights not only on TV but out front of the TV too." "He wouldn't go into Murrillo's,"
said Domlnguez. "That suit means too much to Vamenos. He wonldn't do
anything to hurt it." "He'd shoot his mother first," said
Martinez. "Sure he would." Martinez and Gуmez, alone, listened to
Dominguez's footsteps hurry away down the stairs. They circled the undressed
window dummy. For a long while, biting his lips, Gуmez stood
at the window, looking out. He touched his shirt pocket twice, pulled his hand
away, and then at last pulled something from the pocket. Without looking at
it,. he handed it to Martinez. "Martinez, take this." "What is it?" Martinez looked at the piece of folded pink
paper with print on it, with names and numbers. His eyes widened. "A ticket on the bus to El Paso three
weeks from now!" Gуmez nodded. He couldn't look at Martinez. He
stared out into the summer night. "Turn it in. Get the money," he said.
"Buy us a nice white panama hat and a pale blue tie to go with the white
ice cream suit, Martinez. Do that." "Gуmez-" "Shut up. Boy, is it hot in here! I need
air." "Gуmez. I am touched. Gуmez-" But the door stood open. Gуmez was gone. Mickey Murrillo's Red Rooster Cafй and Cocktail
Lounge was squashed between two big brick buildings and, being narrow, had to
be deep. Outside, serpents of red and sulphur-green neon fizzed and snapped.
Inside, dim shapes loomed and swam away to lose themselves in a swarming night
sea. Martinez, on tiptoe, peeked through a flaked
place on the red-painted front window. He felt a presence on his left, heard breathing
on his right. He glanced in both directions. "Manulo! Villanazul!" "I decided I wasn't thirsty," said
Manulo. "So I took a walk." "I was just on my way to the plaza,"
said Villanazul, "and decided to go the long way around." As if by agreement, the three men shut up now
and turned together to peer on tiptoe through various flaked spots on the
window. A moment later, all three felt a new very warm
presence behind them and heard still faster breathing. "Is our white suit in there?" asked
Gуmez's voice. "Gуmez!" said everybody, surprised.
"Hi!" "Yes!" cried Dominguez, having just
arrived to find his own peephole. "There's the suit! And, praise God,
Vamenos is still in it!" "I can't see!" Gуmez squinted,
shielding his eyes. "What's he doing? " Martinez peered. Yes! There, way back in the
shadows, was a big chunk of snow and the idiot smile of Vamenos winking above
it, wreathed in smoke. "He's smoking!" said Martinez. "He's drinking!" said Dominguez. "He's eating a taco!" reported
Villanazul. "A juicy taco," added Manulo. "No," said Gуmez. "No, no, no .
. ." "Ruby Escuadrillo's with him!" "Let me see that!" Gуmez pushed
Martinez aside. Yes, there was Ruby! Two hundred pounds of
glittering sequins and tight black satin on the hoof, her scarlet fingernails
clutching Vamenos' shoulder. Her cowlike face, floured with powder, greasy with
lipstick, hung over him! "That hippo!" said Dominguez.
"She's crushing the shoulder pads. Look, she's going to sit on his
lap!" "No, no, not with all that powder and
lipstick!" said Gуmez. "Manulo, inside! Grab that drink! Villanazul,
the cigar, the taco! Dominguez, date Ruby Escuadrillo, get her away. Бndale,
men!" The three vanished, leaving Gуmez and Martinez
to stare, gasping, through the peephole. "Manulo, he's got the drink, he's drinking
it!" "Ay! There's Villanazul, he's got
the cigar, he's eating the taco!" "Hey, Dominguez, he's got Ruby! What a
brave one!" A shadow bulked through Murrillo's front door, traveling fast. "Gуmez!" Martinez clutched Gуmez's
arm. "That was Ruby Escuadrillo's boy friend, Toro Ruiz. If he finds her
with Vamenos, the ice cream suit will be covered with blood, covered
with blood-" "Don't make me nervous," said Gуmez.
