Five Smooth Stones (95 page)

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Authors: Ann Fairbairn

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #African American, #General

BOOK: Five Smooth Stones
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Rudy reached deep into a trouser pocket, came up with something in his hand, and tossed it on the table in front of them where it showed stark against the scrubbed old boards. "There it is. There's a million like it in Louisiana. Or anywhere. Jesus, man. You're a lawyer. You got to know you can't trace a thing like that. Even with the police helping. And you know Goddamned well that isn't going to happen."

"I know that. It's why I was looking for you. But now—"

"Now you're getting a little sense in that skull?"

"You call it sense?"

"When it happened I didn't see anyone around but

Negroes. Supposing you'd found those two bastards, how many of those Negroes would rush up to the police station and tell about how they saw two white punks bullying a black man? You got any idea the kind of stuff been going on around here these last few days? You got any idea what's coming? The Citizens' Council's going to call for a mass march on the school board—I heard one of 'em say it was a 'total war.' And you think anyone's going to pay any attention to something like this? People likely to get dead around here next two, three days. How much help you think you're going to get, how many—even those that saw it—going to pop up and say what they saw? How many? Didn't you find out? Didn't you find out tonight?"

"I found out. Christ, yes, I found out."

"You know damned well you'll never find those two cats. And when you've cooled off you'll know you don't want to. But you'll find what licked you, baby; you'll find that. Fear. Scared shitless, everyone. Except some of the kids."

"I know. God, don't I know!" He got up and took two more bottles of beer from the refrigerator and handed one to Rudy. "There's two kinds of fear, Rudy. Ours—our people's —and theirs."

"You can talk sense when you feel like it. Jesus, man, I'm not a good man, like Gramp was. I'm just a fair-to-middlin' smart one. And I think when it says "Thou shalt not kill' it's just good advice, and that's all. Because I'll be Goddamned if I'll go along that it's as bad to kill some of the ofay sons of bitches, like those guys, as it is to kill, well—"

"Gramp. And people like him."

"If it ever gets so we live in a reasonable world, if the time ever comes when killing one man's as bad as killing another, when a black corpse is as important as a white one, then— what the hell—there won't be any need running around looking for ofay bastards to kill quiet-like because they're going to think maybe three times before they go around making corpses out of Negroes."

David felt the sharp dig of claws as Chop-bone reached up, got a purchase on his thigh, then leaped to his lap, pressing against his chest, purring. "You think that'll ever come? A reasonable world?"

Rudy shrugged. Some trick of the overhead light made his skin seem darker and the freckles disappear, and the features and eyes were in that moment all Negro. "You ask me? You're the cat went away to college, studied law. Said the

reason you went to Harvard, didn't you, was because it was the best in the country for constitutional law? You learn anything? Anything at all?"

David was silent for so long that Chop-bone had time to settle down comfortably and, drifting into sleep, let the purr in his throat die out. "Yes," he said. "I learned something. Learned a hell of a lot. A lot sometimes I wish I hadn't. Learned the Constitution doesn't mean a bloody thing as far as parts of the United States are concerned. And if it doesn't mean anything for part of it, it doesn't mean anything for any of it."

"Didn't learn it never will, did you?"

David hesitated. "No. I didn't learn that. I found out that things have got to be changed. Somehow. And I know, myself, without any law to tell me, that we've got the power to do it."

"How?"

"For God's sake, Rudy, some other time, huh? It would take all night. Laws, voting rights—" He looked at the knife that lay on the table, then over at Rudy. "Take the damned thing with you, Rudy. Get it out of my sight. I don't want it—"

Rudy reached forward, picked it up, and put it in his pocket. "I'll sell it Know a guy who wants one—"

David's eyes had gone blank, looking inward; now he focused them on Rudy, frowning. "Sell it? You broke?"

"Down to penny one—"

"Jeez, I've been selfish, talking about myself, nothing else. What's with you?"

Rudy shrugged. "Sticking my neck out. Trying to be a pioneer. Or maybe a martyr. Me and Corrinne. We thought we'd try and register our oldest girl for school—integrated, that is. I went down and they told me to come back. That was on a morning. At two o'clock that afternoon—man, not more'n three hours later—I got fired."

"Jesus!"

