Anne Tyler
Tin Can Tree
V. 1
1
After
the funeral James came straight home, to look after
his brother. He left Mr and Mrs Pike standing on that windy hillside while
their little boy wandered in circles nearby, and the only one who saw James go
was Joan. She looked over at him, but she didn't say anything. When he was a
few steps away he heard her say, 'We have to go home
now, Aunt Lou. We have to go down.' But Mrs Pike was silent, and all James
heard for an answer was the roaring of the wind.
Going
down the hill he took big steps-he was a tall man, and the steepness of the
hill made him walk faster than he wanted to. It was too hot to walk fast. The
sun was white and glaring and soaked deep in through the mat of his black hair,
and his face felt slick when he wiped it with the back of his hand. Partway
down the hill he stopped and took off his suit jacket. While he was rolling up
his shirt sleeves he looked back at the grave to see if the others were coming,
but their backs were still turned towards him. From here it seemed as if that
wind hardly touched them; they stood like stones, wearing black, with their
heads down and their figures making straight black marks against the sky. The
only thing moving was little Simon Pike, as he picked his way down through the
dry brambles towards James. Simon looked strange, dressed up. He had always
worn Levi's and crumpled leather boots, but today someone had made him put his
suit on. That would be Joan. Mrs Pike had looked at nothing but the ground for
two days now, and couldn't notice what Simon wore. Joan would have polished
those white dress-shoes that Simon was getting all grass-stained, and taken out
the last inch of cuff on his sleeves so that they could cover his wrists. There
was a thin faint line above each of his cuffs where the old hem had been; James
could see it clearly when Simon came up even with him. He stood staring at the
cuffs for a long time, and then he shifted his eyes to Simon's face and saw
Simon frowning up at him, his eyebrows squinched into one straight line across
his forehead and his mouth held tight against the wind.
‘I’m
coming too,’ he told James. His voice had a low, froggy
sound; he was barely ten, but in a year or two his voice would begin to change.
James
nodded and finished rolling up his shirt sleeves. There was a band of dampness
beneath his collar. He loosened his tie and unbuttoned the top button of his
shirt, and then he began walking again with Simon beside him. Now he went more
slowly, bracing himself against the steepness of the hill. Each time he took
one step Simon took two, but when he looked over at Simon to see if he was
growing tired, Simon ignored him and walked faster. He wasn't sweating at all.
He looked cold. James wiped his face on his shirt sleeve and followed him down
between the rocks.
'Getting
near lunchtime,' he said finally.
Simon
didn't answer.
'Want
to eat with Ansel and me?'
'Well.'
'Don't
worry about your mother. I'll tell her where you are.'
Simon
said something to his shoes, but James couldn't hear.
'What's
that?' he asked.
'I
wouldn't bother.'
'We'll
tell your cousin Joan then,' said James. 'Soon as she gets
back.'
The
wind was so hot it burned his face; it made lulling sounds around his ears so
that he couldn't hear his own footsteps. He pushed his hair off his forehead
but it fell into his eyes again, hanging in a tangled web just at the top of
his range of vision. Beside him, Simon was letting his hair do what it wanted.
He had greased it down with something (it needed cutting, but Joan had been too
busy with her aunt to see about that) and now it ruffled up in thick strings
and stood out wildly in every direction. When James turned to look at him he
nearly smiled. With his face sideways to the wind the roaring sound was quieter,
so he kept looking in
Simon's
direction until Simon grew uneasy.
'What
are you staring at?' he asked.
'Nothing,'
said James. 'Some wind we got.' He looked straight ahead again, and the roaring
sound came back to hammer at his ears.
The
ground they were treading was wild and weedy, with
rocks sticking up here and there so white they might have been painted. There
was no path to follow. Below them was the whole town of
The
sight of that green part of town was cool and inviting; it made James think of
cold beers in the tavern opposite the post office. He looked down at Simon, but
Simon was hunched into the jacket of his suit and he still seemed cold.
'Do
you like sardines?' James asked him.
'Not
much.'
'Or
cold cuts?'
'No.'
They
stepped through a tangle of briars, with the thorns making little ripping
sounds against their clothes. 'I could eat a pizza,' Simon said.
'You
better talk to Ansel, then. He makes pizzas.'
Simon
tripped and caught himself. He looked down at the small rock that had tripped
him and then began kicking it ahead of him down the hill, swerving out of his
course to recover it every time the rock rolled sideways. Grey streaks began to
show on his shoes, but James didn't try to stop him.
When
they reached the gravel road they turned right and began heading in the
direction of the house. Simon's rock rolled into a ditch; he left it lying
there. It looked as if they might get all the way home this way - not talking
much, and not saying anything when they did talk, just as if this were
an ordinary walk on an ordinary day. That suited James. He had been thinking
too much, these last two days -turning things over and over, figuring out how
if just some single incident had happened, or hadn't happened, things might
have been different. Now he ached all over, and thinking made him sick. He was
just beginning to feel easier, ambling along in silence beside Simon, when
Simon turned and began walking backwards ahead of James, fixing his frowning
brown eyes on a point far down the road. He opened his mouth and closed it, and
then he opened it again and said, 'James.'
'What.'
'How
far down in the ground before it starts getting cold?'
'Pretty
soon,' said James.
'How soon.'
'Pretty soon.'
'I'm
just thinking,' Simon said.
To
keep him from thinking any more, James said, 'But then it gets hot again, down
towards the centre of the earth. That's beyond digging distance.'
'Six
feet under is stone, stone cold,' said Simon.
'Well,
yes.'
'Good old Janie Rose, boy.'
'Now,
wait,' James said. 'Now, Janie Rose don't feel if it's
cold or it's not, Simon. Get that all straight in your mind.'
'I
know that.'
'Get
it straight now, before you go bothering your mother about it.'
'I
know all about that,' said Simon. He spun around and began walking forward
again, still ahead of James. Strands of his hair rose up and floated behind
him, like the tail plumes of some strange bird. 'You don't get what I mean,' he
called back.
'Maybe not.'
'Now,
you know Janie Rose.'
'Yes,'
said James, and without his wanting it the picture of Janie Rose came to him,
sharp and clear - Janie Rose looking exactly the way he thought her name
sounded, six years old and blonde and fat, with round pink cheeks and round
thick glasses. He hadn't been planning to think about it. He said, 'Yes, I
know,' and then waited for whatever would follow, keeping part of his mind far
away.
'She
just hated cold,' said Simon. 'Playing "Rather" in the evenings after
supper - which would you rather be, blind or deaf; which would you rather die
of, heat or cold -she chose heat any day. She had a twenty-pound comforter on
her bed, middle of summer.'
'I
already said to you -' James began.
'Well,
I know,' said Simon, and he started walking faster then and whistling.
He whistled off-key, and the tune was carried away by the wind.
When
they reached their house, which stood slightly swaybacked by the road with its
one painted side facing forward, James stopped to look in his mailbox. There
was only a fertilizer ad, which he stuck in his hip pocket to throw away later.
'See what your mail is, why don't you,' he told Simon.
Simon
was walking in small neat circles around the three mailboxes. He stuck out a
hand toward the box with 'R.J. Pike' painted on it and flipped the door open,
and then made another circle and came to a stop in front of the box to peer
inside. 'Fertilizer ad,' he said. He pulled it out and dropped it on the
roadside. 'Letter for Mama.' He pulled that out too,
and dropped it on top of the first. 'She'll never read it.'
James
picked the letter up and followed Simon along the dirt path to the house.
Halfway through the yard the path split into three smaller ones, each leading
to a separate door on the long front porch. Simon took the one on the far left,
heading toward James's door, and James took the far right to deliver the Pikes'
letter. The Pikes' part of the porch had a washing machine and an outgrown
potty-chair and a collection of plants littering it; he had to watch his step.
When he bent to slide the letter under the door he heard a scratching sound and
a little yelp, and he stood up and called to Simon, 'Your dog wants out, all
right?'
'All right.'
He
opened the door and a very old, fat
Simon
was standing at James's door, his hands in his pockets. 'Why didn't you go on
in?' James asked him, and Simon just shook his head.
'I
reckoned I'd wait,' he said.
'Ansel'd
let you in.'
'Well,
anyway,' said Simon, and stood back to let James open the door for him.
The
inside of the house was cool and dim. It had unvarnished wooden floorboards,
with no rugs, and when Simon walked in he clicked his heels sharply against the
wood the way he did when he was wearing his boots. Walking that way, swinging
his thin legs in heavy, too-big strides, made him look younger, like a small
child entering a dark room. And he didn't look to his left, although he knew
James' brother would be on the couch where he always was.
'Ansel?' James said.
'Here
I am.'
James
closed the screen door behind him and looked toward the couch. Ansel was
sitting there, with his back very straight and his feet on the floor. Usually
he spent the day on his back (he had anemia, the kind that never got much
better or much worse so long as he was careful), but today he had made a
special effort to be up. He was wearing his Sunday black suit, and he had
slicked his pale hair so tightly down with water that it was the same shape as
the narrow bones of his head. Probably he had thought that was the least he
could do for Janie Rose. When James came in Ansel didn't look in his direction;
he was watching Simon. He waited until Simon finally turned around and faced him,
and then he stood up and stooped toward him in what looked like a bow. 'I hope
this day wasn't too hard on you,' he said formally, and then sat down and
waited while Simon stood frowning at him.
'We
got back before the others,' James said. 'I promised Simon lunch.'
'Oh.
Well I doubt that he - Here, you want to sit down?'
He
patted the couch where he sat, which meant that he was extending special
privileges. Ordinarily he didn't like people sitting there. After a minute
Simon shrugged and clicked his heels over to the couch, and Ansel moved aside
to give him room.
'I
haven't really talked to you since the, uh - It's been quite a few days. But I
wanted to say -'
'I
been busy,' said Simon.
'Well,
sure you have,' Ansel said. 'I know that.' He was sitting forward now, placing
the tips of his fingers together, gazing absently at the floor with those clear
blue eyes of his. It made James nervous (Ansel had been known to get too
serious at times like this) but before he could change the atmosphere any,
Ansel had begun speaking again. 'Uh, I wanted to tell you,' he said, 'I been
meaning to say to you -sheesh! James, will you close the door?'
James
gave the inner door a push and it clicked shut.
'Too
much wind,' Ansel said. 'Well. I been meaning to, um, give you my condolences,
Simon. And tell you how sorry I am not to go to the funeral. James said I
shouldn't, but you don't know how I -'
'You
didn't miss much,' said Simon.
'What?
Well, I just wish I could've come and paid my respects, so to speak. That's
what I told James. But James said-'
Simon
sat tight, his hands pressed between his knees and his eyes straight ahead.
When James started into the kitchen Simon half stood, with that squinchy little
frown on his face again, so James stopped and leaned back against the wall. He
wasn't sure why; always before this it was Ansel that Simon followed, leaving
James to Janie Rose. But now Simon sank back in his seat again, looking easier,
and began kicking one foot lazily in the direction of the coffee table. Ansel
rambled on, his speech growing more certain.
'I
had never been so shocked by any news,' he said. 'I was saying to James.
I said, "Why, she and Simon were over here not but a while ago," I
said. "Why, think how Simon must feel."'
'I
feel all right,' Simon said.
'I
mean-'
'I
feel all right.'
Ansel
rubbed the bridge of his nose and looked over at James, and James straightened
up from his position against the wall. 'Mainly he feels hungry,' he told Ansel.
'I promised him lunch.'
'Why,
sure,' said Ansel. 'If he wants it. But I doubt he
does. You hungry, Simon?'
'I'm
starved,' Simon said.
'You going to eat?'
'I
reckon I am.'
'I
see,' said Ansel.
Simon
stood up and came over to James. When he got to James's side he just stood there
and waited, with his eyes straight ahead and his back to Ansel. 'We going to
get that pizza?' he asked.
'Anything
you want.'
.
'Pizza?' Ansel said, and Simon turned then and looked
up at James.
'That's
what I promised him,' James said.
'Why,
Simon-'
'Hush,'
said James. 'Now, Simon, we got three kinds of pizza mix out there. Sausage, and cheese, and something else. I forget. You go
choose and then we'll cook it up. All right?'
'All
right,' Simon said. He turned and looked back at Ansel, and then he went on
into the kitchen. When he was gone, James came over and sat down beside Ansel.
'Listen,'
he said.
Away
from outsiders now, Ansel slumped back in his seat and let his shoulders sag.
There were tired dark marks underneath his eyes; he hadn't slept well. 'You're
on my couch,' he said automatically. 'Do I have to tell you, James? Sitting
like that makes the springs go wrong.'
'Simon's
folks are still on the hill,' said James. 'We've got to keep him here; I
promised Joan he wouldn't sit in that house alone.'
'Ah,
sitting alone,' Ansel said. He sighed. 'That's no good.'
'No.
Will you help keep him busy?'
'The couch, James.'
James
stood up, and Ansel swung his feet around and slid down until he was lying
prone. 'I don't see how he can eat,' he said.
'He's
hungry.'
'I
wonder about this world.'
'People
handle things their own ways,' James said. 'Don't go talking to him about
dying, Ansel.'
'Well.'
'Will
you?'
'Well.'
There
was a crash of cans out in the kitchen. A cupboard door slammed, and Simon
called, 'Hey, James. I've decided.'
'Which one?'
'The sausage. There was only just the two of them.' He came into the
living room, carrying the box of pizza mix, and Ansel raised his head to look
over at him and then grunted and lay back and stared at the ceiling. For a minute
Simon hesitated. Then he walked over to him and said, 'You're the
pizza-maker.'
'Who
said?' Ansel asked.
'Well,
back there on the hill James said -'
'All right.' Ansel sat up slowly, running his fingers through his
hair. 'It's always something,' he said.
'Well,
maybe-'
'No,
no. I don't mind.'
And
then Ansel smiled, using his widest smile that dipped in the middle and turned
up at the corners like a child's drawing of a happy man. When he did that his
long thin face turned suddenly wide at the cheekbones, and his chin became
shiny. 'We'll make my speciality,' he said. 'It's called an icebox pizza. On
refrigerator-de-frosting days that's the way we clean the icebox; we load it
all on a pizza crust and serve it up for lunch. You want to see how I make it?'
He
was standing now, smoothing down his Sunday jacket and straightening his
slumped shoulders. When he reached for the pizza mix Simon walked forward and
gave it to him, not hanging back now but looking more at ease. Ansel said, 'This
is something every man should know. Even if he's married.
He can cook it when his wife is sick and serve her lunch in bed. Do you want an
apron?'
'No,
'said Simon.
'Don't
blame you. Don't blame you at all. Well -' and he was heading for the kitchen now,
reading the directions as he walked. His walk was slow, but not enough to cause
James any worry. James could judge the way Ansel felt just by glancing at him,
most of the time. He had to; Ansel would never tell himself. When he felt his
best he was likely to call for meals on a tray, and when he was really sick he
might decide to wallpaper the bedroom. He was a backward kind of person
James
had a habit of looking at him as someone a whole generation removed from him,
although in reality he was twenty-six, only two years younger than James
himself. He was thinking that way now, watching with narrow, almost paternal
eyes as Ansel made his way into the kitchen.
'Naturally
there are no really rules,' Ansel was saying, 'since you never know what
might be in the icebox.' And Simon's voice came floating back: 'Fruit, even? Lettuce?'
'Well,
now . . .' Ansel
said.
James
smiled and went over to the easy chair to sit down, stretching his legs out in
front of him. It felt good to be home again. The house was a dingy place, with
yellow peeling walls and sunken furniture. And it was so rickety that whenever
James had some photography job that required a long time-exposure he had to run
around warning everyone. 'Just sit a minute,' he would say, and he would
pull up chairs for everybody in the house and then go dashing off to take his
picture before people started shaking the floors again. But at least it was a
comfortable house, not far from town, and Ansel had that big front window in
the living room where he could watch the road. He would sit on the couch with
his elbows on the sill, and everything he saw passing - just an old truck, or a
boy riding a mule - meant something to him. He had been watching that long, and
he knew people that well.
Thinking
of Ansel and his window made James look toward it, to see what was going on,
but all he saw from where he sat was the greenish-yellow haze of summer air,
framed by mesh curtains. He rose and went over to look out, with his hands upon
the sill, and peered down the gravel road toward the hill he had just come
from. No one was in sight. Maybe it would be hours before they returned; Joan
might still be standing there, trying to make her aunt and uncle stop staring
at that grass. But even so, James went on watching for several minutes. He
could feel the wind, gentler down here but strong enough to push the curtains
in.
For
a long time now, wind would make him think of today. He had climbed that hill
behind all the others, and seen how the wind whipped the women's black skirts
and ruffled little crooked parts down the backs of their hairdos. And when the
first cluster of relatives had taken their leave at the end, stopping first to
touch Mrs Pike's folded arms or murmur something to Mr Pike, the words they
said were blown away and neither of the parents answered. Though
they might not have answered anyway, even without the wind. The day that
Janie Rose died, when James had spent thirty-six hours in the hospital waiting
room and finally heard the news with only that tenth of his mind that was still
awake, he had gone to Mrs Pike and said, 'Mrs Pike, if there's anything I or
Ansel can do for you, no matter what it is, we will want to do it.' And Mrs
Pike had looked past him at the information desk and said, 'Just falling off a tractor
don't make a person die,' and then had turned and left. So James had let
them be, and went home and told Ansel to keep to himself a while and not go
bothering the Pikes. 'Not even to give our sympathy?' asked Ansel, and James
said no, not even that. He hadn't liked the thought of Ansel's going to the
funeral, either. Ansel said he had half a mind to go anyway - he could always
rest on the way, he said - but James could picture that: Ansel toiling up the
hill, clasping his chest from the effort and gasping out lines of funeral
poetry, calling out for the whole procession to stop the minute he needed a
rest. So James had gone alone, and quietly, and had promised to report to Ansel
the minute it was over. The only one there that he had spoken to was Joan; the only
two sounds he carried away with him were Joan's low voice and the roaring of
the wind. He thought he would never like the sound of wind again.
Out
in the kitchen now, Janie Rose's brother was talking on and on in his froggy little voice. 'I never saw peanut butter on a
pizza,' he was saying. 'You sure you know what you're doing, Ansel?'
'Just
wait'll you taste it,' Ansel said.
James
left the window and went out to the kitchen. 'How's it going?' he asked.
'It's
coming along,' Ansel said. He was swathed in a big checked dishtowel, wrapped
right over his suit jacket and safety-pinned at the back, and on the counter
stood the almost finished pizza that Simon was decorating. The kitchen was
rippling with heat. James took his shirt off and laid it on the counter, so
that he was in just his undershirt, and he opened the back door.
'Aren't
you hot?' he asked Simon.
But
Simon said, 'No,' and went on laying wiener slices down. On the floor at his
feet were little sprinklings of flour and Parmesan, and the front of his suit
was practically another pizza in itself, but the important thing was keeping
him busy. It was too bad the pizza-making couldn't go on for another hour or
so, just for that reason; they would have to find something else for him to do.
Ansel
said, 'Now the olives, Simon.'
'I
don't think I like olives.'
'Sure
you do. Olives are good for the brain. Will you look at your shirt?'
Simon
looked down at his shirt and then shrugged.
'It'll
wash,' he said.
'Your
mama'll have a fit.'
'Ah,
she won't care.'
'I
bet she will.'
'She
won't care.'
'Any
mother would care
about that,' said Ansel. 'Makes quite a picture.'
'Pictures,'
James said suddenly. He straightened up. 'Hey, Simon. You seen my last photographs?'
'No,'
said Simon. 'You get another customer?'
'Not in the last few days, no. But I took a bunch on my own a
while ago. When you're done I'll show you.'
'Okay,'
said Simon.
'Olives,'
Ansel reminded him.
James
went over to the back window and looked out. There was the Pikes' Nellie, burrowing
her way through a tangle of wild daisies and bachelor's buttons. He had been
planning to pick Joan a bunch of those daisies, before all this happened. They
were her favourite flowers. Now he couldn't; the house would be stuffed with
hothouse funeral flowers. And anyway, he couldn't just walk in there with a
bunch of daisies in his hand and risk disturbing the Pikes. The daisies would
have grown old there, waving in the sunshine on their long green stems, before
he could go back to doing things like that again.
The
pizza was in the oven. Ansel slammed the door on it and wiped his hands and
said, 'There, now.'
'How much longer?' Simon asked.
'Oh,
I don't know. Fifteen-twenty minutes. We'll go out where it's cool and wait on
it. You coming, James?'
James
followed them out to the living room. It seemed very dark and cool here now.
Ansel settled down on his couch with a long contented groan, and Simon went
over to Ansel's window and stood watching the road.
'Anybody
seen those people?' he asked James.
'What
people?'
'My mama and them. Anybody seen them?'
'No, not yet.'
'Well,
anyway,' said Simon, 'I'll reckon I'll just run on over and have a look, see if
maybe they haven't -'
'I
think we'd have seen them if they'd come,' said James. 'Or heard them, one.'
'Still
and all, I
guess I'll just-'
'You
two,' Ansel said. 'Do you have to stand over me like that?' He was lying full length now, with his head propped against one of
the sofa arms. 'Kind of overwhelming,' he said, and James moved Simon gently
away by one shoulder.
'I
almost forgot,' he said. 'You want to see my pictures?'
'Oh,
well I-'
‘They're
good ones.'
'Well.'
James
went down the little hallway to his dark-room. There was a damp and musky smell
there, and only the dimmest light. He headed for the filing cabinet in the
corner, where he kept his pictures, and opened the bottom drawer. The latest
ones were at the front, laid away carefully (taking pictures for fun wasn't
something he could afford very often), and when he pulled them out he handled
them gently, examining the first two alone for a minute before he returned to
the living room.
'Here
you go,' he said to Simon. 'Your hands clean?'
'Yes.'
His
hands were covered with tomato sauce, but he held the pictures by the rims so
James didn't say anything. The first picture didn't impress Simon. He studied
it only a minute and then sniffed. 'One of those,' he said. James grinned and
handed him the next one. Neither Simon nor Janie Rose had ever liked anything
but straight, posed portraits - preferably of someone they could recognize,
which always made them giggle. But when James wasn't taking wedding pictures,
or photographs for the Larksville newspaper, he turned away from portraits
altogether. He had the idea of photographing everyone he knew in the way his
mind pictured them when they weren't around. And the way people stuck in his
memory was odd - they were doing something without looking at him, usually,
wheeling a wheelbarrow up a hill or hunting under the dining-room table for a
spool of thread. Old girlfriends of his used to object to being photographed in
their most faded blue jeans, the way he remembered them from some picnic. But
almost always he won out in the end; the pictures of people in his mind and in
his filing cabinet were nearly identical. Joan he imagined in a dust storm, the
way he had first seen her (she had come down the road with two suitcases and a
drawstring handbag, spitting dust out of her mouth and turning her face
sideways to the wind as she walked.) For a long time now he had waited for
another dust storm, and last week one had come. That was in those first two
pictures, the ones that Simon had barely glanced at. Even when James said,
'That's your cousin Joan, if you don't know,' thinking to make Simon look
twice, Simon only raised his eyebrows. It was the third picture he liked. In
that one Ansel was lying on his couch, looking up at the sky through the window
and absently playing with the cord of the shade. 'Ansel!'
Simon said, and Ansel turned his head and looked at him.
'What
now?' he asked.
'I
just seen your picture here.'
'Oh,
yes,' Ansel said.
'Of you on your couch and all.'
'Oh,
yes. Here, let me look. 'He raised himself up on one elbow, reaching out toward
the picture, and Simon brought it over to him. "That's me, all right,'
said Ansel. He studied it for a while, smiling. 'It's not bad,' he said.
'I
think it's a right good picture.'
'Yep. Not bad at all.' He handed the picture back and lay down
again, staring up at the ceiling and still smiling. 'They're wonderful things,
pictures,' he said.
'Well,
some of them.'
'Very
remaining things, you know?'
'I
don't like them other kind, though,' Simon said. 'Dust clouds and all. I can't
see what they're for.'
'They're
for me,' said James. 'Here, I got another one of Ansel.'
'James,'
Ansel said, 'do your legs ever get to feeling kind of numb? Kind
of achey-numb?'
'Prop
them up.'
'Propping
up won't do it.'
'It's
what you get for not having your shots,' James said.
'Oh,
well. Right behind the knee, it is.' He propped his legs against the back of
the couch and slid farther down, so that his feet were the highest part of him.
This couch is too short,' he said. 'Here, Simon. Hand me the next one.'
The
next picture had Ansel sitting up, looking self-conscious. When Ansel saw it he
smiled his dippy little smile again and brought the picture closer to examine
it. 'This is one I posed myself,' he said. 'Had James take it like I wanted. James, I believe it's my shoes aggravating
that feeling.'
James
set the rest of the pictures beside Simon and reached over to untie Ansel's
shoes. 'If you'd get the right size,' he said.
'No,
it's to do with my illness. I can tell.'
'It's
on Wednesdays you get your shots,' said James. 'This is Saturday. That's five
times you missed.'
'
'The
other one's better,' said Simon.
'What
other one?'
'The first one. You lying down.'
'That's
because you're used to me lying down,' Ansel said. He sighed and tossed the
picture onto the coffee table. 'Everyone's used to it. When I stand up they
hardly recognize me. Faces change, standing up. Become more bottom-heavy. Pass
me the next one.'
'I
think the pizza must be done,' said James. 'Hey, Ansel?'
'Well,
take it out. This one of Mr Abbott-I'd be insulted if I was him. Troweling up the garden plot with his back to the camera and his
rear end sticking out.'
