PAGE 2 - N.C.ESSAY THE N. C. ESSAY VOLUME V, NO. XVI NORTH CAROLINA SCHOOL OF THE ARTS MAY 3, 1971 The Reluctant Inunigrant A Short Story ByPAULMEm Bill Grundy, his head splitting, was not happy. He was sprawl^ inelegantly in an armchiair, the heels of his hands pressed to his eyeballs, trying to i^ore the world. He was listening reluc tantly in anguished incredulous amazement to the church bells. They had been ringing out peal after peal of joyously unskillful music ever since he’d arrived home two hours ago, and of course unlike a symphony, a peal of bells offers no clue to the listener as to whether the recital has just started, is somewhere halfway through or is drawing to a close. At this time looking at it from Bill Grundy’s point of view, the experience must have resembled having his most sensitive incisor drilled; he knew logically that it must end sometime, but ‘when’ was a difficult question. Had it been Wednesday evening, he might have accepted odds that it was about to finish, for having lived under the shadow of the church for three years, he knew that Wednesday night was when the bellringers practiced and it was usually for only two hours. But today was Thursday and he could think of no reason for this extra vigorous assult upon his senses, unless the old verger, who always cast black looks at Bill on Sunday mornings as he mowed the lawn instead of attending church, had ordered the vicious attack, ar med with diabolic intuition of Bill’s migraine. He dismissed this unchristian theory thinking that perhaps the Queen’s bir thday or a record take at the bring-and-buy sale was the reason behind this camponological marathon. Bill toyed with the fantasy of discharging a bazooka at the church tower from his bedroom window, but eventually jumped up in agony and yelled, “Hell and Danuiation” instead. This proving ineffectual except as far as aggravating his head was concern^, he merely stood swaying slightly. From a habit of thinking, he’d expected his wife to evince sympathy at this outburst, but then he recalled that she was in the kitchen weeping softly over the stove. “Blast”, he muttered , and stomped off into the bedroom where he lay face downward on the bed. He was angry. His anger was not chiefly at his headache nor at the bells which were in fact strictly innocent, but at himself. He’d been a bastard today and he knew it. That’s why his wife was weeping. “But hang it all, it’s bloody difficult to be diplomatic when your head’s about to drop off!” This was addressed to his conscience which told him that he ought to go and comfort the tearful Mrs. Gnmdy. He felt himself to be the aggrieved party. In fact his headache was probably the result of his desire to play this role. “Danunit, I didn’t want to go to America in the first place”, he exclaimed peevishly to his conscience. “Don’t be foolish”, the other replied, “You shouldn’t have married an American, if you weren’t prepared to leave England for a while at some time or other.” “Now you tell me”, groaned Bill prosb'ated by this ace. You will gather from this dialogue that Bill Gnmdy had taken to wife a young American lady. He had come four years before straight from college to teach history in the granmiar school of a small market town in Essex. There was an American airforce base nearby and Julia, his wife, was the daughter of an airman. Three years before, they had married and rented this cottage next to the church. From the start Julia had scoffed at the pittance Bill has received from the school authority in return for his services, but Bill was a happily complacent young man and was content with both Uie pay and their pleasant rural existence. He ^dn’t want to go flying off to Texas even if he would be earning ten times his present salary. He loved this little Essex village, he usually even loved the bells, but today he’s sealed his fate. Mr. and Mrs. Grundy were soon to fly off to Texas. Bill winced at the thought because he enjoyed the two mile cycle ride to school every mor ning and the musty old-fashioned smell in the 17th century classrooms. He’d have to say goodbye to all this for a while, for today he had become a reluctant immigrant. Today he’d finally capitulated under Julia’s persuasion and taken the train up to London and the American Embassy. Julia had for the past few weeks ‘escalated’ as the saying goes, her campaign in Essex. She’d put forward all the powerful arguments that, from her Im perialist position, she’d been capable of, and the British Empire a tiny part of it anyway, had crumbled. They had known in advance that to obtain Bill’s visa was to be an all day process. Julia had gathered all Bill’s documents, photocopied them at the base office, obtained affidavits of support in triplicate from her father, typed out Bill’s answers to the len^hy questionaire, un dertaking on his behalf that he wasn’t to the best of his knowledge a member of any totalitarian organization, a drug addict or peddler, a trafficker in vice, an alcoholic, a convicted criminal and that he wasn’t certifiably insane. Seriously doubting this last fact. Bill had allowed himself to be taken on the 7:33 to Liverpool Street. He was groaning inwardly at the thought of the London rush hour with which they would have to com pete, loathing in his timid country way the ratrace exemplified by the Picadilly tube line at and around nine o’clock. It was all that he’d expected and more and his