know. Iâve made quite a study of this building for one reason and another, and Iâve took all kinds of pains tracking things down, but thereâs a lot about it I still donât know. I do know there was a hotel in here years back. I know that beyond all doubt. It was one of those old steamship hotels that used to face the docks all along South Street.â
âWhy donât you get a mechanic to inspect the elevator?â I asked. âIt might be perfectly safe.â
âThat would cost money,â Louie said. âIâm curious, but Iâm not that curious. To tell you the truth, I just donât want to get in that cage by myself. I got a feeling about it, and thatâs the fact of the matter. It makes me uneasyâall closed in, and all that furry dust. It makes me think of a coffin, the inside of a coffin. Either that or a cave, the mouth of a cave. If I could get somebody to go along with me, somebody to talk to, just so I wouldnât be all alone in there, Iâd go; Iâd crawl right in. A couple of times, it almost happened I did. The first time was back in 1938. The hurricane we had that fall damaged the roofs on a good many of the old South Street buildings, and the real-estate management company I rented this building from sent a man down here to see if my roof was all right. I asked the man why didnât he take the elevator up to the attic floor, there might be a door leading out on the roof. I told him Iâd go along. He took one look inside the cage and said it would be more trouble than it was worth. What he did, he went up on the roof of the building next door and crossed over. Didnât find anything wrong. Six or seven months ago, I had another disappointment. I was talking with a customer of mine eats a fish lunch in here Fridays whoâs a contractor, and it happened I got on the subject of the upper floors, and he remarked he understood how I felt, my curiosity. He said he seldom passes an old boarded-up building without he wonders about it, wonders what itâs like in thereâall empty and hollow and dark and still, not a sound, only some rats maybe, racing around in the dark, or maybe some English sparrows flying around in there in the empty rooms that always get in if thereâs a crack in one of the boards over a broken windowpane, a crack or a knothole, and sometimes they canât find their way out and they keep on hopping and flying and hopping and flying until they starve to death. He said he had been in many such buildings in the course of his work, and had seen some peculiar things. The next time he came in for lunch, he brought along a couple of those helmets that they wear around construction work, those orange-colored helmets, and he said to me, âCome on, Louie. Put on one of these, and letâs go up and try out that elevator. If the rope breaks, which I donât think it willâwhat the hell, a little shaking up is good for the liver. If the wheel drops, maybe these helmets will save us.â But heâs a big heavy man, and heâs not as active as he used to be. He went up the ladder first, and when he got to the top he backed right down. He put it on the basis he had a business appointment that afternoon and didnât want to get all dusty and dirty. I kept the helmets. He wanted them back, but I held on to them. I donât intend to let that elevator stand in my way much longer. One of these days, Iâm going to sit down awhile with a bottle of Strega, and then Iâm going to stick one of those helmets on my head and climb in that cage and put that damned elevator back in commission. The very least, Iâll pull the rope and see what happens. I do wish I could find somebody had enough curiosity to go along with me. Iâve asked my waiters, and Iâve tried to interest some of the people in the market, but they all had the same answer. âHell, no,â they said.â
Louie suddenly