"Quickly!" Both ran. Inside they reached Vamenos just as
Toro Ruiz grabbed about two feet of the lapels of that wonderful ice cream
suit. "Let go of Vamenos!" said Martinez. "Let go that suit! " corrected
Gуmez. Toro Ruiz, tap-dancing Vamenos, leered at these
intruders. Villanazul stepped up shyly. Villanazul smiled. "Don't hit him. Hit
me." Toro Ruiz hit Villanazul smack on the nose. Villananul, holding his nose, tears stinging
his eyes, wandered off. Gуmez grabbed one of Toro Ruiz's arms, Martinez
the other. "Drop him, let go, cabrуn, coyote,
vaca! " Toro Ruiz twisted the ice cream suit material
until all six men screamed in mortal agony. Grunting, sweating, Toro Ruiz
dislodged as many as climbed on. He was winding up to hit Vamenos when
Villanazul wandered back, eyes streaming. "Don't hit him. Hit me!" As Toro Ruiz hit Villanazul on the nose, a
chair crashed on Toro's head. "Ai! " said Gуmez. Toro Ruiz swayed, blinking, debating whether to
fall. He began to drag Vamenos with him. "Let go!" cried Gуmez. "Let
go!" One by one, with great care, Toro Ruiz's
banana-like fingers let loose of the suit. A moment later he was ruins at their
feet. "Compadres, this way!" They ran Vamenos outside and set him down where
he freed himself of their hands with injured dignity. "Okay, okay. My time ain't up. I still got
two minutes and, let's see - ten seconds." "What!" said everybody. "Vamenos," said Gуmez, "you let
a Guadalajara cow climb on you, you pick fights, you smoke, you drink, you eat
tacos, and now you have the nerve to say your time ain't up?" "I got two minutes and one second
left!" "Hey, Vamenos, you sure look sharp!"
Distantly, a woman's voice called from across the street. Vamenos smiled and buttoned the coat. "It's Ramona Alvarez! Ramona, wait!"
Vamenos stepped off the curb. "Vamenos," pleaded Gуmez. "What
can you do in one minute and" - he
checked his watch - "forty seconds!" "Watch! Hey, Ramona!" Vamenos loped. "Vamenos, look out!" Vamenos, surprised, whirled, saw a car, heard
the shriek of brakes. "No," said all five men on the
sidewalk. Martinez heard the impact and flinched. His
head moved up. It looks like white laundry, he thought, flying through the air.
His head came down. Now he heard himself and each of the men make a
different sound. Some swallowed too much air. Some let it out. Some choked.
Some groaned. Some cried aloud for justice. Some covered their faces. Martinez
felt his own fist pounding his heart in agony. He couid not move his feet. "I don't want to live," said Gуmez
quietly. "Kill me, someone." Then, shuffling, Martinez looked down and told
his feet to walk, stagger, follow one after the other. He collided with other
men. Now they were trying to run. They ran at last and somehow crossed a street
like a deep river through which they could only wade, to look down at Vamenos. "Vamenos!" said Martinez.
"You're alive!" Strewn on his back, mouth open, eyes squeezed
tight, tight, Vamenos motioned his head back and forth, back and forth,
moaning. "Tell me, tell me, oh, tell me, tell
me." "Tell you what, Vamenos?" Vamenos clenched his fists, ground his teeth. "The suit, what have I done to the suit,
the suit, the suit!" The men crouched lower. "Vamenos, it's . . . why, it's okay!
" "You lie!" said Vamenos. "It's
torn, it must be, it must be, it's torn, all around, underneath? " "No." Martinez knelt and touched here
and there. "Vamenos, all around, underneath even, it's okay!" Vamenos opened his eyes to let the tears run
free at last. "A miracle," he sobbed. "Praise the saints!"
