The Hunger and Other Stories Read online

Page 2


  Whilst there are definitely therefore some obvious recurring themes and preoccupations to be found here, however, one of the things that remains impressive about The Hunger and Other Stories is the evidence it provides of Beaumont’s range. We find here grimly humorous “biter bit” stories such as “Free Dirt” and “The Infernal Bouillabaisse,” tales of empowering whimsy such as “The Vanishing American,” and impressionistic attempts to evoke African-American and Hispanic culture in “Black Country” and “Tears of the Madonna” respectively, as well as tales of outright horror such as “Miss Gentilbelle.” Beaumont was a talented prose stylist whose stories, at their finest, effectively evoke terror, unease, and pity in equal measure. As such, a critical reappraisal of his literary legacy is long overdue: let us hope that it starts here.

  Bernice M. Murphy

  Dublin

  April 19, 2013

  Bernice M. Murphy is Lecturer in Popular Literature at Trinity College Dublin. She is the author of The Suburban Gothic in American Popular Culture (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009), the editor of Shirley Jackson: Essays on the Literary Legacy (McFarland, 2005), and co-founder of the Irish Journal of Gothic and Horror Studies, which she edited from 2006 to 2012.

  THE HUNGER AND OTHER STORIES

  FOR HELEN

  Miss Gentilbelle

  Robert settled on his favorite branch of the old elm and watched Miss Gentilbelle. The night was very black, but he was not afraid, although he was young enough to be afraid. And he was old enough to hate, but he didn’t hate. He merely watched.

  Miss Gentilbelle sat straight and stiff in the faded chair by the window. The phonograph had been turned down and she sat, listening. In her hands were a teacup, faintly flowered, and a saucer that did not match. She held them with great care and delicacy and the tea had long ago turned cold.

  Robert decided to watch Miss Gentilbelle’s hands.

  They were thin and delicate, like the cup and saucer. But he saw that they were also wrinkled and not smooth like his own. One of the fingers was encircled by a tarnished yellow band and the skin was very, very white.

  Now the phonograph began to repeat toward the end of the record and Miss Gentilbelle let it go for a while before she moved.

  When she rose, Robert became frightened and cried loudly. He had forgotten how to climb down from the tree. Miss Gentilbelle heard him crying and after she had replaced the record in its album she went to the window and raised it halfway to the top.

  “Roberta,” she said, “I’m surprised. Quite surprised.” She paused. “Trees are for monkeys and birds, not little girls. Do you remember when I told you that?”

  The soft bayou wind took Miss Gentilbelle’s words and carried them off. But Robert knew what had been said.

  “Yes, Mother. Trees are for monkeys and birds.”

  “Very well. Come down from there. I wish to speak with you.”

  “Yes, Mother.” Robert remembered. Cautiously at first, and then with greater daring, he grasped small limbs with his hands and descended to the ground. Before the last jump a jagged piece of bark caught on his gown and ripped a long hole in the gauzy cloth.

  The jump hurt his feet but he ran up the splintery steps fast because he had recognized the look in Miss Gentilbelle’s eyes. When he got to the living room, he tried nervously to hold the torn patch of cloth together.

  He knocked.

  “Come in, Roberta.” The pale woman beckoned, gestured. “Sit over there, please, in the big chair.” Her eyes were expressionless, without color, like clots of mucus. She folded her hands. “I see that you have ruined your best gown,” she whispered. “A pity: it once belonged to your grandmother. You should have been in bed, asleep, but instead you were climbing trees and that is why you ruined your gown. It’s made of silk—did you know that, Roberta? Pure silk. Soft and fragile, like the wings of a dove; not of the coarse burlap they’re using nowadays. Such a pity. . . . It can never be replaced.” She was quiet for a time; then she leaned forward. “Tell me, Roberta—what did you promise when I gave you the gown?”

  Robert hesitated. There were no words to come. He stared at the frayed Oriental rug and listened to his heart.