"I found another job real quick. That same day. Rudy's got a good name as a mechanic. I figured I wouldn't even tell Corrinne I'd been fired; I'd let her think I made the move on my own. When I got home all the doors and windows were locked and she was inside, scared. I mean
scared.
Calls had started coming in by three in the afternoon. Half an hour after I got in, a rock came through the window. Missed the baby's crib by a foot. Next morning when I got to the new

job—it was gone. Another guy had it. I guess the word had spread because by then I couldn't have gotten a job in all New Orleans. Even where I live, the garage wouldn't hire me. And it's all Negro, David. Negro-owned, Negro-managed. See what I mean? About fear?"

"Yes. Hell, yes."

"I looked all that day and the next, and that night when I got home Corrinne was packed. Everything. I got a nice little house, David. It's rented, but we've been saving to buy. There's a cement walk. Someone had covered it with dog crap they must have shoveled out of gutters and off lawns— God knows where. There were two more busted windows, and busted eggs all over the outside of the house. And the kids were cryin'-frightened. She took the money we'd been saving to buy—I gave it to her—to go to her sister's in California. She left the next morning. After that—they let the house alone." His laugh was not a pleasant one. "Wasn't any woman or any kids left to scare and I was out of a job-why the hell bother to bust any more windows or dirty up the place?"

David swore quietly and effectively, then said, "But look, fella, what're you going to do?"

"Christ knows. I kept enough money to eat on for a while. There wasn't enough dough to get us both back there. And just then I was fighting mad; I didn't want to go. Now? I think a lot of those kids, David. They're damned fine kids. And they sort of like their old man."

"Get out," said David. "Get out there with 'em. Get going, man. And money's what you ain't got, eh?"

"Yeah. Money's what I ain't got. I was figuring on selling the car and hitchhiking."

"No! You know something, Rudy? We've been hitchhiking for a couple of hundred years. I don't mean just on the roads. I mean all through our stinking lives. Hitchhike, balls! Take a train or a plane or a bus. Keep your car and drive. But don't hitchhike. Look, I haven't got a car here. Drive by tomorrow afternoon, latish. I'll have the dough—"

"No! Hell, no, David. You've got troubles too. Why should you—"

"Give me a reason, one reason why I shouldn't You heard about the Prof?"

"Leaving you dough?"

"Yes. You know what would happen if I didn't give you a hand? A ha'nt, that's what would happen."

"I feel like I'm running away."

"Don't feel like that. Better your kids should have you. Too damned many kids without a father. Let 'em bust up your house. Don't let the sons of bitches bust up your life."

On his way to the gate with Rudy he said, "How'd you know for sure you'd find me here? That I'd get back?"

"David Champlin? Been knowing you a long time, man. We ran around together for a long time. Never saw li'l David when he didn't make it back home—"

***

He walked back into the kitchen, sat where he had been sitting before. Something of the pleasure he felt at being able to help Rudy lightened his mood, then passed, and the night of decision closed around him. He folded his arms on the table and laid his head on them, too tired now to sit upright and face what he knew he must: a future that could begin this day, could end God alone knew where—if he chose it. In the living room the telephone blared suddenly, and he did not stir except to raise his head and listen, his face tense with pain. "Tomorrow, baby," he whispered. "Tomorrow. For God's sake, stop now. I'll call tomorrow—I can't talk—I can't talk now—tomorrow I'll know—"

Eventually it stopped ringing.

***

The tension that was in the streets the next morning was like a sounding board for the uneven rhythm of his feet on the pavement. Clop-cloppity. He could smell the tension, almost touch it with his hands. The woman coming toward him, neatly, trimly dressed in starched work clothes, gray in the black of her hair: he knew her kind, she would say "Good morning" to a stranger—especially to a stranger—but this morning she did not speak. She was Gramp's kind of woman, Emma Jefferson's kind of woman, but today her eyes were on the pavement, and God alone knew where her thoughts were.

The offbeat rhythm of his own steps came to David's ears like the sound of another man walking. There was a woman standing on the stoop of a house just ahead, leaning on a broom and talking to a man on the sidewalk below her. She was a tall, spare woman, bright-skinned and with straight hair, but too dark to pass. The man was a red-bone Negro from the Cajun country.

