"Contents of a Dead Man's Pockets by Jack Finney (1911-1995) was published in the October 26, 1956 issue of Collier's Magazine. Finney was almost a decade in to his career at the time, and a master of the "slick magazine" short story. He had already written The Body Snatchers, and his major works were still ahead of him.
Sixty-one
years later, the world Finney captures in these few pages is as extinct as the
the New York of Edith Wharton and Louis Auchincloss. A junior executive puts his notes on a sheet
of yellow paper. He rolls paper and
carbons into his portable typewriter. His wife is going to spend four hours at
a movie theater, where she will see two features, a cartoon, and previews. He
lives eleven floors above Lexington Avenue, and can still open a window!
"Contents
of a Dead Man's Pockets" has been a staple of high school English classes for
decades, and is still going strong. Google tells us numerous teachers have it
posted, and there are student reports galore.
Today some students do video versions, and fill up Pinterest with photos
and art work. It's always been a fun story, a good one for composition students
to outline.
My
tenth grade English teacher had us write our own alternate endings for the
story.
Which
was easy. Every kid has walked along a narrow curb or a brick wall and
pretended they were balancing along the window ledge of a tall building, poised
between life and eternity.
Jay
2/21/17
Photo
from: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Bup-l0qfTo
Jack Finney
At the little living-room desk
Tom Benecke rolled two sheets of flimsy and a heavier top sheet, carbon paper
sandwiched between them, into his portable. Interoffice Memo, the top sheet was
headed, and he typed tomorrow's date just below this; then he glanced at a
creased yellow sheet, covered with his own handwriting, beside the typewriter.
"Hot in here," he muttered to himself. Then, from the short hallway
at his back, he heard the muffled clang of wire coat hangers in the bedroom
closet, and at this reminder of what his wife was doing he though: Hot,
no--guilty conscience.
He got up, shoving his hands
into the back pockets of his gray wash slacks, stepped to the living-room
window beside the desk, and stood breathing on the glass, watching the
expanding circlet of mist, staring down through the autumn night at Lexington
Avenue, eleven stories below. He was a tall, lean, dark-haired young man in a
pullover sweater, who looked as though he had played not football, probably,
but basketball in college. Now he placed the heels of his hands against the top
edge of the lower window frame and shoved upward. But as usual the window
didn't budge, and he had to lower his hands and then shoot them hard upward to
jolt the window open a few inches. He dusted his hands, muttering.
But still he didn't begin his
work. He crossed the room to the hallway entrance and, leaning against the
doorjamb, hands shoved into his back pockets again, he called,
"Clare?" When his wife answered, he said, "Sure you don't mind
going alone?"
"No." Her voice was
muffled, and he knew her head and shoulders were in the bedroom closet. Then
the tap of her high heels sounded on the wood floor and she appeared at the end
of the little hallway, wearing a slip, both hands raised to one ear, clipping
on an earring. She smiled at him--a slender, very pretty girl with light brown,
almost blonde, hair--her prettiness emphasized by the pleasant nature that
showed in her face. "It's just that I hate you to miss this movie; you
wanted to see it too."
"Yeah, I know." He ran
his fingers through his hair. "Got to get this done though."
She nodded, accepting this.
Then, glancing at the desk across the living room, she said, "You work too
much, though, Tom--and too hard."
He smiled. "You won't
mind though, will you, when the money comes rolling in and I'm known as the Boy
Wizard of Wholesale Groceries?"
"I guess not." She
smiled and turned back toward the bedroom.
At his desk again, Tom lighted
a cigarette; then a few moments later as Clare appeared, dressed and ready to
leave, he set it on the rim of the ash tray. "Just after seven," she
said. "I can make the beginning of the first feature."
He walked to the front-door
closet to help her on with her coat. He kissed her then and, for an instant,
holding her close, smelling the perfume she had used, he was tempted to go with
her; it was not actually true that he had to work tonight, though he very much
wanted to. This was his own project, unannounced as yet in his office, and it
could be postponed. But then they won't see it till Monday, he thought once
again, and if I give it to the boss tomorrow he might read it over the weekend.