  “Roberta, don’t you think you ought to answer me? What did you promise?”

  “That—” Robert’s voice was mechanical. “That I would take good care of it.”

  “And have you taken good care of it?”

  “No, Mother, I . . . haven’t.”

  “Indeed you have not. You have been a wicked girl.”

  Robert bit flesh away from the inside of his mouth. “Can’t it be mended?” he asked.

  Miss Gentilbelle put a finely woven handkerchief to her mouth and gasped. “Mended! Shall I take it to a tailor and have him sew a patch?” Her eyes came to life, flashing. “When a butterfly has lost its wings, what happens?”

  “It can’t fly.”

  “True. It cannot fly. It is dead, it is no longer a butterfly. Roberta—there are few things that can ever be mended. None of the really worthwhile things can be.” She sat thoughtfully silent for several minutes, sipping her cold tea.

  Robert waited. His bladder began to ache.

  “You have been an exceedingly wicked girl, Roberta, and you must be punished. Do you know how I shall punish you?”

  Robert looked up and saw his mother’s face. “Shall you beat me?”

  “Beat you? Really, do I seem so crude? When have I ever beaten you? No. What are a few little bruises? They disappear and are forgotten. You must be taught a lesson. You must be taught never to play tricks again.”

  The hot night air went through the great house and into his body, but when Miss Gentilbelle took his hand in hers, he felt cold. Her fingers seemed suddenly to be made of iron. They hurt his hand.

  Then, in silence, the two walked from the living room, down the vast dark hall, past the many dirty doorways and, finally, into the kitchen.

  “Now, Roberta,” Miss Gentilbelle said, “run up to your room and bring Margaret to me. Instantly.”

  He had stopped crying: now he felt ill. Robert knew what his mother was going to do.

  He reached up and clutched her arm. “But—”

  “I shall count up to thirty-five.”

  Robert ran out of the room and up the stairs, counting quickly to himself. When he entered his bedroom he went to the small cage and took it from the high shelf. He shook it. The parakeet inside fluttered white and green wings, moved its head in tiny machine movements.

  Twenty seconds had passed.

  Robert inserted his finger through the slender bars, touched the parakeet’s hard bill. “I’m sorry, Margaret,” he said. “I’m sorry.” He put his face up close to the cage and allowed the bird to nip gently at his nose.

  Then he shook the confusion from his head, and ran back downstairs.

  Miss Gentilbelle was waiting. In her right hand was a large butcher knife. “Give Margaret to me,” she said.

  Robert gave the cage to his mother.

  “Why do you force me to do these things, child?” asked Miss Gentilbelle.

  She took the parakeet from its cage and watched the bird struggle.

  Robert’s heart beat very fast and he couldn’t move; but, he did not hate, yet.

  Miss Gentilbelle held the parakeet in her left hand so that one wing was free. The only sound was the frantic fluttering of this wing.

  She put the blade of the knife up close to the joint of the wing.

  Robert tried not to look. He managed to stare away from Margaret’s eyes; his gaze held on his mother’s hands.

  She held the knife stationary, frozen, touching the feathers.

  Why didn’t she do it! Get it over with! It was like the time she had killed Edna, holding the knife above the puppy’s belly until—

  “And now, when you wish you had your little friend, perhaps you will think twice before you climb trees.”

  There was a quick movement, a glint of silver, an unearthly series of small sounds.


  The wing fluttered to the floor.

  “Margaret!”

  The parakeet screamed for a considerable time before Miss Gentilbelle pressed the life from it. When it was silent, at last, the white fingers that clutched it were stained with a dark, thin fluid.

  Miss Gentilbelle put down the butcher knife, and took Robert’s hand.

  “Here is Margaret,” she said. “Take her. Yes. Now: Shall we mend Margaret?”

  Robert did not answer.

  “Shall we put her together again, glue back her pretty little wing?”

  “No, Mother. Nothing can be mended.”

