"H. L. Gold - Man With English (2)" - читать интересную книгу автора (Gold H. L) Man With English
by H L Gold Lying in the hospital, Edgar Stone added up his misfortunes as another might count blessings. There were enough to infuriate the most temperate man, which Stone notoriously was not. He smashed his fist down, accidentally hitting the metal side of the bed, and was astonished by the pleasant feeling. It enraged him even more. The really maddening thing was how simply he had goaded himself into the hospital. He'd locked up his drygoods store and driven home for lunch. Nothing unusual about that; he did it every day. With his miserable digestion, he couldn't stand the restaurant food in town. He pulled into the driveway, rode over a collection of metal shapes his son Arnold had left lying around, and punctured a tire. "Rita!" he yelled. "This is going too damned far! Where is that brat?" "In here," she called truculently from the kitchen. He kicked open the screen door. His foot went through the mesh, "A ripped tire and a torn screen!" he shouted at Arnold, who was sprawled in angular adolescence over a blueprint on the kitchen table. "You'll pay for them, by God! They're coming out of your allowance!" "I'm sorry. Pop," the boy said. "Sorry, my left foot," Mrs. Stone shrieked. She whirled on her husband. "You could have watched where you were going. He promised to clean up his things from the driveway right after lunch. And it's about time you stopped kicking open the door every time you're mad." "Mad? Who wouldn't be mad? Me hoping he'd get out of school and come into change when heтАФhah!тАФhelps me out in the store!" "He'll be whatever he wants to be," she screamed in the conversational tone of the Stone household. "Please," said Arnold. "I can't concentrate on this plan." Edgar Stone was never one to restrain an angry impulse. He tore up the blueprint and flung the pieces down on the table. "Aw, Pop," the boy said. "Don't say 'Aw, Pop' to me. You're not going to waste a summer vacation on junk like this. You'll eat your lunch and come down to the store. And youтАЩll do it every day for the rest of the summer!" "Oh, he will, will he?" demanded Mrs. Stone. "He'll catch up on his studies. And as for you, you can go back and eat in a restaurant." "You know I can't stand that slop!" "You'll eat it because you're not having lunch here any more. I've got enough to do without making three meals a day." "But I can't drive back with that tireтАж" He did, though not with the tireтАФhe took a cab. It cost a dollar plus tip, lunch was a dollar and a half plus tip, bicarb at Rite Drug Store a few doors away and in a great hurry came to another fifteen cents only it didn't work. And then Miss Ellis came in for some material. Miss Ellis could round out any miserable day. She was fifty, tall, skinny and had thin, disapproving lips. She had a sliver of cloth clipped very meagerly on a hem that she intended to use as a sample. "The arms of the slipcover on my reading chair wore through," she informed him. "I bought the material here, if you remember." |
|
|