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The Old Die Rich.
by Horace Leonard Gold.
_It is the kind of news item you read at least a dozen times a year, wonder about briefly, and then promptly forget--but the real story is the one that the reporters are unable to cover!_
"You again, Weldon," the Medical Examiner said wearily.
I nodded pleasantly and looked around the shabby room with a feeling of hopeful eagerness. Maybe _this_ time, I thought, I'd get the answer. I had the same sensation I always had in these places--the quavery senile despair at being closed in a room with the single shaky chair, tottering bureau, dim bulb hanging from the ceiling, the flaking metal bed.
There was a woman on the bed, an old woman with white hair thin enough to show the tight-drawn scalp, her face and body so emaciated that the flesh between the bones formed parchment pockets. The M.E. was going over her as if she were a side of beef that he had to put a federal grade stamp on, grumbling meanwhile about me and Sergeant Lou Pape, who had brought me here.
[Ill.u.s.tration]
"When are you going to stop taking Weldon around to these cases, Sergeant?" the M.E. demanded in annoyance. "d.a.m.ned actor and his morbid curiosity!"
For the first time, Lou was stung into defending me. "Mr. Weldon is a friend of mine--I used to be an actor, too, before I joined the force--and he's a follower of Stanislavsky."
The beat cop who'd reported the D.O.A. whipped around at the door. "A Red?"
I let Lou Pape explain what the Stanislavsky method of acting was, while I sat down on the one chair and tried to apply it. Stanislavsky was the great pre-Revolution Russian stage director whose idea was that actors had to think and feel like the characters they portrayed so they could _be_ them. A Stanislavskian works out everything about a character right up to the point where a play starts--where he was born, when, his relations.h.i.+p with his parents, education, childhood, adolescence, maturity, att.i.tudes toward men, women, s.e.x, money, success, including incidents. The play itself is just an extension of the life history created by the actor.
How does that tie in with the old woman who had died? Well, I'd had the c.o.c.keyed kind of luck to go bald at 25 and I'd been playing old men ever since. I had them down pretty well--it's not just a matter of shuffling around all hunched over and talking in a high cracked voice, which is cornball acting, but learning what old people are like inside--and these cases I talked Lou Pape into taking me on were studies in senility. I wanted to understand them, know what made them do what they did, _feel_ the compulsion that drove them to it.
The old woman on the bed, for instance, had $32,000 in five bank accounts ... and she'd died of starvation.
You've come across such cases in the news, at least a dozen a year, and wondered who they were and why they did it. But you read the items, thought about them for a little while, and then forgot them. My interest was professional; I made my living playing old people and I had to know as much about them as I could.
That's how it started off, at any rate. But the more cases I investigated, the less sense they made to me, until finally they were practically an obsession.
Look, they almost always have around $30,000 pinned to their underwear, hidden in mattresses, or parked in the bank, yet they starve themselves to death. If I could understand them, I could write a play or have one written; I might really make a name for myself, even get a Hollywood contract, maybe, if I could act them as they should be acted.
So I sat there in the lone chair, trying to reconstruct the character of the old woman who had died rather than spend a single cent of her $32,000 for food.
"Malnutrition induced by senile psychosis," the M.E. said, writing out the death certificate. He turned to me. "There's no mystery to it, Weldon. They starve because they're less afraid of death than digging into their savings."
I'd been imagining myself growing weak from hunger and trying to decide that I ought to eat even if it cost me something. I came out of it and said, "That's what you keep telling me."
"I keep hoping it'll convince you so you won't come around any more.
What are the chances, Weldon?"
"Depends. I will when I'm sure you're right. I'm not."
He shrugged disgustedly, ordered the wicker basket from the meat wagon and had the old woman carried out. He and the beat cop left with the basket team. He could at least have said good-by. He never did, though.
A fat lot I cared about his att.i.tude or dogmatic medical opinion.
Getting inside this character was more important. The setting should have helped; it was depressing, rank with the feel of solitary desperation and needless death.
Lou Pape stood looking out the one dirty window, waiting patiently for me. I let my joints stiffen as if they were thirty years older and more worn out than they were, and empathized myself into a dilemma between getting still weaker from hunger and drawing a little money out of the bank.
I worked at it for half an hour or so with the deep concentration you acquire when you use the Stanislavsky method. Then I gave up.
"The M.E. is wrong, Lou," I said. "It doesn't feel right."
Lou turned around from the window. He'd stood there all that time without once coughing or scratching or doing anything else that might have distracted me. "He knows his business, Mark."
"But he doesn't know old people."
"What is it you don't get?" he prompted, helping me dig my way through a characterization like the trained Stanislavskian he was--and still would have been if he hadn't gotten so sick of the insecurity of acting that he'd become a cop. "Can't money be more important to a psychotic than eating?"
"Sure," I agreed. "Up to a point. Undereating, yes. Actual starvation, no."
"Why not?"
"You and the M.E. think it's easy to starve to death. It isn't. Not when you can buy day-old bread at the bakeries, soup bones for about a nickel a pound, wilted vegetables that groceries are glad to get rid of. Anybody who's willing to eat that stuff can stay alive on nearly nothing a day. Nearly nothing, Lou, and hunger is a d.a.m.ned potent instinct. I can understand hating to spend even those few cents. I can't see going without food altogether."
He took out a cigarette; he hadn't until then because he didn't want to interrupt my concentration. "Maybe they get too weak to go out after old bread and meat bones and wilted vegetables."
"It still doesn't figure." I got up off the shaky chair, my joints now really stiff from sitting in it. "Do you know how long it takes to die of starvation?"
"That depends on age, health, amount of activity--"
"Nuts!" I said. "It would take weeks!"
"So it takes weeks. Where's the problem--if there is one?"
I lit the pipe I'd learned to smoke instead of cigarettes--old men seem to use pipes more than anything else, though maybe it'll be different in the next generation. More cigarette smokers now, you see, and they'd stick to the habit unless the doctor ordered them to cut it out.
"Did you ever try starving for weeks, Lou?" I asked.
"No. Did you?"
"In a way. All these cases you've been taking me on for the last couple of years--I've tried to be them. But let's say it's possible to die of starvation when you have thousands of dollars put away. Let's say you don't think of scrounging off food stores or working out a way of freeloading or hitting soup lines. Let's say you stay in your room and slowly starve to death."
He slowly picked a fleck of tobacco off his lip and flicked it away, his sharp black eyes poking holes in the situation I'd built up for him. But he wasn't ready to say anything yet.
"There's charity," I went on, "relief--except for those who have their dough in banks, where it can be checked on--old age pension, panhandling, cadging off neighbors."