WHEN Quintus Bland set out to enjoy the evening he had not the
vaguest idea he was destined to become a skeleton. Yet that is
exactly what he did become—an impressive structure composed
entirely of bone as far as the eye could reach.
Had fate vouchsafed the man some small warning of the radical
departure from his customary appearance, there is no doubt he would
have stopped where he was and become a skeleton comfortably in the
privacy of his own home, assuming for the moment one can
comfortably become a skeleton while still alive and active.
There were many persons who wished he had pursued this course
and remained at home. Life for them would have still retained a
little of its zest.
Indubitably this would have been the more agreeable course not
only for Mr. Bland and his friends, but also for a number of
unfortunate individuals who through no fault of their own were
forced to undergo the ordeal of gazing on Quintus Bland in far less
than the nude—in, perhaps, the most disturbing form a man can
present to his fellow men.
Although to become a skeleton is a noteworthy achievement it is
not an admirable one. If a man must so disport himself he would
show far more consideration by enjoying his horror in solitude
instead of in the heart of a populous city. The metamorphosis from
flesh to bone is not one especially designed to be regarded
affectionately by the average observer.
In extenuation of Mr. Bland's slight lapse it must be recorded
that he had neither the intention nor the inclination to become a
skeleton. Such an ambitious undertaking never entered his mind.
Bones, in appalling number, were thrust upon him, so to speak. Or,
inversely, flesh was removed. In the long run it made little
difference how the change occurred. Bland suddenly and
confoundingly discovered he had turned to a skeleton. He discovered
also that it is the rare individual indeed who regards a skeleton
either as a social equal or a desirable companion.
By way of explanation it should be known that Quintus Bland
literally sniffed himself into his skeletonhood. For long hours at
a time he had been inhaling the potent fumes of a secret chemical
fluid with which he had been experimenting for some months past. It
was his somewhat revolting hope that some day by means of this
fluid he would be able to produce a fluoroscopic camera film. Why
any normal man should wish to create such an intimately revealing
commodity is difficult to conceive. Possibly Quintus Bland was not
quite normal.
But before we take the man in his bony structure it would
perhaps be a gentler approach and show better taste to consider him
first in the flesh.
Quintus Bland was the sole owner and active head of one of the
largest and most successful photographic studios in the city of New
York. Like a versatile undertaking establishment the Bland Studios,
Inc., could handle any job no matter how unappetising. No face, not
even the most murderous in character, ever took itself off the
premises without feeling that it was quite a good face to look
at.
As a small boy Quintus had made clicks with his camera while his
companions were making pops with their guns. He was an essentially
gentle little boy, and consequently was known as a queer duck, a
mamma's boy, and a 'fraid cat. Eventually when he fell upon his
tormentors and inflicted upon their quick healing bodies severe and
humiliating punishment he gained the local reputation of being an
embryonic homicidal maniac.
The truth of the matter was that these violent reprisals of the
youthful Bland had not been undertaken in his own behalf, but
rather in the best interests of a besieged turtle the other boys
were attempting to open with the same ruthless enterprise they
applied to clocks, watches, and other diverting bits of mechanism.
Doubtless the boys considered the turtle as being nearly if not
equally inanimate. Not only did young Quintus save the life of the
turtle, but he also won the lasting admiration of a small female
child with long golden hair who had witnessed the rescue. Later he
married the girl.
At the moment when we take up Mr. Bland actively he had just
turned thirty-seven years of age. There were days when he looked
every bit of that, and others when in some surprising manner he
appeared to have recaptured the breath and body of his youth. One
could never be sure about Quintus Bland. He was never quite sure
about himself. His age fluctuated most bewilderingly. If the
conversation bored him he gradually became haggard and enfeebled,
to the intense irritation of his wife. Should the talk turn to more
diverting matters, he made a rapid recovery and attacked the
subject with vigour and animation. His eyes had always been old,
very old and wise. And there was a far-away quality in his smile
that gave one the impression of mental reservations. It was a
disturbing but not an uninteresting effect. He was a tall man and a
dark man. Like the rest of him his hair was straight and dark. The
word "lank" well covered the impression Mr. Bland created. And he
made a lanky skeleton, which is, of course, one of the most
demoralising types of skeletons to encounter. He had a surprisingly
snappy pair of dark eyes. Occasionally they glittered wickedly. At
other times they smouldered morbidly into vacancy. His wife found
it difficult to decide whether her husband's eyes were more
annoying when they saw nothing at all or when they saw everything.