James
got up and went to the kitchen. The pizza-smell filled the whole room, and when
he opened the oven he thought it looked done. From a hook on the wall he took a
pot-holder and then hauled the pizza out and set it on the counter, burning one
finger on the way. 'Ansel!' he called. He came to the living room doorway.
Ansel was just bending over a picture, rocking slightly back and forth and
frowning at it, and Simon was sorting through the rest of them. 'Ansel, 'James
repeated.
'This
one here,' said Ansel, 'ought not to've been included.'
'Which one?' Simon asked.
'I'm
ashamed of James. You ought not to see it.'
'Well,
I just saw it,' said Simon. 'What's the matter with it?'
'Nothing's
the matter. I'll just set it aside.'
He
pulled himself up and lay the picture face down on the back of the couch,
looking over his shoulder to make sure Simon hadn't seen. 'Shamed of James,' he
said.
'Well,
for heaven's sake,' James said from the doorway. 'What's all that about,
Ansel?'
'It
ought never to've been included, that picture.'
James
crossed the living room and picked up the picture. It was a perfectly ordinary one
- he'd done it as a favour for Miss Faye, who wanted her screened back porch
photographed now that her nephew had spent half the summer building it. She had
led James way behind the house, deep into the wild grass that grew there among
scattered piles of rusted stoves and old car parts, and she directed him to
photograph the whole long house so that her people in
'I
don't get it,' he said.
'Well,
never you mind. Just give it back.'
'What
are you trying to pull, Ansel?'
'Will
you give it back?'
James
handed it across, but before Ansel's fingers had quite touched it Simon reached
out and took it away. He swung away from the couch, avoiding Ansel's long arm,
and wandered out into the middle of the room with his eyes fixed frowningly on
the picture. Ansel groaned.
'You
see what you done,' he told James.
'Ansel,
I don't know why -'
'Then
listen,' Ansel said. He leaned forward talking in a whisper now. 'James,
someone departed is in that picture -'
'Where?' Simon asked.
'Oh,
Lord.'
'Well,
I don't see.'
'Me
neither,' said James. 'What're you up to, Ansel?' Ansel stood up, supporting
himself with both hands on the arm of the couch. When he walked over to Simon
he walked like a man wading, sliding his stocking feet across the floor. He
poked his finger at one corner of the picture, said 'There,' and then waded
back again. 'I'm going to lie down,' he said to no one in particular.
'Ah,
yes,' said James. 'I see.'
'I
don't,' Simon said.
'Right
here she is.'
He
pointed. His forefinger was just touching the Model A
Ford that stood behind the house, resting on cinder-blocks that were hidden by
the tall waving grass. All that could really be seen of the Ford was its
glassless windows and its sunken roof- it had been submerged in that sea of
grass a long time - and in the front window on the driver's side, no bigger
than a little white button, was Janie Rose's moon-round face. She was too far
away to have any expression, or even to have her spectacles show, but they
could see the high tilt of her head as she eyed James and the two white dots of
her hands on the steering wheel. She was pretending to be some haughty lady driving
past. Yet when James drew back from the picture he lost her again immediately;
she could have been one of the little patches of Queen Anne's lace that dotted
the field. 'I don't see how you found her,' he told Ansel.
'No
trouble.'
Simon
stared at the picture a while and then tilted it, moving Janie Rose out of his
focus. 'She just blurs right in again,' he said. 'She comes and goes. Like
those pictures in little kids' magazines, where you try and find the pig in the
tree.'
The what?' Ansel said. He raised his head and looked at Simon,
open-mouthed.
'But
it's here, sure enough,' said James. 'Isn't that something? I never saw her. Not even when I was enlarging it, and I looked it over right
closely then.'
'It's
funny,' Simon said.
'You hungry, Simon?'
'I
guess.' But he went on staring at the picture. He seemed not so much to be
looking at Janie Rose as turning the whole thing over in his mind now, holding
the picture absently in front of him. With his free hand he was pulling at a
cowlick over his forehead.
'When
our mother died,' Ansel said suddenly, 'I was beside myself.'
Simon
looked over at him.
'I
couldn't think about her. I couldn't think her name. Yet people are different
these days. I see that.'
'Oh,
well,' Simon said. He returned to his picture. 'James, is there such a thing as
X-ray cameras? Could you take a picture of our house, like, and have the people
show up from inside?'
'I
don't know,' said James. 'I doubt it.'
A
fly buzzed in, humming its way in zigzags through the room, and Ansel followed it
with his eyes. When the fly had disappeared into the kitchen he lay back again,
gazing upwards. 'I'm doing all my dying in one room now,' he told the ceiling.
'Oh,
stop that,' James said.
'It's
true. I'm getting contained in smaller and smaller spaces. First it was the
whole of
'Look,
'James said. 'I know of one stone-cold pizza in the kitchen. What do I do with
it? Throw it out?'
'Well,'
said Ansel. He sat up and peered over at Simon. 'Why do you keep looking at
that picture?'
Simon
put the picture down. He looked from Ansel to James, and then he stood up and
stuck his hands in his pockets. 'When I come to think of it,' he said, 'I don't
want no pizza.'
'Well
you don't have to eat it,' said James.
'I
think I'll just pass it up.'
'All right.'
'It's
hard to say what's happening to people,' Ansel said. 'They don't seem to
realize, no more. Don't think of themselves being dead someday; don't
mourn no more. It's hard to say what they do do, when you stop and
consider.'
'Don't
die of anemia no more, either,' said James.
'What
do you know about it?'
Simon
was tilting gently back and forth, from his toes to his heels and his heels to his
toes, with his shoulders hunched high and his eyes on a spot outside Ansel's
window. He didn't seem to be listening.
'Nobody's
perfect,' Ansel said. Janie wasn't exactly a pink-pinafore type, I admit it.
Rattling through her prayers in purple pyjamas; Deliver
us from measles. But she's under the earth like you'll be someday, have you
thought of that? You in that clay, and your survivors
calling you a pig in a tree?'
'Ansel,
there's not a thing in this world you do right,' James said.
But
Ansel waved him aside and sat forward, on the edge of his couch. 'What will you
do about me? he asked. 'How about
that, now? When I am -'
Simon
was crying. He was still rocking back and forth, still keeping his hands jammed
tightly in his pockets, but there were wet paths running through the flour on
his cheeks and his eyes were frowning and angry. 'Well -' he said, and his
voice came out croaky. He took a breath and cleared his throat. 'Well, I reckon
I'll be getting on home,' he said.
'Oh,
now,' said Ansel.
But
James said, 'All right. It's all right.'
He
crossed over to open the door and Simon went out, stumbling a little. James
followed him. He stood on the porch and watched Simon all the way down to his
end of the house, hoping Simon might look back once, but he never did. He
walked stiffly and blindly, with his sharp little shoulder-bones sticking out
through the back of his jacket. When he reached his own door he hesitated, with
his hands on the knob and his back still toward James. Then he said, 'Well,'
again, and pulled the door open and went on in. The screen door slammed shut
and rattled once and was still. James could hear Simon's footsteps clomping on
across the hollow floor of the parlour.
The
aluminum porch chair was still beneath the window, where Ansel had been sitting
in it to watch the funeral go by. After a minute James went over and sat down
on it. He let his arms rest along the arms of the chair and the metal burned
him, making two lines of sunbaked heat down the inside of his forearms. Behind
him was the soft sound of the mesh curtains moving,
and the sleeves of Ansel's rough black suit sliding across the splintery
windowsill. 'Hot out,' Ansel said.
James
squinted toward the road.
'I
wish it was the season for tangerines.'
There
were no people passing now, only the yellow fields across the way rippling in
the wind and one grey hound plodding slowly through the yard. In the house
behind James were the soft, humming sounds of other people, murmuring
indistinct words to one another and moving gently around. James closed his
eyes.
'Hey, James.'
He
didn't answer.
'James.'
'What.'
'James,
I told you he wouldn't eat.'
The
wind began again, and James rose from his chair to go inside. He didn't want to
sit here any more. Here it was too still; here there was only that wind,
rushing over and around the house in its solitary position among the weeds.
2
Joan
Pike was twenty-six years old, and had lived in bedrooms all her life. She
lived the way a guest would - keeping her property strictly within the walls of
her room, hanging her towel and wash-cloth on a bar behind her door. No one
asked her to. Her aunt had even said to her, once, that she wished Joan would
act more at home here. 'You could at least hang your coat in the
downstairs closet,' she said. 'Could you do that much?'
And Joan had nodded, and from then on hung her coat with the others. But her
towel stayed in her own room, because nobody had mentioned that to her. And she
read and sewed sitting on her bed, unless she was expressly invited downstairs.
If
they had asked her, point-blank, the way they must have wanted to - if they had
asked, 'Why do you have to be invited?' she wouldn't have known the answer. It
was what she was used to; that was all. When she was born, her parents were
already middle-aged. They weren't sure what they were supposed to do with her;
they treated her politely, like a visitor who had dropped in unexpectedly. If
she sat with them after supper they tried to make some sort of conversation, or
gazed at her uneasily over the tops of their magazines until she retreated to
her room. So now, a hundred miles from home and on her own, it felt only
natural to be living in another bedroom, although she hadn't planned it that
way. She had come here planning just to stay with the Pikes a week or two,
until she found a place of her own, and then the children made her change her
mind. When Janie Rose's hamster ran away, and Janie Rose stayed an hour in the
bathroom shouting that it wasn't important, brushing her teeth over and over
with scalding hot water that she didn't even notice and crying into the sink,
Joan was the only one who could make her come away. After that the Pikes asked
if she would like to live with them, and she said yes without appearing to
think twice. This bedroom wasn't like the first one, after all. Here there was
always something going on, and a full family around the supper table. When she
went walking with Simon and Janie Rose, she pretended to herself that they were
hers. She played senseless games with them, toasting marshmallows over candles,
and poking spiders in their webs to try and make them spin their names. For
four years she had lived that way. Nine months of each year she worked as a
secretary for the school principal, giving some of her salary to the Pikes and
sending some home to her parents, and in the summers
she worked part-time in the tobacco fields. In the evening she sat with James,
every evening talking of the same things and never moving forwards or backwards
with him, and she spent a little time with the Pikes. But she still lived in
her bedroom; she still waited for an invitation, and when any of the Pikes
wanted to see her they had to go knock on her door.
Today
no one knocked. Her aunt and uncle had gone straight to their room after the
funeral and were there now - the sound of Mr Pike's murmuring voice could just
be heard - and Simon was alone in his room and seemed to be planning to stay
there. That left Joan with a piece of time she knew would be her own, with no
one interrupting, and at first she thought it was what she needed. She could
sit down and get things sorted in her mind, and maybe catch some sleep later
on. There was still that heavy feeling behind her eyes from the long aching wait
in the hospital. But when she tried sorting her thoughts she found it was more
than she could do just now, and then when she tried sleeping her eyes wouldn't
shut. She lay on top of her bedspread, with her shoes off but her dress still
on in case her aunt should call her, and her eyes kept wandering around the
bland, motel-like cleanness of her room. It seemed every muscle she owned was
tensed up and waiting to be called on. If she were alone in the house she would
have gone down and scrubbed the kitchen floor, maybe, or at least had a long
hot bath. But who knew whether her aunt would approve of that on a day like
today?
When
she finally thought of what she could do, she sat up quickly and frowned at
herself for not thinking of it sooner. It was the one thing her aunt had asked
of her all day: she had been sitting at the breakfast table, digging wells in
her oatmeal and staring out into the back yard, and suddenly she had caught
sight of Janie Rose's draggled blue crinoline flapping on the clothesline. 'Take
everything away, Joan,' she said.
'What?'
'Take
Janie's things away. Put them somewhere.'
'All
right,' said Joan, but she was hunting raisins for Simon's oatmeal and hadn't
really been thinking about it. Now she wasn't sure how much time she would
have; Simon might come in at any moment. She wanted to do the job alone,
keeping it from the rest of the family, because different things could bother
different people. With her it had been Janie Rose's pocket collection -
modelling clay and an Italian stamp and a handful of peas hidden away during
supper, sitting on the edge of the tub where they had been dumped before a bath
five nights ago. She didn't think any more could bother her now.
She
opened her door and looked out into the hallway. No one was there. Behind the
Pike's door the mumbling voice still rambled on, faltering in places and then
starting up again, louder than before. When Joan came out into the hall in her
stocking feet, a floorboard creaked beneath her and the murmuring stopped
altogether, but then her uncle picked up the thread and continued. Joan reached
the steps and descended them on tiptoe, and when she got to the bottom she
closed the door behind her and let out her breath.
Janie
Rose's room opened off the kitchen hall. It had had to be built on for her
especially, because the Pikes had never planned for more than one child and the
room that was now Joan's had been taken up by a paying lodger at the time.
Janie didn't like her room. She liked Simon's, with the porthole window in the
closet and the cowboy wallpaper. When Simon wasn't around she did all her
playing there, so that her own room looked almost unlived in. On her hastily
made-up bed sat an eyeless teddy bear, tossed against the pillow the way Janie
Rose must have seen it in her mother's copies of House and Garden. And
her toys were neatly lined on the bookshelves, but wisps of clothes stuck out
of dresser drawers and her closet was one heap of things she had kicked her way
out of at night and thrown on the floor.
It
was the closet Joan began with. She pulled back the flaps of a cardboard box
from the hall and then began to fold the dresses up and lay them away. There
weren't many. Janie Rose hated dresses, although her mother had dreams of
outfitting her in organdy and dotted swiss. The dresses Janie chose for herself
were red plaid, with the sashes starting to come off at the seams because she
had a tendency to tie them too tightly. Then there were stacks of overalls,
most of them home-sewn and inherited from Simon, and at the very bottom were
the few things her mother had bought when Janie Rose wasn't along - pink and
white things, with 'Little Miss Chubby' labels sewn into the necklines. While
she was folding those Joan had a sudden clear picture of Janie Rose on Sunday
mornings, struggling into them. She dressed backwards. She refused to pull
dresses over her head, for fear of becoming invisible. Instead she pulled them
up over her feet, tugging and grunting and complaining all the way, and
sometimes ripping the seams of dresses that weren't meant to be put on that
way. She had a trick that she did with her petticoat, so that it wouldn't slide
up with her dress -she bent over and tucked it between her knees, and while she
was doing all this struggling with the dress she would be standing there
knock-kneed and pigeon-toed, locking the petticoat in place and usually crying.
She cried a lot, but quietly.
When
Joan had finished with the closet, the cardboard box was only two-thirds full.
The closet was bare, and the floor had just a few hangers and bubble gum
wrappers scattered over it. It looked worse that way. She reached over and
slammed the closet door shut, and then she dragged the box over to the dresser
and began on that.
Upstairs,
a door slammed. She straightened up and listened, hoping it was only the wind,
but there were Simon's footsteps down the stairs. For a minute she was afraid
he was coming to find her, but then she heard the soft puffing sound that the
leather chair made when someone sat in it, and she relaxed. He must not want to
be with people right now. She pushed her hair off her face and opened the next
dresser drawer.
Janie
Rose had more sachet bags than Joan thought existed. They cluttered every
drawer, one smell mixed with another - lemon verbena and lavender and rose petals. And tossed in here and there were her mother's
old perfume bottles with the tops off, adding their own heavy scent, so that
Joan became confused and couldn't tell one smell from another any more. She
wondered why Janie Rose, wearing all this fragrant underwear, had still smelled
only of Ivory soap and Crayolas. Especially when she wore so much
underwear. On Janie Rose's bad days, when she thought things were
going against her or she was frightened, she would pile on layer upon layer of
undershirts and panties. Her jeans could hardly be squeezed on top of it all,
and if she wore overalls the straps would be strained to the breaking point
over drawersful of undershirts. Sometimes her mother made her take them off
again and sometimes she didn't ('She's just hopeless,' she would say, and give
up), but usually, if the day turned better, Janie peeled off a few layers of
her own accord. On the evenings of her bad days, when Simon came in for supper,
he had a habit of reaching across the table and pinching her overall strap to
see how many other straps lay beneath it. It was his way of asking how she was
doing. If Janie was feeling all right by then she would just giggle at him, and
he would laugh. But other days she jumped when he touched her and hunched up
her shoulders, and then Simon would say nothing and fix all his attention on
supper.
Out
in the parlour now Joan heard the squeaking of leather as Simon rose, and the sound of his shoes across the scatter rug. She
stopped in the act of closing the box and waited, silently; his footsteps came
closer, and then he appeared in the doorway. 'Hey, Joan,' he said. There was
something white on his face.
'Hey.'
He
looked at the cardboard boxes without changing expression, and then he went
over to the bed and sat down, picking up the teddy bear in one hand. 'Hey,
Ernest,' he said. He laid Ernest face down across his lap, circling the bear's
neck with one hand, and leaned forward to watch Joan.
'I'm
packing things away,' she told him.
'Well,
I see you are.'
She
folded the flaps of the box down, one corner over another so as to lock them,
and then stood up and pushed the box toward the closet. 'Some of your things're
on the shelves there,' she told Simon while she was opening the closet door.
The box grated across the hangers on the floor. 'You better take out what's
yours, before I pack it away.'
'None
of it is,' said Simon, without looking at the shelves.
'Some
is. That xylophone.'
'I
don't play that any more. Don't you know I've stopped playing with that kind of
thing?'
'All
right, 'Joan said.
'I
gave it for keeps.'
'All right.'
'Unliving
things last much longer than living.'
"That's
true,' Joan said. She chose an armload of things from the shelves - dolls,
still shining and unused, a pack of candy
'No.'
'What
was wrong with it?'
'Nothing,'
said Simon. "There just wasn't any. Because I didn't eat
it.'
'Oh.'
'If
I had eaten it, it would have been a pizza.'
'I
see.'
She
dumped another armload in the box. It was half full now, and junky-looking,
with the arms of dolls and the wheels of cars tangled together.
'I
better make you a sandwich,' she said finally.
'Naw.'
'You
want an apple?'
'Naw.'
He
crossed over to where she was standing and laid the bear gently on top of the
other things. 'James has got this photograph,' he said, and went back to sit on
the bed. "That Ansel, boy.'
'What
about him?'
'I
just hate him. I hate him.'
When
it looked as if he weren't going to say any more, Joan began removing the last
few things from the shelf. Every now and then she looked Simon's way, but he
sat very quiet with his back against the wall and his face expressionless.
Finally she said, 'Well, Ansel has his days. You know that.' But Simon remained
silent.
The
room was bare now; all that remained were the things on the clothesline. She
pushed the second box into the closet and then said, 'I'm going out back a
minute. After that I'll fix you a sandwich.' Simon stood up to follow her. 'I'm
only going for a minute,' she said, but Simon came with her anyway, and they
went down the hall and through the kitchen and out the back screen door.
It
was hot and windy outside, with the acres of grass behind the house rumpling
and tangling together. The few things on the line - Simon's bathing suit and
Janie Rose's crinoline and Sunday blouse - were being whipped about by the wind
so that they made little cracking sounds. While Joan unpinned Janie's things,
Simon wandered nearby snapping the heads off the weeds.
'Simon,'
she called to him, 'what kind of sandwich you want?'
'I
ain't hungry.'
'I'll
just make you a little one. And go call your mama and daddy; they have to eat
too.'
'I
wish you would.'
'Come
on, Simon.'
He
shrugged and started toward the house, still walking aimlessly and kicking at
things. 'All right,' he said. 'But I'll tell them it's your fault I came.'
'They
won't mind you coming.'
'You
think not?'
He
banged the screen door behind him. After he was gone Joan stood in the yard
awhile, clutching Janie's things against her stomach, feeling the dampness soak
into her stocking feet. She wished she could just walk off. If it were't for Simon,
she would; she would go find some place to sit alone and think things out. But
her feet were growing cold, and there were sandwiches to make; she shook her
hair off her forehead and started back toward the house. The closer to the
house she came the quieter the wind sounded, and when she stepped back into the
kitchen there was a sudden silence in her ears that felt odd.
She
put the things from the clothesline into the closet, and then she returned to the
kitchen and leaned against the refrigerator while she planned a meal. The room
was so cluttered it made thinking difficult. Small objects lay here and there,
gathering dust because no one had ever found a place for them. The kitchen
windows were curtainless, and littered with lost buttons and ripening tomatoes.
And the wall behind the stove was covered with twenty or thirty drawings,
scotch-taped so closely together they might have been wallpaper. Most of them
were Simon's - soldiers and knights and masked men with guns. His mother
thought he might be an artist someday. Scattered among them were Janie Rose's
drawings, all of the same lollipop-shaped tree with hundreds of tiny round
apples on it. She said it was the tree out back, but that was only a tiny
scrubby tree with no leaves; it had never borne fruit and wouldn't have borne
apples even if it had, since it was some other kind of tree. Once her mother
said, 'Janie, honey, why don't you draw something else? and Janie had run out crying and wouldn't come down from the
attic. But the next day she had said she would draw something different. She
came into the kitchen where they were all sitting, carrying a box of broken
crayons and a huge sheet of that yellow pulpy paper she always used. 'What else
is there to draw?" she asked, and her mother said, 'Well, a house,
for instance. Other children draw houses.' Then they all hung over her, and she
drew a straight up-and-down line and a window, and then a green circle above it
with lots of red apples on it. Everybody sat back and looked at her; she had
drawn an apple tree with a window in it. 'Oh, my,' she said
apologetically, and then she smiled and began filling in the circle with green
crayon. After that she never tried houses again. She laboured away at apple
trees, and signed them, 'Miss J. R. Pike' in the corner, in large purple
letters. Simon never signed his, but that was because his mother said she would
recognize his style anywhere in the world.
When
Simon came downstairs again he had changed into his boots; he was trying to
make the floor shake when he walked. 'Daddy's coming and Mama ain't,' he said.
'She ain't hungry.'
'Did
you ask if she wants coffee?'
'She
didn't give me a chance. She said go on and let her rest.'
'Well,
run up again and ask her.'
'No,
sir,' Simon said.
He sat down firmly in one of the chairs.
'Just
run up, Simon -'
'I
won't do it,' he said.
Joan
thought a minute, and then she said, 'Well, all right.' She reached out to
smooth his hair down and for a minute he let her, but just barely, and then
shrugged her hand away.
'Daddy
wants just a Co-Cola,' he told her.
'He's
got to have more than that.'
'No.
He said - Hey, Joan.'
'What.'
'I
got an idea.'
'All right.'
'Why
not you and me go out and eat. You like that?'
'We
can't,' Joan said.
'We
could go to that place with the chicken.'
'We
have to stay home, Simon.'
'I
would pay for it.'
'No,'
Joan said, and she touched one upright piece of his hair again. 'Are you the
one that doesn't like using other people's forks? That makes twice in two days
you've had that idea.'
'Well,
anyway,' said Simon. But he must have been expecting her to say no; he sat back
quietly and began drumming his fingers on the table. Above them was the sound
of Mr Pike's footsteps, crossing the hall and beginning to descend the stairs,
and Joan remembered why she was in the kitchen and went back to the
refrigerator. She opened the door and stared inside, at shelves packed tightly
with other people's casseroles. At the kitchen doorway her uncle said, 'I only
want a Coke, Joan,' and came to stand beside her,
bending down to peer at the lower shelves.
'You
have to eat something solid,' Joan told him.
'I
can't. He straightened up and rubbed his forehead. He was a lean man, all bones
and tough brown skin. Ordinarily he did construction work, but for the month of
July he had been laid off and was spending his time the way Joan did, helping
Mr Terry get his tobacco in. Years of working outdoors had made his face look
stained with walnut juice, and his eyes were squinted from force of habit even
when he wasn't in the sun. They were narrow brown slits in his face, the same
shade as Simon's, and they were directed now at Joan while he waited for her to
speak.
'There's
a chicken salad here from Mrs Belts,' said Joan.
'No,
thank you.'
'The
kind you like, with pimento.'
'No.'
'Now,
eat a little something,' she said. 'I could be perking coffee for you to
take Aunt Lou, if you'd wait a minute.'
'Oh,
well, 'he said.
He
sat down awkwardly, across from Simon, giving his Sunday pants a jerk at each
knee to save the crease. 'How you been getting along?'
he asked Simon.
'Okay.'
'Not
giving Joan any trouble.'
'No, sir.'
'He's
been just fine,' said Joan. She set the salad out and laid three plates on the
table. Her uncle studied his own plate seriously, hunching his shoulders over
it and working his hands together.
'I'm
glad to hear it,' he said finally. When Joan looked over at him he said, 'About
Simon, I mean. James and Ansel feed you okay, boy?'
'No, sir.'
'Well.
Joan, Dr Kill left a prescription for your aunt but I don't see how I can go
into town and leave her. I wonder, would you mind too
much if-'
'I'll
see to it after we eat,' Joan said.
He
accepted his chicken salad wordlessly, keeping his eyes on Joan's hands as she
dished his share out. When she had passed on to the next plate, he said, 'Thank
you,' and the words came out hoarse so that he had to clear his throat. 'Thank
you,' he said again. Even then his voice was muffled-sounding. In the last
three days he had been talking steadily, always mumbling something into Mrs
Pike's ear to keep her going. It was probably the most he had talked in a
lifetime. Ordinarily he sat quiet and listened, with something like awe, while his
wife rattled on; he seemed perpetually surprised and a little proud that she
should have so much to say.
When
Joan had sat down herself, after filling the others' plates and passing out
forks, she said, 'Eat, now.' She looked at the other two, but neither of them
picked up his fork. 'Come on,' she said, and then Simon sighed and
tucked his paper napkin into his collar with a rustling sound.
'This
feels like Sunday-night supper,' he said.
'It
does.'
'Not
like afternoon. Why're we eating in the afternoon? What the day feels like, is Wednesday.'
'Wednesday?'
'Feels
like Wednesday.'