. . . "Have a good time," he said aloud. He gave his wife a little
swat and opened the door for her, feeling the air from the building hallway,
smelling faintly of floor wax, stream past his face.
He watched her walk down the
hall, flicked a hand in response as she waved, and then he started to close the
door, but it resisted for a moment. As the door opening narrowed, the current
of warm air from the hallway, channeled through this smaller opening now,
suddenly rushed past him with accelerated force. Behind him he heard the slap
of the window curtains against the wall and the sound of paper fluttering from
his desk, and he had to push to close the door.
Turning, he saw a sheet of
white paper drifting to the floor in a series of arcs, and another sheet,
yellow, moving toward the window, caught in the dying current flowing through
the narrow opening. As he watched, the paper struck the bottom edge of the window
and hung there for an instant, plastered against the glass and wood. Then as
the moving air stilled completely, the curtains swinging back from the wall to
hang free again, he saw the yellow sheet drop to the window ledge and slide
over out of sight.
He ran across the room,
grasped the bottom edge of the window, and tugged, staring through the glass.
He saw the yellow sheet, dimly now in the darkness outside, lying on the
ornamental ledge a yard below the window. Even as he watched, it was moving, scraping
slowly along the ledge, pushed by the breeze that pressed steadily against the
building wall. He heaved on the window with all his strength and it shot open
with a bang, the window weight rattling in the casing. But the paper was past
his reach and, leaning out into the night, he watched it scud steadily along
the ledge to the south, half-plastered against the building wall. Above the
muffled sound of the street traffic far below, he could hear the dry scrape of
its movement, like a leaf on the pavement.
The living room of the next
apartment to the south projected a yard or more farther out toward the street
than this one; because of this the Beneckes paid seven and a half dollars less
rent than their neighbors. And now the yellow sheet, sliding along the stone
ledge, nearly invisible in the night, was stopped by the projecting blank wall
of the next apartment. It lay motionless, then, in the corner formed by the two
walls--a good five yards away, pressed firmly against the ornate corner
ornament of the ledge, by the breeze that moved past Tom Benecke's face.
He knelt at the window and
stared at the yellow paper for a full minute or more, waiting for it to move,
to slide off the ledge and fall, hoping he could follow its course to the
street, and then hurry down in the elevator and retrieve it. But it didn't
move, and then he saw that the paper was caught firmly between a projection of
the convoluted corner ornament and the ledge. He thought about the poker from
the fireplace, then the broom, then the mop--discarding each thought as it
occurred to him. There was nothing in the apartment long enough to reach that
paper.
It was hard for him to
understand that he actually had to abandon it--it was ridiculous--and he began
to curse. Of all the papers on his desk, why did it have to be this one in
particular! On four long Saturday afternoons he had stood in supermarkets
counting the people who passed certain displays, and the results were scribbled
on that yellow sheet. From stacks of trade publications, gone over page by page
in snatched half-hours at work and during evenings at home, he had copied
facts, quotations, and figures onto that sheet. And he had carried it with him
to the Public Library on Fifth Avenue, where he'd spent a dozen lunch hours and
early evenings adding more. All were needed to support and lend authority to
his idea for a new grocery-store display method; without them his idea was a
mere opinion. And there they all lay in his own improvised shorthand--countless
hours of work--out there on the ledge.
For many seconds he believed
he was going to abandon the yellow sheet, that there was nothing else to do.
The work could be duplicated. But it would take two months, and the time to
present this idea was now, for use in the spring displays. He struck his fist
on the window ledge. Then he shrugged. Even though his plan were adopted, he
told himself, it wouldn't bring him a raise in pay--not immediately, anyway, or
as a direct result. It won't bring me a promotion either, he argued--not of
itself.
