âSaved ammo,' Phil said.
âI almost stepped on a doe.'
âHow close?'
âThree steps and a good spit.
âI've never been that close.'
âNeither have I.'
âPretty quiet, Pop.'
âShe startled me. If she'd been a buck, I would have missed.'
They ate sandwiches, then lay on their backs in the shade of the jeep. Harry rested his hat on his forehead so the brim covered his eyes.
âAre you staying for dinner?' Phil said.
âNo. I don't like driving tired.'
âWe can go back now, if you want.'
âLet's hunt. What will you do tomorrow?'
âMake sure my toothbrush is packed.'
âNo girl?'
âThere isn't one. I mean no
one
. So why choose now, right? I'll go out with the guys and get drunk.'
âOnly way to go. What time Monday?'
âI don't even want to say.'
âThey love getting guys up in the dark.'
His boots were warm. He looked out from under the hat: sunlight was on his ankles now; he looked over his feet at the low end of Phil's ridge.
âOrientals can hide on a parade field. Chinese would crawl all night from their lines to ours. A few feet and wait. All night lying out there, no sound, nothing moving, and just before dawn they'd be on top of us. And
Japanese
: they were like leaves.'
âExcept that tank.'
âWhat tank?'
âYour Silver Star.'
âThat was a pillbox.'
âIt was?'
âSure. Did you think I'd go after a tank?'
âNot much difference. Why didn't I know that?'
âToo many war stories, too many Marines; probably a neighbor told
his
kid about a tank.'
âI told
them
. Was it on Tarawa?'
âYes.'
âAt least I got that right.'
âIt's not important. It's just something that happened. We were pinned down on the beach. The boxes had interlocking fire. I remember my mouth in the sand, then an explosion to my right front. It was a satchel charge, and a kid named Winslow Brimmer was the one who got it there.'
âWinslow Brimmer?'
âHe was a mean little fart from Baltimore. Nobody harassed him about his name. He took whatever was left of his squad to that box, and all but two of them bought it. Then I was running with a flamethrower on my back. If you can call that running.'
âWhere did you get the flamethrower?'
âThe guy with it was next to me, and he was dead. So I put it on and moved out.'
âJesus.'
âIt was easier than Brimmer's because he had knocked out the one on their left. I had more fresh air than he did.'
âNot much.'
âI can remember doing it, but it's like somebody told me I did it, and that's why I remember. The way it can be after a bad drunk. I don't remember what I felt just before, or what I thought. I remember getting the flamethrower off him and onto me, and that should have taken a while, but it doesn't seem like it. I remember running, but I don't remember hearing anything, not with all those weapons firing, and I don't remember getting there. I was there, and then I burned them. They must have made sounds, but I only remember the smell.'
âWas that when you were wounded?'
âNo. That was the next day.'
âI wish I had been there.'
âNo you don't. The Navy dropped us in deep waterâ'
âI know.'
âDead troops bobbing in it and lying on the reef and the beach. Fuck Tarawa.'
He opened his eyes to the sun, and squinted away from it at the sky. A hawk glided toward the earth, veered away, and climbed west over the ridge.
âYou reflected the sun this morning,' he said. âThat's how I saw you.'
âMy watch.'
He looked at the chrome band on Phil's wrist.
âGoddamn it, leave that civilian shit at home and get one from supply.'
âIt's in my room.'
âSorry.'
âOkay, Captain.'
He closed his eyes, listening to Phil's breathing. The sun on his face woke him, and he stiffened and pressed his palms against the ground, then knew where he was. Phil was gone. He stood, wiping sweat from his eyes; Phil leaned against the back of the jeep, eating a plum.
âHave some fruit.'
Harry took a peach from the pack and stood beside him.
âDo you want to swap ridges?' Phil said.
âNot unless you do.'
âNo, I'm fine.'
âMine's like home now.'
âWe'll probably get back here around six. Thirty minutes to the camp to sign out. Then about forty.'
âPlenty of time. I make it in under three hours. 'Course, there's always the Jesus factor.'
âLike getting a deer.'
âIf we do, I'll help you clean it.'
