Mark Dunn - We Five

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We Five The result is a novel about five young women pursued by five young men of predatory purpose, which takes place alternatively in a small mill town outside of Manchester, England in 1859; in San Francisco on the eve of the 1906 earthquake and fire; in Sinclair Lewis’s fictional Zenith, Winnemac in 1923; in London during the Blitz of autumn, 1940; and in a small town in northern Mississippi in 1997. In the first book “We Five” are seamstresses; in the next they are department store sales clerks; in the next, they sing in the choir of a popular female evangelist; in the next, they work in an ordinance factory outside of London; and in the final version, they are cocktail waitresses in a Mississippi River casino.
The book’s climax is a dramatic collision of all five incarnations of the story: an incident of mass hysteria arising from a solar storm in 1859, the 1906 San Francisco quake, a fire in the evangelist’s newly built “temple” in 1923, the 1940 Balham Underground station bombing and flooding, and a tornado in rural 1997 Mississippi.

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Ruth shook her head, her face darkened by fearful concern. “What I see withal is calamity and disaster, for we do not know just what these men are up to.”

“I choose to give them the benefit of the drought.”

“What is that?”

“I said that I choose to give them the benefit of the doubt.”

“That isn’t what you said.”

“It very well is.”

“It isn’t. You said drought. You said ‘benefit of the drought. ’ And I say that this sums things up perfectly.”

Maggie sate upon a stile. Molly paced. Carrie shook her head anxiously.

“There can be no resolution,” asserted Carrie, “if neither of you is willing to speak another word to the other. This is why we stand here apart from town, where none shall hear us but the errant cow. So talk. The both of you. Or I shall find things to chuck at you for inducement?”

“There’s nothing else to be said,” answered Molly sulkily. “Every word that flies from her mouth casts aspersions upon my father, for Maggie cannot draw a difference between her deceased father, who was a disreputable toper, and my perfectly alive and happy and loving father who wants only for his new wife (and by obvious association both his residual daughter and his prospective daughter) to be blissful and contented with this impending union.”

Impending ?” muttered Maggie. “I should say not. For I will stop the marriage by all means available to me.”

“You most certainly will not.”

Maggie amplified her voice to match the intensity of her manner. “I will and I must . Mamma has suffered far too much already. Shall I name her woes and throes? Her many years of ill health. The terrible loss of two of her daughters. And then the dissipated decline of a husband whose useless life ended when he stepped, stupefied by the spirits, into the path of a fully-stoked L&NWR 2-2-2 Number 302 °Cornwall locomotive.” Maggie took a moment to fetch her breath. “I will not subject this poor mother of mine to the possibility of yet another heavy dose of sorrow and regret.”

“As for your mother’s health, Maggie,” said Molly, who was no longer pacing, so that she should hold one spot and stare at her friend with a piercing gaze, “most of her troubles are self-inflected. I suspect she makes herself sick for the sole purpose of sending for my father. But he never minds it. Perhaps you haven’t noticed it, Maggie, but they are in love.

“I will not dispute the fact that my mother is the occasional hypochondriac.”

“And it is a terrible thing, as well, to lose one’s sisters. You know I too lost my own sister only two years ago.”

Maggie dipped her eyes in melancholy memory. “They say that I may have lost a brother as well — that my sister Octavia had a twin. Once when Mamma was delirious with fever, she muttered something to this effect. But then she later disavowed it.”

“Whether it be two siblings or three, the sadness is the same, Maggie. It is a sadness that wants to be overcome by the joy of my father’s ascendance in your mother’s heart and in your heart too, if you will but allow it. And as for my father, I cannot tell you how it stabs my own heart for you to say the things you say about him.”

Now Carrie, the peacemaker, interceded: “Maggie isn’t saying she loathes your father, Molly. Only that there are aspects to his character to which she cannot comfortably reconcile herself.”

“Being a quack and a fraud,” jerked out Maggie, “is not an ‘aspect of character.’ It is a crime.”

“He is not a quack and a fraud!” cried Molly. “He is merely uncredentialed.”

Maggie replied in a sulky under voice: “I would rather he not be uncredentialed. For without the proper documents, he will never make enough money to provide for my mother as she deserves.”

Molly’s mouth fell into a gape. “Then that is what this boils down to. That my father isn’t rich enough for your mother.”

“Not precisely,” replied Maggie. “But it would certainly help matters if he were more prosperous. It would counter a number of deficiencies on his side.”

Carrie wasn’t certain if it was Molly whose fingers went first to pull Maggie’s hair, or Maggie who clawed at Molly’s in defensive anticipation. But the outcome was the same.

And it was all rather appalling.

Chapter Seven

San Francisco, April 1906

Miss Colthurst looked up at the clock on the wall and tutted.

11:20.

She summoned her head salesclerk in ribbons, Jane Higgins, and addressed her fretfully: “Any sign of them?”

Jane shook her head.

“It’s nearly lunch,” said the harried floor-walker. “I’ve had to pull two girls from Hosiery and another from Misses’ Ready-to-Wear. This leaves us short in both of those departments. But that isn’t my greatest concern. I’m worried something serious might have happened to them.”

Jane was looking at the clock herself. It hung over the pass-through to Men’s Furnishings and carried the name of the department store in bold script: Pemberton, Day & Co. “I’m a little worried myself, Miss Colthurst. When Mag telephoned to me this morning, she said they didn’t anticipate being too late, but that was over two hours ago.”

“Surely there’s some logical explanation, though I must say that this just isn’t like them — and all three at the same time!”

Jane glanced at the counter directly behind her. There was a customer standing there looking around for someone to wait on her. Her hat was so ridiculously aigretted that Jane could not stop herself from saying, “Let me help this woman with the private aviary, and then I’ll tell you what I think is going on.”

Miss Colthurst shook her head. “You needn’t bother. Miss Thrasher has given me her theory, which will probably be the same as yours. See to the customer. Miss Thrasher! Miss Thrasher, come over here! I’d like a private word, my dear.”

Ruth, who was working behind the Gloves counter nearby, pushed open the little gate next to her and was at her supervisor’s side in that next instant. Vivian Colthurst was standing in the middle of the Ladies’ Apparel showroom. Cash girls were flying by on their roller skates and giving the room the feeling of a festive roller rink. “Yes, Miss Colthurst?”

“I was going to — why, that’s a lovely lavender tie. Did you get it here?”

Ruth smiled. “I did. Thank you for noticing, Miss C.”

Miss Colthurst winked. “When it’s only the two of us, Ruth, you may call me by my Christian name.”

“Yes, of course, Vivian ,” said Ruth, as Miss Colthurst straightened her favorite shop girl’s necktie with solicitous hands. “Carrie — Miss Hale —saw it on the bargain table and thought it would go very nicely with this shirtwaist.”

“It does indeed. Our Miss Hale has impeccable taste. With the lavender and the pink, Ruth, you are looking quite hydrangeaish today.”

Ruth blushed. “I never know exactly how I look unless somebody tells me. I don’t have that feminine knack for the harmonizing of apparel that most of my female co-workers have.”

“Which is why I keep you in Gloves where you can do the least harm!” teased the floor-walker, winking again, this time more playfully.

“You wished to see me about something?”

“Oh yes.” Miss Colthurst patted her slightly unraveling pompadour into submission. “Ruth, oh my good Lord, this is absolutely the worst possible day for any act of truancy on the part of your three friends. You see, I hadn’t wished to spread it about because it was only a select number of you girls whom I intended to recommend, but circumstances now require me to make a clean breast of it.”

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