But just the same, and he
couldn't escape the thought, this and other independent projects, some already
done and others planned for the future, would gradually mark him out from the
score of other young men in his company. They were the way to change from a
name on the payroll to a name in the minds of the company officials. They were
the beginning of the long, long climb to where he was determined to be, at the
very top. And he knew he was going out there in the darkness, after the yellow
sheet fifteen feet beyond his reach.
By a kind of instinct, he
instantly began making his intention acceptable to himself by laughing at it.
The mental picture of himself sidling along the ledge outside was absurd--it
was actually comical--and he smiled. He imagined himself describing it; it
would make a good story at the office and, it occurred to him, would add a
special interest and importance to his memorandum, which would do it no harm at
all.
To simply go out and get his
paper was an easy task--he could be back here with it in less than two
minutes--and he knew he wasn't deceiving himself. The ledge, he saw, measuring
it with his eye, was about as wide as the length of his shoe, and perfectly
flat. And every fifth row of brick in the face of the building, he remembered--leaning
out, he verified this--was indented half an inch, enough for the tips of his
fingers, enough to maintain balance easily. It occurred to him that if this
ledge and wall were only a yard above ground--as he knelt at the window staring
out, this thought was the final confirmation of his intention--he could move
along the ledge indefinitely.
On a sudden impulse, he got to
his feet, walked to the front closet, and took out an old tweed jacket; it
would be cold outside. He put it on and buttoned it as he crossed the room
rapidly toward the open window. In the back of his mind he knew he'd better
hurry and get this over with before he thought too much, and at the window he
didn't allow himself to hesitate.
He swung a leg over the sill,
then felt for and found the ledge a yard below the window with his foot.
Gripping the bottom of the window frame very tightly and carefully, he slowly
ducked his head under it, feeling on his face the sudden change from the warm
air of the room to the chill outside. With infinite care he brought out his
other leg, his mind concentrating on what he was doing. Then he slowly stood
erect. Most of the putty, dried out and brittle, had dropped off the bottom
edging of the window frame, he found, and the flat wooden edging provided a
good gripping surface, a half-inch or more deep, for the tips of his fingers.
Now, balanced easily and
firmly, he stood on the ledge outside in the slight, chill breeze, eleven
stories above the street, staring into his own lighted apartment, odd and different-seeming
now.
First his right hand, then his
left, he carefully shifted his finger-tip grip from the puttyless window edging
to an indented row of bricks directly to his right. It was hard to take the
first shuffling sideways step then--to make himself move--and the fear stirred
in his stomach, but he did it, again by not allowing himself time to think. And
now--with his chest, stomach, and the left side of his face pressed against the
rough cold brick--his lighted apartment was suddenly gone, and it was much
darker out here than he had thought.
Without pause he
continued--right foot, left foot, right foot, left--his shoe soles shuffling
and scraping along the rough stone, never lifting from it, fingers sliding
along the exposed edging of brick. He moved on the balls of his feet, heels
lifted slightly; the ledge was not quite as wide as he'd expected. But leaning
slightly inward toward the face of the building and pressed against it, he
could feel his balance firm and secure, and moving along the ledge was quite as
easy as he had thought it would be. He could hear the buttons of his jacket
scraping steadily along the rough bricks and feel them catch momentarily,
tugging a little, at each mortared crack. He simply did not permit himself to
look down, though the compulsion to do so never left him; nor did he allow
himself actually to think. Mechanically--right foot, left foot, over and
again--he shuffled along crabwise, watching the projecting wall ahead loom
steadily closer. . . .
Then he reached it and, at the
corner--he'd decided how he was going to pick up the paper--he lifted his right
foot and placed it carefully on the ledge that ran along the projecting wall at
a right angle to the ledge on which his other foot rested. And now, facing the
building, he stood in the corner formed by the two walls, one foot on the
ledging of each, a hand on the shoulder-high indentation of each wall. His
forehead was pressed directly into the corner against the cold bricks, and now
he carefully lowered first one hand, then the other, perhaps a foot farther
down, to the next indentation in the rows of bricks.