He had a way of regarding her darkly for an interminable moment,
then grunting suddenly as if from sheer disgust. She found this
most disturbing.
At present he was having his full share of wife trouble. On her
part the little blonde girl of years ago had come to rue the day
she had ever witnessed the dark youth rescue the turtle from the
grubby talons of the village boys. She blamed that turtle with all
the blind unreason of her sex. She wished she could find the
slow-witted creature and give it a piece of her mind. She would
have liked to point out to it in terms of passionate reproach that
if he had only kept on turtling instead of parking provocatively in
the exact middle of a dirt road she, Lorna Bland, sometimes called
Blondie because of the inevitable alliteration, would not now be
married to a long-legged, grunting maniac, capable of seeing life
only through the lens of a camera. Yes, that turtle had plenty to
answer for when presently he stood in the presence of his God. That
would be a long time off, she speculated gloomily. Turtles, she had
been given to understand, lived practically for ever, provided that
they escaped the attentions of small boys.
Blondie Bland was about as pretty as any reasonable man should
require a woman to be. Pretty of face and pretty of figure, with a
quantity of unlived hell still flickering near the surface of her
great blue eyes. She was all that a woman should be and much that
one should not. But the worst that could be said of her was that
she was tarrying a little overlong on that stage of her development
in which the capture of men through partial surrender seemed a
matter of prime importance. Quintus was a most satisfyingly jealous
husband. Lorna did not endeavour to make things any easier for him.
His long legs done into joints frequently made her unreasonably
furious. There were times when she wished she could kick his shins,
but remembering the fury of the dark youth in action she suppressed
this dangerous impulse.
When they were first married, Lorna Bland had been seven years
younger than her husband. Gradually the years separating them had
increased until by now they had become ten. At the present rate of
speed, Quintus Bland reflected sardonically, theirs would soon
assume the aspect of an April-October union. This set him to
wondering why Lorna loved youth instead of life, why she wallowed
in repetitive experience instead of questing fresh adventure. In a
sense she was older than he was, more settled in her ways, more
reconciled with the set routine of her existence. The lovely but
benighted creature still approached a tea, flirtation, or dinner
party with the same eager anticipation of her first year out. He
hated to believe that women were instruments of torture or pleasure
according to the occasion. Yet Lorna did much to further this
belief. He often wished he had the courage to shake her blonde head
off her smooth, firm shoulders.
In much the same state of unsatisfied hostility couples drag
themselves along to regret their golden anniversaries. Neighbours
call with congratulatory words. A festive to-do is made. The
venerable couple, cynically despising the whole affair, have their
picture taken together, the nearest physical contact they have had
in years. In the local paper a paragraph appears. Then the
neighbours, after singing "Auld Lang Syne," depart, vowing they
will presently return to celebrate with equal gusto the diamond
anniversary. Sometimes the old battlers are actually fooled by
public approval into believing they really care for one another,
but this mood is speedily dissipated when presently they retire to
bed to lie in the darkness, wondering why they had not given each
other pulverised glass somewhere between the paper and the wooden,
when they still had a chance to carry on with a mate who would have
understood them.
In the majority of cases a golden anniversary is in reality a
gathering of friends to celebrate the fact that a man and a woman
have miraculously succeeded in living together for fifty years
without committing murder. There are not many such occasions. There
was little likelihood that Quintus and Lorna Bland would ever
celebrate theirs. Long before that time one or the other of them
would have succeeded in escorting his or her mate to the grave.
Already much of the man's innate gentleness was being replaced by
strong homicidal impulses. Frequently now he found himself
contemplating his wife and thinking how pleasant it would be to
drag her about the house by her hair. He even speculated whether it
was long enough to afford a good grip. So far, however, physical
conflict had been avoided.
The highly desirable Blondie consistently feigned a vast
contempt for cameras, their works, and those who worked them. To
irritate her husband still further she was frequently seen at art
exhibits, where she bored herself insufferably by looking at
paintings she neither understood nor appreciated. It must be said
for her that she took her punishment with fortitude worthy of a
better cause.
