Those were a few, a very few, of the strands out of which a child’s life was woven in East Harlem in the teens of the twentieth century, Ecclesias. Futile to ask what his life would have been like among his own kind in the Jewish ghetto he had left.
— You say a child’s life?
Well. His.
— When will you redress the omission, introduce the crucial factor? In good time, Ecclesias, in good time. .
X
It was late on a sunny morning when he climbed the rough granite steps leading to the summit of Mt. Morris Park hill. A trio of kids were playing tag about the bell tower. A solitary individual sat on one of the green park benches. Vacant otherwise, the benches bordered the inner circle of the iron-pipe barrier separating the summit from the hillside. Down below, Harlem streets and avenues stretched away in different directions. On Madison Avenue, at the base of the hill to the east, stretched the Fourth and Madison trolley tracks. At eye level, an irregular view revolved: the tops of brownstone roofs, the spire of a red-brick church on 121st Street, stodgy tenement facades, and bordering the west of the park, decorous and well-kept apartment houses. Smoke and shreds of cloud hovered in the sky to the pale horizon. And directly overhead — the thing he had come to see — hung the great bronze bell, motionless in the open belfry atop the massive wooden beams of the tower.
Breathing a little faster because of the climb, Ira walked about the tower, looking aloft, enjoying the sight of the huge bell among its equally huge timbers open to the sky — and wondering how the bell could have been used long ago as a fire alarm, which was what he once heard somebody say. How could anyone have climbed the hill and rung the bell in time to summon the firemen before the house burned down?
Unhurried and with little commotion, the trio of boys played their sporadic game of hide-and-go-seek, dodging behind the tower or trotting to the pipe railing about the summit. The lone adult sitting on the park bench watched them negligently — until Ira came close enough to speak to, and then to his surprise, the man greeted him. He engaged Ira in conversation. He said he could see that Ira liked hills and woods and country. Did he?
Ira did. He loved the country. So did the stranger. He knew some wonderful places too, not far away either, after a real nice trolley car ride. Did Ira like to ride in an open-air trolley car? Ira loved open-air trolleys. Then they could go out together — ride out and see a real wild place and ride back.
The man must be fooling. He wouldn’t take Ira on a long trolley-car ride. A trolley-car ride cost five cents. Everybody knew that. No, the man was going to go out there himself anyway. Be nice to have company. He’d pay the carfare, if Ira wanted to go.
Ira hesitated. The stranger was smiling, but he was in earnest too. Ira stared at him, trying to make sure the other meant what he said: He was blue-eyed, loose-limbed and slender. He wore his brown felt hat crimped all around, “pork-pie” style, Ira had heard the other kids on the block call it. And there was a sort of rustiness about his clothes, as if weathered, but not mussed or wrinkled. No, he was serious. And he was so friendly, good-humored and relaxed.
“I have to go home first, and eat. My mama’ll worry.”
“That’s all right. After you eat your dinner. We got plenty o’time.”
“Yeh?”
“I’ll be on 125th Street. When you finish your dinner, you just wait for me on the corner of Fifth Avenue. We’ll take the trolley and have some fun.”
“All right.”
“My name’s Joe. What’s yours?”
“My name is Ira.”
“O.K. I’ll meet you on the corner, Ira: Fifth Avenue and 125th Street. Remember?”
“Yeh.”
Ira said nothing to Mom. She might spoil his adventure. And lunch over, he hurried to 125th Street, early, and waited on the corner of Fifth Avenue, where the trolley ran west, just as Joe had directed him. And there he came, lanky, now that he was walking, and looking straight ahead as if he was about to saunter by nonchalantly, as if they hadn’t made an appointment to meet there; so noncommittal, he would have gone on if Ira hadn’t intercepted him, greeted his grown-up friend with, “Here I am, Joe!”
Oh, yes. He recognized Ira, indulgently. They would take the trolley here on the corner, an open-air trolley — and ride to the wonderful park he knew, Fort Tryon Park, at the end of the line, the last stop after a nice, sightseeing ride.
They rode and rode, on the open-air trolley, where the seats were like benches that went from one side to the other, and the conductor stood on the running board when he came to collect the carfare. After the trolley turned north on Broadway, and Ira could see the Hudson River, they rode uptown, uptown till street numbers went way up toward the 200’s, and traffic grew less, and you could see real country, open fields and groves of trees, and isolated houses. They rode so far and so long that something began to stir within Ira: uneasiness.
Yes, it was a wonderful park, full of big shade trees. It was wild and secluded, like a forest. A narrow trail, overshadowed by leafy branches, slanted down a sharp declivity through ever thicker woods. But something wasn’t right; no; to be so alone. . with Mr. Joe. They should go back, now that Ira had seen the place, even though the Mister talked so kind, so cheerfully, as he went ahead, or stopped and looked around so good-naturedly.
“Here’s a nice place.” He led the way — from the path around a big boulder, stopped, surveyed the vicinity with a calm turn of the head. And then, gently, but with unmistakable insistence: “Take your pants down.”
“Wha’?” The full import of his situation, his peril, his helplessness, toppled down on him with crushing force.
“Take your pants down.” The voice was still easy, but more inflexible.
“I don’t wanna.”
“I said take your pants down.”
“I don’t wanna.” Too frightened for tears, Ira began trying to force tears by whimpering: “Lea’ me alone! I wanna go back.”
“C’mon, kid. I ain’t gonna hurt you. Get those pants down.” Mr. Joe became all lanky arms, unsmiling face, strong fingers at Ira’s belt, his other hand pushing Ira’s hand away. “Let go, I told you I ain’t gonna hurt you.”
But worse than hurt lay in store, if he didn’t submit, worse, worse: terror. One hand strove with Ira’s two. And in another moment the same hand was raised, impatiently. “C’mon, you little bastard.” Mr. Joe’s palm poised to slap—
When out of the thicket, up above from the covert that secluded Mr. Joe and Ira, the undergrowth swished, sounds approached, a woman’s blithe giggle, a man’s quick chuckle, mingling, and near and nearer, blessedly, angelically descending the inclined way, and now at hand: The young couple appeared, brightly out of shade, apotheosis, never again so blooming, shining-eyed, blushing Irish as she, nor as husky Irish as he, white shirt open at neck, laughter on lips, strong and eager. Barely surprised at seeing Ira and Mr. Joe, the two lovers glanced in momentary self-conscious check of amorous intent. They smiled, in friendly apology, veered away, and brushing away undergrowth as they proceeded downhill disappeared among the bushes.