He quieted at last "The car?" "Hit and run." Gуmez suddenly
remembered and g!ared at the empty street. "It's good he didn't stop. We'd
have-" Everyone listened. Distantly a siren walled. "Someone phoned for an ambulance." "Quick!" said Vamenos, eyes rolling.
"Set me up! Take off our coat!" "Vamenos-" "Shut up, idiots!" cried Vamenos.
"The coat, that's it! Now, the pants, the pants, quick, quick, peуnes!
Those doctors! You seen movies? They rip the pants with razors to get them off!
They don't care! They're maniacs! Ah, God, quick, quick!" The siren screamed. The men, panicking, all handled Vamenos at
once. "Right leg, easy, hurry, cows!
Good! Left leg, now, left, you hear, there, easy, easy! Ow, God! Quick!
Martinez, your pants, take them off!" "What?" Martinez froze. The siren shrieked. "Fool!" wailed Vamenos. "All is
lost! Your pants! Give me!" Martinez jerked at his belt buckle. "Close in, make a circle!" Dark pants, light pants flourished on the air. "Quick, here come the maniacs with the razors!
Right leg on, left leg, there! " "The zipper, cows, zip my zipper!"
babbled Vamenos. The siren died. "Madre mнa, yes, just in time! They
arrive." Vamenos lay back down and shut his eyes. "Gracias." Martinez turned, nonchalantly buckling on the
white pants as the interns brushed past. "Broken leg," said one intern as they
moved Vamenos onto a stretcher. "Compadres," said Vamenos,
"don't be mad with me." Gуmez snorted. "Who's mad?" In the ambulance, head tilted back, looking out
at them upside down, Vamenos faltered. "Compadres, when . . . when I come
from the hospital . . . am I still in the bunch? You won't kick me out? Look,
I'll give up smoking, keep away from Murrillo's, swear off women-" "Vamenos," said Martinez gently,
"don't pronsise nothing." Vamenos, upside down, eyes brimming wet,
Martinez there, all white now against the stars. "Oh, Martinez, you sure look great in that
suit. Compadres, don't he look beautiful? " Villanazul climbed in beside Vamenos. The door
slammed. The four remaining men watched the ambulance drive away. Then, surrounded by his friends, inside the
white suit, Martinez was carefully escorted back to the curb. In the tenement, Martinez got out the cleaning
fluid and the others stood around, telling him how to clean the suit and,
later, how not to have the iron too hot and how to work the lapels and the
crease and all. When the suit was cleaned and pressed so it looked like a fresh
gardenia just opened, they fitted it to the dummy. "Two o'clock," murmured Villanazul.
"I hope Vamenos sleeps well. When I left him at the hospital, he looked
good." Manulo cleared his throat. "Nobody else is
going out with that suit tonight, huh?" The others glared at him. Manulo flushed. "I mean . . . it's late.
We're tired. Maybe no one will use the suit for forty-eight hours, huh? Give it
a rest. Sure. Well. Where do we sleep?" The night being still hot and the room
unbearable, they carried the suit on its dummy out and down the hall. They
brought with them also some pillows and blankets. They climbed the stairs
toward the roof of the tenement. There, thought Martinez, is the cooler wind,
and sleep. On the way, they passed a dozen doors that
stood open, people still perspiring and awake, playing cards, drinking pop,
fanning themselves with movie magazines. I wonder, thought Martinez. I wonder if - Yes! On the fourth floor, a certain door stood open. The beautiful girl looked up as the men passed.
She wore glasses and when she saw Martinez she snatched them off and hid them
under her book. The others went on, not knowing they had lost
Martinez, who seemed stuck fast in the open door. For a long moment he could say nothing. Then he
said: "Josй Martinez." And she said: "Celia Obregуn." And then both said nothing. He heard the men moving up on the tenement
roof. He moved to follow. She said quickly, "I saw you
tonight!" He came back. "The suit," he said. "The suit," she said, and paused.