'Why
does it feel like-?'
'She
blames it on herself,' said Mr Pike.
'What?'
'It
breaks my heart. She keeps saying how she was hemming Miss Brook's basic black
at the time - I never have liked that Miss Brook - and Janie Rose comes
up and says, "Mama," she says, "I'm going off to -"and Lou
just never did hear where. Miss Brook was going on about her bunions.
"Lou," I told her, I said, "Lou, I don't think that would have -"but Lou says that's how it come to happen. She never let Janie Rose play with
those Marsh girls. Never would have let her go, if she had known. But she was-'
'Never
let her ride no tractors, either,' said Simon. 'Shakes a
girl's insides all up.'
'Hush,'
Joan told him. 'Both of you. There's not even a dent
made in that chicken salad.'
Her
uncle picked his fork up and then leaned across the table toward her. 'She blames
herself,' he said.
'I
know.'
'She
keeps-'
'Eat,
Uncle Roy.'
He
began eating. His fork made steady little clinking sounds on the plate, and he
chewed rapidly with the crunchy sound of celery filling the silence. When he
was done, Joan put another spoonful of salad on his plate and he kept on
without pause, never looking up, making his way doggedly through the heap of
food. Simon stopped eating and stared at him, until Joan gave his wrist a tap
with her finger. Then he started eating again, but he kept his eyes on his
father. When Mr Pike reached for the bowl and dished himself another helping,
still crunching on his last mouthful, chewing without breathing, like a thirsty
man drinking water, Simon looked over at Joan with his eyes round above a
forkful of food and she frowned at him and cleared her throat.
'Um,
Mrs Hammond phoned today,' she said. 'She's a very cheering person,
Uncle Roy; maybe Aunt Lou could talk to her later on. I told her to call back
in a day or -'
'Remember
Janie Rose?' Simon asked.
His
father stopped chewing. 'Remember what?' he said.
'Remember
how she did on the telephone? Never answering "Hello," but saying,
"I am listening to WKKJ, the all-day swinging station," in case WKKJ
was ever to call and give her the jackpot for answering that way. Only you
know, WKKJ never did call -'
'Simon,
I mean it,' Joan said.
'Lou
is breaking my heart,' said Mr Pike.
'Wouldn't
you feel funny, if you was to call someone that
answered like that? "I am listening to - "'
'It
wasn't her fault,' Mr
Pike said. 'Janie never asked for no special
attention, like. She just kind of -'
'God
in heaven,' Joan said.
The
doorbell rang. It made a sharp, burring noise, and Joan stood up so quickly to
answer it that her chair fell over backwards behind her. She let it stay. She
escaped from the kitchen and crossed the parlour floor, smoothing her skirt
down in front of her, making herself walk slowly. Behind the screen, standing
close together with their faces side by side and peering in,
were the Potter sisters from next door. They stepped backwards simultaneously
so that Joan could swing the door open, and then Miss Faye entered first with
Miss Lucy close behind her.
'We
only stopped by for a minute,' said Miss Faye. 'We wanted to bring your
supper.'
'Well,
come on in,' Joan said. 'Really, do. Come out to the kitchen, why don't you.'
'Oh,
I don't think-'
'No,
I mean it.' She took Miss Faye by one plump wrist, almost pulling her. 'You
don't know how glad I am to see you,' she said.
'Well,
if you really think-'
They
walked on tiptoe, bearing their covered dishes before them like sacred offerings.
When they reached the kitchen door, Mr Pike stood up to greet them and his
chair fell backwards too, so that the room with its overturned furniture looked
stricken. 'Why, Miss, um, Miss Lucy' he said. 'And Miss Faye.
I declare. Come in and have a -' and he bent down and pulled the chairs up by
their backs, both at the same time. 'Sit down, why don't you,' he said.
Joan
drew up the chair from beside the stove, and Miss Lucy sat down in it with a
sigh while Miss Faye went to sit beside Simon. 'We only mean to stay a minute,'
said Miss Lucy. She plopped the bowl she was carrying down on the table in
front of her and then sat back, sliding her purse strap to a more comfortable
position on her wrist. The Potter sisters always carried handbags and wore hats
and gloves, even if they were going next door. They were small, round women, in
their early sixties probably, and for as long as Joan had known them they had
had only one aim in life: they wanted to have swarms of neighbourhood children
clamouring at their door for cookies, gathering in their yard at the first
smell of cinnamon buns. And although no one came ('Children nowadays prefer to
buy Nutty Buddies,' Miss Faye said), they still went on baking, eating the
cookies themselves, growing fat together and comparing notes on their identical
heart conditions. It was those heart conditions that Miss Faye was discussing
right now. She was saying, 'Now, you and Lou know,
And
Mr Pike was saying, 'Well, I know, I know,' and nodding gently without seeming
to be listening. There was chicken salad on his chin, which meant that both the
Potters kept staring tactfully down at their gloves instead of looking at him.
Joan passed him a paper napkin, but he ignored it; he sat forward on his chair
and said, 'It surely was nice of you to come. Nice to bring
us supper.'
'It's
the least we could do,' said Miss Lucy. She looked around her, toward
the kitchen door, and then lowered her voice. Tell me,' she whispered. 'How is
she? How's Lou?'
'It
breaks my heart,' said Mr Pike.
'Oh,
my,'
'Not
a thing I can do, seems like. She just sits. If she
would stop all this blaming herself-'
They
all do that,' said Miss Faye.
'She
said Janie was the one she never paid no mind to.'
'Will
you listen to that.'
'Never
gave her a fair share.'
'If
it's not one reason it's another,' Miss Lucy said. I’ve seen that happen
plenty of times.'
'Maybe
if you talked to her,' said Mr Pike. He pushed his plate away and straightened
up. 'You think you could just run up there a minute?'
'Well,
not run, no, but-'
'I
didn't meant that,' he said. 'No, you can take the
stairs as slow as you want to. But if you two would talk to her a minute, so
long as you don't mind -'
'Why,
we don't mind a bit,' said Miss Faye. 'We'd be proud.' She reached up to set her
flowered hat straighter, as if she might like to put an extra hat on top of the
first one for such a special visit. And Miss Lucy pulled gloves to perfect
smoothness, and then folded her hands tightly over her purse.
'I
just don't like to trouble you,' Mr Pike said.
'You
stop that, Roy Pike.'
They
rose simultaneously, with their backs very straight. But even making the trip
across the kitchen they walked slowly, preparing themselves for the stairs. 'Be
careful,' Joan told them. 'Just see they don't get out of breath, Uncle Roy.'
'I
will.'
But
Simon was frowning as he watched them leave. 'Hey, Joan,' he said.
'Hmmm?'
'When
they go up to bed at night, it takes them half an hour. They take two steps and
then rest and talk; they bring their knitting along.'
'Well,
that's kind of silly, 'said Joan.
'Could
they crumple up and die on our stairs?'
'No,
they could not,' she said. 'It would take more than that.'"
'How
do you know?'
'I
heard Dr Kitt tell them so. They just shouldn't get too out of breath, is all,
or run in any marathons. He said -'
'I
got an idea,' Simon said.
'What?'
'Listen.'
He stood up from his place at the table and came around to face her, with his
hands hitched through his belt loops. 'How about us going to a movie,' he said.
'That Tarzan movie.'
'We're
not supposed to.'
'Well,
I got to get out,' he said.
She
looked down at him, considering. His face had a thin, stretched look; patches
of flour still clung to it like some sort of sad clown makeup and his hair
stuck up in wiry tangles. 'Well, I do have to get Aunt Lou's prescription,' she
said. 'Would you comb your hair first?'
'Sure.'
'All
right, we'll go.'
'Right now?'
'If you want to.’
He
nodded, but with his face still wearing that strained look, and turned to go
upstairs and then turned back again. 'I'll wash downstairs,' he said.
'There's
no soap here.'
'I
don't care.'
He
turned on the water in the kitchen sink and splashed his face, and then he
reached spluttering for the dishtowel. 'My allowance money's all the way
upstairs,' he said. 'I'll pay you back tomorrow, if you'll lend me the money.'
'All right.'
She
went into the living room, with Simon following, and handed him a comb from her
pocket-book. While he was combing his hair she went upstairs for her shoes. Mrs
Pike's door was open now. She was lying on her bed, with her head propped up on
two pillow s and the sisters beside her talking steadily, and when Joan walked
past, her aunt followed her with her soft blue eyes but only vaguely, as if she
weren't seeing her, so Joan didn't stop in to say anything. She put on her
shoes and picked up a scarf and went downstairs, where Simon was waiting with
his hand on the newel post and his face strained upward.
'What're
they doing?' he asked her.
'I
don't know.'
'Are
they crying?'
'I
don't think so.'
'Well.
I would've gone upstairs,' he said. 'You know.'
'I
know.'
'Did
you think I wouldn't?'
'No.'
She sighed suddenly, looking back toward the stairs. ‘I don't know how to comfort people,' she
said.
'Well.'
They
went out the front door, across the porch, and down the wooden steps. It was
beginning to get cool outside. Joan could hear tree frogs piping far away, and
the wind had died down enough so that the sound of cars on the east highway
reached her ears. She clasped her hands behind her back and followed Simon,
cutting across the road and through the field toward town.
'Remember
I've got heels on,' she called.
'I
remember.'
'Remember
that makes it hard walking.'
He
slowed down and waited for her, walking backwards. Behind him and all around
him the field stretched wide and golden, with bits of tall yellow flowers
stirring and glimmering like spangles in the sunlight. And when Joan came up
even with him, so that he turned and walked forward again by her side, she
could look down and see how his hair, bleached lighter on top, took on a
varnished look out here and the little line of fuzz down the back of his neck
had turned shiny and golden like the field he was walking in. 'Right about here
. . . 'he said, but the wind started up just then and blew his words away.
'What?'
she asked.
'Right
about here is where I lost that ball. Will you keep a lookout for it?'
'I
will.'
'Do
you reckon I'll ever find it?'
'No.'
'I
don't either,' Simon said.
But
they walked slowly anyway, keeping their eyes on the ground, kicking at clumps
of wild wheat to see what might turn up.
3
'Hold
still,' James
said.
He
bent over and peered through the camera; No one was holding still. Line upon
line of
'Nope,'
he said. 'You've moved every which-away again. Close in tighter, now.'
He
waited patiently, with his hands on his hips. For five years he had been going
through this. Every year there was a picture of the
Someone
called out, 'Give her brown bread.' And someone else said, 'No, rock candy will
do it.' But the aunt spread her old hands out in front of her, palms down and
fingers stretched apart, signifying she was better now and wanted to hear no
more about it. 'Back in your places,' James said, and the twenty or thirty
'One more, James.'
While
he was fiddling with the camera people began talking again, still standing in
their set places, and some lit cigarettes. He peered through the view-finder at
them. If this were any other picture he would snap it now, catching them at
their ease, but family pictures were different. He liked the way they stood so
straight in jumbled, self-conscious rows, and molded themselves to make a block
of tensed-up faces. Tm ready,' he warned them, and they did it again - closed
their mouths and narrowed their eyes and set their shoulders. He snapped the
picture that way. Then he said, 'That's all,' and watched the children as they
shook themselves and scattered off to play.
The
hostess walked up to him, trailing white lace, sinking into the ground at every
step in her high-heeled pumps. 'There's one more I want, James,' she said, and
then stopped and let her eyes wander after her youngest child. 'Joey, you know
not to ride that dog,' she called.
'Yes, ma'am.'
'I
want you to photograph Great-Aunt Hattie alone,' she told James. 'She's getting
old. Can you do that?'
'If
she's willing,' said James.
'She's
not.'
'Then
maybe we should -'
'Now,
don't you worry, 'said Mrs Hammond. Ill talk
her around. They're serving up the ice cream over there. You go and get you
some, and when you're through I'll have Aunt Hattie ready. Hear?'
'Well,
okay,' James said. 'But Mrs Hammond hadn't stayed to hear his answer.
He
folded his equipment up and put it on the porch, out of the way of the
children. Then he went across the yard to the driveway, where the others were
standing in line for ice cream. They looked different now, quick-moving and
flexible, with the paper-doll stiffness gone. In a way James was sorry. Some of
the best pictures he had were these poker-straight rows of families, Hammonds
and Ballews and Burnetts; he kept copies of them filed away in his darkroom,
and sometimes on long lonesome days he pulled them out and looked at them a
while, with a sort of faraway sadness coming up in him if he looked too long.
He might have seen any one of those families only that morning in the hardware
store, but when he looked at their faces in pictures they seemed lost and long
ago. ('I just wish once you'd take a giggly picture,' Ansel said. 'You
make me so sorrowful.') Thinking about that made James smile, and the girl in
front of him turned around and looked up at him.
'I'm
thinking,' he told her.
"That's
what it looked like,' she said. Her name was Maisie Hammond, and she lived
across town from here and sometimes came visiting Ansel. She thought Ansel was
wonderful. James was just considering this when she said, 'How's that brother
of yours?' and he smiled at her.
'Just
fine,' he said. 'He's home reading magazines.'
'Well,
say hello to him.' She moved up a space in line, still facing in James's
direction and walking backwards. Standing out in the sunlight like this she was
pretty, with her towhead shining and her white skin nearly transparent, but
Ansel had always said she was homely and only out to catch a good husband (it
was rumoured James and Ansel came from an old family). Whenever she came visiting, Ansel turned his face to the wall and played
sicker than he was. That was how he planned to scare her off, but Maisie only
stayed longer then and fussed around his couch. She liked taking care of
people. She would fetch pillows and ice-water, and Ansel would wave them away.
When she was gone, James would say, 'Ansel, what you want to treat her like
that for?' But by that time Ansel had fooled even himself, and only tossed his
head on the pillow and worried about how faint he felt. To make it up to Maisie
now (although she wasn't aware there was anything to be made up), James
stepped closer to her in the line and said, 'Maisie, it's been a good two weeks
since you've been by.'
'Two
days,' said Maisie. 'Day before yesterday I was there.'
'I
never heard about it.'
'You
were off somewhere. Taking care of some arrangements for the
Pikes.'
The
man ahead of her left with his
'That's
all right,' said James. 'I don't like strawberry.'
He
followed her back across the lawn, preferring to stick with her rather than
interrupt the little individual reunions that were going on among the others.
When she settled on the porch steps, fluffing her skirt out around her, he
said, 'You mind if I sit with you?' She shook her head, intent on opening her
ice cream. 'I'm going to take a picture of your great-aunt,' he said.
'Oh, her.'
'Do
you like sitting out in the sun like this?'
'Yes,'
she said. But she looked hot; she was too thin and bird-boned, and being the
slightest bit uncomfortable made her seem about to topple over. James was used
to Joan, who was unbreakable and built of solid flesh.
When
he had pried the lid off his own ice cream, and dipped into it with his paper
spoon, he said, 'It's sort of melty-looking.' Maisie didn't answer. She was
staring off across the yard. 'Better eat yours before it turns to milk,' he told
her.
But
Maisie said, 'Ansel was laying down, when I went to see him.'
'He
does that,' said James.
'I
mean laying still. Not doing anything.'
'Well,
it was nice of you to come,' he said.
She
shrugged impatiently, as if he hadn't understood her. 'You were out doing
something,' she told him. She seemed to be starting all over again now, telling
the story a second time. 'You weren't around.'
'I
was helping Mr Pike with some arrangements,' said James.
'That's
what Ansel said.'
'I'm
sorry I wasn't around.'
'Well.
When I came in I said, "Hey, Ansel," and Ansel didn't even hear me.
He was just laying there. I said, "Hey!" and he jumped a foot, near
about. He was a million miles away.'
James
was making soup out of his ice cream. He had it down to a sort of pulpy mess
now, the way he liked it, and then he looked up and saw Maisie wrinkling her
nose at it. He stopped stirring and took his first bite. 'Ansel's a great one
for day-dreaming,' he said with his mouth full.
'He
wasn't daydreaming.'
'Oh.'
'He
was crying, near about.'
'Ansel?'
'Well,
almost,' said Maisie. She sat forward, with the ice cream still untasted in her
hand. 'I said, "Ansel, what's the matter?" But he never did
say. His eyes were all blurry.'
'You
got to remember Janie Rose,' James said. 'It was only three days ago.'
'Well,
I thought of that. But then I thought, no, Janie wasn't all that much to him.
She was right bothersome, as a matter of fact. We had her over for supper just
a month ago, her and her family; we gave them chicken. Mama forgot about Janie
being vegetarian. Janie said, "This chicken's dead," and her
daddy said. "Well, I hope so," and everybody laughed, but
Mama's feelings were a little hurt. Though she went to the funeral and all, just like anyone else. I said, "Ansel,
is that what's bothering you? Janie Rose Pike being
taken?" But the way he was acting, I don't think that was the real
reason.'
'His
feet hurt him sometimes,' said James.
'This
is serious, James.'
'I'm
being serious.'
'Anyway,'
Maisie sighed, and she took the first mouthful of her ice cream. It bothered
him,-the way she ate it; she chewed, slowly and carefully, even though the ice
cream was nothing but liquid now. When she had swallowed, she said, 'All he
would talk about was dying. He said he could see how it would all turn out;
they would mourn him like they mourn Janie Rose, not sad he died but sorry they
hadn't liked him more. He'd rather they be sad he died, he said.'
'Oh,
now,' said James. 'He's been on that for days. It'll pass.'
'Will
you listen? I can't hardly sleep nights, for thinking
about it. I keep wondering if he's all right.'
'Of
course he's all right,' James said.
But
Maisie was still hunching over, frowning into space. Her ice cream was forgotten.
A child ran by, chased by another child, grabbing Maisie's knee for support as
he pivoted past her, and Maisie only brushed his hand away absent-mindedly.
'Those times he goes away,' she said finally, 'those times he starts to get
better and then goes off drinking for a night and can't be found till morning.
He'll die of it.'
'He
won't die,' said James. 'He could lead a life like any other man, if he wasn't
so scared of needles.'
'He
might die,' Maisie said. 'What if one of those nights of his, he don't come back?'
But
James was getting tired of this. 'Look,' he said firmly. He swallowed the last
of his ice cream and said, 'Ansel only goes so far, you notice. Only enough to worry people. You ever thought of that?'
'What?
Well, if that isn't the coldest thing. How do you know how far he'll
go?'
'I
just do,' James said. 'I been through this.'
'Can
you say for sure how far he'll go?'
'I been through it hundreds of times.'
'I
believe you don't even give it a thought,' said Maisie. 'That's what Ansel said.
'He said, "What does James care -'
'Well,
we've got to be clearheaded about this,' James said.
'You're
clearheaded, all right.' She jabbed her spoon into her ice cream and left it
there, standing straight up in the middle of the cup.' "What does James
care," he said, and then just lay there with his eyes all blurry -'
'I
do everything I can think of,' said James.
'Oh,
foot.'
'I
try everything I know.'
'Then
tell me this, if you do so much all-fired good. Can
you say that never, never once in all your life, have you thought about Ansel's
going off and letting you be someday?'
'Well,
for-'
'Never
thought how nice it would be to live on your own for a change, just one little
old TV dinner to pop into the -'
'I
try everything I know!' James shouted, and then noticed how loud
his voice was and lowered it. 'I mean -'
But
Maisie just folded in the rim of her
In
front of him some children were playing statues. An out-of-town boy was
flinging the others by one arm and then crying, 'Hold!' so that they had to
freeze there, and when he came to Janice Hammond, who was the littlest, he
swung her around so hard that she spun halfway across the lawn and landed
against Mrs Hammond, who was heading over toward James. 'Hold!' the boy said.
Mrs Hammond looked down at Janice, who was clutching her around the middle. She
said, 'Oh, Janice,' tiredly, and was about to pull away, but the other
children stopped her. 'No, Janice has got to stay that way,' said the
out-of-town boy, and Mrs Hammond seemed too tired to argue. She stood still,
rising above Janice's circled arms like the figure of someone passively
drowning, and called out, 'James, we're ready with Aunt Hattie.'
'Where
is she?' he asked.
'Over
there. Standing up. We wanted her to sit but she says
no, she'll do it standing. Die with her boots on. She doesn't like cameras.'
She came to life suddenly and disentangled herself from Janice, ignoring the
other children's protests. 'She's fading,' she said. James looked over at
Janice, surprised, and Mrs Hammond caught his look and shook her head. 'Aunt
Hattie, I mean,' she said. 'Just fading away.'
'I'm
sorry to hear that,' said James. He gathered up his equipment and came after
her. 'She looked all right to me.'
'Well,
she fades out and then in again.'
They
circled a little group of women, all standing in identical positions with
folded arms while they watched the children playing statues. 'I don't like
doing this if she don't want me to,' James called.
'Some people just have an allergy to cameras.'
But
Mrs Hammond smiled brightly at him over her shoulder and kept walking. Out here
on the grass the sun was still hot, and the back of Mrs Hammond's powdered neck
glistened faintly. She had the same brittle little bones as her niece Maisie,
only covered now with a solid layer of flesh. James looked away from her and
shifted his equipment to the other shoulder. 'Right here would be a good
place,' he said. He hadn't really looked around; he just wanted to stop and not
do anything any more. The heaviness inside was weighing him down. He set the
camera on its tripod and then leaned on it, with his chin propped on his hand,
and Mrs Hammond said, 'You all right?'
'I'm
fine.' James said.
'You
look kind of tired.'
He
straightened up and tucked his shirt in. There was Great-Aunt Hattie, only a
few yards away now, being led gingerly by Mrs Hammond. Aunt Hattie looked
neither to the right nor to the left: she seemed to be pretending Mrs Hammond
wasn't there. The closer they got to the camera, the farther away her eyes
grew.
'Right
here would be a good place,' said Mrs Hammond. 'Don't you think so, James? In front of the roses?'
'Fine,'
James said. He had started adjusting his camera and wasn't really looking now.
But when he raised his eyes again he saw that the old woman had been placed
directly in front of a circular flower bed; she seemed to be rising from the
middle of it, like an intricately sculptured garden decoration. James smiled.
'I've changed my mind,' he said. 'I don't think she should have those flowers
behind her.'
'They're
so pretty, though,' Mrs Hammond said sadly.
'Well.
But I think she should have just grass behind her. You mind moving over, Miss
Hattie?'
'I
have just one thing to say,' Miss Hattie said suddenly.
'Ma'am?'
'Don't
push me. You can tell me where to go, but don't push me around.'
'Oh,
I won't,' said James.
'The
last time I had my picture taken -'
'I
think he wants you to move over," Mrs Hammond said. 'Could you step this
way, dear?'
The
aunt stepped stiffly, jerking her chin up. 'I was saying, Connie, 'she said,
'the last man that took my picture was in need of an anatomy lesson. I
told him so. He came right up to me and pushed my face sideways but my
shoulders full-front, and my knees sideways but my feet full-front, so I swear,
I felt like something on an Egyptian wall. You should have seen the photograph.
Well, I don't have to tell you how it looked. I said -'
'If
I were you I'd let my beads show,' said Mrs Hammond. 'They're such nice ones.'
'Well,
just for that I won't,' snapped Aunt Hattie. She raised her hands, heavy with
old rings, and fumbled at the neck of her crepe dress until she had closed it
high around her throat, hiding the beads from sight. 'Now no one can see
them,' she said, and Connie Hammond sighed and turned to James with her hands
spread hopelessly.
'I
try and I try,' she told him, and he looked up from fiddling with his camera
and smiled.
'Why
don't you go on and see to the others,' he said, 'and I'll call you when I'm
through. I bet you haven't even had your ice cream yet.'
'No.
No, I've been so busy. Well, I might for just a minute, maybe -' She trailed
off across the yard, looking relieved, and the last part of her to fade away
was her voice, which still flowed on and on.
'She's
putting on weight, don't you think?' Aunt Hattie asked.
James
had the camera ready now, but he was waiting because he wanted the picture to
be just right. He bent down and cleared away a dandelion from one of the tripod
legs, and then over his shoulder he called. 'You comfortable
like that? Don't want to sit down?'
'No.
I'll stand.'
Connie
Hammond wouldn't like that, but James was glad. To him Aunt Hattie looked just
right this way -standing against a background of bare grass, holding her shoulders
high to hide the beads and jutting her chin out at him. She had terrified high
school students for forty years that way, back when she taught Latin I. People
still told tales about her. She had declined her nouns in a deafening roar and
slammed her yardstick against her desk on the ending of every verb. While
students could lead other teachers off their subjects just by asking how they'd
met their husbands, Miss Hattie had only strayed from Latin once a year, at
Christmastime, when she read aloud from a condensed version of Ben Hur. James
could picture that. He wished he had her in a classroom right now, to
photograph her the way she stood in his mind. But all he had was this wide
lawn, and he would have to make do with that. He stood there, pressing a dandelion
between his fingers and squinting across at her. 'That's right,' he told her.
'That's what I want.'
She
shifted her feet a little. 'How many prints you plan to make of this?' she
asked.
'Ma'am?'
'How many copies.'
'Oh.
As many as you want.'
'Well,
I want none,' she said. 'I'd like to request that you make the one
picture asked of you and have that be that.'
'Oh, now.'
'Connie
can have one, if she wants it so much. But that's because I don't like her.
Nothing she could do would make me like her; I just constitutionally
don't. Danny can't have one.'
'Danny
who?' he asked. 'Raise your chin a little, please.'
'Danny
Hammond. Is there anyone in this world whose last name isn't
'Danny
Hammond? Why, I saw him only last -'
'You
saw him. You saw him. But do you think I
do? They rush him away the moment I come around; he looks back over his
shoulder all bewildered. He's only seven.'
'Could
you turn more toward me?' asked James.
'They
think he insulted me last Valentine's Day.'