On the evening when Mr. Bland set forth in search of enjoyment
his wife returned to their fashionable suburban home with a
painting she had acquired at no small expense. As far as she could
judge, it was a picture of a cow in convulsions. In her mind's eye
she had already selected the exact spot on the library wall where
this atrocity would do the most harm, that is, where her husband's
eyes would be forced to fall on it most frequently. Having hung the
daub to her infinite satisfaction, she fluffed out her golden hair,
sighed happily, flexed her supple torso like a cat preparing to
pounce, then curled herself up in a chair with a book which she did
not read. Presently Quintus Bland arrived from the city with a
bundle under his arm.
"Ah, there," said Mr. Bland, defensively flinging the words in
the general direction of his wife. "I've brought home a new
study—wheels, all wheels."
"Ah," welcomed Lorna Bland, "an X-ray of your negroid head, I
take it."
"What?" asked Mr. Bland in a preoccupied voice as he busily
unwrapped the bundle. "You were saying?"
"Never mind," his wife replied, feeling that under the
circumstances minor insults were superfluous. "It really doesn't
matter."
Humming under his breath in a peculiarly irritating manner,
Quintus, with his new study of wheels, approached the exact spot on
the library wall on which the cow was having her convulsions.
Blondie, not missing a move, decided that this little affair was
going to turn out even better than she had anticipated.
Bland raised his eyes to the wall and met the cow face to face.
Both faces expressed acute agony. The man looked as if the cow had
gored him in some vital spot. He, too, seemed seized with
convulsions. Then, as if suddenly realising that the eyes of his
wife were hatefully studying his reactions, Bland rallied gamely.
Once more he endeavoured to hum as if his mind was quite serene,
but this time there was a noticeable quaver in his voice.
As if he had grown up in daily association with the stricken
cow, he removed her from the wall and carelessly scaled her across
the room. By this action his humming was definitely improved. It
swelled to a note of triumph.
From her coiled position in the chair Lorna shot like a maddened
spring. She grabbed the cow from the floor, pressing it to her
heart. In her eye flashed the light of battle.
"You beast," she said in a tragic voice. "You long-legged
butcher."
"Why shouldn't a butcher have long legs?" her husband inquired
mildly.
"I don't care whether a butcher has any legs at all," Mrs. Bland
heatedly flung back.
"A butcher would hardly chop off his own legs," the man pursued
thoughtfully. "That wouldn't make any sense."
"What do I care about butchers?" cried Mrs. Bland.
"I don't know," replied Mr. Bland. "What do you care about
butchers?"
"Nothing!" snapped the lady. "I don't care a damn about
butchers."
"I'm glad to learn," said Quintus Bland, "that there is one
class of male that fails to attract you. Is it because they hide
their trousers beneath their aprons?"
Mrs. Bland blinked.
"You're a vulgarian," she told him.
"Admittedly," agreed Quintus Bland. "But I'm not a butcher. Were
I one, I would have hacked that obscene beast to bits."
"If you keep going on about butchers," Lorna Bland assured her
husband, "I'll do something desperate."
"You'll be sorry when you're hungry," Mr. Bland warned her. "For
my part I am very fond of butchers. I fully appreciate the dignity
and importance of their calling."
With this observation he hung his study of wheels in the space
recently occupied by the convulsive cow.
"And besides," said Mrs. Bland, hovering round the spot, "that
isn't an obscene beast. It's a cow—a swell cow."
"I hope she swells until she bursts," remarked Mr. Bland. "If
you hadn't told me I would have carried away the impression it was
a composite picture of all the most objectionable features of the
animal kingdom."
With his head cocked on one side he stepped back and stood
admiring his weird study of wheels.
"Do you imagine that horror is going to remain there on the
wall?" asked Lorna Bland in a low voice.
"Of course it is, my dear," replied her husband. "Can't you
almost see those wheels turn, hear the purr of the dynamos, feel
the reverberations of—"
His sentence was never finished. Already there had been too much
of it for Blondie Bland. The man's complacency had completely
unbalanced her mind. Snatching the picture from the wall, she
sprang to a footstool and brought the framed photograph down on the
cocked head of Quintus Bland. In less time than it takes to think
of it, the head protruded through the wheels with the frame around
its neck. Across the face there flickered momentarily an expression
of surprise, then the features became impassive. In silence they
confronted each other; then Mr. Bland, with a polite smile, helped
his wife to step down from the footstool. With elaborate courtesy
he removed the convulsive cow from her possession, raised it aloft,
then brought it down with great force and deliberation upon the
sleek blonde head. Being stretched on canvas, the convulsive cow
bounced up with a snap, but not so Mrs. Bland. With a gasp of
astonishment she found herself squatting on the floor, literally
driven into that position in which she remained, all thought of
dignity forgotten.