mood was savage when they’d arrived at the Embassy. In this mood he’d done everything he could to fail in his application for a visa. That this attempt had been un successful diminished only slightly the grim pleasure he took from recalling it now. First he’d demanded a receipt for the syringeful of blood taken from him, telling the girl blandly that his la^er wanted legal proff of the ri^ts he surrendered by becoming an immigrant. For the chest X-ray, he had entered the room with a convincing tuber cular cough which incorporated a hollow rattle. He had often used this with results on his mother in his childhood. The nurse asked him the usual questions as to whether he’d experienced trouble with his chest. Bill replied that he was perfectly fit, but that he was allergic to air conditioning. Later when the doctor submitted him to the indignity of the cough-and- drop test, he had repeated his tubercular performance with extra vigor hoping secretly that he had succeeded in making his genitals do whatever they are supposed to do if you have a rupture. He didn’t know if defective testicles precluded one from entering the States but he wasn’t going to take any chances. The doctor seemed pleased with them and looked in his ears in stead. Having made a token gesture of defiance Bill sub mitted to the rest of the examination without histrionics. Next they had to go and get his picture taken, and when the photographer said “Smile please”. Bill scowled in his best English stiff upper lip fashion. When the immigration officer at Kennedy airport inspected his visa and pictwe Bill didn’t want to seem happy or grateful, so he scowled. However, when the photograph came through, he merely looked sick and Julia laughed which put him in an even worse mood. From here they had to go to yet another section of the building where Bill was genuinely outraged to find that his fingerprints were required of him. “Look here”, he said, “This is really going too far. Who do you think I am? Some wretched member of the Mafia or something? I am only doing this to stop my wife nagging.” The man who was doing the finger printing was a middle aged Cockney employed by the U.S. Government to do nothing but this all day long. He was of weary aspect and this obviously wasn’t the first time he had encountered objections. “Look mate”, he said, “I don’t care why the ‘ell yer goin’, but if yer want to get a visa yer’ve got to ‘ave yer fingerprints took.” Bill reluctantly allowed the man to put his fingers on to a block of black ink and then to transfer them on to a form containing his details. Bill looked at the prints and felt that he’d surrendered his freedom for ever. Now came a long wait before their interview with the consular officer. This was where they would learn finally whether or not Bill was desirable or un desirable as an alien. It was still technically possible that even if his documents were in order and his medical examination proved him healthy, the official, after a few judicious questions, might turn him down. Julia, therefore, waited anxiously and Bill with malicious anticipation. “Now don’t you go and say something stupid, will you”, said Julia. “You mean that I mustn’t say what I feel?” “No, I don’t, I just mean for you to be a little diplomatic for once ... for me,” “What if he asks me my political views or about the Vietnam war or something? I shall say exactly what I think, and if he asks me my reasons for wanting to go, I’ll tell him I don’t want to go. I don’t want them thinking that they’re doing me any favors.” This was where the strain started to tell on Julia and she made a discreet, though swift, exit to the ladies’ room. Julia returned shortly with a fresh face, but Bill wouldn’t look at her. He imagined his finger prints being reduced to computer tape and automatically checked against criminal files and his blood being analysed for possible unAmerican traits. He could already hear a friendly American voice saying, “Ah’m right sorry Mr. Grundy, but it’s my dooty to tell you that your blood is sub standard. Ah’m afraid you can’t come in.” Eventually his name was called and accompanied by a very flustered Julia, Bill entered the official’s plush office. They were cordially invited to sit, and they sank down almost out of sight in front of his desk, which of course put Bill at a slight disadvantage. The interview consisted almost entirely of the official flirting with Julia who of course simpered diplomatically. The official expressed great elation at interviewing a ‘nice young couple’, and joked around for five minutes in Johnathan Winters’ style. He confided that he spent most of all day in terviewing Jamaicans. “Oh, we kid around a while. I have some fun, make ’em laugh. I reject them, but we have fun! ” Bill was horrified and couldn’t say a word. Then the official, omitting to say that Bill had been accepted, which because Julia was American, was a foregone conclusion anyway, started telling them the procedure Bill should take for becoming an American citizen. Bill, forgetting all the clever things he’d intended to say, merely replied, “Actually, I don’t intend to become a citizen.” Julia and the official seemed mortaUy offended at this and the interview was brought to a speedy conclusion. Bill was directed to the cashier who gave him a receipt for the fifteen pounds, which he had to pay for his visa. However, the trials of the day were far from over, the