'Oh,
I don't think Danny would -'
'Made me a present. None of these easy-breaking things from the gift
shop. Made me a ceramic saltshaker in school, and it was the exact shape of my
head, with even the wrinkles painted in.'
'That's
nice,' said James.
'Do
you know where the salt came out?'
'Well,
no.'
'My nose. Ho, out of my nose. Two little holes punched for
nostrils, and out came the salt. Can you picture Connie's face?'
James
laughed. 'I sure can,' he said.
'Well,
of course she hadn't seen the thing, prior to my unwrapping it. She
thought it was a bobby-pin holder or something. She said, "Danny Hammond!"
and made a grab for it, but I was too quick for her. I meant to keep it;
it's not often I get such a personal present. But Connie rushed him off like I
would eat him and there I sat, all alone with my saltshaker. No
one to thank.'
'Maybe
you could -'
'I
still use it, though.'
'Ma'am?'
"The saltshaker. I use it daily.'
'Well,
I would too,' said James.
'Then
you see why he shouldn't have my picture.'
That
stumped him; he had to consider a minute. (If Miss Hattie Hammond was fading
out, should he not just let it pass and agree with her?) But Miss Hattie seemed
the same to him as ever, as sharp as a rock against the green of the lawn 'I
don't see what you mean,' he said.
'Ah
well.'
'I
don't understand what pictures have got to do with it.'
'Not
much,' she said. 'But they're photographing me because I'm old, you know. They
think I'm dying. (I'm not.) They think they'll have something to remember me
by. But pictures are merely one way, Mr Green. Should a person that I like have
a picture of me?'
'I
wouldn't let it worry me,' said James. 'I find no one ever looks at pictures
anyway, once they get hold of them.-'
‘I
don't want Danny remembering just a picture. Remembering something flat and of
one tone. What is ever all one way?'
'Well,'
James said. He frowned down at his fingers, sticky now with dandelion mild.
'Well, plenty of-'
'Photographs,'
said Miss Hattie, 'are the only thing. Don't interrupt. Everything else is a
mingling of things. Photographers don't agree, of course. Why else would they
take pictures? Press everything flat on little squares of paper - well, that's
all right. But not for people that' you'd like to stay interested in
you. Not for Danny Hammond.'
'Now,
wait a minute,' said James, but Miss Hattie held up her hand.
'I
already know,' she said. ‘I know photographers.'
James
grinned and bent over his camera again. 'As far as things that're all one way,'
he called. 'I can name -'
'No.
Not a thing, not a person, Mr Green. Take your picture.'
He
gave up. Through the frame of his view-finder he saw her standing just the way
he wanted her, old-fashioned-looking and symmetrical, with her hands across her
stomach and her mouth tight. Her face was like a turtle's face, long and
droopy. It had the same hooded eyes and the same tenacious expression, as if
she had lived for centuries and was certain of living much longer. Yet just in
that instant, just as his hand tightened on the camera and his eyes relaxed at
seeing the picture the way he had planned it, something else swam into his
mind. He thought of Miss Hattie coughing, in the centre of that family reunion
- not defiant then but very soft and mumbling, telling them all she was sorry.
He frowned and raised his head.
'Well?'
said Miss Hattie.
'Nothing,'
James said.
He
bent down again, and sighted up the haughty old turtle-face before him and
snapped the picture. For a minute he stayed in that position; then he
straightened up. 'I'm done,' he said.
'I
should hope so.'
'I'll
get one copy made, for Mrs Hammond.'
'I'm
going in then. I'm tired.'
'All
right,' he said. 'Goodbye, Miss Hattie.'
'Goodbye.'
She
nodded once, sharply, and turned to go, and James watched after her as long as
she was in sight. Then he stared down at his camera. Just to his right Connie
Hammond materialized - he caught a fold of lace out of the corner of his eye -
but he didn't look at her.
'Well,
now!' Mrs Hammond said brightly. She was out of breath and looked anxious. She
came around in front of him and went to stand where Miss Hattie had stood, with
her eyes intent on the ground, as if by tracking down the print of Miss
Hattie's Wedgies she could suddenly come to some understanding of her. 'I'm
sure it'll come out good,' she called over her shoulder.
'Well’
'What's
that?'
'Yes,
I'm sure it will,' James said. He folded up his tripod and gathered the rest of
his equipment together. 'I'm leaving now,' he told her.
'Oh,
are you?'
'I'll
have the pictures ready in a day or two.'
'That'll
be fine,' said Mrs Hammond. But she was still staring at the ground and looking
anxious; she didn't turn around to say goodbye.
James's
pickup truck was parked on the road at the edge of the lawn. He circled around
the children, being careful to stay clear of the ones playing statues. Their
game was growing rougher now. Little Janice Hammond was frozen in the exact
stance of a baseball pitcher, her right arm drawn back nearly out of joint, and
even her face was frozen - she was grimacing wildly, showing an entire set of
braces on her teeth. But she unfroze just as James passed her; she shook out
her arms and smiled at him and he smiled back.
'I
want to come out pretty in them pictures,' she said. 'You see what you
can do about it.'
'I'll
see.'
He
placed the camera on the leather seat of the pickup and then went around to the
driver's side and climbed in. It was like an oven inside. First he started up
the motor and then he rolled down his window, and while he was doing that he
caught sight of Maisie Hammond. She was standing high up on the lawn, waving
hard to him and smiling. He waved back. This time when the heavy feeling hit
his stomach he didn't shrug it off; he sat turning it over in his mind, letting
the motor idle. As long as he sat there, Maisie went on waving. And when he had
shifted into first and rolled on down to the bottom of the hill, he looked in
the rear-view mirror and saw her still waving after him. He thought suddenly
that she must be having two feelings at once - half one way and half another. Half angry at him, and half sorry because she had told him so.
And now she had to keep on waving.
He
looked down beside him at the camera, where Miss Hattie was so securely boxed
now in her single stance. But the fields he drove through shimmered uncertainly
in the sunlight; the road was misted with dust, and he was driving home now not
knowing if he wanted to go there or not, not knowing for sure what he thought
about anyone. All he could do was put the heavy feeling out of his mind, and
let only the road and the fields alongside it occupy his thoughts.
4
That
Sunday, Joan began thinking about Simon's hair. She started out by saying,
'Simon, tomorrow morning first thing I want to find you in that barber's
chair,' but Simon said, 'Aw, Joan, I don't want to go downtown.' Since that
movie yesterday he had changed his mind about town; he hadn't even asked to eat
in a restaurant today, and Joan could see his point. Going downtown meant
people murmuring over him and patting his head, asking Joan in whispers, 'How
is he taking it? Is his mother coming out of it?' while Simon stood right next
to them, his chin tilted defiantly and his eyes on their faces. Little boys who
were usually his friends circled him widely, looking back over their shoulders
in curious, half-scared glances. They had never seen someone that close to
funerals before, not someone their own age. When Simon and Joan were coming out
of the movie theatre a member of Mrs Pike's church had stopped smack in front
of them and said to her friend, 'Oh, that poor little boy!' Her voice had rung
out clearly and hung in the air above them, making other people stop and stare
while Simon pulled on Joan's hand to rush her home. She could understand it if
he never went downtown again.
So
instead of insisting, she said, 'Well, all right. But we've got to cut your
hair at home then. Today.'
'It's
not so long,' he said.
'Curls down over your ears.'
'Well,
we've got nothing to cut it with.'
'Scissors,'
Joan reminded him. 'Your mother's sewing scissors. Anything.'
'Okay.
Tomorrow, then,' said Simon. 'Bright and early.'
'Tomorrow's
a tobacco day; I won't be here. You know that.'
'Other
boys have hair lots
longer.'
. 'Orphans do,' said Joan. 'Will you fetch the
scissors?'
He
slid off the couch, grumbling a little, and went for his mother's sewing basket.
It sat in one corner of the living room, gathering dust, odds and ends of other
people's clothing poking out of it every which-way. (Mrs Pike was a seamstress;
she made clothes for most of the women in Larksville.) The materials on the top
Simon threw to the floor, making a huge untidy pile beside the basket, and he
rummaged along the bottom until he brought up a large pair of scissors. 'These
them?' he asked, and walked away from the basket with that heap of material
still lying beside it. Joan let the mess stay there. She followed Simon into
the kitchen, a few steps behind him, with her eyes on the back of his head.
Where it had been pressed against the couch his hair was as matted as a bird's
nest. It would take a sickle to cut all that off.
In
the kitchen she found an apron and tied it around his neck, to keep the hair
from tickling, and then she had him sit on the high wooden stool beside the
kitchen table. He revolved on it slowly, making the seat of it squeak, while
Joan looked him over and debated where to start. 'I don't know where you got
all that hair,' she told him. 'When was the last time you went to the
barber's?'
'I
don't know.'
'It
couldn't have been all that long ago.'
'You
sure you know how to cut hair?' Simon asked.
'Of
course I do.'
'Whose
have you cut?'
'Well,
my own,' Joan said.
He
stopped revolving and looked at her hairdo. 'It's a little choppy at the ends,'
he told her.
'It's
supposed to be.'
'Will
mine come out like that?'
'I
surely hope not.'
'If
it does, what will we -'
'Now,
Simon,' Joan said, 'I don't want to hear any more about it. Let's just get it
over with.'
He
sighed then and gave in, but with his shoulders squinched up and his neck drawn
into itself as if he thought she might slip and cut
his head off. His hair grew in layers, lapping downwards like hay on a
haystack. When Joan cut too much from one of the sun-yellowed upper layers it
sprang straight up, choppy and jagged-edged, and she quickly pressed it down
again and shot a look at Simon to see if he had noticed. He hadn't. He sat
slumped on the stool, idly swinging one boot and gazing out of the window. The
only sound now was the steady snipping of scissors.
Out
in the back yard Joan could see her uncle - just his head and his crumpled blue
shirt. He was tilting back on an old kitchen chair in the sunshine, with one
hand resting absently on Nellie's neck. That was the way he had been sitting
all day. When Joan called him for his meals he came in docilely and ate
everything set before him, and then he went out back again. Twice he had gone
upstairs to see his wife, but that had taken only a minute; he must have given
up trying to talk to her. Even Joan had given up. When she went to her aunt's
bedroom, to where she was lying on her back with the covers pulled up around her,
and asked her to come down for a bite to eat, her aunt only said, 'No,' and
closed her eyes. Saying that one word seemed to take all the strength she could
muster; Joan didn't dare argue with her. In the back of her mind she kept
trying to think up little plots, planning ways to get her aunt interested in
something, but she wasn't the kind of person who could do that.
The
most she could do was try and take care of the house
for a while, and feed Mr Pike and Simon. Even that was hard; she had never learned
how to keep house.
The
top part of Simon's hair was cut now. She squinted at it, not sure if this was
how it was supposed to be or not. It seemed a little homemade-looking. But then
she shrugged and began on the shaggy part along the back of his neck. She could
always even it up later on.
Outside,
Ansel called, 'Is anybody home?' His voice was thin and wavered in the wind.
Simon gave a sudden start and turned his head, so that Joan nearly gouged him
in the neck. 'Hold still, Simon,' she said, and Ansel called again, 'Is
anybody home?'
'It's
him, 'Simon said.
'Who
do you mean? It's Ansel.'
'I
know. It's him.'
'Just
stop wiggling,' said Joan. She raised her voice and called out, 'We're out
here, Ansel.'
'Out
where?'
'Out
here.'
'Well,
is someone going to come and let me in?'
'It's
not locked,' Joan said, and returned to her cutting. She didn't like Ansel and
had never pretended to; he could open his own doors. When he came ambling out
to the kitchen, walking in that shuffling way of his and stooping to get
through the doorway, she didn't even turn around to look at him. 'How are you,'
she said, making it a statement.
'Oh,
not so bad, I guess.'
Turn
a little to the left, Simon.'
'Hey,
Simon,' Ansel said.
Simon
frowned at his boots.
'Hey, boy.'
'He's
having his hair cut,' said Joan.
'Ah,
I see. That makes it impossible for him to speak.'
'Will
you have a seat?'
'I
might,' he said. He pulled out one of the chairs from the table and sat down,
facing Joan and Simon. He was looking better than usual today. The yellowish
pallor of his face had faded and he sat nearly erect, with his arms folded
across his chest. When he saw Simon frowning at him he smiled his dippy smile
and said, 'What's the matter with the barber, boy?'
'What?'
'Barber
sick?'
But
Simon only shrugged and didn't answer. Joan said, 'I'm cutting his hair myself
this time.'
'I
see that.'
'I'm
using the sewing scissors.'
'I
see.'
That
seemed to leave nothing more to be said. Joan hesitated a minute, with the
scissors in mid air, and then she said, Turn around, Simon.'
'Are
we done?' Simon asked.
'Almost. I want to think what to do about the front part of it.'
'Where's
Mr and Mrs Pike?' said Ansel.
'Uncle
Roy's out back.'
'Where's
Mrs Pike?'
Joan
was frowning at Simon's hair, trying to figure out how to begin on that front
shock. Any way she managed it, it was almost sure to end up looking like bangs.
She snipped gingerly at one piece and held what she had cut off up to the light
to examine it. Then she said, 'Ansel, what're you here for?'
'Who, me?'
'Didn't
James tell you not to bother her? Where is James?'
'He's
taking pictures of the
'Didn't
he tell you not to come around here?'
'Well,
yes, he did,' Ansel said. 'He suggested that I not. But I was sitting
reading on the couch and it occurred to me: I thought I might just wander over
and see how you all are doing.'
'We're
doing fine,' said Joan. She snipped off another piece of hair.
'Joan,
you're ruining that boy.'
'It'll
turn out all right.'
'Well.
I was sitting reading a Guideposts,' Ansel
said, 'and after that two outdoor-type magazines, and then I read them again. I
would've read them a third time, if I hadn't come on over here. I read even the
smallest inch-long ads for worm farms; I read the list of editors at the front
and the entire information about the subscriptions. Then I thought I might come
and see you.'
'Simon,
maybe you better get a mirror,' Joan said. 'I'm not sure what you're going to
think of this.'
'Aw,
I don't care,' said Simon. 'Is it done?'
'You
go look in a mirror and see if it is.'
Simon
stood up and little rags of hair fell around him, spilling off the apron around
his neck. When he walked out of the room he trailed fuzz in a long path behind
him.
'He
won't thank you for this,' Ansel said.
'I
don't think it's so bad.'
Twice
before, I started to come,' Ansel said. 'I got up and headed for the door and
then I thought, "No." I cut my fingernails. I cleaned out my wallet.
Then I thought I might as well come over. I thought -'
When
he talked he had a way of leaning slightly forward and placing his fingertips
together, as if words came hard to him and he had to consider. Yet in reality
the words came flooding from him; it always made her feel swept away and
drowned, with so many useless words spilling around her. Sometimes she could
even get interested in what he said, but she never lost that drowned feeling.
While he talked she stood silently by the stool, keeping her face blank and
idly snipping at thin air with her scissors, but inside she was thinking. I wish
you would go. The pale thinness of his face irritated her. She thought
about all the long evenings of three long years, with James sitting next to her
on the porch and never taking one step forward, never asking for more than
tonight's kiss and tomorrow's date and never mentioning marriage or a family or
any of those other things she was sitting there waiting to hear. And the reason
for it all was Ansel, who hung limp and heavy in his brother's living room and
expected to die any day, although actually he was stronger than any of them. He
had that flood of words, after all, and that sad dippy smile, and that way of
placing his fingers together as if asking people to be patient while he fumbled
for what to say. 'I thought I would come offer
sympathy and then leave again,' he was saying, and Joan snapped, 'Well, you've
offered it. Are you leaving?'
'Huh?'
Ansel said. He looked up, bewildered. 'Joan, I ain't even seen your Aunt Lou
yet -'
Simon
came in, with his hair plastered down by water. 'It looks kind of like I
expected it to,' he said.
'You
don't like it?'
'Well,
yes. It'll grow out.'
'I
could trim it around the edges a little more,' Joan said.
'No,
that's all right. Thank you anyway.'
'Or
maybe tomorrow you could -'
'Hush!'
Ansel said. He sat up straight, listening, and when the other two turned toward
him he pointed at the ceiling. 'Footsteps,' he said.
It
was the slow, clapping sound of Mrs Pike's mules, crossing the upstairs
hallway. 'She's only going over to the bedroom,' Joan said, but then the sound
continued to the stairs, and Ansel said, 'She's coming down.' He stood up,
preparing to meet her. Joan reached out and touched his arm. 'Let her be,' she
said. 'Why don't you go home?'
'I
wanted to say hello.'
'Do
it some other time.'
'No,
I want-'
The
footsteps descended slowly, like a child's - both feet meeting on the same
step, then another hesitant step downwards. Joan left the kitchen, with a wave
of her hand toward Ansel to show that he should stay there. He did, which
surprised her a little. She crossed through the parlour alone and came to stand
at the bottom of the stairs, looking up. Her aunt had just barely reached the
halfway point. She was holding on to the railing and gazing steadily at Joan,
her face blank without its makeup, her dark yellow hair straggly and uncurled,
and her plump body wrapped in a chenille bathrobe. The greyness of her made her
blend into the dark stairwell. She said, 'Joan,' and her voice came out blurred
and grey also, without expression.
'What?'
Joan said.
But
her aunt didn't answer. She continued down the stairs laboriously, and when she
reached the bottom she would have gone straight into the kitchen except that
Joan took hold of her by one arm.
'Don't
you want to sit in the parlour a while?' she asked. 'I'll bring coffee.'
'No.'
'Ansel's
out there in the
kitchen.'
'No.'
Mrs
Pike went on walking, not pulling away from Joan but just walking off, so that
Joan had to drop her arm or follow her. She dropped it. Her aunt said, 'No,'
again, as if some new question had been raised, but Joan was trailing behind
her now in silence, frowning at Mrs Pike's back. Her back was soft and
shapeless, and folded in upon itself at the waist where her sash was tightened.
When she walked the hem of her robe fluttered out and Joan could see the
dinginess where it had dragged across the floor.
Ansel
was standing, ready to greet her. He said, 'Mrs Pike, I been waiting to see
you,' and Mrs Pike said, 'Ansel,' and crossed to one of the kitchen chairs. Over
by the window Simon stood with his back to her, his hands jammed awkwardly in
his pockets and his chopped-at, straggly head wearing a stiff and listening
look.
'I
only came to tell you how I feel,' Ansel said gently. Then I'll leave.'
'Where
is
'Out back. You want I should get him?'
'No.'
Mrs
Pike was sitting craned forward a little, with her hands on her stomach as if
it hurt her. After a minute Ansel sat down opposite her, but Joan remained
standing and Simon stayed by the window. Mrs Pike didn't look at any of them.
'I thought I would come downstairs a little,' she said.
'That's
the way,' said Ansel. 'You shouldn't sit alone.'
'I
wasn't sitting.'
'What
I actually came to say,' Ansel said, 'was how bad I feel about all this. That's
all I wanted to tell you. I told James, I said, "It's like the tragedy has
struck at our own lives. I know just how she feels," I said. I said -'
'No,
'said Mrs Pike.
'Ma'am?'
But
Mrs Pike only looked away then, toward the screen door. Behind her, Simon
picked up the cord of the paper window shade and began tying knots in it, small
tight knots running up and down the length of the cord.
'What
was you saying no for?' Ansel asked.
Mrs
Pike didn't answer.
'Was you saying I don't know how you feel? Mrs Pike, I
know how you feel better than you do yourself. I been
through this before.'
'Ansel,'
Joan said. 'You've offered your sympathy now. I think you'd better leave.'
'But
I've got so much I want to say to her -'
'I
came down to eat,' said Mrs Pike, 'but I don't think I will.'
Joan
turned away from Ansel and looked down at Mrs Pike. She said, 'Why, Aunt Lou,
there's all kinds of things to eat in the icebox. Everyone's been bringing
things.'
'No,'
her aunt said.
'I
know that when my mother died,' said Ansel, 'everyone kept trying to snap me
out of it. They said that mourning has never brought the dead back. But it's
only right to mourn; it's only natural. People have their faults but when
they're dead you mourn them, and you expect to be mourned yourself someday.'
'Janie
Rose didn't have no faults,' said Mrs Pike.
'No,
ma'am, of course she didn't. When my-'
'We
don't know how it might have turned out. She was a little chubby but not, you
know, really fat. She might have slimmed down some later on. I never said to
her she was fat. I don't know what she thought I said but really I
didn't. Never a word.'
'When
my mother died,' said Ansel, 'I thought of all the bad things I ever said about
her. I got in a real swivet about it. She was a fine woman, but scared of
everything. Wouldn't stand up against my father for us.
When some sort of crisis was going on she had a way of sort of humming
underneath her breath, slow and steady with no tune, and sewing away at
someone's overalls without looking up. My father was -'
Joan
came over and stood between Ansel and Mrs Pike, bending down low so as to make
her aunt look into her face. 'I want you to eat something, now,' she said.
'There's a stew. Would you like that?'
'No.'
'There's
a whole icebox of things.'
'No.'
'My
father was not what you'd call a man of heart,' said Ansel, placing his
fingertips together. 'Very strict. We always kept two
goats around the place, to eat off the underbrush -'
'Isn't
it funny,' Mrs Pike said, 'that no one sent roses. Roses are a very normal
flower, yet nobody sent them. Everything but, in fact.'
'It's
a little hot for good roses,' Joan said.
'In
the spring, when the goats had kids,' said Ansel, 'we would fatten them up for
eating. Only by the time they were fat they'd be good pets, and we would beg
for my father not to kill them. We would cry and make promises. But my mother
sat humming (though she loved those goats the best of all and had names for
every one of them) and my father always killed them. Only there was one thing
that made up for that -'
'Ansel,'
Joan said, 'Will you go home?'
'Wait
a minute. When my mother brought a roasted kid in, or any part of it, holding
it high on a wooden platter with potatoes around it, she always dropped it just
in the doorway between the kitchen and the dining room. It never failed. The meat on the floor, and the potatoes rolling about like marbles
and leaving little buttery paths behind them. "Pick it up," my
father always said, but she would begin talking about germs and never let us
eat it. I haven't yet tasted a piece of roasted goat. I think about that
often now; it makes up for that humming, almost. I'm sorry I ever -'
Someone
knocked on the front door. Joan said, 'Ansel, will you go see who that is?'
'Why,
Joan it's your house.'
'I
don't care; just go.'
'I'm
not well enough to go bobbing up and down for people,' said Ansel. But
he rose anyway, moving slowly like an old man and holding his chest. 'Who is
it?' he called.
'Is
that you, Ansel?'
It
was James, with his voice sounding loud and steady even though he was still
outside the house. Hearing him made Joan straighten up and feel suddenly more cheerful, and Simon turned around and let the window-shade
cord slip out of his hand. 'Ansel, what are you doing here?' James called.
'What're
you doing here?'
'I'm
looking for you. I been looking all over.'
James
had let himself in now, seeing that Ansel wasn't advancing to the door very
quickly. He crossed the parlour in long strides, and appeared in the kitchen
entrance with his hands on his hips.'
'I'm
taking you home for supper,' he told Ansel. 'I'm sorry about this, Mrs Pike.'
Mrs
Pike only gazed at him unblinkingly, without appearing to hear him. Joan said,
'I wish you would, James.'
'Come
on, Ansel.'
'Supper
in the afternoon?' asked Ansel.
'It's
getting on towards sunset.'
'Well,
I don't feel so good, James. I'm not hungry.'
'What's
the matter with you?' James asked.
'My
head is swimming.'
'You been resting enough?'
'Well,
yes. But after lunch this blackness started floating in, and then a little
later this, um -'
Joan
leaned back against the table, watching. She had never seen James actually listen
to all this before; it seemed strange, and she couldn't figure out why he
was doing it. The more James listened, the more Ansel's symptoms expanded and
grew in detail; even his face looked paler. But James kept on nodding, saying
'Hmmm,' every now and then. Finally he said, 'I'll put you in bed. You can have
your supper on a tray, if you want.'
'Oh,
I think I'll just stay here and -'
'It's
time to go, Ansel.'
Ansel
sighed and let himself be led toward the doorway by
one elbow. To Mrs Pike he called, 'I hope you're feeling better, ma'am. I'll be
back tomorrow, maybe, or the next day-'
'Come
on,' James said.
They stopped trying to be
graceful about it. James gave Ansel's arm a good tug and Joan followed close
behind, almost on Ansel's heels, to hurry him out. After her
came Simon, with his face looking small and curious under his ragged haircut.
Mrs Pike didn't go with them. She sat quietly in her chair, with her hands
still pressed to her stomach, and it wasn't until the others were all the way
into the parlour that she spoke.
Nobody
knows,' she said
distinctly.
Ansel
wheeled around, fighting off Joan's and James's hands, and shouted, 'What's that?'
Mrs
Pike didn't answer.
'Let's
go,' James said.
'I
just want to tell you,' Ansel shouted toward the kitchen, 'I know better than
you can imagine, Mrs Pike. You're just sorry now you weren't nicer to
her, but I know how it feels to really miss someone. I remember -'
Both
James and Joan stopped then, looking first at Ansel and then back toward the
kitchen. But all they heard was the creaking of a chair, as if Mrs Pike had
changed positions. And that seemed to show Ansel what they had been trying to
tell him all along: that Mrs Pike wasn't listening right now, and that nothing
he could say would do her any good or any harm. So he shrugged and let himself
be led the rest of the way out. When Joan stepped back a pace, indicating that
he should go first and that she was staying in the house, he nodded good-bye to
her gravely.
'One
thing I'd like to make clear, Joan,' he said. He was facing her squarely,
acting very formal and dignified. 'I do know,' he told her.
'All
right,' Joan said absentmindedly.