Very slowly, sliding his
forehead down the trough of the brick corner and bending his knees, he lowered
his body toward the paper lying between his outstretched feet. Again he lowered
his fingerholds another foot and bent his knees still more, thigh muscles taut,
his forehead sliding and bumping down the brick V. Half-squatting now, he
dropped his left hand to the next indentation and then slowly reached with his
right hand toward the paper between his feet.
He couldn't quite touch it,
and his knees now were pressed against the wall; he could bend them no farther.
But by ducking his head another inch lower, the top of his head now pressed
against the bricks, he lowered his right shoulder and his fingers had the paper
by a corner, pulling it loose. At the same instant he saw, between his legs and
far below, Lexington Avenue stretched out for miles ahead.
He saw, in that instant, the
Loew's theater sign, blocks ahead past Fiftieth Street; the miles of traffic
signals, all green now; the lights of cars and street lamps; countless neon
signs; and the moving black dots of people. And a violent instantaneous
explosion of absolute terror roared through him. For a motionless instant he
saw himself externally--bent practically double, balanced on this narrow ledge,
nearly half his body projecting out above the street far below--and he began to
tremble violently, panic flaring through his mind and muscles, and he felt the
blood rush from the surface of his skin.
In the fractional moment
before horror paralyzed him, as he stared between his legs at that terrible
length of street far beneath him, a fragment of his mind raised his body in a
spasmodic jerk to an upright position again, but so violently that his head
scraped hard against the wall, bouncing off it, and his body swayed outward to
the knife edge of balance, and he very nearly plunged backward and fell. Then
he was leaning far into the corner again, squeezing and pushing into it, not
only his face but his chest and stomach, his back arching; and his finger tips
clung with all the pressure of his pulling arms to the shoulder-high half-inch
indentation in the bricks.
He was more than trembling
now; his whole body was racked with a violent shuddering beyond control, his
eyes squeezed so tightly shut it was painful, though he was past awareness of
that. His teeth were exposed in a frozen grimace, the strength draining like
water from his knees and calves. It was extremely likely, he knew, that he
would faint, slump down along the wall, his face scraping, and then drop
backward, a limp weight, out into nothing. And to save his life he concentrated
on holding on to consciousness, drawing deliberate deep breaths of cold air
into his lungs, fighting to keep his senses aware.
Then he knew that he would not
faint, but he could not stop shaking nor open his eyes. He stood where he was,
breathing deeply, trying to hold back the terror of the glimpse he had had of
what lay below him; and he knew he had made a mistake in not making himself
stare down at the street, getting used to it and accepting it, when he had
first stepped out onto the ledge.
It was impossible to walk
back. He simply could not do it. He couldn't bring himself to make the
slightest movement. The strength was gone from his legs; his shivering
hands--numb, cold, and desperately rigid--had lost all deftness; his easy
ability to move and balance was gone. Within a step or two, if he tried to
move, he knew that he would stumble and fall.
Seconds passed, with the chill
faint wind pressing the side of his face, and he could hear the toned-down
volume of the street traffic far beneath him. Again and again it slowed and
then stopped, almost to silence; then presently, even this high, he would hear
the click of the traffic signals and the subdued roar of the cars starting up
again. During a lull in the street sounds, he called out. Then he was shouting
"Help!" so loudly it rasped his throat. But he felt the steady
pressure of the wind, moving between his face and the blank wall, snatch up his
cries as he uttered them, and he knew they must sound directionless and
distant. And he remembered how habitually, here in New York, he himself heard
and ignored shouts in the night. If anyone heard him, there was no sign of it,
and presently Tom Benecke knew he had to try moving; there was nothing else he
could do.
Eyes squeezed shut, he watched
scenes in his mind like scraps of motion-picture film--he could not stop them.
He saw himself stumbling suddenly sideways as he crept along the ledge and saw
his upper body arc outward, arms flailing. He was a dangling shoestring caught
between the ledge and the sole of his other shoe, saw a foot start to move, to
be stopped with a jerk, and felt his balance leaving him. He saw himself
falling with a terrible speed as his body revolved in the air, knees clutched
tight to his chest, eyes squeezed shut, moaning softly.