âAnd rake it home with you.'
âRight.'
âAll set?'
âNeed my hogleg.'
He took the rifle from the back seat and slung it from his shoulder.
âHow do you like the .308?' Phil said.
âIt's good.'
âHave you zeroed it in?'
âNot this year.'
They walked into the valley and up the hard, cracked earth of the stream bed to the pine trees, and stood in their shade.
âI like the smell of pine,' Harry said. âUp there I can smell the ocean. Did you see it this morning, when the sun came up?'
âBeautiful.'
âNow we get the sunset. Ready?'
âI'm off.'
âTake care, then.'
âYou too.'
They turned from each other and Harry walked out of the trees, into the sunlight, then he lengthened his stride toward the ridge.
W
HEN GERRY FONTENOT
is five, Six, and seven years old, he likes to ride in the car with his parents. It is a grey 1938 Chevrolet and it has a ration stamp on the windshield. Since the war started when Gerry was five, his father has gone to work on a bicycle, and rarely drives the car except to Sunday Mass, and to go hunting and fishing. Gerry fishes with him, from the bank of the bayou. They fish with bamboo poles, corks, sinkers, and worms, and catch perch and catfish. His father wears a .22 revolver at his side, for cottonmouths. In the fall Gerry goes hunting with him, crouches beside him in ditches bordering fields, and when the doves fly, his father stands and fires the twelve-gauge pump, and Gerry marks where the birds fall, then runs out into the field where they lie, and gathers them. They are soft and warm as he runs with them, back to his father. This is in southern Louisiana, and twice he and his father see an open truck filled with German prisoners, going to work in the sugar cane fields.
He goes on errands with his mother. He goes to grocery stores, dime stores, drugstores, and shopping for school clothes in the fall, and Easter clothes in the spring, and to the beauty parlor, where he likes to sit and watch the women. Twice a week he goes with her to the colored section, where they leave and pick up the week's washing and ironing. His mother washes at home too: the bedclothes, socks, underwear, towels, and whatever else does not have to be ironed. She washes these in a wringer washing machine; he likes watching her feed the clothes into the wringer, and the way they come out flattened and drop into the basket. She hangs them on the clothesline in the backyard, and Gerry stands at the basket and hands them to her so she will not have to stoop. On rainy days she dries them inside on racks, which in winter she places in front of space heaters. She listens to the weather forecasts on the radio, and most of the time is able to wash on clear days.
The Negro woman washes the clothes that must be ironed, or starched and ironed. In front of the woman's unpainted wooden house, Gerry's mother presses the horn, and the large woman comes out and takes the basket from the back seat. Next day, at the sound of the horn, she brings out the basket. It is filled with ironed, folded skirts and blouses, and across its top lie dresses and shirts on hangers. Gerry opens the window his mother has told him to close as they approached the colored section with its dusty roads. He smells the clean, ironed clothes, pastels and prints, and his father's white and pale blue, and he looks at the rutted dirt road, the unpainted wood and rusted screens of the houses, old cars in front of them and tire swings hanging from trees over the worn and packed dirt yards, dozens of barefoot, dusty children stopping their play to watch him and his mother in the car, and the old slippers and dress the Negro woman wears, and he breathes her smell of sweat, looks at her black and brown hand crossing him to take the dollar from his mother's fingers.
On Fridays in spring and summer, Leonard comes to mow the lawn. He is a Negro, and has eight children, and Gerry sees him only once between fall and spring, when he comes on Christmas Eve, and Gerry's father and mother give him toys and clothes that Gerry and his three older sisters have outgrown, a bottle of bourbon, one of the fruit cakes Gerry's mother makes at Christmas, and five dollars. Leonard receives these at the back door, where on Fridays, in spring and summer, he is paid and fed. The Fontenots eat dinner at noon, and Gerry's mother serves Leonard a plate and a glass of iced tea with leaves from the mint she grows under the faucet behind the house. She calls him from the back steps, and he comes, wiping his brow with a bandanna, and takes his dinner to the shade of a sycamore tree. From his place at the dining room table, Gerry watches him sit on the grass and take off his straw hat; he eats, then rolls a cigarette. When he has smoked, he brings his plate and glass to the back door, knocks, and hands them to who-ever answers. His glass is a jelly glass, his plate blue china, and his knife and fork stainless steel. From Friday to Friday the knife and fork lie at one side of a drawer, beside the compartments that hold silver; the glass is nearly out of reach, at the back of the second shelf in the cupboard for glasses; the plate rests under serving bowls in the china cupboard. Gerry's mother has told him and his sisters not to use them, they are Leonard's, and from Friday to Friday, they sit, and from fall to spring, and finally forever when one year Gerry is strong enough to push the lawn mower for his allowance, and Leonard comes only when Gerry's father calls him every Christmas Eve.
