polarizing glass, the inner of which could be rotated, allowing a person to blacken his window or have it
fully transparent or enjoy any shade of twilight. One other very unusual luxury touch was that the
windows could actually be opened, swinging on pivots at top and bottom. Nowadays, with radiant sleep-
heating general throughout the hotel and the air-conditioning system anything but trustworthy, this last
feature was put to real use more often than might have been expected, though windows were still kept
closed most of the daytime.
It had always seemed to Phil that the great gray wall just ten feet from his window, with its rows of
ominous portholes, many of them blackened, was the grimmest sight in the world — a symbol of the
way he was walled off from life and people.
But now, as he stood leaning out just a little, his cropped hair brushing the tarnished circular rim, it
seemed to him that he could imagine his way through that wall as if it were made of some material that
conducted emotion as copper conducts electricity. Not see or think through it, butfeel through it to the
multiple texture of warm, pitiful, admirable, ridiculous human lives in the cubicles behind: the two-fifths
happy ones, the nine-tenths sad ones, the ones who nursed fears and frustrations because you had to
nurse something, the ones who hammered fears and frustrations into a painful armor, the old man
apprehensively sorting his limp ration stamps from three communo-capitalist wars, the boy playing
spaceship and pretending the blacked-out window was the porthole of a comic-book intergalactic liner,
the three unemployed secretaries — one of them pacing — the lovers whose rendezvous was tainted
with worries about the Federal Bureau of Morality, the fat man feeling a girl’s caress by radio handie
and thinking of something long ago, the old woman coddling her dread of war-germs and atomic ashes
by constantly dusting, dusting, dusting …
Well, his new self certainly had a vivid imagination, Phil decided with a smile.
An old hand came out of a porthole three floors down and shook something — or nothing — from a
dustpan.
Coincidence, of course, or else he’d once watched the woman without thinking about it — nevertheless,
Phil chose to interpret the event as an encouraging confirmation of his new feeling of outgoingness.
Then the smile left his lips as he thought of another aspect of the opposite wall.
This window was the vantage point where he had spent countless drearily excited hours spying on the
activities of all the young women whose cubicles were even remotely within range. Not the new girl —
the one who wore her black hair in old-fashioned pony style — in the room straight across, although she
was quite beautiful in a sprightly, animal way, and he sometimes heard her practicing tap-dancing. No,
she was a bit too close and besides, he was vaguely frightened of her. There was something eerily dryad-
like about her and, in any case, she blacked out her porthole religiously. It was blacked out now, though
slightly ajar.
But all the other girls were recipients of his untiring, sterile interest. The cute green-blonde just below
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