Out of utter necessity,
knowing that any of these thoughts might be reality in the very next seconds,
he was slowly able to shut his mind against every thought but what he now began
to do. With fear-soaked slowness, he slid his left foot an inch or two toward
his own impossibly distant window. Then he slid the fingers of his shivering
left hand a corresponding distance. For a moment he could not bring himself to
lift his right foot from one ledge to the other; then he did it, and became
aware of the harsh exhalation of air from his throat and realized that he was
panting. As his right hand, then, began to slide along the brick edging, he was
astonished to feel the yellow paper pressed to the bricks underneath his stiff
fingers, and he uttered a terrible, abrupt bark that might have been a laugh or
a moan. He opened his mouth and took the paper in his teeth pulling it out from
under his fingers.
By a kind of trick--by
concentrating his entire mind on first his left foot, then his left hand, then
the other foot, then the other hand--he was able to move, almost imperceptibly,
trembling steadily, very nearly without thought. But he could feel the terrible
strength of the pent-up horror on just the other side of the flimsy barrier he
had erected in his mind; and he knew that if it broke through he would lose
this thin artificial control of his body.
During one slow step he tried
keeping his eyes closed; it made him feel safer shutting him off a little from
the fearful reality of where he was. Then a sudden rush of giddiness swept over
him and he had to open his eyes wide, staring sideways at the cold rough brick
and angled lines of mortar, his cheek tight against the building. He kept his
eyes open then knowing that if he once let them flick outward, to stare for an
instant at the lighted windows across the street, he would be past help.
He didn't know how many dozens
of tiny sidling steps he had taken, his chest, belly, and face pressed to the
wall; but he knew the slender hold he was keeping on his mind and body was
going to break. He had a sudden mental picture of his apartment on just the
other side of this wall--warm, cheerful, incredibly spacious. And he saw
himself striding through it lying down on the floor on his back, arms spread
wide, reveling in its unbelievable security. The impossible remoteness of this
utter safety, the contrast between it and where he now stood, was more than he
could bear. And the barrier broke then and the fear of the awful height he
stood on coursed through his nerves and muscles.
A fraction of his mind knew he
was going to fall, and he began taking rapid blind steps with no feeling of
what he was doing, sidling with a clumsy desperate swiftness, fingers
scrabbling along the brick, almost hopelessly resigned to the sudden backward
pull and swift motion outward and down. Then his moving left hand slid onto not
brick but sheer emptiness, an impossible gap in the face of the wall, and he
stumbled.
His right foot smashed into
his left anklebone; he staggered sideways, began falling, and the claw of his
hand cracked against glass and wood, slid down it, and his finger tips were
pressed hard on the puttyless edging of his window. His right hand smacked
gropingly beside it as he fell to his knees; and, under the full weight and
direct downward pull of his sagging body, the open window dropped shudderingly
in its frame till it closed and his wrists struck the sill and were jarred off.
For a single moment he knelt,
knee bones against stone on the very edge of the ledge, body swaying and
touching nowhere else, fighting for balance. Then he lost it, his shoulders
plunging backward, and he flung his arms forward, his hands smashing against
the window casing on either side; and--his body moving backward--his fingers
clutched the narrow wood stripping of the upper pane.
For an instant he hung
suspended between balance and falling, his finger tips pressed onto the
quarter-inch wood strips. Then, with utmost delicacy, with a focused
concentration of all his senses, he increased even further the strain on his
finger tips hooked to these slim edgings of wood. Elbows slowly bending, he
began to draw the full weight of his upper body forward, knowing that the
instant his fingers slipped off these quarter-inch strips he'd plunge backward
and be falling. Elbows imperceptibly bending, body shaking with the strain, the
sweat starting from his forehead in great sudden drops, he pulled, his entire being
and thought concentrated in his finger tips. Then suddenly, the strain
slackened and ended, his chest touching the window sill, and he was kneeling on
the ledge, his forehead pressed to the glass of the closed window.