Before that, when he is eight, Gerry has stopped going on errands with his mother. On Saturday afternoons he walks or, on rainy days, rides the bus to town with neighborhood boys, to the movie theater where they watch westerns and the weekly chapter of a serial. He stands in line on the sidewalk, holding his quarter that will buy a ticket, a bag of popcorn, and, on the way home, an ice-cream soda. Opposite his line, to the right of the theater as you face it, are the Negro boys. Gerry does not look at them. Or not directly: he glances, he listens, as a few years later he will do with girls when he goes to movies that draw them. The Negroes enter through the door marked
Colored
, where he supposes a Negro woman sells tickets, then climb the stairs to the balcony, and Gerry wonders whether someone sells them popcorn and candy and drinks up there, or imagines them smelling all the bags of popcorn in the dark beneath them. Then he watches the cartoon and previews of next Saturday's movie, and he likes them but is waiting for the chapter of the serial whose characters he and his friends have played in their yards all week; they have worked out several escapes for the trapped hero and, as always, they are wrong. He has eaten his popcorn when the credits for the movie appear, then a tall man rides a beautiful black or white or palomino horse across the screen. The movie is black and white, but a palomino looks as golden and lovely as the ones he has seen in parades. Sitting in the dark, he is aware of his friends on both sides of him only as feelings coincident with his own: the excitement of becoming the Cisco Kid, Durango Kid, Red Ryder, the strongest and best-looking, the most courageous and good, the fastest with horse and fists and gun. Then it is over, the lights are on, he turns to his friends, flesh again, stands to leave, then remembers the Negroes. He blinks up at them standing at the balcony wall, looking down at the white boys pressed together in the aisle, moving slowly out of the theater. Sometimes his eyes meet those of a Negro boy, and Gerry smiles; only one ever smiles back.
In summer he and his friends go to town on weekday afternoons to see war movies, or to buy toy guns or baseballs, and when he meets Negroes on the sidewalk, he averts his eyes; but he watches them in department stores, bending over water fountains marked
Colored
, and when they enter the city buses and walk past him to the rear, he watches them, and during the ride he glances, and listens to their talk and laughter. One hot afternoon when he is twelve, he goes with a friend to deliver the local newspaper in the colored section. He has not been there since riding with his mother, who has not gone for years either; now the city buses stop near his neighborhood, and a Negro woman comes on it and irons the family's clothes in their kitchen. He goes that afternoon because his friend has challenged him. They have argued: they both have paper routes, and when his friend complained about his, Gerry said it was easy work. Sure, his friend said, you don't have to hold your breath. You mean when you collect? No, man, when I just ride through. So Gerry finishes his route, then goes with his friend: a bicycle ride of several miles ending, or beginning, at a neighborhood of poor whites, their houses painted but peeling, their screened front porches facing lawns so narrow that only small children can play catch in them; the older boys and girls play tapeball on the blacktop street. Gerry and his friends play that, making a ball of tape around a sock, and hitting with a baseball bat, but they have lawns big enough to contain them. Gerry's father teaches history at the public high school, and in summer is a recreation director for children in the city park, and some nights in his bed Gerry hears his father and mother worry about money; their voices are weary, and frighten him. But riding down this street, he feels shamefully rich, wants the boys and girls pausing in their game to know he only has a new Schwinn because he saved his money to buy it.