The Curator by Owen King
Author:Owen King
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Scribner
Published: 2023-03-07T00:00:00+00:00
The Fields, Pt. 2
âI looked for you everywhere,â Robert said when she raised her head from the desk to see him sitting on the opposite side. âI thought youâd run off with one of your wax swains. I donât think they like me, Dora. Especially the clamdigger with her little beach. She reminds me of someoneâs very formidable mother. Itâs discouraging. I find this whole place discouraging, but her especially. She looks so pleased and certain of herself, swinging along with that bucket. Dora, she looks victorious. I have this feeling that sheâs about to tell me that her daughter, who I love, has already agreed to the proposal of a richer manâs son. Or maybe to the proposal of one of the wax miners.â
Dora blinked her sticky eyes. She had fallen asleep in the curatorâs office. Her lieutenant regarded her with his elbow propped on the desk and his clean-shaven chin propped on his fist. A groggy dustiness filled the small room.
âAre you throwing me over for one of the miners?â
âNo. The telegraph operator. What time is it?â
âJust after noon. Isnât the telegraph operator⦠oh, I remember, the small room by the chemistâs laboratory, Telegraph Service above the door. The operator wears a white suit? Holds a notepad and a pencil? Portly?â
âYes.â
âHe has jowls.â Robert used a hand to shape a jowl in the air around his own face. He frowned. âThey donât have parts, do they?â
She shook her head. âNo, they donât. Theyâre smooth. But the telegraph operator pleases me in other ways, Lieutenant.â
âThat son of a bitch. Iâll have to kill him.â He spoke without any conviction whatsoever, leaned back in his chair, and crossed his legs. He nodded at the tintype of the old king on the wall. âYou should take that down.â
He was right. D stood and grasped the sides of the framed picture of the old king, whose murky eyes were seeded beneath wooly eyebrows. What Ike had said after seeing the kings carved into the rowboats was true; if you took away the medals around his collar, he was a mutt. The old king could have been the brother, in fact, of the nightsoil man on the second floor, who hunched arthritically under the arms of his barrow.
D lifted the picture off the wall and revealed the bright-yellow window of paint beneath.
âYou look wretched,â Robert said.
D set the picture on the floor against the wall. âThe telegraph operator hardly lets me sleep.â
âEnough.â
âItâs funny, but thatâs what I said to the telegraph operator last night.â
Robert said he was taking her somewhere for a few hours, wherever didnât matter, she needed some sunshine, needed to get away from this place.
âIt smells awfully ripe too,â he said. âHave you looked to see if something crawled into the basement and expired?â
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