  “Very good. Perhaps you will learn.” Miss Gentilbelle smiled. “Now take the bird and throw it into the stove.”

  Robert held the dead parakeet gently in his hands, and secretly stroked its back. Then he dropped it into the ashes.

  “Take off your gown and put it in, also.”

  As Robert drew off the thin blue nightgown, he looked directly into his mother’s eyes.

  “Something you would like to say to me, Roberta?”

  “No, Mother.”

  “Excellent. Put in some papers and light them. And when you’ve finished that, get a rag from the broom closet and wipe the floor. Then put the rag into the stove.”

  “Yes, Mother.”

  “Roberta.”

  “Yes?”

  “Do you understand why Margaret was killed?”

  This time he wanted to say no, he did not understand. Not at all. There was such confusion in his head.

  “Yes, Mother. I understand.”

  “And will you climb trees any more when you ought to be in bed?”

  “No. I won’t climb any more trees.”

  “I think that is true. Good night, Roberta. You may go to your room, afterwards.”

  “Good night, Mother.”

  Miss Gentilbelle walked to the sink and carefully washed her hands. She then returned to the living room and put a record on the phonograph.

  When Robert went upstairs, she smiled at him.

  He lay still in the bed. The swamp wind was slamming shutters and creaking boards throughout the house, so he could not sleep. From a broken slat in his own shutter, moonlight shredded in upon the room, making of everything dark shadows.

  He watched the moonlight and thought about the things he was beginning to know.

  They frightened him. The books— The pictures of the people who looked like him and were called boys, and who looked like Miss Gentilbelle and were called girls, or ladies, or women. . . .

  He rose from the bed, put his bathrobe about him, and walked to the door. It opened noiselessly, and when it did, he saw that the entire hallway was streaming with dark, cold light. The old Indian’s head on the wall looked down at him with a plaster frown, and he could make out most of the stained photographs and wrinkled paintings.

  It was so quiet, so quiet that he could hear the frogs and the crickets outside; and the moths, bumping and thrashing against the walls, the windows.

  Softly he tiptoed down the long hall to the last doorway and then back again to his room. Perspiration began to form under his arms and between his legs, and he lay down once more.

  But sleep would not come. Only the books, the knowledge, the confusion. Dancing. Burning.

  Finally, his heart jabbing, loud, Robert rose and silently retraced his footsteps to the door.

  He rapped, softly, and waited.

  There was no answer.

  He rapped again, somewhat harder than before; but only once.

  He cupped his hands to his mouth and whispered into the keyhole: “Drake!”

  Silence. He touched the doorknob. It turned.

  He went into the room.

  A large man was lying across a bulky, posterless bed. Robert could hear the heavy guttural breathing, and it made him feel good.

  “Drake. Please wake up.”

  Robert continued to whisper. The large man moved, jerked, turned around. “Minnie?”

  “No, Drake. It’s me.”

  The man sat upright, shook his head violently, and pulled open a shutter. The room lit up.

  “Do you know what will happen if she finds you here?”

  Robert sat down on the bed, close to the man. “I couldn’t sleep. I wanted to talk to you. She won’t hear—”

  “You shouldn’t be here. You know what she’ll say.”

  “Just a little while. Won’t you talk a little while with me, like you used to?”

  The man took a bottle from beneath the bed, filled a glass, drank half. “Look here,” he said. “Your mother doesn’t like us to be talking together. Don’t you remember what she did last time? You wouldn’t want that to happen again, would you?”

  Robert smiled. “It won’t. I don’t have anything left for her to kill. She could only hit me now and she wouldn’t hit you. She never hits you.”

  The man smiled, strangely.

  “Drake.”

  “What?”

  “Why doesn’t she want me to talk to you?”

  The man coughed. “It’s a long story. Say I’m the gardener and she’s the mistress of the house and you’re her . . . daughter, and it isn’t right that we should mix.”

  “But why?”

  “Never mind.”

  “Tell me.”