'I
remember how it feels. My memory's excellent.'
'I
believe you.'
'Clutters
my mind at night, it's so excellent.'
James
pulled him gently.
'When
I want to sleep, it does. Clutters my mind.'
'All
right, Ansel,' James said.
He
led him on out to the porch. When he passed Joan she could smell the smoky,
outdoors smell of James and he bent closer to her and said, 'If you need
anything, I want you to tell me.'
'I
will.'
'And
when you can get away, come over and see us.'
'I
will.'
She
stood in the doorway with her hand on Simon's shoulder and watched after them -
Ansel tall and thin and leaning against James, who was solider and could bear
his weight. She heard Ansel say, 'Right through my temples it is, James. A sort of spindle of dizzy-feeling, right through my temples.
James
said, 'We'll lie you down. You feel tired?'
'Naw. I was thinking-'
'You
sure now,' James said.
'Huh?'
'I
want you to tell me.'
‘Tell
you what?' Ansel asked.
But
James didn't answer that. And Joan, listening with a frown because it was so
strange to her, felt suddenly lost and uncertain. She retreated into the
parlour again, letting the screen door swing slowly shut behind her. But there
was no one to listen to what was bothering her. Only Mrs
Pike, staring at the wall in the kitchen, and Simon beside her with his funny
new haircut.
5
'Now,
I can have my ideas,' said
Joan
sighed and handed her the next bunch of tobacco leaves. It was Monday
afternoon, late in the day but hot, and even here
under the shade of the pecan trees she could feel the sweat trickling down
between her shoulder blades. Beside her stood three other women - two handing
to Mrs Hall, who was the fastest tobacco-tier in the county, and the other
helping Joan do the handing to
'What
it is,' she called down the table to Mrs Hall, 'I bind across the stick.
You bind on the same side, and I declare I don't see how. With Miss Joan on the
left, I take her leaves and bind them on the right, and backwards from that
with Lily. You follow my meaning?'
'Yes,
and I think it's just as inefficient,' Mrs Hall said. She stopped her
tying to brush a piece of wispy blonde hair off her face. 'That's three inches
wasted motion every bunch you tied
'Ha.
Fast as I move, who cares about three inches.'
'It
adds up. You see if it don't.’
'Ha.'
She
yanked Joan's bunch from her and lashed it to the rod. That finished up the stick;
it looked now like one long chain of hanging green leaves, with the rod itself
hidden from sight by the thick stems that stuck up on either side. 'You!' she
said without looking, and Jimmy Terry raised himself from the side of the barn
and set down his Coke bottle. By the time he had ambled over to
'Well,
so far, 'Joan said.
'Good.
Now, what started me on that - well, I do say. Took you long
enough.'
She
was looking off toward the dirt driveway, where the men were just coming with
the mule. 'Behind the mule was a huge wooden sled piled high with tobacco
leaves, and it must have been heavy because the mule was objecting. He had
stopped trying and began to amuse himself by blowing through his nose at the
flies circling his head, and when Mr Terry slapped his back he only switched
his tail and gave an extra hard wheeze through his nose. Mr Terry pulled out a
bandanna and wiped his face.
'You
stop that and bring him here,'
'Well,
I wouldn't want that,' Mr Terry said, but he went on wiping his face
with his back to the mule. He was an easygoing man; it was a wonder to the
whole countryside how he ever got his tobacco in. Behind the sled was James
Green, filling in for the day because Mr Pike was at home with his wife, and he
wasn't doing anything about the mule either. His face was dark from the sun and
glistening, and his hair hung in a wet mop over his forehead. When he saw Joan
he grinned and waved, but he didn't look as if he gave a hang whether that mule
ever moved, so
'I
never,' she said, and circled the long picnic table where the women were
standing and headed for the mule. 'Jefferson, you no-good, you,' she told the
mule, 'you going to keep us waiting all day?'
'That's
not
'I
don't care who he is.' She reached up and grabbed the mule by one long ear, as
if he were a little boy, and pulled in the direction of the table. The mule
followed, sighing sadly. 'In the end, it's the women that work,'
'I
wish it was
'He sick?'
'Nah. Dead.'
'That's
why this one is doddering around so, then. They know,
them mules.'
'Mr
Graves shot him down,' Mr Terry said. He and James were both at work now,
lifting armloads of leaves from the sled and carrying them over to the table.
'He says he has the right, because
'Nah,
that ain't so. Only if
'Oh, no.'
'Well,
you go on and sue then. Go on and do it.'
'Well,'
Mr Terry said. He took the mule and turned him around, and when he slapped him
this time the mule headed back toward the fields with the empty sled skittering
behind him. 'We'll let Saul take care of him,' Mr Terry told James. To the
women at the table he called, 'That was the last load, there. Me and the men are going to cut out and have a beer up at
the house.'
'Don't
you give Lem more than one,'
'You
know how he gets.'
'Well.'
He
headed towards the house, wiping his face again with the bandanna, and James
turned and said, 'You yell when you're ready to go, Joan.'
'All
right,' Joan said.
When
the men had left there was a different feeling in the air, blanker and stiller.
The smell of sweat and mule and hot sun had drifted away, and for a minute the
women just stood looking after them with their faces expressionless. Then
"That
James stays out in the sun much more, he's going to change races,'
'I
guess he might,' Joan said.
'He's
a good man. Though a bit too quiet - don't let things show through.'
'No.'
The
others looked up. Joan said, 'Oh . . . from around here he says.'
'Well,
so are we all,' said
'He
doesn't talk much about it.'
'That's
kind of
peculiar,' Mrs Hall called. 'You ever asked him?'
'He's
not wanted or nothing, is he?' said
'No.'
'You
never know. I'd been married two and a half years before I found out Lem had
been married before. Mad? I tell you-'
'If
I were you I'd ask him.' Mrs Hall said.
'Well,
I did,' said Joan. She was beginning to feel uncomfortable. 'He told me
where he was from but it was just an ordinary town, like Larksville -'
Then
why don't he say so?'
'Well,
you know Ansel,' Joan said.
'There's
an odd one.'
'He
doesn't like for James to talk about it. He's afraid James'll send him back.'
'Good
thing if he did,' said Mrs Hall. 'You ever been invited to meet their family?'
'Well,
no.'
They
had some kind of falling-out,'
'Maisie
Hammond don't know beans,'
'If
I was you, Joan,' said Mrs Hall, 'I'd just march right up and ask him. I'd say,
"James, will you take me to meet your family?" Just like that, I'd
ask.'
'No,'
Joan said.
They
went on watching her, waiting for her to say more, but she didn't. She
concentrated on grouping the leaves together by the stems, a small cluster at a
time, so that they lay flat against each other, and then she held them out to
'Well,
not disrespect,' Mrs Hall called across. 'Not that, exactly.
But I see Lou's point, I wouldn't have come today, Joan. I don't mind telling you.'
'What
would I do at home?' Joan asked. 'Sit?'
'Exactly
what led me to my discussion,' said
'You
could have stayed around and helped out,' Mrs Hall said. 'Made
tea and things. A person needs company at a time like this. And James
there, why, he is very close to being Janie's
cousin-in-law, or once removed, or whatever you call it -'
Once
again they all looked at Joan, but she went on grouping leaves and they sighed
and turned back to the table.
'Anyway,'
said Mrs Hall,
'with his own brother on the verge of-'
'Well,
this is sort of pointless,' Joan said. 'You just think one way, and me another.
I don't think she wants any more than her own husband there, and that's what
she's got. And Simon too, if she wants him.'
'Ain't
that a funny thing,' Lily said suddenly. 'Up to last week, it was Janie Rose
she never paid no attention to -'
'You
hush,'
'Well,
I know that. Now, won't it Simon she used to brag on all the time? Won't it
Simon that was spoiled so rotten he-'
'Hush.'
'My
feet are killing me,' said Mrs Hall.
Her
second hander, the pale one named Josephine, looked down at Mrs Hall's feet and
gave one of them a gentle kick with the toe of her sneaker. 'With me it's
sneakers or barefoot,' she said. 'What you wearing leather shoes for?'
'Because I'm older than you. I have to look decent.' She
snapped off her twine and turned to the barn. 'Boy!' she called.
'Will
you look?' said
Lily
handed her the next bunch and then stretched, raising her thin black arms an
enormous length above her head. To show her disapproval
'Won't
help you if it is,' called Mrs Hall, 'so long as you've still got leaves on
your table.'
'Well,
I can't help it if they loaded the most leaves on me.' She pulled her strap up
again and took the end of the twine away from Joan. 'I was saying something,'
she said. 'I have that fidgety feeling, like I wasn't finished.'
'Sitting,'
Joan reminded her.
'Sitting?
Oh, sitting. My Lord, how long I been on that? Well, anyway.' She
snapped her fingers at Lily, who was gazing open-mouthed at a pecan tree, and
Lily jumped and handed her another bunch of leaves. 'Originally,'
'Working?' Lily said, 'I
didn't know Mrs Pike worked.'
'Will
you hush?'
'Well,
yes,' said Joan. 'You're saying this would snap her out of it. But being a
seamstress is like working in a beauty shop - you have to carry on a
conversation. And Aunt Lou just isn't capable right now.'
'Of
course not,' said Mrs Hall. 'Why, she just don't
have the heart to do that. Will you look at you people?'
'I
got the answer,' Mrs Hall's first hander called. 'I don't see why you are all
worrying.' She kept on handing as she spoke, thrusting
precisely neat bunches at Mrs Hall with lightning speed. 'It's like when you've
been sick,' she said. 'They have to walk you around by the elbow a while. Well,
Mrs Pike needs to be walked around too, only in the talking sense. Joan here
only works every other day; she can spare the time. She can greet the customers
and tell them the news and all, so's they won't even notice how quiet Mrs Pike
is. Then by and by Mrs Pike'll start to get interested in what Joan is talking
about. She'll begin uncurling and saying a few words herself.
That's why she was such a favourite before, Mrs Pike was; she could talk up a
storm.'
'Silly yourself,' Charleen muttered, and bent closer over
her pile of leaves.
'Mrs
Pike's no worse than my sister Mary was,' said Mrs Hall. 'When Mary's oldest
died she sat on the porch seven days and seven nights and it rained on her. I
thought she'd mold, before we got her in again. Mrs Pike is at least
talking some.'
'Not
much,' Josephine said. She was scraping tobacco gum off her hands with a nail
file while Mrs Hall tied a knot at the end of her stick. 'I went up to her at
the burying and, "Mrs Pike," I said. "I surely am sorry."
And you know what she said? She said, "This is where Simon's bedroom was
going to be." I tell you, it scared me.'
'Well,
they were going to build a house there,' Mrs Hall said. She slammed another
stick in the stand. 'I say they should have put Janie Rose by the church, but
that's an individual matter.'
'Yes'm.'
'Well,
come on and get it.'
Joan
and Lily leaned back against the table, half sitting on it, and
'Well,
I'm sure I don't know,' Lily said.
'Hush.
Wait, now - oh.' She stopped fanning herself, clamped her hat on her head
again, and bent for another rod. 'Stop that standing around,' she commanded.
'Charleen, I take it back.'
'What?'
'What
I said. I take it back. You only half silly.'
'Oh,
why, thank you.'
'Only
half as silly as you look. Stand up straight, Lily, you're a mess. What's that
all over your hands?'
'It's
tobacco gum, what you think?'
'Oh.'
She snapped off her length of twine, with Mrs Hall watching closely, and
reached for Joan's leaves. 'I'm a little vague, but I'm thinking,' she said.
Then she frowned into space for a while. Finally she said, 'Growing old surely
do damage a person.'
'Well,
is that what you've been getting ready to say?' Mrs Hall asked
irritably.
'Oh
no,'
'You
were talking about Aunt Lou,' Joan reminded her.
'Well,
I know I was. If you all would just let me -'
'Personally,'
said Mrs Hall, 'I think this is a lot of fuss for nothing. You think it's
something wrong if Mrs Pike sticks to herself a few days. Well, something is
wrong. Somebody died. And that's all I'm going to say.'
'It's
just as well,' said
'Why,
'You
said,'
Mrs
Hall sighed and turned her back, muttering something but not attempting to
argue any more, and
She
bent down and slapped a fly on her leg. 'Oh, you,' she said to the fly, and
then reached out for Joan's leaves. Joan was holding the leaves too high and
far away, and
'Anyhow,'
said
'Mrs
Pike,' Joan said.
'Mrs
Pike? Oh, her. Well, no, I was passing on to someone else. What's-his-name.
What's his name?'
'Mr Pike?'
Lily suggested.
'Just
hush. Though he's in this too, of course. No, just hush -Simon. That boy of theirs.
You know him, Joan?'
'He's
my cousin,' said Joan.
'Oh,
yes. Yes. Simon. Going to go to pieces if things go on this
way. Do you see now what I'm getting at?'
'Well,
no.'
'It's
as plain as the nose on - Boy? Come on, now, quit that poking. I'm saying it's Simon should be in her beauty shop with her.'
'In her-?'
'I
mean in her sewing shop. Look what you done now, got me all confused. Well,
that's who you want.'
'You
mean he should entertain the customers,' Joan said.
'That
was my point.'
'Well-'
'He's
the only one can help now. Not hot tea, not people circling round. Not even her own husband. Just her little boy.'
'I
don't see how,' said Joan.
She
snapped her twine tight and held it there while she watched Joan scrape up the last
of the leaves. 'I despise finishing the day on half a stick,' she said.
'Well,
I'll be,' said Charleen. She leaned back against the table,
shaking her head and watching Mrs Hall tie the end of her stick. 'I never. Was that what you did all this talking to
say?'
'It
was,' said
At
the other end of the table, Mrs Hall suddenly looked up. 'That's true,' she
said slowly, but when they turned toward her she only shook her head. 'That's
true,' she said again, and lifted her tobacco rod gently from its notches and
handed it to the waiting boy.
6
James
was halfway through his second beer before he saw Joan coming toward him. He
was sitting on Mr Terry's porch, leaning back against the side of the house in
a folding chair and lazily listening to the other men talking, and the beer can
was making a cold wet ring on his knee. There were four other men there, all
sitting just like he was in a line against the house. Maybe if Joan hadn't come
he would have sat with them till supper, just to rest up from the long day's
work and let the breeze dry his damp shirt. But then Mr Terry said, 'If you'll
look out yonder -' and James raised his eyes toward the fields and saw Joan
padding down the dirt driveway in tare feet with a sandal swinging from each
hand. 'Out yonder to the east is what I mean to cultivate year after next,' Mr
Terry went on. He had been saying that for as long as James had known him. 'I
aim to extend the alfalfa a bit. No sense in letting good
land grow wild, I say.' James only nodded, not really listening. He
squinted his eyes so as to see better -Joan was still far away - and watched
how she picked her way so quickly and gently along the dusty wheel-tracks. Her
head was bent, so that her hair fell forward and nearly hid her face. Way behind her were the other women, going in the opposite
direction toward town, and once they turned back and waved at Joan but she
didn't see them. The women bobbed on, farther and farther, until all that
showed of them was their bright dresses between the tobacco rows and two huge
black umbrellas shading Lily and
'I
also been thinking about the eight acres out back,' said Mr Terry. 'They're
Paul Hammond's, but he's not using them.'
'No,'
James said.
'You
listening?'
Joan
had reached the edge of the Terry's front yard. She crossed onto the grass,
sliding her feet a little as if she liked the coolness of it, and Mr Terry
stopped talking and the others sat forward and took their hats off.
'Hey,
Joan,' said Mr Terry.
'Hey.'
She stopped at the bottom of the steps and smiled up at them. 'Lem,' she said,
'
Lem
tipped back again in his chair, shaking his head. 'Must be a
mistake somewheres,' he said. His eyes were faraway and dreamy, and the
others laughed softly.
'Well,
anyway,' said Joan. 'I came to see if you're ready to go yet, James. Or do you
want to stay on a while.'
'No,
I'm ready.'
He
finished his beer in one gulp and stood up. Down at the end of the porch,
Howell Blake looked up from cleaning his fingernails with a pocket knife and
said, 'You coming tomorrow?'
'Depends
on Roy Pike, I guess. Looks like he'll be sitting with his
wife a while.'
'Well,
just so's one of you makes it,' said Mr Terry. 'You tell
'I
will.'
James
went down the steps toward Joan, and she switched one sandal to the other hand
so that he could take her free hand in his. Both of them were coated with
tobacco gum. The gum had lost its stickiness by now but it still clung to their
skin in heavy layers, so that it was like holding hands with rubber gloves on.
He kept hold of her anyway, and turned partway back to nod at the others. 'See
you tomorrow, I guess,' he said. 'I or Roy, one.'
'Okay.
So long.'
'So long.
They
crossed the yard together and then they were on the dirt driveway again,
heading toward the gravel road. When James looked down, he could see the dust
rising in little puffs around Joan's toes every time she took a step. Her toes
were gum-covered too, and the dust had stuck to them like a layer of sugar
frosting.
'I
have to have a bath,' Joan said, as if she had been following his eyes.'
'No.
I like you this way.'
'I'm
serious. You have to have one too, and then we can sit outside and cool off.'
'Okay,'
James said. He pulled her along faster, because he liked the idea of just the
two of them sitting out on the porch a while. But Joan slowed him down again.
'I
have to put on my sandals to walk fast,' she said. 'Do you want me to?'
'No,
that's all right.'
But
she bent down anyway, and James stood waiting while she slid her feet into the
sandals. She was wearing bermudas and a faded blue shirt with the tails out,
and when a breeze started up it ballooned out the back of her shirt and made
her look humpbacked. He put one hand on the hump. It vanished, pressed flat by
the weight of his hand, and he could feel the ripple of her back-bone through
the thin cloth of her shirt. It seemed to him he knew Joan's clothes by heart.
He could tell the seasons by them, and if she bought something new, he felt
uneasy and resentful toward it until it had become worn-looking. When spring
came he never really felt it until those old cotton shirts had come out again,
though for days he might have known about the bits of green on the trees and
the flowering Judas buds by the side of the road. He smiled down at Joan now
and she straightened up and looked at him, not knowing anything about what was
going on in his mind.
'What're
you thinking?' she asked him.
'Nothing.'
They
turned onto the gravel road, holding hands again. A station wagon drove past,
clanking and rattling as if it would fall apart before their eyes,
and Joan waved at whoever was driving but James didn't look up. He was
concentrating on the gravel beneath his feet, and on steering Joan into the
sandiest part of the road. Finally he said, 'I've got an idea.'
'What?'
'How
about coming over and cooking supper tonight? We could sit out and eat it on
the porch.'
'You
know I can't cook.'
'Well,
hot dogs is all right.'
He
dropped her hand and put his arm around her, so that he could feel her shoulder
moving against his rib cage as they walked. They were going very slowly now; he
had stopped caring if they never got anywhere at all. He would like to go on
down this road indefinitely, with everything around him shining and wearing a
clean, finished, end-of-the-day look. The sun picked things up slantwise, and
the fields were very still in between the gusts of breeze. When they rounded
the bend and their house appeared, long and shabby with its tin roof batting
the sunshine into their eyes, it seemed surprising and out of place. Both of
them slowed down still more to stare at it. Then Joan said, 'Well, I'll race
you home.'
'Now?'
'Come
on.'
She
started running, moving in bursts of uneven speed and letting her hands stay
open instead of doubling them into fists the way most people did. Beside her,
James ran at a slow easy pace because he didn't want to leave her behind. When
he ran like this he was scarcely breathing hard, but Joan was out of breath and
laughing. They reached the edge of the yard, and she stopped to tuck her shirt
tails in. 'You weren't even trying,' she told him. 'That was no race.'
But
he reached out for a tall blue spiky flower and presented it to her gravely, as
if she had won, and she accepted it.
'When
you coming over?' he asked.
'In an hour or so. I have to take a bath and see that the others
eat.'
'Can
you leave your aunt?'
'I'll
see how she is,' Joan said. She bent over suddenly and clapped her hands
together, with the stem of the flower between them. 'Hey, Nellie,' she said. 'That you?'
The
bushes beside the lawn rustled and the dog poked just her head out, her nose
pointed upwards. 'Where you been?' Joan asked her. She made little coaxing
motions with her hands. For a minute James watched, and then when it looked as
if Nellie would be a long time making up her mind to come he turned towards the
house.
'I'm
going on in,' he called.
'All right. Come on, Nellie.'
James
crossed the yard and climbed the steps at his end of the porch. In the seat of
Ansel's chair was a rumpled magazine, which he picked up to take inside with
him. 'I'm home, Ansel,' he said in the doorway. But Ansel didn't answer, and
his couch was bare. 'Hey, Ansel?'
On
the coffee table was Ansel's entire collection of sea-shells, all laid out
neatly with the hollow sides up. This must have been
one of his bored days, spent wandering aimlessly through the house with an
occasional pause to glance over some possession of his before he grew tired of
it and began wandering again. But he hadn't been flipping through James's
photographs, the way he usually did on those days. And he wasn't in the
kitchen, or up in his room. 'Ansel?' James called once
more, and his voice rang out into a waiting, ticking silence that worried him.
He
went outdoors again. Joan was still in the yard, sitting on her heels and
patting Nellie. When she saw James she said, 'You're supposed to be in the tub
by now,' but James only shook his head.
'I
can't find Ansel,' he said.
Joan
stood up then and came over to the porch. 'He's probably just gone visiting,'
she told him. 'Did you look for a note?'
'Ansel
don't leave
notes.'
'Well,
he'll be back.'
'I
don't know. I want you to check your aunt's for me; I don't like bothering
her.'
'All right.' She turned and made a kissing sound at Nellie, who danced
after her toward the porch. 'It's time for your supper,' Joan told her, and
then led her through the Pikes' door by snapping her fingers high above Nellie's
head. After they had disappeared into the house James stayed out on the porch,
waiting to see if Joan had found his brother. If she had, she would need help coaxing him out. He had a sudden clear
picture of Joan backing out the door again, snapping her fingers at Ansel to
lead him forward the way she had led Nellie. He smiled, and then relaxed and
swung one foot up onto the porch railing.
But
when Joan came she came alone. 'He's at the Potters',' she said, before James
could ask. 'Uncle Roy said he came calling, but Simon
wouldn't let him in. He went on to the Potters.'
'Well,
maybe I'll just check,' said James.
'Oh,
he's all right, James. What's got into you lately?'
'I
just want to make sure,' he told her. 'I wish you'd come with me. If I go alone
I'll never get out, once they start to talking.'
'Well,
all right.'
She
came over to stand beside him, and he knocked on the Potters' door. There was
no screen on it, because they didn't need one; they kept the inner door shut.
Summer and winter their part of the porch had a closed, unbreathing look, and
they had long ago paid James two dozen cinnamon buns for taking the baggy old
screen door off its hinges and carting it out back. When James knocked there
was first a faint movement of the paper shade - they had to make sure who it
was - and then there was the sound of two bolts sliding back. The door cracked
open; Miss Faye poked her round face out.
'Why,
James,' she said.
'Hello,
Miss Faye.'
'And Joan too. Both of you together. Joan,
honey, don't you look fresh and outdoorsy today. I was saying to Miss Lucy just
a -well, step on inside, step in.'
'Actually,'
James said, 'I just wanted to see if you had Ansel here.'
'Ansel?' She had the door wide open now, and was throwing back one
arm to show that they were welcome. James kept trying to peer past her, hoping
to see Ansel, but the way the Potters' house was arranged made it impossible.
They had set up a labyrinth of tall black folding screens with needlework
flowers on them, so that the house was divided into a dozen or more tiny rooms.
No matter how James craned his neck around Miss Faye, all he saw was the screen
behind her and more screens behind that. 'Oh, Ansel Miss Faye was saying.
'James, I worry about that boy. I was saying just a while ago; I said - are you
coming in? Don't stand outside; come on in.'
'We've
only got a minute,' Joan said gently. 'Is Ansel here?'
'Well,
let's see.' She stepped further back, leaving them the whole doorway to enter
through, and after a minute the two of them came in. Who could tell what might
be hidden in this maze of screens? The air was dark and stale, from being
separated into so many cubicles in a tightly closed house. And there was a
thick feeling to the walls that must have come from the heavy tapestries,
because every place else in this house was shell-thin. When they were inside,
Miss Faye shut the whole world behind them out; she said, 'Now,' and
slammed the door and slid the two locks into place. James frowned (it made him
uneasy, being locked in this way) but Joan only looked amused.
'You
were going to tell us if Ansel's here,' she reminded Miss Faye.
'Yes.
Yes, I was saying - Lucy? Lucy, are you coming to say hello?'
They
heard Miss Lucy's footsteps, sounding very faint and taking a long time to
weave in and out among the screens. First she came close and then went farther
away again, and suddenly she popped out right behind Miss Faye. She wore a huge
white apron with jokes about outdoor barbecues printed all over it.
'Lucy,
look who's here,' said Miss Faye.
'Well,
isn't this nice?' Miss Lucy came towards them with both hands outstretched,
making James wonder, just as he always did, what he was supposed to do when she
reached him - hug her? - but Joan saved the day by
stepping up and taking both Miss Lucy's hands in her own. 'You're looking just
as healthy,' Miss Lucy told her, and then gave a little giggle and shook
her tight cap of curls. 'We've had so much company today that I'm getting all
-'
'Well,
that's really what we came to talk about,' said James.
'Aren't
you going to sit down?'
'We
wanted to ask -'
'You
have to sit down.' She began backing around the first screen, still
holding Joan's hands. James glanced over at a puffy plush chair, with its
layers and layers of antimacassars, and then shook his head.
'I'm
sorry,' he said, 'but it looks like Ansel isn't here, and that's what we came
about.'
'Oh
yes. Yes, he was
here.'
