Her Victory

Her Victory Read Online Free PDF Page B

Book: Her Victory Read Online Free PDF
Author: Alan Sillitoe
traffic system that was so irrationally complicated that occasional motorists from other localities abandoned it after several hours trying to get their bearings, and went off quietly to cut their throats in some leafy lane near Sherwood Forest. He would toss up a coin as to whether he would go to the doctor or not.
    He drove by the station and towards Castle Boulevard. I ought to kill her for leaving me in the lurch. The car behind stopped following, was lost somewhere in the one-way spirit-traps. All mirrors had disappeared except his own. He touched the end of his nose to see if he was real, and the tip was ice-cold, so he assumed himself to be healthy. The doctor could stuff his pills up his arse where they should have stayed in the first place.
    The only thing he wasn’t afraid of was his work, and he was happy when he turned into the cul-de-sac street that backed on to the canal and saw his workshop at the bottom. The men were already waiting for him, and one of them waved a friendly greeting.

5
    â€˜Don’t like it here.’ She might even add: ‘Coming home today. Expect me soon.’
    â€˜Don’t come back,’ he would write, if she sent him an address. ‘You’re dead.’
    So she wouldn’t send any of the leaden words that clamoured at the end of her biro. The post office was warm compared to her room. She screwed up a telegram form before beginning another. People in the queues looked. She needn’t have thrown the paper with such force. Every morning after buying food she called at the post office to write a telegram. It might be better to live with George than rot in the fifteen pounds a week hole of a room she had landed in. Pneumatic drills and traffic shook her nerves, and at night the Shepherd’s Bush hooligans roamed noisily on their way home.
    When not walking she wanted to be lying down, but was terrified at never getting up again, so she went along muddy lanes of wintry trees in Holland Park, with a plastic bag of shopping, and several crumpled telegram forms in her pocket. She looked in a pool of water, and saw a squirrel run over her face. The pain of its claws and grey bush paralysed her lips more than the wind, but children passing in a gang from the school were happy, and she smiled at them.
    The semi-circular screen of the peacock’s tail was blue-gold and veined-red against darkening foliage. She fed bread to sparrows. Her pride would never forgive her if she sent a telegram saying she didn’t like it here. She was two people. One was imperious and able to cope, plain but presentable, cheerful, imaginative, solid in all her perceptions. The other person was timid, incompetent, everchanging, and half-mad. She knew them well, often walked with one at each hand, like two illegitimate children that she was forced to drag along for their daily outing.
    She was neither of them. She was somewhere in between – but now that she lived on her own each fought more violently for her absolute attention. At her best moments she inclined firmly to the former, and at her worst lapsed alarmingly towards the latter. In spite of such inner turmoil, she liked it here, even though it meant spending most of her time being afraid. A long walk was needed before her thoughts became helpful. She passed Lord Holland’s statue for the fourth time, and decided to go home.
    Hunger was as real as the rain as she crossed the main road. Motor-cars speeding on either side were also real. She stayed on the island, unable to go back or forward, even when there was no traffic. Time passed, and she was unwilling to reach a decision. Her fingers were frozen. Then she found herself on the opposite pavement without having made up her mind.
    She bought a pair of heavier shoes because her own got damp in the slightest moisture. Her second pair were also too thin. She bought grey tights and woollen stockings. In Nottingham, George had driven her in the car, or she knew all the
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