Dropping his palms to the
sill, he stared into his living room--at the red-brown davenport
across the room, and a
magazine he had left there; at the pictures on the walls and the gray rug; the
entrance to the hallway; and at his papers, typewriter, and desk, not two feet
from his nose. A movement from his desk caught his eye and he saw that it was a
thin curl of blue smoke; his cigarette, the ash long, was still burning in the
ash tray where he'd left it--this was past all belief--only a few minutes
before.
His head moved, and in faint
reflection from the glass before him he saw the yellow paper clenched in his
front teeth. Lifting a hand from the sill he took it from his mouth; the
moistened corner parted from the paper, and he spat it out.
For a moment, in the light
from the living room, he stared wonderingly at the yellow sheet in his hand and
then crushed it into the side pocket of his jacket.
He couldn't open the window.
It had been pulled not completely closed, but its lower edge was below the
level of the outside sill; there was no room to get his fingers underneath it.
Between the upper sash and the lower was a gap not wide enough--reaching up, he
tried--to get his fingers into; he couldn't push it open. The upper window
panel, he knew from long experience, was impossible to move, frozen tight with
dried paint.
Very carefully observing his
balance, the finger tips of his left hand again hooked to the narrow stripping
of the window casing, he drew back his right hand, palm facing the glass, and
then struck the glass with the heel of his hand.
His arm rebounded from the
pane, his body tottering. He knew he didn't dare strike a harder blow.
But in the security and relief
of his new position, he simply smiled; with only a sheet of glass between him
and the room just before him, it was not possible that there wasn't a way past
it. Eyes narrowing, he thought for a few moments about what to do. Then his
eyes widened, for nothing occurred to him. But still he felt calm: the
trembling, he realized, had stopped. At the back of his mind there still lay
the thought that once he was again in his home, he could give release to his
feelings. He actually would lie on the floor, rolling, clenching tufts of the
rug in his hands. He would literally run across the room, free to move as he
liked, jumping on the floor, testing and reveling in its absolute security,
letting the relief flood through him, draining the fear from his mind and body.
His yearning for this was astonishingly intense, and somehow he understood that
he had better keep this feeling at bay.
He took a half dollar from his
pocket and struck it against the pane, but without any hope that the glass
would break and with very little disappointment when it did not. After a few
moments of thought he drew his leg onto the ledge and picked loose the knot of
his shoelace. He slipped off the shoe and, holding it across the instep, drew
back his arm as far as he dared and struck the leather heel against the glass.
The pane rattled, but he knew he'd been a long way from breaking it. His foot
was cold and he slipped the shoe back on. He shouted again, experimentally, and
then once more, but there was no answer.
The realization suddenly
struck him that he might have to wait here till Clare came home, and for a
moment the thought was funny. He could see Clare opening the front door,
withdrawing her key from the lock, closing the door behind her, and then
glancing up to see him crouched on the other side of the window. He could see
her rush across the room, face astounded and frightened, and hear himself shouting
instructions: "Never mind how I got here! Just open the wind--" She
couldn't open it, he remembered, she'd never been able to; she'd always had to
call him. She'd have to get the building superintendent or a neighbor, and he
pictured himself smiling, and answering their questions as he climbed in.
"I just wanted to get a breath of fresh air, so--"
He couldn't possibly wait here
till Clare came home. It was the second feature she'd wanted to see, and she'd
left in time to see the first. She'd be another three hours or--He glanced at
his watch: Clare had been gone eight minutes. It wasn't possible, but only
eight minutes ago he had kissed his wife good-by. She wasn't even at the
theater yet!
It would be four hours before
she could possibly be home, and he tried to picture himself kneeling out here,
finger tips hooked to these narrow strippings, while first one movie, preceded
by a slow listing of credits, began, developed, reached its climax, and then
finally ended. There'd be a newsreel next, maybe, and then an animated cartoon,
and then interminable scenes from coming pictures. And then, once more, the
beginning of a full-length picture--while all the time he hung out here in the
night.