'When?' James asked.
'At
'It
was
'That
was nearly two hours ago,' James said.
'No,
you're wrong, James.' 'Well, it's way past five.'
'Oh,
it was nearly two hours ago that he came, all right. But it was more
recently that he left, because he stayed to have a jam braid.'
'Well-'
'Also a glass of milk. I said, "Ansel, we've got to
get some meat on your bones." So did Miss Lucy. She said so too. Ansel
said, "Oh, Miss Faye, I just don't know." He was feeling sad.'
'What
about?' asked James.
'He
didn't say. Well, you know how he is. Some days the world is just too much for
him. That's how he put it. "Miss Faye," he said, "some days the
world is just too much for me." He told Lucy that too. "Miss
Lucy," he said, "some days the-"'
'Did
he say where he was going?'
'Why,
home, I reckon.'
'I
have to leave,' James said.
'Oh, now. You only just-'
'I'm
sorry, Miss Faye. Come on, Joan.'
He
reached the door before Miss Faye could, and he slid the bolts back himself, with
Miss Faye's hands fluttering anxiously above his. Then he shot out on the
porch, not even trying to be polite about it. Joan followed, but with her head
turned toward the Potters, her voice drifting back to them as she tried to
smooth everything over. 'I'm sorry we have to leave this way,' she said, 'but I
know you see how it is -' and the Potters made thin, sad little sound to show
that they did.
'Just
please come back,' Miss Faye told them, and James nodded tiredly and let the
door swing shut. The two bolts slid back into place.
When
they were outside again James just stood there, trying to think where to begin.
Joan didn't seem worried at all. She said, 'I got tobacco gum all over Miss
Lucy's hands.'
'That's
too bad,' James said absently.
'She
was staring at her hands all funny-like; that's how I noticed. Little bits of
black were sticking to them.'
James
turned around and looked at her. 'Will you listen?' he told her. 'I
can't find Ansel.'
'I'm
sorry, James.' She grew serious, and came over to stand beside him. 'He'll come
back,' she said.
'I
don't know.'
'He
always has before.'
'Well,
I just don't know,' James said. He knelt to tie his shoe and then stayed
that way, looking down the porch to see who might be coming along the road. No
one was in sight. 'We don't know what might have happened,' he said.
Joan
squatted down beside him and said, 'Well, he's come back every other time,
James.'
'You
already said that.'
'I
just meant -'
'I
know he comes back. I been through this a
hundred times. If I didn't even go looking for him, he'd come back. But I can't
be a hundred per cent sure of that.'
Down
the road came a red hen, strutting importantly, sticking her neck far out as if
she were heading someplace definite. As she walked she talked to herself, in
little conversational clucks. James and Joan watched after her until she had
disappeared.
'Somehow
I can't get what Maisie said off my mind,' James said finally. 'How would I
feel if just once he went too far? There'd be no one to blame but me, if that
happened.'
'Maisie who?' Joan asked.
'Maisie
Hammond.'
'Well,
if you did go after him, you know how it'd be. You ever seen Ansel
standing on a street corner waiting for you? He goes somewhere you'd never
think to look, James. You go up and down town all night searching for him,
waking every drinking man to ask him if he knows, and where does it get you? You always end up right here, waiting for him to decide
to come back.
'I
like to think I looked,' James said.
'I
know that.' She stood up again, and the cotton smell of her shirt floated past
him. 'I can see it better than you can,' she told him. 'I don't like him. I can
see easier than you how he will always come back.'
'You
can't see.'
'Look,'
Joan said. 'What's got into you? Things were getting better for a while. You
weren't fussing over him, and he had almost stopped wandering off. Why have you
started acting this way?'
He
stared down at her feet, long and dirty in sandals that had molded themselves
to the curl of her toes. Her feet made him so angry that he almost didn't
answer her. But then she looked down at him, with her face worried and unsure,
and he said, 'I don't know.'
'Well,
there's got to be some reason.'
'Will
you stop asking me that? You don't have a brother.'
'Maybe
not,' Joan said, 'but there is nothing I like or understand about you going to
look for Ansel all the time. If he wanted he could have done a full day's work
today, and been off at a dance right now.'
'No,
he couldn't.'
'Yes,
he could. He could be dancing and you and I could be going someplace. We could
be doing something. We could be someone besides an old familiar couple that'll
be courting when they're seventy and the town's fondest joke. Are you
listening?'
'No,
'James said.
He
got up off his knees and went down the porch steps. Bits of tobacco gum and
dust from the floorboards clung to the knees of his pants, but he didn't brush
them off. The sunset glowed red and dull across the roof of the pickup. 'Don't
bother fixing supper,' he called.
'I
wouldn't think of fixing supper.'
He
stopped and look back at her. She was standing at the
edge of the porch now, with her arms folded and her feet planted solidly apart.
'I wish you'd wear some real shoes once,' he said.
'What?'
'I'm
sick of those sandals.'
'Well,
I'm sick of everything,' Joan said.
Her
voice was flat now, and only sad-sounding. It made him look back at her one
more time, but by then she had turned away and was
walking down the porch. 'Joan?' he said. She went on walking, not answering.
From behind, her folded arms gave her a thin, round-shouldered look, and she
stepped in that gentle way she had, with her bare pointed heels rising and
falling delicately across the long grey porch.
7
At
night, when everyone was in bed, the house seemed to belong to one family
instead of three. The separate sleeping-sounds mingled and penetrated through
all the thin walls, and by now James could identify each sound exactly and
where it came from. He knew Miss Faye's snore, as curlicued and lacy as she
herself was, and the loud, honking sound that Mr Pike made. He knew Miss Lucy's
rat-a-tat on the walls, first on Mr Pike's wall when the snoring grew too noisy
and then on his own wall if he talked in his sleep. He thought it must be a thimble
she tapped with. Because there was a big room's width between his end of the
house and the Pikes' end, he wasn't sure of the softer sounds there - Simon's
snoring, for instance, or Mrs Pike's. And he had always wondered if Joan
snored. But he had heard Janie Rose's nightmares often enough. They came
through loud and clear, drifting up from the open window of her tacked-on
bedroom downstairs. "That's not something you should be doing,' she
would say reasonably. And then, 'Daddy, would you come quick?'
and the floundering thuds across the floor as Mr Pike began groping his way
toward her voice in the dark. But if Simon talked in his sleep, he must have
talked quietly. All James heard of him was in the morning, when they tried to
wake him and he bellowed out, 'Oh, fine, I'll be right there! I already
got my socks on. Ain't this some day?' -yet all the while sound asleep, and
just trying to fool people. Sometimes Mr Pike shouted too. He would have too
many beers on a Saturday night and throw all the pillows out the window.
'Ninety-nine point two per cent of all the people in the southern states die
of smothering,' he would roar to the night, and then Miss Lucy would rap on the
wall. Miss Lucy never slept at all; James was convinced of that. She spent her
time policing the area. On nights when Ansel was restless, when he tossed
around on his old wooden bed across the room from James (he wouldn't sleep in
the other bedroom, for fear of waking alone and finding his feet numb), and
when he kept calling, 'James, how long has the night been going on?' Miss
Lucy would tap very gently and ask if Ansel wanted her hot water bottle. 'No,
ma'am,' James always said, and Miss Lucy would go back to her quiet, patient
pacing. Sometimes James had a great urge to go see what she was wearing. He
pictured her in a twenty-pound quilted robe with lead weights at the bottom,
like the ones sewn into curtains, because it dragged so loudly across the floor
at every step she took. But once he had had a horrible nightmare, right after
eating two pizzas. He had shouted out, 'My God!' and awakened shaking,
with the terrible sound of his own shout still ringing in his ears. Then Miss
Lucy had tapped and called, 'Why, it's going to be all right,' and the
horror vanished. He had lain back down, feeling
comforted and at home, and now it never annoyed him to hear Miss Lucy's
bathrobe dragging.
In
the Potters' bedroom the clock struck four, whirring and choking before each
clang. James lay tensed, counting the strokes, although he already knew how many
there would be. He had slept only in patches all night, and even in his dreams
he was searching streets full of people for the thin stooped figure of his
brother. In the last dream it had been a year ago - that time they had called
from ten miles away to tell him Ansel had been run over, but neglected to add
it was only a bicycle that had done it. After that he couldn't sleep at all. He
thought of all the things that had happened to Ansel in the past, the really
serious things, and all the things that might be happening to him tonight. When
the clock had stopped whirring he found that he was frowning into the darkness
so hard that the muscles of his forehead hurt. Then, as if that clock had been
some sort of musical introduction, a faraway voice began singing outside:
There's sunshine on the mountains,
And spring has come again . . .
James sat up and pulled
back the curtain. Outside it was pitch black, with a handful of small stars
scattered like sand across the blue-black sky. The trees beyond the field were
only hulking dark shapes, and not one light glimmered
from the town behind them.
My true love said she'd meet me,
But forgot to tell me when.
He climbed out of bed and
untwisted the legs of his pyjamas. At his bedroom wall there was one sharp tap,
questioning (he had learned to read Miss Lucy's thimble language), and he
called, 'It's all right, Miss Lucy.' She resumed her pacing again, with her
robe trailing her footsteps like a murmuring companion. James shot out of his
room, still buttoning his pyjama top, and went downstairs in the dark. The
voice was nearer now.
I was walking down the track, Lord,
With a letter in my hand,
A-reading how she'd left me
For that sunny
The front door was open
but the screen was hooked shut. James pushed the hook up, jabbing his finger,
and swung the screen door open. Then he walked across the porch barefoot, with
the cold rough grain of the wooden floorboards stinging the soles of his feet.
Around his ankles the cuffs of his pyjamas fluttered and ballooned and nearly
tripped him (they were Ansel's, and too long); he bent to roll them up. Then he
descended the steps, scowling into the dark as he tried to see. He was halfway
down the path before he stopped, more by sensing someone in front of him than
by seeing him. Ahead of him was a long tall shape, swaying gently, smelling of
bourbon. The voice was so close now that James could feel its breath.
Oh, there's sunshine on the hills, Lord,
And the grass is all of gold . . .
His reedy voice was
piercing, but the thinness of it made it seem still far away. James stepped
closer. 'Ansel,' he said.
My love has gone and left me,
And I'll cry until I'm old.
'Ansel,' James said
again.
'I'm
singing, please.'
'Come
on in.'
He
took Ansel by the arm. It was stone cold; he could feel the bone underneath.
When he pulled Ansel toward the porch Ansel came, but lifelessly and with the
shadow that was his face still averted. 'People keep asking you in nowadays,'
he told the dark. 'They got a thing about it.'
'Careful,'
said James. 'We're coming to the steps.'
'The
Potters downright lock you in. Slide little bits of machinery
around. You mind if I finish my song?'
'I
certainly do.'
'I
might just finish it anyway. Where you taking me, James?'
'In,'
said James, and
half lifted him up the first step. Ansel was as limp as a rag doll. His
limpness made James realize suddenly how angry he was at Ansel, after all this
worrying and waiting; instead of guiding him so carefully, he felt like giving
him a good shove into the house and having done with it. 'Get on in,' he said,
and took his hand away from Ansel's arm. Ansel gave him a deep lopsided bow and
entered first.
'Certainly
nice of you to ask me,' he told James. 'Certainly are a hospitable
man.'
'If
you're hungry, Ansel -'
'I'm
starved.'
'Cook
up some eggs,' said James, and began making his way across the dark living room
toward the stairs. Behind him Ansel said, 'Hey, now -' but James paid no
attention. The way he felt, he couldn't even make a cup of coffee for Ansel; he
had been worrying for too long, and all he wanted now was sleep. Already he was
unbuttoning the tops of his pyjamas, preparing to go back to his bed.
'Don't
you have food waiting?' Ansel asked.
'Nope.'
'Don't
you even care if I come back?'
'You
know how to fry an egg.'
'Well,
I'll be,' said Ansel, and sat down suddenly on something that creaked. 'I take
it back, James. What's so hospitable about you?'
The
stairs were narrow, and James kept stubbing his toes against them. He touched
the wall to guide himself, feeling the ripples and bubbles of the wallpaper as
he slid his fingers along it. Behind him Ansel said, 'You mad at me, James?'
but James didn't answer. He could already hear the tapping sound that was
coming from upstairs. Miss Lucy must be worried.
'I reckon you're
wondering where I was at,' Ansel said, and there was another creak when he
stood up again. 'You always do wonder.' He banged into something, and
then his footsteps wavered uncertainly toward the stairs. 'You're taking all my
places from me. Once I tell you, I can't go back no
more. How long you guess it'll be before I've used up every place there is?' He
was climbing the steps behind James now. His voice rang hollowly through the
stairwell. For a minute James paused, listening to him coming, and then he
continued on up and reached the top, with his hand still on the wall so that he
could find his room. 'It's all a question of time,' Ansel said sadly. 'Time and geography.'
'If
you're coming to sleep in my room,' James told him, 'you'd better shut
up that talking.'
'Well,
I only want to explain.'
'I'm
sleepy, Ansel.'
'I
only want to explain.'
James
kept going, heading in the direction of Miss Lucy's tapping thimble. He could
hear Ansel's hands sliding along behind his now on the wall, and then the
sliding sound stopped and there was a click as Ansel snapped the hall light on.
For a minute the light was blinding. James screwed his eyes up and said, 'Oh,
Lord -'and Ansel turned the light off again, quickly and guiltily. 'I just
thought,' he said, 'as long as we had electricity -'
'It's
'What're
you, wearing my pyjamas?'
'Go
to hell, will you?'
'I
never,' said Ansel, but James was past listening. He was in the bedroom now, and
on his way to bed he reached out and knocked on Miss Lucy's wall for her to
stop that tapping. She did. He eased himself down between the sheets, which
were cold already and messy-feeling. When he was lying flat he closed his eyes
and wished away the figure of Ansel, standing like a long black stick and
swaying in the bedroom doorway.
'I
wisht I knew what was wrong with you,' Ansel said. 'You angry
with me, James?'
'Yep.'
'I
only went out for a walk.'
'You
usually end up half dead after those walks. It's me that's got to nurse you
back.'
'Well,
wait now,' Ansel said. 'I can explain. All you need to do is listen.'
‘Can
I listen when I'm asleep?' asked James, and turned over on his side with his
face to the window. He could hear Ansel's feet shuffling into the room, and he
knew by the soft thumping noise that he had reached the other bed and was
sitting on it.
'I
tried and I tried,' Ansel told him. 'I went to the Pikes' first off, but Simon
don't like me any more. I went to the Potters', and they locked me in and
requested news of my hemoglobin. What could I do? At the tavern I said,
"Charlie," I said, "I got a problem." But all Charlie did
was sell me hard liquor under the counter; he didn't
listen to no problem.'
Ansel's
shoes were dropped on the floor, first one and then the other. There was a
small whipping sound as he flung his tie around a bedpost. Even with his eyes
shut James could picture his brother, how he would be leaning toward James with
his shoulders hunched and his hands flung out as he talked, even though he knew
he couldn't be seen. 'Go to sleep, Ansel," he muttered, but Ansel only
sighed and began unbuttoning his shirt with tiny popping sounds.
'This
all has to do with Janie Rose,' he told James. 'Are you listening?'
'No.'
'Just
about everything has to do with Janie Rose these days. I don't know why. Looks like she just kind of tipped everything over with her passing
on. Janie don't like gladioli, James.'
James
didn't answer. A button flew to the floor and then circled there for an endless
length of time, and Ansel stamped one stocking foot over it and shook the whole
house. James could feel the floorboards jar beneath his bed. There was a long
silence; then Ansel bent, with a small puff of held-in breath, and scrapped his
fingers across the floor in search of the button.
'Got
it,' he said finally. 'All today, I was so sick and tired. I had looked at that
picture of the Model A too long. I don't know why I do
things like that. Then I thought, well, I'll just go up the hill and pay my
respects to Janie Rose. I'll go slow, so as not to get
overtired. And I did. I stopped a plenty on the way. But when I got close I saw
her flowers, how they had got all wilted. I thought: I wisht I'd brought some
flowers. I thought: I wisht I'd brought some bluets. You
listening, James?'
James
gritted his teeth and stayed quiet.
'There's four names for bluets I know of. Bluets,
Quaker-ladies, pea-in-the-paths, and wet-the-beds. You can count on
Janie Rose; she called them wet-the-beds. Well, she had problems herself in
that line. But what I thought was: I wisht I'd brought some bluets. I didn't think: I wisht I'd
brought some wet-the-beds.'
'Oh,
Lord,' James said tiredly. He turned his pillow to the cool side and lay back
down on it.
'Now,
bluets are not good funeral flowers. Too teeny. But
Janie Rose is not a funeral person. Usually it's only the good die
young. Consequently I thought: I wish I'd-'
James
raised his head and shouted, 'Ansel, will you hush?' and on his wall
there was the sudden sound of frantic tapping. 'I don't want to hear,' he told
Ansel more quietly, and then lay back down and forced his mind far away.
'I'll
just get to the point,' Ansel said. 'I have to tell you this. James, there are gladioli
on Janie's grave.'
James
heard a zipper slide down, and after a minute a pair of trousers was tossed
shuffingly across the floor. Then Ansel's socks dropped one after the other
beside his bed, in soft crumpled balls, and James heard them fall and winced
because his ears seemed raw tonight.
'Janie
Rose despises gladioli,' said Ansel.
James
said nothing.
'She
hates and despises them. Believes they're witches' wands, all frilled up. She
told me so.'
James
opened his eyes and rolled over. 'Funerals are for parents,' he said. 'Ansel,
Janie Rose is dead.'
He
waited, frowning. Out of the corner of his eye he could see the white blur that
was Ansel in his underwear, standing before the bureau with his skinny arms
folded across his chest. Finally Ansel said, 'I know.'
'She's
dead.'
'I
know all about it. Nevertheless, she despises gladioli.'
‘The
funeral is not really for her,' James said, and rolled over again to face the
wall. 'It don't make any
difference to her about those gladioli.'
'Oh
now,' said Ansel.
'Oh now.' He crossed to his bed, heavily. 'It's
hard to bury people, Jamie. Harder than digging a hole in the
ground.' '
'Will
you go to bed?'
'They
keep popping up again, in a manner of speaking.'
James
dug his head into his pillow.
'I
remember Janie Rose's religious period,' Ansel went on comfortably. 'It was a
right short one, wouldn't you know. But she took this tree out back, this
scrubby one she was always drawing flattering pictures of. Dedicated it to God,
I believe; hung it with tin cans and popcorn strings. Didn't last but a week;
then she was on to something new. The birds ate the popcorn. But those tin cans
are still rattling at the ends of the branches when a wind passes through, and
Mr Pike sits out back all day staring at them. Though he had
placed every last bit of her in a hole in the ground. Ha.'
James
reached behind him for the sheet and pulled it up over his head, making a hood
of it. The rustling of the sheet drowned out everything else, and then when he
was still again the sounds couldn't come through to him so clearly. The
creaking of Ansel's bedsprings when he sat down was muffled and distant, and
his voice was thin-sounding.
'I
ought to studied botany,' he was saying. 'Don't you think? All I know about
flowers, I ought to studied botany.'
James
lay still, and stared at the dark vines running up the wallpaper until his eyes
ached.
'With
Mama it was lilies,' said Ansel. 'Lord, she hated lilies. All she wanted, she
said, was just a cross of-'
'We
won't go into that,' James told the wallpaper.
'We
don't go into nothing. Getting so the only safe topic
around here is the weather. Well, I was saying. Just a cross of white
roses, she wanted. No lilies. And you know what they sent? You know what?'
He
waited. The silence stretched on and on. James's arm, pressed beneath his body,
began to go to sleep, but he didn't switch positions for fear of breaking the
silence. He wiggled his fingers gently, without making a sound.
'Well,
they sent lilies,' Ansel said finally. 'I thought you would have guessed. If
you'd been there, I wouldn't have to be telling you all this. But I called you.
I called you on the phone and said, "James," I said, "will you
kindly come to Mama's funeral?" I called you long distance and
person-to-person, Caraway to Larksville. But you never answered me. Just hung up the telephone, neat and quiet. If I was the
persistent type, I'd be asking still. I'd
ask it today: "James, will you kindly come to Mama's
funeral?" Because you never have answered, never once,
not once in all these years. I'll ask it now. James, will you kindly -'
'No,
I won't,' said James.
Across
the room there was a little intake of breath, quick and sharp, and over behind
the Potters' wall the measured pacing suddenly began again, with the weighted
bathrobe sighing behind it. Ansel lay down on his bed.
'There's two kinds of sin,' he said after a minute. His voice was
directed toward the ceiling now, and sounded dreamy. 'There's general sin and
there's private sin. General sin there's commandments against, or laws, or
rules. Private sin's an individual matter. It's hurting somebody, personally.
You hear me? Listen close now; this is essential. What I chose was a general
sin, that they'll be a long time forgiving. I did all that drinking, and ran
around with that girl that everyone knew was no good. But what you chose was a
private sin, that they'll never forgive. They
got hurt personally by it - you forever running away, and telling them finally
what you thought of them and leaving home altogether. Then not coming to the
funeral. Think they'll forgive that? No, sir.
Me they will cry over in church and finally forgive, someday. But not you. I'm a very wise man, every so often.'
James
didn't say anything. Ansel raised himself up on one elbow to look over at him,
but he stayed within his hood of sheets. 'James?' Ansel said.
'What?'
'You
don't care what I say, do you?'
'Yes,
'James said.
'Don't it bother you sometimes? Don't you ever think about
it? Here we are. You walked off from them without a backward wave of your hand,
and I got thrown out like an old paper bag. Don't it -'
'Got
what? James asked.
'What?'
'You
got what?'
'Got
thrown out, I said, like an old -'
'You
never got thrown out,' said James.
'I
did. Daddy said I was an alcoholic; he said I was-'
'He
never said that.'
'Well,
almost he did. He said, "Leave this house," he said. "You and your drinking and that girl in red pedal pushers, I never
want to see you again." That's what he told me.'
James
raised himself slightly from beneath the hood of the sheet. He peered across
the dark room toward Ansel and said, 'Don't you give me that, Ansel.'
'What?'
'You
left. You left, I left. Tell it that way.'
'Well,
what difference does it make? Who cares?'
'I
care,' said James. 'Do I make excuses for leaving? Run out on him or
don't run, but don't make it easy on yourself; don't tell me he kicked you out.'
'Well,'
Ansel said after a minute, 'I was drinking all that-'
'You
don't even like the taste of it,' said James.
'I
do too.'
James
lay back down and pulled his sheet closer over him, and Ansel's voice rose
louder. 'It was a wonderful taste,' he said. And then, 'Well, maybe he
didn't exactly throw me out, but anyhow-'
Up
on the tin roof, rain began. It started very gently, pattering in little sharp
exclamation points that left spaces for Ansel's voice. 'James?' Ansel said
'Hmm.'
'There's
one thing I don't get, James. It was you they liked best. The others
weren't nothing special, and I was so runny-nosed. I
had a runny nose from the moment I was born, I think, and pinkish eyes. One
time I heard Daddy say, "Well, if there's ever a prize for sheer sniveliness
given, he'll take it," and Mama said, "Hush now. Maybe he'll grow
out of it." They didn't think I heard, but I did.'
'They
didn't mean that,' said James.
'You
know they did. But you they liked; why did you leave? Why didn't you
come to the funeral? I said, "Daddy," I said, "you want I should
ask James to Mama's funeral?" "Which James is that?" he asks.
"James your son," I tell him. And he says, "Oh. Oh, why,
anything you want to, Ansel." This was when I was still home and they had
hopes I would change my ways; they let me do some things I wanted. I called and
said, "James, will you kindly come to Mama's funeral?" Then he asked
what happened. "Ansel," he said, "did you invite that person you
had mentioned previously?" And I said no, figuring it was better that way.
Daddy said, "He wouldn't have come. He was born that way," he said,
"lacking our religion. There was no sense asking him."'
The
rain grew louder. Now it was one steady booming against the sheets of tin, and
all of Ansel that could be heard was his words; the quality of his voice was
drowned out.
'I'm
going back there sometime,' he was saying. 'They'll forget, and I'll go back. I
crave a religious atmosphere.' He lay back down and James nodded to himself,
thinking maybe he would be sleepy now. 'Churches here are somewhat lacking, I
think,' Ansel went on. 'Quiet-like. At home it was
better. Mrs Crowley spoke in tongues. There was things
that bound you there. A red glass on the windowsill in the choir loft, with
something brown rising above it like the head of a beer. I think now it was
wax, and the glass was a sort of candle. But before I thought it was a sort of
brown fungus, some kind of mold just growing and growing. Do you remember,
James?' He waited a minute. 'James?' he said, and now his voice rose
even above the roaring of the rain.
'No,
I don't, James said.
'Sometimes
I think your mind is just a clean, clean slate, James.'
'I
keep it that way,' said James.
'You
do. I bet when I go back you won't even miss me. I'll go and bring presents. A natural-bristle hairbrush for each sister and a table game for
Claude, and a French briar pipe for Daddy. Flowers for
the grave and a set of them new, unbreakable dishes to go in the kitchen.
A conch shell with the crucifixion inside to make up for that one you dropped,
and a crane-necked reading lamp . . .'
The
rain roared on, and James listened to that with all his
mind. He thought it was the best sound he had heard all day. The heavy feeling
was beginning to fade away, and the rain was lulling him to sleep.
' . . . a new swing,' Ansel was saying, 'though none of us would use it
now, I reckon. Before, it was a tyre we swung on. It was all right and it went
high enough, but there wasn't no Comfortable way to
sit in it. Inside it, your legs got pinched. Straddled above it, you'd be dizzy
in no time what with all that spinning. "Stop!" you'd say, and cling
like a monkey on a palm tree while everybody laughed . . .'