tube was still there to test his character once again. It was again the rush hour and when they descended into Hyde Park Comer they found, cJi joy, that there was a go- slow or a ‘work-to-nde’ by all the train drivers. It was physically impossible to get on the first train or anywhere near it as the crowds lined the platform ten deep. Gradually they found themselves a little nearer the edge. Bill felt a bit like a leming, that species which annually rushes en masse to the nearest cliff top and tumbles into the sea, guided instinctively to this method of coping with over population. Bill stood at the edge resisting with difficulty the temptation to imitate the lemings’ behavior and make the noble gesture of throwing himself on to the electric track. A train came in, packed already to bursting point. A guard yelled, “Let the passengers out first please”, and Bill watched fascinated as one by one the passengers wishing to alight emerged Uke shelled peas, or popcorn as it pops. Then it was their turn and plucking up courage, Bill towing Julia by the arm assaulted the wall of flesh, and succeeded in finding an opening more by the pressure of the crowd behind than by efforts of his own. However, they were in. Julia being short was standing stiff with glazed eyes, her chin between the breasts of a ^1 slightly taller than herself. Bill, himseif experiencing pressure on his body considerably in excess of the usual fifteen pounds per square inch, wondered how the doors would ever shut, the crowd being still ten or more deep on the platform and no apparent gap between the passengers and those who by their presence in this forcing bag of a tunnel, implicitly wished to be so. There was a hi^ as the invisible guard released the doors and a muffled rumble as other compartments sealed themselves, but the one in which Bill and his wife were jammed remained open. “Mind the doors”, a voice shouted hoarsely, and there were minor rearrangements of arms and legs, but the doors remained open. A guard could be seen half swimming, half hacking his way towards toeir carriage where he started pummelling ttie flesh into the requisite shape to ac commodate the sliding doors which eventually rolled together. Somewhere Bill and JuUa had to change trains, repeating the process of being canned and uncanned, in order to reach their destination, Liverpool Street. When they were almost there, Bill was suddenly aware that Julia was giggling softly. By tilting his head back slightly and rolling his eyeballs down he could just about see her profile. She was apparently muttering “Quit” out of the comer of her mouth and wriggling slightly. At that moment &e train lurched and he could see that a young man, smartly dressed was tickling the underside of Julia’s right but tock. On the bed Bill shifted in acute embarrassment, as he recalled the scene he’d made on the train. Julia hadn’t realized until Bill had started yelling at the top of his voice at someone, that it wasn’t her husband who was responsible for this intimate caress. He’d gone purple in the face and was roaring in coherently at a total stranger, while confined in an attitude of rigid attention by the crush. This is where the ridiculousness of the situation lay. It’s all very well to take exception to someone for tickling your wife’s bottom, if you can punch him on the nose and stalk off outraged, but when all you can do short or biting his nose is to roar at him from a range of four inches, one’s own dignity is not a little compromised. Especially so if one is obliged to continue in this proximity for another ten minutes, long after one has exhausted aU the various verbal possibilities and is reduced to inevitable silence. This is how it iiad been; nevertheless Bill was hurt to his very soul by Julia’s attitude when they at last had alighted from the train. Her reaction was as if Bill had cordially invited tiie stranger to inspect her private parts. She had been deeply outraged by the embarrassment her husband had caused her and was furious. This seeming illogicality caused him to inwardly see the even now as he remembered it. Dammit, he didn’t want to go to London in the first place. Now they were home and Bill was in the dog house. He had put up a good fight, but he wasn’t sure if he’d won or lost. In cricket terms “He’d kept his wicket up”, and in his opinion had maintained his English dignity too. The bell ringers had stopped now. He wondered if the verger was giving them the drop-and- cough test. They’d certainly risked double rupture in the marathon of the last two and a half hours. “Oh well”, Bill signed as he got off the bed, after a raging battle with his conscience, “I’d better practice the gentle art of British compromise”, and he strolled out to negotiate a peaceful set tlement with the American forces encamped in the kitehen. The other day I went into a mental hospital. Now to be mad is one of the national charac teristics of the poet. Americans expect it of them and Jesus, we never let them down. To Uie gypsy or the Apache Indian there is no such word as madness. Madness only means that ttie gods have taken the person’s mind. And a poet must have a great mind when the gods have need of it, for the gods have everything. Madness is the highest form of .intelligence, and combined with common sense, madness is genius. Bobby Dardin My thanks to Mick Ferguson, contributors, and readers. Robin Kaplan, Editor