"Go on," she said at last in a dull voice. "Finish me with the
frame. It's the only thing left to do."
"There was glass in yours," observed her husband. "You might
have cut my throat."
"I wanted to cut your throat," Mrs. Bland retorted. "I still do.
From ear to ear," she added.
"Indeed," sneered Mr. Bland. "Well, just observe this
cutting."
Lorna Bland, still squatting, looked up with sudden interest.
Her husband had taken a knife from the long library table. With
this weapon in one hand and the convulsive cow in the other he
placed himself before her so that she could enjoy a clear and
unobstructed view of his actions. Even at that tense moment the
squatting wife could not refrain from dwelling on what a fantastic
picture her husband presented, standing ceremoniously before her,
his framed head protruding through a mass of wheels, a knife poised
dramatically above a picture of a cow. It would be a crisp moment
for the entrance of a neighbour. The dramatic solemnity of the man
suggested a priest of some ancient religion on the point of making
vicarious sacrifice to his bloodthirsty gods.
"You wouldn't dare," breathed Mrs. Bland. "That cow cost one
hundred dollars."
"I'd pay twice that amount to cut her to ribbons," Mr. Bland
informed her. "Watch. See, I slit the creature's throat from ear to
ear as you would have slit mine." This he proceeded to do with one
deft stroke of the knife. "Next," he continued, "I swish off her
hind legs, or quarters." The legs were neatly severed from the
body. "And not content with that," he added grimly, "I disembowel
the beast like this. Observe!" Mrs. Bland observed and saw exactly
how it was done. "And now, my dear," resumed her husband politely,
"here is your hundred-dollar cow. Have you any more funny
pictures?"
"Thank you a lot," replied Lorna sweetly, rising from the floor
and accepting the tattered ruin. "I think I'll hang it back where
it was. When callers want to know what has happened to the picture
I'll explain in full detail."
"Very well," said Mr. Bland, delicately removing his head from
the frame. "If you are going to do that, I am going to do this, and
when callers inquire about the jagged state of this photograph I'll
simply tell them you tried to cut my throat with it—from ear to
ear."
Thus speaking, he placed the shattered study of wheels in the
centre of the mantelpiece.
"They'll be sorry I didn't succeed," said his wife, eyeing the
picture critically. "It certainly looks like hell up there."
"Your cow scarcely adds to the attractiveness of the room," Mr.
Bland reminded her.
"In trying to dash my brains out," said Lorna Bland, "you
succeeded in giving me a terrible headache. I must take some
aspirin."
"It's merely good luck I'm not standing in a pool of blood,"
observed Mr. Bland. "As it is, I, too, have a headache."
"I wish to God you were standing in two pools of blood,"
commented Mrs. Bland. "One foot in each."
Having voiced this pious wish, Lorna Bland rang for the maid,
Fanny, a small, desperately passionate-looking girl, slightly
oversized in the right places.
"Aspirins, Fanny," said Lorna. "It may interest you to know that
your master has just beaten me over the head in an attempt to dash
my brains out. Tell the cook."
"And it may further interest you to know, Fanny," put in Mr.
Bland calmly, "that your mistress has just attempted to slit my
throat. Tell that to the cook. It would have been from ear to ear,"
he added, drawing a long finger across his throat to make himself
clearly understood.
There was no doubt that Fanny was deeply impressed. She looked
first at Mrs. Bland's head, then transferred her dark gaze to Mr.
Bland's throat. There was such a lot of Mr. Bland's throat. Fanny
was just as well pleased it was not slit. Fanny took care of the
rugs.
"I'm sorry, madam," she said respectfully. "Is there anything I
can do?"
"Yes," replied Madam bitterly. "You might get a gun and shoot me
and get it over with."
"Or," suggested her husband, "you might ask the cook to step in
for a moment with the carving knife and cut my throat for the
edification of Mrs. Bland. I'll endeavour to bleed in two separate
pools, my dear, and place a failing foot in each."
Mentally confronted by this ghastly picture, Fanny hurried from
the room.
"Have you no pride?" asked Quintus Bland when the passionate
maid had gone.