8
On
Tuesday morning, Mr Pike was the second person awake. He arrived in the kitchen
wearing his work clothes and carrying a nylon mesh cap, and when he sat down at
the table he sat heavily, stamping his boots together in front of him and
scraping the chair across the linoleum. 'I'm picking tobacco today,' he told
Joan. Joan was at the stove, peering into the glass knob on top of the
percolator to see what colour the coffee was. When her uncle made his
announcement she said nothing, because she was thinking of other things, but
then she turned and saw him looking at her expectantly.
‘I’m
sorry?' she said.
'I'm
going to pick tobacco,' he repeated.
'Oh.
All right.'
But
he still seemed to be waiting for something. He folded his big boney hands on the
table and leaned toward her, watching, but Joan couldn't think what was
expected of her. She picked the coffeepot off the stove and carried it over to
the sink, in order to dump the grounds.
'We
need the money,' her uncle said.
Joan
shook the grounds into the garbage pail, holding the coffee-basket by the tips
of her fingers so as not to get burned.
'Well,
sometime I got to start work,' he said.
'Of
course you do, Uncle Roy.'
'Things
are getting worse and worse in this house. I thought they'd get better.'
'Pretty
soon they will.'
'I
wonder, now.
He
watched as Joan set his cup of coffee before him. She handed him the sugar bowl
but he just stared at it, as if he'd never seen one before.
'Sugar?' Joan prodded him.
He
shook his head, and she set the bowl down at his elbow.
'It's
no good sitting in a room all my life,' he said.
'Drink
your coffee,' Joan told him. She poured a cup for herself and then sat down
opposite him hitching up the knees of her blue jeans. Her eyes were still foggy
from sleep and things came through to her blurred, in shining patterns - the
blocks of sunlight across the worn linoleum, the graduated circles of Mrs
Pike's saucepan set hanging on the wall, the dark slouched waiting figure of
her uncle. When she stirred her coffee with a kitchen knife that was handy, the
reflection of the sunshine on the blade flashed across the wall like a fish in
a pool and her uncle shifted his eyes to that. He watched like a person
hypnotized. She set the knife down and the reflection darted to a point high on
the wall near the ceiling, and he stared upward at it.
'You
going to want sandwiches?' she asked.
He
didn't answer. She took a sip of her coffee, but it was tasteless and heavy and
she set the cup down again. 'Putting my foot down,' her uncle mumbled. Joan
drew lines on the tablecloth with her thumbnail. Outside a bird began singing,
bringing back all the spots and patches of restless dreams she had had last
night, in between long periods of lying awake and turning her pillow over and
over to find a cool place. Ever since the rain stopped those birds had been
singing. She rubbed her fingers across her eyelids and saw streaks of red and
purple behind them.
'In
regard to sandwiches,' her uncle said suddenly, 'I don't want them. I'll come
home for lunch.'
'All right.'
'Least
I can do.'
'All right.'
'What's
the matter with you?' he asked, and reached finally for the sugar bowl.
'You mad I'm picking tobacco?'
'No.
I think it's the best thing you could do. Don't forget to tell James he won't
need to work today.'
'I
thought you'd do that,' said Mr Pike.
'You
can.'
'You're
not working today; you can spare a minute.'
'No,
I'd rather you do it.'
'Oh
now,' Mr Pike
said suddenly. 'You two have a fight?'
Joan
took another sip of coffee. It still had no taste. A hummingbird swooped down
to the window and just hung there, suspended like a child's bird-on-a-string,
its small eyes staring curiously in and its little heart beating so close and
fast they could see the pulsing underneath the feathers. Mr Pike gazed at it
absently.
'I
never did hold with long engagements,' he said.
'What?'
'Longer
the engagement, the more time for fights. Shouldn't allow it,
Joan.'
'I'm
not engaged,' Joan said shortly. 'And anyway, it's none of my doing.'
Her uncle looked away from the hummingbird and frowned at her.
'I
don't know about that,' he said. 'And I'll tell you. Some men need a little
shove.'
'I
don't believe in shoving.'
'Only way, sometimes. I ever tell you how I came to marry your aunt?'
'I'm
not in the mood for that,' said Joan.
'I
was only going to mention.'
'No,
I don't want to hear,' she said, and pictured suddenly her aunt, no longer
young, lying so still upstairs. 'You go tell James,' she said.
'Aw, Joan.'
'Someone
has to.'
'Aw,
Joan, you know how it is. I'll go over and there will be Ansel, all talkative
and cheerful. Cheerful in the morning - can you feature that?'
'Maybe
he's still asleep,' Joan said.
'Ansel? No. I heard him come in long after
'In bed.'
'Been
days since I seen that boy. Send him over.'
'He
won't go either.'
'Look,'
said Mr Pike. He stood up, jarring the table, and the hummingbird flew away
without even preparing to go. 'I can't see Ansel today,' he said. 'I don't know
why but he gets under my skin nowadays. Will you please go?'
'Oh,
all right,' Joan said.
'All
right, that's settled. Thank you very much.'
He
sat down again, and Joan went back to looking at the patterns in the kitchen.
Everything she saw made her homesick, but not for any home she'd ever had. The
sunlight on the linoleum reminded her of something long ago and lost; yet she
had never lived in a house with a linoleum kitchen, never in all her memory.
She kept staring at the design of it, the speckled white floor with bars of red
and blocks of blue splashed across it, and the sun lighting up the dents and
scrapes made by kitchen chairs. Finally she looked away and into her uncle's
frowning, leather-brown face, but her uncle only said, 'We need the money,' so
she looked away again. Her coffee had cooled, and the surface of it was
greasy-looking. She drank it anyway.
When
her uncle was through with his coffee he pushed the cup toward the centre of
the table and rose, clamping the mesh cap on the back of his head. 'You can
take care of things here, I guess,' he said.
'Yes.'
'I'll
be running along, then.'
He
clomped off toward the front of the house, swinging his boots in that heavy way
that Simon always tried to copy. His steps made the whole floor shake. She
heard the screen door swing open with a twang of its spring and then slam shut
again, rattling on its hinges. Then the clomping continued across the porch,
and she waited for the extra-heavy sound of his boots descending the wooden
steps to the yard but it didn't come. 'Joan?' he called.
'What.'
'Joan!'
She
rose and went out front, wondering why men always had to shout from where they were
instead of coming closer. Her uncle was standing on the edge of the porch with
his back to the house and his cap off, scratching the back of his head. 'What
is it?' she asked him, and he turned toward her.
'Well,
I already informed your aunt,' he said, 'but I'm not certain she heard.'
'Informed
her about what?'
'About my working. But I'm not certain she heard. Will you tell her
again?'
'All
right,' said Joan.
'Say
we need the money, tell her. Say I'm sorry.'
'All
right, Uncle Roy.'
'I
can't sit looking at trees all my life.'
'No,
I know,' said Joan, and reached out to give his shoulder one gentle push so
that he would turn and leave. He did, still frowning. Then halfway across the
yard he slapped his cap back on his head and thrust his hands in his pockets
and began walking more briskly, getting ready to go out into the world again.
Joan watched after him till he was out of the yard, and then she went down
toward the Greens' end of the porch.
Ansel
was in his window, chewing sunflower seeds. He looked very happy. He spit the
hulls out on the porch floor and then leaned over, his hands on the windowsill
and his elbows jutting behind him like bird wings, and tried to blow the hulls
all the way across the porch and into the yard. Joan wished he would fall out.
She stood over him with her hands on her hips and waited until he had
straightened up again, and then she said, 'Ansel.'
'Morning,
Joan.'
'Ansel,
will you give James a message?'
'If
I can remember it,' said Ansel. 'My health is poorly this morning. Seems to be growing worse and worse.'
'Doesn't
look to me you could get much worse,' Joan said.
'At
least you noticed. James just don't even care. He's in
an ill mood today.'
Joan
gave up on him and stepped over to the door and knocked. For a minute Ansel
stared out his window at her, puzzling this over; then he shrugged and
withdrew. He came to the door and opened it with a flourish.
'Morning,
Joan,' he said.
'Where's
James?'
'Ain't seen you in a long time. James? He's in the back yard,
emptying out the garbage.'
'Will
you tell him he doesn't have to work today? Make up your mind, now. If you're
planning to forget I'll just do it myself.'
'Oh,
I'll tell him,' Ansel said. 'Come in and set, why don't you.
Old James'll be back any minute.'
'No,
thank you,' said Joan.
'Well,
suit yourself.' He yawned. 'Saw your uncle go off to work this morning,' he
said. 'Seems kind of soon for him to be doing that, don't it?'
'No.'
'Well,
I just thought I'd point it out.' He yawned again and fished another sunflower
seed from the packet in his hand. The shirt he had on was James's, she saw. It
was a dark red plaid and hung too loosely on him. She stared at it a minute and
then, without a word, turned and went back up the porch. 'Hey!' Ansel called
after her, but Joan was inside her own parlour by now, letting the door slam
shut behind her.
Upstairs,
Simon was sound asleep, with his pyjamaed legs sprawled and all his covers
kicked loose from the foot of the bed. Joan went over and touched him gently,
just on the outflung, curled-in palm of his hand. He stirred a little and then
mumbled and turned away from her.
'Get
up, Simon,' she said.
'I
am up. I am.'
'Come
on.'
‘I’m
half dressed already. I got my -'
'Simon.'
He
opened his eyes. 'Oh light,' he said, and Joan smiled and sat down on the bed
beside him.
'I
got something I want to talk over,' she told him.
'Okay.'
'You
listening?'
'I
just can't find any clean jeans,' he said, and closed his eyes and was asleep
again. Joan picked up his hand and shook it, but it hung loose and limp.
'Simon,
this is about your mother,' she said.
'I'm
listening.'
'I
think your mother should start working today.'
He
turned over and squinted at her, through foggy brown eyes. 'What at?' he asked.
'At her sewing. I want you to stay around and help with the conversation,
all right?
'What?'
'Will
you help me out?'
'Oh,
why, sure,' Simon said, and would have been asleep again if Joan hadn't pulled
him to a sitting position. He stayed there, slumped between her hands, with his
head drooping to one side. 'I was in this boat,' he said.
'Come
on, Simon.'
'Then
we started sinking. They told me I was the one that had to swim for it. Do you
believe that'll happen someday?'
'No,'
said Joan, and pulled hard on him till he was standing beside the bed.
'They
say everything you dream will happen,' Simon told her. 'It's true. Last year I
dreamed Mama would find out about me smoking and sure enough, that night at
supper there was my half-pack of Winstons lying beside my plate and Mama
staring at me. It came true.'
He
bent down to examine a stubbed toe and Joan stood up, preparing to go. 'You
come down when you're dressed, 'she said.
'I
don't have any clean jeans to wear.'
'That's
just something you said in your sleep. You have lots of jeans.'
'No,
really, I don't,' Simon said. 'No one's been doing the laundry.'
Joan
crossed to his bureau and pulled open his bottom drawer. It was bare except for
a pair of bermudas. 'Oh, Lord,' she said. 'I forgot
all about the laundry.'
'I
told you you did.'
'Well,
wear bermudas till this afternoon, why don't you. By
then I'll have you some jeans.'
'Have
my knees show?' Simon asked.
'What's
wrong with that?'
'Boys
don't have their knees out any more. You ought to know that.'
'Well,
la de da,' said Joan, and rumpled the top of his hair. 'Wear a pair of dirty
jeans, then.'
‘They'd
all call me sissy if my knees showed.'
'All right. Hurry up, now.'
She
closed the door behind her and went downstairs. In the parlour she sat down on
a faded plush footstool and reached for the telephone, which sat on a table
beside her. She hooked the receiver over her shoulder and then opened the
telephone book to the very back, where there was space for frequently used
numbers. The page was filled to the bottom, and looked messy because of so many
different handwritings. Mr Pike had listed the names of bowling pals in a
careful, downward-slanting script, and Simon had scrawled the names of all his
classmates even though he never talked to them by telephone, and Janie Rose had
printed names in huge capitals that took two lines, after asking several times
how to spell each one - the four little Marsh girls, each listed separately,
and the milkman who had once brought her a yellow plastic ring from a chicken's
leg, which she had worn every day until she lost it. Mrs Pike's handwriting was
small and pretty, every letter slanting to the same degree, naming off her
steady customers one by one with little memos to herself about colours and
pattern numbers pencilled in lightly beside them. Joan went down the list
alphabetically. Mrs Abbott, who never talked. Mrs Chrisawn, who was in such a black mood most of the time.
Davis, Forsyth, Hammond . . . She stopped there. Connie Hammond was always good
to have around during a tragedy. She brought chicken broth whether people
wanted it or not, and she knew little things like how to make a bed with
someone in it and what to say when no one else could think of anything. As far
as Joan was concerned, having a person talk incessantly would be more harm than
help; but her aunt felt differently. Her aunt had actually sat up and answered,
the last time Connie Hammond came. So Joan smoothed the phone book out on her
knees and dialled the
Mrs
Hammond was talking to somebody else when she answered. She said, 'If that's
not the worst thing -'and then, into the phone, 'Hello?'
'Mrs
Hammond, this is Joan Pike,' said Joan.
'Why,
Joan, honey, how are you?' Mrs Hammond
said, and then softened her shrill voice to ask, 'How's your poor aunt?'
'Well,
that's what I wanted to talk to you about,' said Joan. She spoke at some
distance from the receiver, in case Mrs Hammond should grow shrill again.
'What's
that you say?'
'I
said, I wanted to talk to you about that. Aunt
Lou is just miserable.'
'Oh, my.' There was a rustling sound as Mrs Hammond cupped her hand
over the receiver and turned away. 'Lou Pike is just miserable,' she
told someone. Her hand un-cupped the receiver again and she returned,
breathless, to Joan. 'Joan, honey, I told Mr Hammond, just last night. I said,
I haven't ever seen someone take on so. Well, of course she has good
reason to but the things she says, Joan. It wasn't her fault; it was
that noaccount Ned Marsh who did it. How he manages to drive even a tractor recklessly
is more than I can -'
'Um,'
Joan said, and Mrs Hammond stopped speaking and snapped her mouth shut audibly,
to show she had been interrupted. 'Um, she hasn't even gotten up today. She's
still in bed. And Uncle Roy's at the tobacco barns -'
'The where?'
'Tobacco barns. Working tobacco.'
'Why,
that man,' said Mrs Hammond.
'Well,
he can't just sit staring at the trees all -'
'He
could comfort his wife,' Mrs Hammond said.
'She
won't listen. So I was thinking, as long as he's away today-'
'Men
are like that,' Mrs Hammond said. 'Work is all they think about.'
'As
long as he is at work,' Joan said firmly, 'I think maybe Aunt Lou should
start working too.'
'Working?'
'Working at sewing.
'Mrs
who?'
'Mrs
- never mind. Wait a minute.' Joan switched ears and leaned forward, as if Mrs
Hammond could see her now from where she stood. 'Mrs Hammond,' she said, 'I
know how good you are at helping other people.'
'Oh,
why, I just-'
'I
know you could help Aunt Lou right now, if anybody could. You could bring that
dress she was working on, that -was it purple?'
'Lilac,'
said Mrs Hammond. 'Princess style.'
That's
the one.'
'Lou
said it would add to my height a little, a princess style would.'
That's
right,' Joan said. 'That's the one.'
'Especially since it has up-and-down pinstripes.'
'Yes.
Well, I was thinking. If you could just bring it over and get her to work on it
for you, just take her mind off all the-'
'You
might be right,' said Mrs Hammond. 'Why didn't I think of that? Why, the day
before the funeral, when I came -you remember -1 did feel she was doing
wrong to sit so quiet. I said so. I have always believed that baking calms the
nerves, so I said to her, "Lou," I said, "why don't you make
some rolls?" But she looked at me as if I'd lost my senses. After all, I'd
just brought two dozen, and a cake besides. Yet I felt she ought to be
doing something; that's what I was trying to tell her. You just might be right,
Joan.'
'Well,
then,' said Joan, 'do you think you could come over sometime today?'
'I'll
come over right this minute. I just wouldn't feel at rest until I had. You say
your aunt's still in bed?'
'She
was a minute ago,' Joan said.
'Well,
you try and get her up, and I'll be there as fast as I can find the dress. I'll
be there, don't you worry.'
'All
right,' Joan said. 'It certainly is nice of you to come, Mrs Hammond.'
'Well.
Goodbye, now.'
'Goodbye.'
Joan
hung up and sat back to rub her ear, which felt squashed. Now that all that was
settled, the next step was to get Simon downstairs. He would have to back her
up in this.
Simon
was standing in front of his mirror when Joan came in. He was wearing blue
jeans but no shirt, and scratching his stomach absently. 'Hey,' Joan said, and
he jumped and looked up at her. 'Find yourself a
shirt,' she told him. 'Connie Hammond's coming.'
'Aw,
gee, Joan. Mrs Hammond?'
'She'll
be here any minute. Come on, now. It's a special favour to your mother.
'I
bet she'll never notice,' Simon said, but he pulled a bureau drawer open. Joan
closed the door and went on to her aunt's room.
Mrs
Pike was sitting up against two pillows, fat and soft in a grey nylon
nightgown. She had her hands folded across her stomach and was looking vaguely
at the two points her feet made underneath the bedspread. 'Good morning,' Joan
said, and Mrs Pike raised her eyes silently and peered at her as if she were
trying to pierce her way through mist. But she never answered. After a minute
her eyes passed on to something else, dismissing Joan like the wrong answer to
a question she had asked. Joan came to stand at the foot of the bed.
'Aunt
Lou,' she said, 'would you like to get up?'
Her
aunt shook her head.
'Mrs
Hammond's coming. Do you want her to find you in bed?'
'No,'
said Mrs Pike, but she didn't do anything about it. She settled lower into the
pillows, with her eyes worrying at the wallpaper now, and in so much dim
clutter she appeared to be sinking, overcome by the objects around her. Under
Joan's feet were cast-off clothes, everywhere, everything her aunt had been
persuaded to put on in the last few days. She had stepped out of them and left
them there, returning wearily to her grey nightgown. Mr Pike, on the other
hand, had made some effort at neatness. He had laid his clothes awkwardly on
the back of the platform rocker, where they rose in a layered mountain that
seemed huge and overwhelming in the half-dark. On the bureau were hairbrushes
and bobby pins and old coffee cups with dark rings inside them. The sight of it
all made Joan feel caved in and despairing, and she went over to raise the
window shade but the light only picked up more clutter. 'Aunt Lou,' she said, 'We just have to get organized here.'
'What?'
'We
have to start cleaning things up.'
Her
aunt nodded, without seeming to pay attention, but then she surprised Joan by
moving over to the edge of the bed and standing up. She stood in that old
woman's way she had just acquired - searching out the floor with anxious feet, rising slowly and heavily. For a minute she stood there, and
then she shook her nightgown out and faltered toward the bureau. 'I'm going to
clean up,' she told Joan.
That's
it.'
But
all Mrs Pike did, once she reached the bureau, was to stare into the mirror.
She put both hands on the bureau top and leaned forward, frowning into her own
eyes. The alarm clock in front of her ticked loudly, and she reached out
without looking to set it farther away. 'Some people stop all the clocks when
someone dies,' she said.
'What're
you going to wear, Aunt Lou?'
'If
Connie Hammond's coming, why, she'll have to turn around and go off again.'
'What
dress are you going to wear?' Joan asked, and the sharpness of her voice
made Mrs Pike sigh and stand up straight again.
'Any
one will do,' she said. She pulled out a small plastic box from a half-open
drawer and began putting bobby pins into it. One by one she scraped them off
the top of the dresser, working like a blind woman with careful fingers while
she kept her eyes on the mirror. Joan watched, not moving. Each bobby pin made
a little clinking sound against the bottom of the plastic box, and each time
the sound came Mrs Pike winced into the mirror. 'My grand-mother stopped
all the clocks,' she said. 'She would also announce the death to each fruit
tree, so that they wouldn't shrivel up. But we don't have no
fruit trees.' Her fingers slid slowly across the bureau
top, and when she found that all the bobby pins were picked up she closed the
box and set it down again. Then she went back to bed. She tucked her feet down
under the covers and drew the top sheet with great care over her chest.
'No,
wait,' Joan said.
'I
did what I could, Joan.'
Joan
went over to the closet and pulled out the first thing she touched,
a navy blue dress with white polka dots. 'Is this all right?' she asked.
'No.'
'This, then.' And she lifted a brown dress from its hanger and laid it
on the bed without waiting for an answer. 'It's the prettiest one you've got,'
she said.
Outside,
a car screeched to a halt and sent up a spray of gravel that Joan could hear
from where she stood. She looked out and saw Mrs Hammond's
'Just
walk on in and come upstairs,' Joan told her. 'Aunt Lou's in bed still.'
'Oh.
All right.'
She
bent her head over her armload of cloth and started running again, and Joan
could hear her quick sharp heels along the porch and then inside, across the
parlour floor and up the stairs. 'Oh, law,' she was saying to no one. She
sounded out of breath.
But
Mrs Pike didn't say a word to all this. She just lay back against the pillows
and folded her arms across her stomach again, her face expressionless. When Mrs
Hammond burst into the room and said, 'Why, Lou!' as if Mrs Pike had
somehow taken her by surprise, Mrs Pike only nodded gently and watched the
wallpaper. 'Lou?' said Mrs Hammond.
'She
was just now getting up,' Joan told her.
'Well,
I'll help. That's what I came for.' She set her load down on the dresser and
peered into the mirror a second, pushing back a wisp of hair, and then she came
over to sit on the edge of the bed. Every move she made was definite; now that
she was here, the room seemed to lose its swampiness. Her face was carefully
made up to cover the little lines around her mouth, and she was packed into a
nice summery sheath that Mrs Pike had made two years ago. The sight of so much
neatness made Mrs Pike sit up straighter and pull her stomach in, even though
her face stayed blank.
'I
was talking about stopping all the clocks,' she told Mrs Hammond.
'Oh, no.'
'I've
about decided to do it.'
'Oh, no. I don't think that's necessary.'
But
Mrs Pike said, 'Yes. I don't know why I didn't think of it before.'
'It
depends on the type,' Mrs Hammond said. 'Ormolu, for
instance, or mahogany - that you would stop. But those are the only
kind. Isn't that so, Joan?'
Joan
hadn't heard that before, but she said, 'Well, yes,' and Mrs Hammond beamed at
her and rocked gently on the bed.
'Only
if it's ornamental,' she told Mrs Pike.
'Oh.
I didn't know that.'
'You
wouldn't stop a Baby Ben or anything.'
'No.'
'Do
you want to get up?'
'Connie,
I just can't,' Mrs Pike said. 'I just don't have it in me. You're going to have
to go off again.'
'Oh, now.' Mrs Hammond shook her head and then began examining the
room, as if anything Mrs Pike said was to be expected and she was just planning
a wait till it was over. 'This place could use a bit of cleaning,' she said.
'Also, if I was you I'd add some patches of colour to it. You know? I put an
orange candlestick in Mr Hammond's brown den and it just changed the whole atmosphere.
He don't like it, but you'd be amazed at the
difference it makes.'
'I
don't care about any of that,' Mrs Pike said distinctly.
'Now,
Lou.'
'I
just want to sleep a while.'
'After
you make up my lilac dress, I'll let you sleep all you like,' said Mrs Hammond.
'I need it for a party.'
She
stood up and went over to the bureau, where she pulled open the top left drawer
as if she knew by instinct where Mrs Pike kept her underwear. From a stack on
the right she took a nylon slip and held it up to the mirror. 'Oh, my, how
pretty!' she said, and tossed it in the direction of the bed. Mrs Pike caught
it in her lap and stared at it.
From
across the hall came the clattering sound of Simon's walk, closer and closer.
He had his boots on now. When he reached his mother's door he walked on in
without knocking and said, 'I'm ready.' Then he stood there at the foot of the
bed, tilting back and forth in that awkward way he had and keeping his hands jammed
tightly in his pockets.
'What're
you ready for?' Mrs Hammond asked interestedly.
'To
be sociable at the sewing,' Simon told her. 'Would you like to know what was
the cause of that fight
'In
a minute I would,' said Mrs Hammond. 'Right now I'm trying to get your mother
out of bed.'
For
the first time, Simon looked at his mother. He looked from under bunched
eyebrows, sliding his eyes over slowly and carefully. But she wasn't watching.
He kicked at one leg of the brass bed, so that a little jingling sound rose
among the springs. Then he said, 'Well, I'll be down getting me some
breakfast,' and sauntered out again. Mrs Hammond looked after him and shook her
head.
'Something
is seriously wrong with that boy's hair,' she told Mrs Pike.
'No.'
'How
long you going to keep on like this, Lou?'
Mrs
Pike looked down at her hands and then shook her head, as if that were her
secret. 'Are you sure not to stop the clocks?' she asked, but Mrs
Hammond didn't answer. She had picked out the rest of Mrs Pike's underwear, and
she tossed it on the bed and then reached out to pull her gently to a sitting
position. 'That's it,' she said. To Joan she said, 'You go along and get that
boy a decent breakfast. I'll have her down in a minute.'
It
didn't look to Joan as if they'd ever be down, but she was glad to leave
the room. She shut the door behind her and descended the stairs quickly, taking
two steps at a time, trailing her fingers along the railing. When she reached
the kitchen Simon had already taken out the makings for a peanut butter and
mayonnaise sandwich. He was running his thumbnail around the edge of the
mayonnaise label, making little ripples in it. 'Would you like some milk
coffee?' she asked him, but he only shook his head. He stopped playing with the
label and opened the jar, and Joan handed him a knife.