He might possibly get to his
feet, but he was afraid to try. Already his legs were cramped, his thigh
muscles tired; his knees hurt, his feet felt numb, and his hands were stiff. He
couldn't possibly stay out here for four hours, or anywhere near it. Long
before that his legs and arms would give out; he would be forced to try changing
his position often--stiffly, clumsily, his coordination and strength gone--and
he would fall. Quite realistically, he knew that he would fall; no one could
stay out here on this ledge for four hours.
A dozen windows in the
apartment building across the street were lighted. Looking over his shoulder,
he could see the top of a man's head behind the newspaper he was reading; in
another window he saw the blue-gray flicker of a television screen. No more
than twenty-odd yards from his back were scores of people, and if just one of
them would walk idly to his window and glance out. . . . For some moments he
stared over his shoulder at the lighted rectangles, waiting. But no one
appeared. The man reading his paper turned a page and then continued his reading.
A figure passed another of the windows and was immediately gone.
In the inside pocket of his
jacket he found a little sheaf of papers, and he pulled one out and looked at
it in the light from the living room. It was an old letter, an advertisement of
some sort; his name and address, in purple ink, were on a label pasted to the
envelope. Gripping one end of the envelope in his teeth, he twisted it into a
tight curl. From his shirt pocket he brought out a book of matches. He didn't
dare let go the casing with both hands but, with the twist of paper in his
teeth, he opened the matchbook with his free hand; then he bent one of the
matches in two without tearing it from the folder, its red tipped end now
touching the striking surface. With his thumb, he rubbed the red tip across the
striking area.
He did it again, then again
and still again, pressing harder each time, and the match suddenly flared,
burning his thumb. But he kept it alight, cupping the matchbook in his hand and
shielding it with his body. He held the flame to the paper in his mouth till it
caught. Then he snuffed out the match flame with his thumb and forefinger,
careless of the burn, and replaced the book in his pocket. Taking the paper
twist in his hand, he held it flame down, watching the flame crawl up the
paper, till it flared bright. Then he held it behind him over the street,
moving it from side to side, watching it over his shoulder, the flame
flickering and guttering in the wind.
There were three letters in
his pocket and he lighted each of them, holding each till the flame touched his
hand and then dropping it to the street below. At one point, watching over his
shoulder while the last of the letters burned, he saw the man across the street
put down his paper and stand--even seeming to glance toward Tom's window. But
when he moved, it was only to walk across the room and disappear from sight.
There were a dozen coins in
Tom Benecke's pocket and he dropped them, three or four at a time. But if they
struck anyone, or if anyone noticed their falling, no one connected them with
their source.
His arms had begun to tremble
from the steady strain of clinging to this narrow perch, and he did not know
what to do now and was terribly frightened. Clinging to the window stripping
with one hand, he again searched his pockets. But now--he had left his wallet
on his dresser when he'd changed clothes--there was nothing left but the yellow
sheet. It occurred to him irrelevantly that his death on the sidewalk below
would be an eternal mystery; the window closed--why, how, and from where could
he have fallen? No one would be able to identify his body for a time, either--the
thought was somehow unbearable and increased his fear. All they'd find in his
pockets would be the yellow sheet. Contents of the dead man's pockets, he
thought, one sheet of paper bearing penciled notations--incomprehensible.
He understood fully that he
might actually be going to die; his arms, maintaining his balance on the ledge,
were trembling steadily now. And it occurred to him then with all the force of
a revelation that, if he fell, all he was ever going to have out of life he
would then, abruptly, have had. Nothing, then, could ever be changed; and
nothing more--no least experience or pleasure--could ever be added to his life.
He wished, then, that he had not allowed his wife to go off by herself
tonight--and on similar nights. He thought of all the evenings he had spent
away from her, working; and he regretted them. He thought wonderingly of his
fierce ambition and of the direction his life had taken; he thought of the
hours he'd spent by himself, filling the yellow sheet that had brought him out
here. Contents of the dead man's pockets, he thought with sudden fierce anger,
a wasted life.