"None whatsoever," his wife coolly replied. "In the presence of
a stalking murderer there is no room for pride."
Fanny returned with aspirin and water. Lorna took one tablet and
washed it down with a small gulp.
"Will you have one?" she asked the stalking murderer.
"Thanks," he replied. "Two."
"Your headache is no worse than mine," said his wife. "I'll take
three."
"How petty," remarked Mr. Bland, enjoying Lorna's efforts to get
the tablets down. "How, how petty."
"You started it," said his wife, passing him the box.
"Might as well finish them off," he said, glancing at the
contents. "There are only four left."
Even for his long throat the swallowing of four aspirins
presented some difficulty. Nevertheless he succeeded in flexing
them down. With thwarted eyes his wife watched her husband's neck
until the last spasmodic ripple had subsided.
"You should have been a sword swallower," she commented; then,
turning to Fanny, "Are there any more aspirins in the house?"
"No, Mrs. Bland," said Fanny. "Shall I send for some?"
"Do," replied Mrs. Bland. "A large box."
"How petty," murmured Mr. Bland. "How very, very petty."
"I hope your heart stops beating," snapped his wife.
"Fanny," said Mr. Bland, disregarding this hope, "where is my
dog? A man must have some companionship."
"If that dog shows his stupid face in here," Mrs. Bland
announced in a voice of cool determination, "I'll pull his tail out
by the roots."
"I think you mean off," corrected her husband.
"Off or out," cried Lorna Bland, "it doesn't matter which. If
that dog comes in here he'll leave the room with his tail in my
hands."
"So you would carry the warfare to dumb animals," said Mr. Bland
with a sneer in his voice.
"I started it with one," Mrs. Bland replied with evident
satisfaction.
At this moment the dog whose tail had been under discussion, and
whose correct name was Busy, came on little bounces into the room.
Busy was about a foot high, a trifle less than a foot wide, and a
little more than a foot long. It was quite obvious the dog had made
a brave attempt to make himself as nearly a cube as possible. He
was all white and woolly. Two black eyes like washed grapes danced
vividly in a large square head. Such was Busy. Both Quintus and
Lorna Bland were always on the point of looking up in a book to
find out just what sort of dog he was, but what with one thing and
another they had never quite got round to it. Nominally Busy was
the property of Mr. Bland, although his wife was equally fond of
the dog. Now, however, it pleased her to consider the animal
entirely his, realising that the best way to attack her husband was
through this odd-looking beast.
Therefore, the moment the blonde woman's eyes fell upon the
unsuspecting dog she swooped down upon him and began to tug lustily
at his tail. Busy gave tongue to a sharp yelp of indignation. This
was quite enough for Quintus Bland. He rushed across the room and
seized his crouching wife by the hair.
"Let go of that dog's tail," he threatened, "or I'll drag you
about by the hair."
"See," said Lorna Bland triumphantly, as she went over
backwards, dragging the dog with her. "What did I tell you, Fanny?
The man's a stalking murderer. This probably will be the end. Run
for your life."
For a moment the situation remained static. Mr. Bland had his
wife by the hair while she had his dog by the tail. Fanny could not
recall ever having seen anything quite like it. Neither seemed
willing to let go first, although Busy would have been only too
happy to wash his hands of the whole affair. The ring of the
doorbell broke the deadlock. Quintus Bland released his wife, who
in turn released his dog. Struggling to her feet, she began to
fluff out her hair. As Fanny with a backward glance hurried to the
door, the master of the house assumed a dignified attitude while
his consort fixed a smile of greeting on her lips.
"Will you help me to get through college," hopefully inquired a
voice, "by subscribing to one of these popular magazines?"
"Certainly not!" shouted Mr. Bland to the unseen aspirant.
"No!" passionately elaborated his wife. "Not if you remain
ignorant to the end of your days, which I hope are numbered."
Feeling definitely certain that this was a poor portal indeed
through which to enter into the realms of higher education, the
youth withdrew, and Fanny hurried back to the room, hoping to
witness the resumption of hostilities. But for that day active
hostilities were at an end. Mrs. Bland was busy with the telephone.
Her husband was watching her with a pair of brooding eyes.
"Is that you, Phil?" said Lorna Bland after a short pause. "Yes,
of course, it is. Certainly this is Blondie. I simply wanted to let
you know that my husband has just attempted to dash my brains out,
then drag me round by my hair. Pretty, isn't it?"