"But not the suit." "Eh?" he said. She lifted the book to show the glasses lying
in her lap. She touched the glasses. "I do not see well. You would think I
would wear my glasses, but no. I walk around for years now, hiding them, seeing
nothing. But tonight, even without the glasses, I see. A great whiteness passes
below in the dark. So white! And I put on my glasses quickly!" "The suit, as I said," said Martinez. "The suit for a little moment, yes, but
there is another whiteness above the suit." "Another?" "Your teeth! Oh, such white teeth, and so
many!" Martinez put his hand over his mouth. "So happy, Mr. Martinez," she said.
"I have not often seen such a happy face and such a smile." "Ah," he said, not able to look at
her, his face flushing now. "So, you see," she said quietly,
"the suit caught my eye, yes, the whiteness filled the night below. But
the teeth were much whiter. Now, I have forgotten the suit." Martinez flushed again. She, too, was overcome
with what she had said. She put her glasses on her nose, and then took them
off, nervously, and hid them again. She looked at her hands and at the door
above his head. "May I-" he said, at last. "May you-" "May I call for you," he asked,
"when next the suit is mine to wear?" "Why must you wait for the suit?" she
said. "I thought-" "You do not need the suit," she said. "But-" "If it were just the suit," she said,
"anyone would be fine in it. But no, I watched. I saw many men in that
suit, all different, this night. So again I say, you do not need to wait for
the suit." "Madre mнa, madre mнa! " he
cried happily. And then, quieter, "I will need the suit for a little while.
A month, six months, a year. I am uncertain. I am fearful of many things. I am
young." "That is as it should be," she said. "Good night, Miss-" "Celia Obregуn." "Celia Obregуn," he said, and was
gone from the door. The others were waiting on the roof of the
tenement. Coming up through the trapdoor, Martinez saw they had placed the
dummy and the suit in the center of the roof and put their blankets and pillows
in a circle around it. Now they were lying down. Now a cooler night wind was
blowing here, up in the sky. Martinez stood alone by the white suit,
smoothing the lapels, talking half to himself. "Ay, caramba, what a night! Seems
ten years since seven o'clock, when it all started and I had no friends. Two in
the morning, I got all kinds of friends . . ." He paused and
thought, Celia Obregуn, Celia Obregуn. ". . . all kinds of friends,"
he went on. "I got a room, I got clothes. You tell me. You know
what?" He looked around at the men lying on the rooftop, surrounding the
dummy and himself. "It's funny. When I wear this suit, I know I will win
at pool, like Gуmez. A woman will look at me like Dominguez. I will be able to
sing like Manulo, sweetly. I will talk fine politics like Villanazul. I'm
strong as Vamenos. So? So, tonight, I am more than Martinez. I am Gуmez,
Manulo, Dominguez, Villanazul, Vamenos. I am everyone. Ay . . . ay . . ."
He stood a moment longer by this suit which could save all the ways they sat or
stood or walked. This suit which could move fast and nervous like Gуmez or slow
and thoughtfully like Villanazul or drift like Dominguez, who never touched
ground, who always found a wind to take him somewhere. This suit which belonged
to them but which also owned them all. This suit that was - what? A parade. "Martinez," said Gуmez. "You
going to sleep?" "Sure. I'm just thinking." "What?" "If we ever get rich," said Martinez
softly, "it'll be kind of sad. Then we'll all have suits. And there won't
be no more nights like tonight. It'll break up the old gang. It'll never be the
same after that." The men lay thinking of what had just been
said. Gуmez nodded gently. "Yeah . . . it'll never be the same . . .
after that." Martinez lay down on his blanket. In darkness,
with the others, he faced the middle of the roof and the dummy, which was the
center of their lives. And their eyes were bright, shining, and good
to see in the dark as the neon lights from nearby buildings flicked on, flicked
off, flicked on, flicked off, revealing and then vanishing, revealing and then
vanishing, their wonderful white vanilla ice cream summer suit. |
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