The woman had a high-pitched, penetrating voice. "They'll be at it again," she said. The man, darker than she, older, said, "Sure will. Heered women're standing round now, waiting for that pore chile to get there."

David slowed his steps to pass the man, who was saying, "Heered there's a white family gonna send their kids there, put 'em in the school."

"Crazy," said the woman. "They're
sure
crazy."

"Trying mighty hard to learn what trouble is."

"They'll find out. What they doing to those women at the school? What's the law doing to 'em?"

"Shucks, I don't know. Spose they'll do like they done yestiddy. Run 'em off, pick 'em up. Saying right out loud they don't like it because they has to do it; don't like it having to protect a little chile."

Clop-cloppity. Clop-cloppity. They were behind him now, the half-white woman and the red-bone Negro. Two miles away a little child was hearing words she'd never heard before, was seeing red hate in the eyes of white women, white mothers. Even now, even as he walked along, the little girl might be mounting the steps of the schoolhouse, one small brown hand in the big white hand of a United States marshal, entering an echoing, empty building, where she would learn her lessons all alone.

What had her mother and father said to her before she left the house? "Don't cry, baby; whatever happens, baby, don't cry. You'll be crying all your life, you starts crying now." Something like that. How strong, how invincible must be the wall of love they had built around her.

He had heard talk last night that another little girl might enter the school this week. Two little girls in blue are we....

Where are you now, Simmons? The days of the blues are over, eh, Simmons? Where are you now, Dunbar, blind, so damned blind and just as black as they are? Where are you now, Nehemiah?
Were you there when they crucified my Lord?
I'm here, Nehemiah. I'm here.
Were you there, Father? Were you?... Nehemiah, think!... You want me to think, Father? There's more harm done by just thinking than you knows 'of, Father.
Where are you now, Father McCartney, with your glib tongue and ready answers? Where? What was it you said, Nehemiah?
They crucify my Lord every day, in the streets, in the houses.
They're crucifying little children, Nehemiah, little girls in starched dresses, little girls in span-clean dresses, with little white gloves on chubby brown hands. Where are you, Nehemiah?

There in the warm kitchen the morning he came back to bury Gramp the voice of Emma Jefferson had been shaking with emotion:
Lady I work for says to me, "Oh, Emma, I hope the Negroes"—she don't ever say "nigra" and I never heered no one in that house say "nigger"

"I hope the Negroes know we aren't all like those dreadful people. That poor child. I hope the Negroes know there are lots of us want to see right done. It can't come overnight.
Two hundred years isn't overnight; two hundred years is a long time, hanging on a cross.
What I wants to know is what's she doing about it? What's her and all her lily-white friends doing about it? Moaning and groaning and carrying on about how dreadful it is.
Where are you now, white-lady-that-Emma-works for?
They talks about it all the time. Seems like they can't talk about nothing else, talking on the telephone, back and forth, saying it's so dreadful, saying how bad they making it out to be, worse than it is, in the papers up north and on the television, knowing all the time them pictures ain't lying.

Where are you, friends-of-the-white-lady-Emma-works-for? Sitting at telephones, listening to the radio, watching television, talking, talking...

Clop-cloppity; clop-cloppity. Now he was facing the door of the building he sought. On the front of the door a square area lighter than the surrounding wood showed where there had been a sign. No need to wonder why it had been removed. When he opened the door the stairs that faced him were worn, uncarpeted. Voices above him were blurred by closed doors, and even in the small lower entry he could smell the smoke of cigars and cigarettes.

Can I go see the cartoon, Gramp? Can I, Gramp? Can I go see Popeye?... Reckon so, son. Reckon Gramp can get you up them steps.... I'll help you up them steps.... Don't act foolish, son; let Gramp help you.... You gonna hurt yourself, you don't let Li'l Joe help you.
A big black man, his arms as hard and strong as oak boughs, had come along that day and picked him up and laughed as he carried him up the long stairway, Li'l Joe behind them. He could hear his own voice crowing with delighted laughter, see the whiteness of the cast on his leg, stiff and straight across the black man's arm. He could not remember why he was laughing that day, what the man had said that had made him laugh so loudly. The man had set him in a seat beside Gramp, way up high in the balcony, so high the figures on the screen were hard to

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