He was simply not going to
cling here till he slipped and fell; he told himself that now. There was one
last thing he could try; he had been aware of it for some moments, refusing to
think about it, but now he faced it. Kneeling here on the ledge, the finger
tips of one hand pressed to the narrow strip of wood, he could, he knew, draw
his other hand back a yard perhaps, fist clenched tight, doing it very slowly
till he sensed the outer limit of balance, then, as hard as he was able from
the distance, he could drive his fist forward against the glass. If it broke,
his fist smashing through, he was safe; he might cut himself badly, and
probably would, but with his arm inside the room, he would be secure. But if
the glass did not break, the rebound, flinging his arm back, would topple him
off the ledge. He was certain of that.
He tested his plan. The
fingers of his left hand clawlike on the little stripping, he drew back his
other fist until his body began teetering backward. But he had no leverage
now--he could feel that there would be no force to his swing--and he moved his
fist slowly forward till he rocked forward on his knees again and could sense
that this swing would carry its greatest force. Glancing down, however,
measuring the distance from his fist to the glass, he saw it was less than two
feet.
It occurred to him that he
could raise his arm over his head, to bring it down against the glass. But,
experimenting in slow motion, he knew it would be an awkward girl-like blow
without the force of a driving punch, and not nearly enough to break the glass.
Facing the window, he had to
drive a blow from the shoulder, he knew now, at a distance of less than two feet;
and he did not know whether it would break through the heavy glass. It might;
he could picture it happening, he could feel it in the nerves of his arm. And
it might not; he could feel that too--feel his fist striking this glass and
being instantaneously flung back by the unbreaking pane, feel the fingers of
his other hand breaking loose, nails scraping along the casing as he fell.
He waited, arm drawn back,
fist balled, but in no hurry to strike; this pause, he knew, might be an
extension of his life. And to live even a few seconds longer, he felt, even out
here on this ledge in the night, was infinitely better than to die a moment
earlier than he had to. His arm grew tired, and he brought it down.
Then he knew that it was time
to make the attempt. He could not kneel here hesitating indefinitely till he
lost all courage to act, waiting till he slipped off the ledge. Again he drew
back his arm, knowing this time that he would not bring it down till he struck.
His elbow protruding over Lexington Avenue far below, the fingers of his other
hand pressed down bloodlessly tight against the narrow stripping, he waited,
feeling the sick tenseness and terrible excitement building. It grew and
swelled toward the moment of action, his nerves tautening. He thought of Clare--just
a wordless, yearning thought--and then drew his arm back just a bit more, fist
so tight his fingers pained him, and knowing he was going to do it. Then with
full power, with every last scrap of strength he could bring to bear, he shot
his arm forward toward the glass, and he said, "Clare!"
He heard the sound, felt the
blow, felt himself falling forward, and his hand closed on the living-room
curtains, the shards and fragments of glass showering onto the floor. And then,
kneeling there on the ledge, an arm thrust into the room up to the shoulder, he
began picking away the protruding slivers and great wedges of glass from the
window frame, tossing them in onto the rug. And, as he grasped the edges of the
empty window frame and climbed into his home, he was grinning in triumph.
He did not lie down on the
floor or run through the apartment, as he had promised himself; even in the
first few moments it seemed to him natural and normal that he should be where
he was. He simply turned to his desk, pulled the crumpled yellow sheet from his
pocket, and laid it down where it had been, smoothing it out; then he absently
laid a pencil across it to weight it down. He shook his head wonderingly, and
turned to walk toward the closet.
There he got out his topcoat
and hat and, without waiting to put them on, opened the front door and stepped
out, to go find his wife. He turned to pull the door closed and the warm air
from the hall rushed through the narrow opening again. As he saw the yellow
paper, the pencil flying, scooped off the desk and, unimpeded by the glassless
window, sail out into the night and out of his life, Tom Benecke burst into
laughter and then closed the door behind him.
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