"She brutally assaulted my dog," thundered Quintus Bland over
his wife's shoulder, "and tried to pull his tail off."
"That was the voice of the murderer," said Lorna into the
telephone. "No, no, not mine. He was referring to the dog's.
[Pause.] Listen, Phil, I want you to take me out to dinner. I'll
pick you up in the car. [Pause.] How sweet of you. Yes, yes, yes.
[Another pause.] And after? Oh, I don't care what happens after.
Better that than death."
She replaced the instrument and glanced significantly at her
husband.
"Better that by far," she said as if to herself.
"What do you mean by that?" he demanded.
"Don't tell me you were born yesterday," she retorted.
"So that's how the crow flies," said Mr. Bland nastily.
"I don't care whether the crow flies or crawls along on the flat
of his belly," was his wife's indelicate rejoinder. "You look like
a crow yourself. How do you fly?"
"If I fly into a rage," said Quintus Bland, "you'll be sorry you
were ever born."
"I'm sorry you ever were," Mrs. Bland flung back at him as she
rose to quit the room. "And if I could lay my hands on that turtle
I'd wring his horrid neck off."
"Animal baiter," muttered Quintus.
"Fanny," called Mrs. Bland from the stair-way, "come up here and
help me find my black underwear with the lace."
A look of consternation took possession of Mr. Bland's features.
He gathered the assaulted dog in his arms and sat down with him on
the sofa. In a surprisingly short time Lorna Bland was down
again.
"Good-bye," she said, looking in at the door. "I have it on, the
black underwear with—"
"I know," Mr. Bland interrupted. "With the lace."
For a moment the small blonde creature lingered undecidedly in
the door. She was sorry she had said he looked like a crow. It was
too close to home. And she had lied about the black underwear, what
little there was of it. Phil Harkens was not worth black underwear,
especially with lace. Sitting there in the shadows, her black
long-legged husband did look for all the world like a dark bird of
ill omen—an old crow huddled on a sofa with a square dog on his
lap. Still, he might say something friendly. She wanted only a word
or so to call the battle off. But no word was forthcoming. Feeling
a little hollow inside, she closed the front door slowly behind
her. Shortly after, the man on the sofa heard the expostulations of
her motor. He listened until the spluttering had turned to an
ingratiating purr which grew fainter and died away. So she really
had taken herself off with her black underwear with the lace. Now
he had the house to himself, and he did not want it. Damn her,
anyway, and damn her black underwear. Damn the lace, too. He
removed a strand of blonde hair from his vest. Yes, damn her blonde
hair.
For a long time he sat there quite motionless with the square
dog. The battle had left him deflated. Idly he examined the tail of
Busy. It was an odd hook of a tail not unlike a jigsaw piece with
hair on it. It seemed to have escaped injury. Its permanent hook
was undamaged. Mr. Bland decided it would be difficult to pull off
a tail as strongly affixed as Busy's.
Darkness drifted into the room and piled up in the corners.
Bland was too listless to switch on the lights. The far-away
drumming of a scooting express train throbbed across the gloom. The
sound made him think of the city. Lorna in her black underwear was
spending the evening with that rotter, Phil Harkens. Why should not
he, Quintus Bland, make a night of it also? The city was congested
with good-looking women. His acquaintance among models was
extensive.
"Busy," said the man to the square dog, "I feel very much like
hell. All washed out, you know. Should I or should I not go to the
city?"
The dog was far above the battle. He slumbered heavily on his
master's lap and made gross noises about it.
Fanny's dark eyes glittered in the doorway.
"I'm going out, Fanny," said Quintus Bland from the sofa. "Pass
the word to the kitchen. There will be no dinner."
Fanny's expression revealed the fact that she was sorry her
master was going out. She had certain ideas of her own in which he
was rather intimately involved. She wished she had the courage to
tell him there was no need for him to stir farther afield in search
of amorous diversion.
"Will you be back late, Mr. Bland?" she asked.
"If at all," Mr. Bland replied.
He removed the dog from his knees and placed him gently on the
sofa. The square animal snored peacefully through the transition.
Accepting his hat and stick from a reluctant Fanny, he moved out
into the dusk, quitting the comforts of his suburban home in favour
of the city, where he later became a skeleton, which was even worse
than wearing black underwear with lace on it.