  “Go back to bed, Bobbie. I’ll see next week when your mother takes her trip into town.”

  “No, Drake, please talk a little more with me. Tell me about town; please tell me about town.”

  “You’ll see some day—”

  “Why do you always call me ‘Bobbie’? Mother calls me Roberta. Is my name Bobbie?”

  The man shrugged. “No. Your name is Roberta.”

  “Then why do you call me Bobbie? Mother says there is no such name.”

  The man said nothing, and his hand trembled more.

  “Drake.”

  “Yes?”

  “Drake, am I really a little girl?”

  The man got up and walked over to the window. He opened the other shutter and stood for a long while staring into the night. When he turned around, Robert saw that his face was wet.

  “Bobbie, what do you know about God?”

  “Not very much. It is mentioned in the George Bernard Shaw book I am reading, but I don’t understand.”

  “Well, God is who must help your mother now, Bobbie boy!”

  Robert’s fists tightened. He knew—he’d known it for a long time. A boy . . .

  The man had fallen onto the bed. His hand reached for the bottle, but it was empty.

  “It’s good,” the man said. “Ask your questions. But don’t ask them of me. Go away now. Go back to your room!”

  Robert wondered if his friend were ill, but he felt too strange to be with anyone. He opened the door and hurried back to his room.

  And as he lay down, his brain hurt with the new thoughts. He had learned many wonderful things this night. He could almost identify the feeling that gnawed at the pit of his stomach whenever he thought of Miss Gentilbelle. . . .

  Robert did not sleep before the first signs of dawn appeared. And then he dreamed of dead puppies and dead birds.

  They were whispering something to him.

  “Why, Roberta,” said Miss Gentilbelle, in a soft, shocked voice. “You haven’t worn your scent this morning. Did you forget it?”

  “Yes.”

  “A pity. There’s nothing like the essence of blossoms to put a touch of freshness about everything.”

  “I’m sorry.”

  “I should be displeased if you were to forget your scent again. It’s not ladylike to go about smelling of your flesh.”

  “Yes, Mother.”

  Miss Gentilbelle munched her toast slowly and looked into Robert’s flushed face.

  “Roberta, do you feel quite well?”

  “Yes.”

  Miss Gentilbelle put her hand to Robert’s forehead. “You do seem somewhat feverish. I think we will dispense with today’s lesson in Jean
ne d’Arc. Immediately following your criticism on the Buxtehude you will go to bed.”

  The breakfast was finished in silence as Miss Gentilbelle read a book. Then they went into the living room.

  Robert hated the music. It sounded in the faded room like the crunch of shoes on gravel, and the bass notes were all dissolved into an ugly roar.

  They listened for one hour without speaking, and Robert moved only to change the records.

  “Now, then, Roberta,” Miss Gentilbelle said. “Would you agree with Mr. Locke that Buxtehude in these works surpasses the bulk of Bach’s organ music?”

  Robert shook his head. He knew he would have to answer. “I think Mr. Locke is right.”

  And then it struck him that he had actually lied before, many times. But perhaps he never knew before that he disliked music.

  “Very good. No need to continue. The facts are self-evident. Go to your room now and undress. Dinner will be prepared at twelve-thirty.”

  Robert curtsied and began to walk to the stairway.

  “Oh, Roberta.”

  “Yes, Mother?”

  “Did you by any chance see Mr. Franklin last night?”

  Robert’s throat went dry. It was difficult to hold on to his thoughts. “No, Mother, I did not.”

  “You know you should never see that evil man, don’t you? You must always avoid him, never speak a word to him. You remember when I told you that, don’t you?”

  “Yes, Mother.”

  “You disobeyed me once. You would never dream of doing that again, would you, Roberta?”

  “No, Mother.”

  “Very good. Retire to your room and be dressed for dinner by twelve.”

  Robert went up the stairs slowly, for he could not see them. Tears welled in his eyes and burned them, and he thought he would never reach the top.