[Gutenberg 43095] • Dust of New York

[Gutenberg 43095] • Dust of New York
Authors
Bercovici, Konrad
Tags
new york (n.y.) -- fiction , short stories
Date
2007-10-09T00:00:00+00:00
Size
0.53 MB
Lang
en
Downloaded: 41 times

New York is an orchestra playing a symphony. If you hear the part of only one instrument—first violin or oboe, 'cello or French horn—it is incongruous. To understand the symphony you must hear all the instruments playing together, each its own part, to the invisible baton of that great conductor, Father Time.

But the symphony is heard only very rarely. Most of the time New York is tuning up. Each voice is practising its part of the score—the little solos for the violins to please the superficial sentimentalists, and the twenty bars for the horn to satisfy the martial spirit in men.

But don't, oh sightseers, don't think you know New York because you have sauntered through a few streets and eaten hot tamales in a Mexican restaurant, or burnt your tongue with goulash in some "celebrated Hungarian palace." Only to very few privileged ones is it given to hear the symphony—and they have to pay dearly for it. But it is worth the price.

They called her the Vampire, or Vamp for short. Her name was Theresa, and she was born somewhere on Hungarian soil in Tokai, where flows the dark blue water of the Tisza, not far from the Herpad Mountains on which grows the grape for the luxurious Tokai wine.

Now, when and why Theresa came to New York nobody knew. But all were glad she was here ... here, at a little table in a corner of the "Imperial" on Second Avenue. When one met a friend on the street and asked: "Anybody at the 'Imperial?'" and the answer was "Nobody there to-night," it simply meant that the Vamp was not there. The other two hundred or more guests did not count.

She spoke very little. She smoked all the time, and her fiery dark eyes hid behind the thin smoke curtain from her cigarette. Young men had no chance at her table. They seldom came near her at all. They were afraid of her. Only married men dared approach her, relying on their experience to extricate themselves when in danger.

And yet there was no danger! At some hour after midnight Theresa brushed the ashes off her waist from the "last" cigarette, arranged her hair a bit, and announced to the company "I am going."

It always was irrevocable. A newcomer was known by the fact that he offered to see her home. The habitués would then answer in chorus, "I can find my way alone," and laugh and tease the unfortunate who did not know that Theresa went home alone.

After Theresa's departure her friends would scatter to different tables and take up cudgels for this or that or the other, always with the conscience that on the street the question would be: "Anybody there?" and the answer would be the inevitable "Nobody there." So most of them would leave the place soon after Theresa—dispersing over the city, each to his home, bringing there the secret emptiness that was in him.

CONTENTS

Theresa the Vamp

The Troubles of a Perfect Type

How the Ibanezes Love

The Little Man of Twenty-Eighth Street

The Newly-Rich Goldsteins

All in One Wild Roumanian Song

Expensive Poverty

Why Her Name is Marguerite V. L. F. Clement

Luleika, the Rich Widow

Because Cohen Could Neither Read nor Write

The Marriage Broker's Daughter

The New Secretary of the Pretzel-Painter's Union

The Gypsy Blood that Tells

When Stark's Caf้ was Closed

Because of Bookkeeping

The Strength of the Weak

Socialists! Beware of Mrs. Rosenberg

A Conflict of Ideals

The Holy Healer from Omsk

Hirsh Roth's Theory

The Tragedy of Afghian's Living Rug

Babeta's Dog

The Professor

The Pure Motive