'From
now on, I'm going on no more boats,' he said. 'I take stock in dreams.'
‘That's
kind of silly,' said Joan.
'I
know when I been warned.'
He
slapped mayonnaise on top of peanut butter and clamped the two slices of bread
together. Then he began to eat, starting with the crust and working his way
around until all he had was a small crustless square with scalloped edges. When
that point was reached he looked relieved, because he hated crusts. He took a
bite out of what was left and began talking with his mouth full.
'Instead
of staying here,' he said, 'I just might go on over to Billy's house. His daddy
gave him a chemistry set.' He looked up at Joan, but she didn't say anything.
'I might do that instead of staying around here talking,' he told her.
'Well,
suit yourself,' said Joan.
'Mama'd
never notice.'
'Sure,
she would.'
'I
bet not.'
Joan
went over to the cupboard and took down a huge plate, a green glass one that
looked like summer and river-water. She began laying out cookies and cakes on
it, choosing from boxes that neighbours had brought, while Simon watched her
and chewed earnestly through a mouthful of peanut butter. When Joan was
finished she stepped back and looked at the cake plate with her eyes squinted a
little.
'Aunt
Lou does it better,' she said.
'Oh,
I don't know.'
'She
puts it in a design, sort of.'
'One
thing,' said Simon, 'she don't ever lay out that much.
Not with just one customer, she don't.'
'That's
true.'
'She
uses that little clear sparkly plate.'
'Well,
it's too late now,' Joan said. She picked up the plate and carried it out to
the parlour, where she set it on a lampstand by the couch. Then she swung her aunt's
sewing machine out into the middle of the room. It was the old kind, run by a
treadle, set into a long scarred table. From one of the drawers underneath it
she took her aunt's wicker spool box, and while she was doing that she heard
the slow careful steps of Mrs Pike beginning across the upstairs hall. 'That's
it,' Mrs Hammond was saying. 'That's it.' The kitchen door swung
open and Simon came out, chewing on the last of his sandwich, to stand at the foot
of the stairs and gaze upward. 'Mama's coming down,' he told Joan.
'I
see she is.'
'First
time she's come before
'You
don't have to stay at all.'
'Well,
maybe I will for a minute,' said Simon. He swung away from the stairs and went
to sit on the couch, and Mrs Pike's feet began searching their way down the
steps. 'That's it,' Mrs Hammond kept saying. Joan pulled a chair up to the
sewing machine and then stood waiting, with her face turned toward the sound of
those heels.
When
Mrs Pike appeared she was dressed more neatly than she had been in days. Her
brown dress was freshened up with a flowered handkerchief in the pocket, and
her hair was combed by someone who knew how. The only thing wrong was that she
had lost some weight, and her belt, which had had its eyelets torn into long
slashes from being strained across her stomach, now hung loose and stringy a
good two inches below the waist of the dress. Mrs Hammond was following close
behind her. to pull the belt up from in the back, so
that at least it looked right in front, but it kept slipping down again.
'Doesn't she look nice?' Mrs Hammond asked, and both Joan and Simon
nodded.
In
Mrs Hammond's other hand was the bundle of cloth and tissue paper. She escorted
Mrs Pike to the chair Joan had ready and then she set the bundle down on the
sewing table beside her, saying, 'There you are,' and stepping back to see what
Mrs Pike would do. Mrs Pike didn't do anything. She looked at the lilac cloth
as if she'd never seen it before. 'Well, now,' said Mrs Hammond, and began
opening out the bundle herself. 'If you'll remember, you cut this out back in May,
before all that business about Laura's wedding came up, and I haven't tried
it on since. Joan honey, do you want to bring your aunt some coffee and a
roll?'
'I'm
not hungry,' said Mrs Pike.
But
Joan escaped to the kitchen anyway, while Mrs Hammond went on talking. 'I've
been on a tomato diet for three weeks,' she was saying, 'all in honour of this
princess-style dress. So now, Lou, I want you to pin it on me again.
Don't make it an inch too big, because I want to lose five more pounds,
Lord willing -'
Joan
took two cups and saucers down and set them on the tray. Then she poured out
the coffee, taking her time because she was in no hurry to get back to the
parlour. When the last possible thing had been seen to, she picked up the tray
and carried it out.
'The
older you get,' Mrs Hammond was saying, 'the harder the fat clings.' She had
patches of lilac pinned on over her regular dress now, but she was more or less
doing it herself. Mrs Pike just kept smoothing down the already pinned-on
patches, running her fingers along the cloth with vague fumbling motions.
"There's only four pieces,' Mrs Hammond reminded her.
'Plus the pocket. Where's the pocket? You remember that's one reason we
decided on this. You could whip it up in a morning, you said. Do you remember?'
In
the silence that followed the question Joan set the coffee down by the cake
plate and passed the two cups over. Her aunt's she put on the table, and Mrs Hammond's she placed on the chair arm, but
neither woman noticed. Mrs Pike seemed fascinated by the little wheel on her
sewing machine. Mrs Hammond was waiting endlessly, with her hands across her
breasts to keep the lilac cloth in place. She seemed to be planning to keep
silent forever, if she had to, just so that one question of hers could be
answered. But Mrs Pike might not even have heard.
Then
Simon said, 'Um, why
'It's
nearly always little things,' said Mrs Hammond. Mrs Pike nodded and took a
packet of pins out of her spool box.
'They
were on their way to church, see,' Simon said. 'Andy was along. They made him
come. When suddenly they passed this sign saying, "Craig
Church two miles, visitors welcome," Mrs Point she said, "Why, I
never have seen that before." Just being
conversational. And Mr Point says, "Well, I don't know why
not. It's been there a year or more," he says. "No it ain't,"
Mrs Point says. "Yes, it has," Mr Point says . . .'
'Well,
now, isn't that typical,' said Mrs Hammond. She turned slightly, but Mrs Pike
pulled her back again to pin two pieces of cloth together at the waist. Mrs
Pike's mouth was full of pins, and her eyes were frowning at everything her fingers
did.
'So
anyway,' Simon said, 'that was what began it. Andy says he never saw such a
thing. He says they've even had to order another .newspaper subscription,
because they wouldn't share the one between them.'
'If
that isn't the limit,' said Mrs Hammond. 'Ouch, Lou.'
'Oh,
I'm sorry,' said Mrs Pike. Everyone looked toward her, but she only went on
pinning and didn't say any more, so Mrs Hammond took up where she had left off.
'What
doesn't make sense,' she told Simon, 'is
'Oh,
it won't her fault,' said Simon. 'Andy says she had forgot
about it. She just went on into church and never thought a thing about it. But
then at dinner, Mr Point wouldn't eat what she had cooked and made himself a
sandwich right after. That's a sign he's mad. Mrs Point said, "Andy,"
she said, "I'll be. Is your daddy mad about something?" And Andy
said, "Well, I reckon he's mad you said that sign wasn't there." So
she said, "Oh, I had forgot all about that," but then it was too
late. Now she's mad at him for being mad, and it don't look like it's ever
going to end.'
'You
haven't lost a pound,' Mrs Pike said. She had finished pinning the pieces
together now, and she was shaking her head at how tightly they fit.
'I
have too,' said Mrs Hammond. 'You allow a good inch for the dress I'm wearing
underneath it, Lou.' She acted as if it were perfectly natural that Mrs Pike
was speaking, but right on the tail of her words she shot Joan a meaningful
glance. Joan nodded, although privately she didn't feel too sure of anything
yet. But Simon kept on bravely, with his hands clutching the edge of the couch
and his eyes on his mother, even though it was Mrs Hammond he was speaking to.
'I
asked him,' he said, 'I asked, "Andy, how you think you're going to end
it?” And Andy says, "Same way it started, I reckon. By accident."'
'Well,
no,' said Mrs Pike, and once again everyone's attention was on her alone. She
removed the pins from her mouth and laid them on the sewing table, and then she
said, 'It's not that easy. Why sure, one of them might speak by accident. Mary
might. Then Sid might answer, being glad she'd spoken first, but by then Mary
would have caught herself. She'd feel silly to speak first, and only snap his
head off again. It's not that easy.'
'No,
you're right,' said Mrs Hammond, and Joan thought she would have agreed no
matter what her aunt had said. 'You have to think about the -'
The
telephone rang. Mrs Hammond stopped speaking, and Simon leaped over to pick up
the receiver. 'Hello?' he said. 'What?' He was silent a minute. 'No, I knew
about it. I knew, I just forgot. Well, thank you anyway. Bye.' He hung up.
'Who
was that?' asked Mrs Hammond.
'Just that station.'
'What?'
'Just
that radio station. They got this jackpot on. They call you up and if you don't
say, "Hello," if you say instead, "I am listening to WKKJ, the
all-day swinging station - "'
'I've
heard about
that,' Mrs Hammond said.
'If he'd just called before, boy. It's not me who was
prepared for them to -'
Mrs
Pike's spool box went clattering on the floor. All the colours of thread went
every which-way, rolling out their tails behind them, and Mrs Hammond said.
'Why, Lou,' but Mrs Pike didn't answer. She had crumpled up against her sewing
machine, leaning her forehead against the wheel of it and clenching both fists
tightly against her stomach. 'Lou!' Mrs Hammond said sharply. She looked
at Joan and Simon, and they stared back. 'Did something happen?'
'I
said something,' Simon told her.
Mrs
Hammond kept watching him, but he didn't explain any further. Finally she
turned back to Mrs Pike and said, 'Sit up, Lou,' and pulled her by the
shoulders, struggling against the dead weight of her. 'What's the matter?' she
asked. She looked into Mrs Pike's face, at her dry wide eyes and the white mark
that the sewing-machine wheel had made down the centre of her forehead. 'What's
the matter?' she asked again. But Mrs Pike only rocked back and forth, and
Simon and Joan stared at the floor.
9
All
Tuesday morning, Ansel had visitors. The first one was Joan. She mustn't have
stayed long because she came and went while James was emptying the garbage,
which only took a minute. When he returned Ansel said, 'Joan's been here,' and
then dumped a cupped handful of sunflower hulls into an ashtray and sat down to
read the paper.
'What'd
she want?' James asked.
'Oh,
nothing,' said Ansel. He opened the paper out and stayed hidden behind it, with
just one tuft of pale hair on the top of his head exposed to view. 'You won't
have to work tobacco today,' he added as an afterthought.
'How's that?'
But
Ansel didn't answer. Ever since he had awakened he had been angry; James could
tell by his long silences, but he knew there was no point asking what was wrong.
So he went on fixing breakfast, and while he was doing that he figured out that
Joan must have come to say her uncle was working today. He flipped over a fried
egg that was burning and called, 'Ansel?'
'Hmmm.'
'Is
Roy Pike working today?'
But
that was another question he never got the answer to. All he heard was the
steady thumping of Ansel's foot (Ansel kept time to everything he read, as if
it were a poem) and the crackling of newspaper pages. He didn't try asking
again.
The
second visitor was Maisie Hammond. She came while Ansel was eating breakfast
off the Japanese tray, and when she walked in Ansel said, 'Um. Maisie,' and
went on munching on his fried egg. (It was one of those days when James had
brought a tray without being asked, simply because it was more comfortable to
eat in the kitchen alone. Ansel had said, Well.
I see you've taken up cooking again,' which hadn't even made sense.) Maisie
was wearing a white summer dress with a full skirt, and she stood over his
couch like Florence Nightingale and bent down to inspect Ansel's egg. 'What's
that?' she asked.
'Fried egg, of course.'
'It
looks kind of funny.'
'It's
James's,' said Ansel.
'Ah.'
And she turned around, so that now she could see James where he sat eating in
the kitchen. 'Hey, James,' she said.
'Hello,
Maisie.'
‘Taken
any pictures lately?'
'No.'
That
seemed to end the conversation; she turned back to Ansel. 'You mind if I sit on
your couch?' she asked.
"I'd
prefer the armchair.'
'Well.'
She
settled on the very edge of the armchair, spreading her skirt around her. When
she bent her head toward Ansel, with the tow-white hair falling over her face,
the morning sun seemed to pass right through her hair. She looked like glass.
James studied her through the doorway as he munched on a piece of toast, but
she didn't look his way again. 'I came to ask you to a picnic,' she told Ansel.
'Oh, no. Thank you anyway.'
'Aunt
Connie's giving it.'
'Well,
it's nice of you to ask,' Ansel said.
'Don't
you want to come?'
'Oh,
I can't. James, I'm through with my tray.'
'Put
it on the table,' said James.
"There's
too much other stuff there.'
James
scraped his chair back and went to the living room, still chewing his piece of
toast. By the time he reached the couch, Ansel was already preparing to lie
down; he held the tray out in one hand, while he swung his feet up onto the
couch.
'Ansel
won't come to Aunt Connie's picnic,' Maisie said.
'That's
too bad,' said James. He picked the tray up and went back to the kitchen.
'He
just won't be reasoned with,' Maisie called after him.'
'Maybe
he don't feel up to it.'
'Will
you hush?' Ansel asked. ‘I’m not giving any excuses; why
should you?'
James
made another trip back for the salt and pepper, which were sitting on the arm
of the sofa. As he bent to pick them up, Maisie said, 'Will you talk to him?'
'Nothing
I can say.'
'Why
doesn't he ever go places?'
‘That's
my secret,' Ansel said. They looked at him. He was lying on his back,
with his hands crossed over his chest as if he expected to be laid out any
minute, and his eyes were staring upwards, wide and blank. But now that he had
their attention, all he did was switch his eyes suddenly to the window overhead
and say, 'Well, now. Yonder goes a jet.'
They
both waited, still watching him.
'Little
white tail behind it,' he said finally.
'Are
you in some pain?' Maisie asked.
'Well,
yes.'
She
looked across at James. 'Ansel's in pain,' she told him. But James just sat
down on a wooden chair, still holding the salt and pepper, and stretched his
legs out comfortably in front of him. If Ansel began an answer by saying,
'Well,' there was no use believing him.
'What
shall I do?' Maisie asked him.
'I
don't know.'
'Get
him a hot water bottle?'
'Hot
water bottle on my feet won't help,' said Ansel.
'Oh.
Is it your feet that hurt?'
'I
think it is.'
'I
declare,' said Maisie, and then looked at James again, but he didn't offer any
suggestions. Finally she said, 'Is that why you won't come to the picnic?'
'No.'
'It's
not till Sunday, you know. You'd be all better by then.'
'I
just don't want to come,' Ansel said. 'But thank you anyway.'
Maisie
couldn't seem to find anything to say to that. She sat there, twisting at the
hem of her white skirt, and James began hitting the plastic salt and pepper
shakers together until he had worked up to a good rhythm. He was considering
starting some more complicated beat when Maisie said, 'Will you stop that
noise?'
James
stopped. Outside a car suddenly drove up, making a great racket as it skidded
to a stop on the gravel road. Maisie stood up and bent forward a little to peer
out the window. 'It's Aunt Connie,' she said.
'Maybe
she's come to invite me personally,' said Ansel.
'No,
she's going toward Mrs Pike's.'
'She
won't stay there long. Mrs Pike wants to be by herself.'
'Aunt
Connie's very cheering,' Maisie said.
'Sometimes,
I'm very cheering, but you know what happened when I -'
'It's
Aunt Connie's biggest party of the summer I'm asking you to,' Maisie told him.
'That's all. The one where she hires the magician and all.'
Ansel
sighed and looked at the ceiling. After a minute he said, 'The actual place it
hurts is right behind the ankle-bones. The pain is awful.'
'The anklebones?'
'Last
night I walked too much.'
'Where'd
you walk to?' Maisie asked.
James
frowned at Ansel. He didn't want Maisie to hear about last night, not after the
scolding she'd given him. But Ansel wasn't looking at James; he went on,
placidly.
'I
walked just about everywhere,' he said. 'I thought, "I got to get out of
here. This is no place for me." I went everywhere I could think of.'
'You
shouldn't take such strenuous exercise,' Maisie said.
'You
have no idea how dizzy I was,' Ansel told her. 'How swimming in the head I was.
I couldn't even pack my things. I had to have a little something first to
steady my nerves.'
'To
- oh,' Maisie said, and she shot a glance over at James and narrowed her eyes.
'Ansel, you know what happens. If you get drinking, you see how
you feel.'
'It
was my mood,' said Ansel. 'I started walking.'
James
sat forward and said, "There's a pitcher of Kool-Aid in the icebox.
Anybody want some?'
'No,'
Maisie said. 'Where were you when all this was going on?'
'I
was working,' said James. He stood up, before she had a chance to say any more.
'I've got to go see Dan at the paper. Take him those pictures.'
'Well,
goodbye,' Maisie said, and turned back to Ansel. James was relieved she had let
him go that easily.
In
the darkroom he got his pictures together - one fire, one family reunion, two ladies' meetings - for this week's paper. Then while he
was hunting for a manila envelope he heard a knock on the door. He straightened
up and listened (it might be Joan again) but it was only the Potter sisters,
dropping in for their biweekly visit to see how Ansel was. He heard their
little chirping voices, with Maisie's voice running flatly behind them. 'We
brought some Jewish grandmother cookies, the kind you like,' Miss Lucy said,
and Ansel said, 'Why, that's real -' 'I'll take them,'
Maisie said, Maisie was always butting in, James thought. He set down his
pictures and came out to the living room, just to say hello, and saw that both
the Potter sisters were still standing in the doorway while Maisie sat back in
her easy chair with a bag of cookies in her lap. 'Why don't you sit down?' he
asked them, and then the chirping sounds began all over again, and the sisters
came toward him with their hands outstretched. They had on those dressy white
gloves of theirs with the ruffles around the wrists. Seeing that made him sad -
they looked as if they were expecting so much out of the visit, when all they
were going to do was sit on the threadbare plush chairs a minute and then go
home again. He said, 'It's good to see you, Miss Lucy. Miss Faye. Nice of you to bring the cookies.'
'We
like doing it,' said Miss Lucy.
'Will
you have a seat?'
Miss
Faye took the chair he pointed out to her, but Miss Lucy chose to sit by Ansel
on his couch. He didn't object. He was sitting upright now, and when she settled
down next to him he only smiled at her. 'I heard you tapping those walls
last night,' he said.
Tapping
the what?' asked Maisie.
Miss
Lucy looked very severe suddenly and tucked her head further inside her high
collar. She never mentioned her nightwalking during the daytime. 'We came to
see if you're well,' her sister said, and to remind you that tomorrow's
Wednesday. Time for your shots.'
'James
already told me,' Ansel said.
'Last
time you forgot anyway. You went visiting.'
'That's
true, I did,' said Ansel, and then he sat back and smiled around the room,
looking so happy and pleased with himself that
everyone else smiled back. The Potters made little ducking smiles down at their
gloved hands, and Maisie smiled with narrow eyes straight into Ansel's face.
James stood up; now that people were seated and comfortable he could go.
'I
have to see Dan Thompson at the paper,' he told the Potters. 'Sorry to run
off.'
'Well,
now, have a good time,' said Miss Faye. 'Will you remind him of that
announcement about our niece's baby?'
'I
sure will. See you later.'
He
went back to the darkroom. Here it was cool and distant-feeling; the voices in
the living room were faded. He put the week's pictures in the envelope and
then, to prolong his stay in the coolness, he set that down and began filing
away the pictures that Ansel had been looking at a couple of days before- the
Model A, Ansel on his couch, Joan in the dust storm. When he came to the
picture of Joan he stopped and studied it; he thought it might be the best thing
he had ever done. Her figure made a straight, black line through a circle of
wavery blurs, and her head was bent forward in that way she had when she
walked. He didn't know how many hundreds of times he had seen her like that.
And facing that photograph head-on, having a tangible picture of the way he saw
her in his mind, made him think about the quarrel again. All last night and all
this morning, he had been trying not to.
It
seemed to him, now that he stopped to consider, that if he wanted things to be
smoothed over again it would have to be he who took the first step. Joan
wouldn't. She would never change her mind about Ansel or even pretend to, in
order to make things easier. He would have to go over and say, 'Well, however
we feel, I'm sorry that fight happened,' or else she would just stay quietly in
her own house, playing games with Simon and occupying herself with little
private chores until she died. And all over nothing.
He tucked her picture back into the file. Mr Pike was always saying, 'Someday,
boy, that girl is going to walk off and leave you,' and he didn't know how
right he was. Last month
Joan
had packed her things and gone downtown to catch a bus for home, but then she
had decided she might as well go to a movie first and by the time the movie was
over she had changed her mind and come home again, dragging two big suitcases
behind her and hobbling along on her dressup shoes. She had told James about
it, laughing at herself as she told it, but James hadn't laughed with her. If
she were to go, what would he decide to do about it?
Out
in the living room, he could hear Miss Lucy discussing her nephew, who was a
missionary in
If
Joan were to go, he had only two choices. That was the way he saw it. He could
let her be, and spend the next forty years remembering nothing but the way she
used to walk across the fields with him from the tobacco barns and the
peppermint smell of her breath when she kissed him good night. Or he could go
after her and say, 'Come back. And will you marry me?' In his mind he
could say that, but not in real life. In real life he had Ansel, and would have
him always because he couldn't walk out on that one, final member of his family
that he hadn't yet deserted. And in real life, he could never make Joan and
Ansel like each other.
'I'll
take
He
stood up and rubbed his knees where they ached from being bent so long. Then he
picked up the pictures for the paper and left the dark-room. Instead of going
out through the front he crossed to the back door, in order to make his escape
as quickly as possible. Outside, his eyes searched out those daisies he had
been meaning to pick, blowing in the wind and about to be too old. He tucked
the pictures under his arm and went deeper into the field, heading toward the
tallest ones. It always made him feel silly, picking flowers. He didn't mind
doing it (Joan liked daisies far better than bought flowers, or any other kind
of present), but he didn't like thinking that anyone might be watching. In case
someone was, he picked very offhandedly - yanking the daisies up nearly
by their roots, jumbling them together helter-skelter without looking at them.
But while he was rounding the side of the house and heading toward the front
yard he arranged them more carefully, and held them up to see if they were all
right.
Mrs
Hammond's car was gone; that was one good thing. She must have left while he
was in the darkroom. Now all he wanted was for Joan to be the one to answer the
door. He knocked and waited, frowning tensely at the screen. For a long time
nobody came. Then from somewhere else in the house, Joan called, 'Was that a
knock?' Her voice echoed; she must have been standing at the head of the
stairs.
'It's
me,' James said.
'Simon,
will you let James in?'
Simon
came out of the kitchen, dragging his feet. Through the screen, all James saw
of him was his silhouette - his spidery arms and legs, his shoulders hunched up
as if he were scared of something. Before he reached the door he stopped and
said, 'You come by yourself?'
'Who
would I be bringing?' asked James.
'Oh, no one.' And he came the rest of the way
to the door and pushed it open. 'Joan's upstairs,' he said, 'putting Mama to
bed. She'll be down.'
'Your
mother got up already?'
'Well,
but now she's going back to bed. I said everything all wrong.'
'I'll
bet you didn't,' said James, without being quite sure what he was talking
about. He closed the door very softly behind him and went over to a chair. 'Is
Joan too busy to talk?'
But
just then they heard Joan coming downstairs, walking on tiptoe and taking only
one step at a time where usually she took two. Simon jerked his thumb toward
the sound. 'Here she is,' he said. When Joan came into view she looked at James
blankly a minute, as if she'd forgotten he was here, and then she smiled and
said, 'Oh. Hello.'
'Hello,'
James said. He stood up and held out the flowers. 'I brought you some daisies.
I was walking through the field and happened to come across them.'
'That
was nice,' she said, and then frowned at the daisies.
James
looked at them. They seemed old and draggled now, in a messy little cluster in his
hand. 'They're not all that special, I guess,' he said, but Joan had come out
of her thoughts. 'I think they're fine,' she said. 'I'll get a vase.'
'Oh,
you don't have to get a vase for them -'
'Well,
of course I do.'
She
went out into the kitchen, still seeming to walk on tiptoe. Now that James
thought of it, there was an uneasy silence about this house. He couldn't tell
if it was because of something to do with Mrs Pike or because Joan was still
mad at him and he didn't know how to
ask. He looked across at Simon, who was still standing and staring into space.
'Did I come at a bad time?' James asked him.
'Huh?'
Joan
came back, carrying a cut-glass vase full of water. He asked her, 'Did I come
at a bad time?'.
'Oh, not really.'
'Well,
did I or didn't I?'
'It's
all right,' Joan told him. 'Aunt Lou didn't feel well this morning, but she's
upstairs now and everything's all right.' She took the daisies from him. Her
hands when they brushed his were cool and impersonal, and she didn't look at
him. 'We have to go gradually,' she said. 'I keep forgetting that. I don't seem
to have a light touch with anything.' Yet her fingers when she arranged
the flowers were as light and gentle as butterflies, and the daisies stood up
or bent gracefully over the minute she touched them. When she was done they had
stopped looking draggled; James was glad now that he had brought them.
'You
ought to work for a florist,' he told her.
But
she set the vase down on a table without even noticing how they looked. She
hadn't glanced at them once, all the time she was arranging them. 'Mrs Hammond
does,' she said. 'Have a light touch, I mean. But I'm not sure that's the kind
I'm talking about right now.'
'I
don't know that I follow you,' James said.
She
shook her head and sat down, as if she had given up on him. 'Never mind,' she
said.
'Mrs
Hammond has a light touch?'
'Never mind.' She looked suddenly at Simon. 'Simon, do you want lunch?'
she asked him.
'I
just had breakfast.'
'Oh.'
'You
have a light
touch,' James said. 'You have the lightest touch of anyone I know.'
'Oh,
James, you don't know.'
'Well,
I'm trying -'He stopped and glanced toward Simon. It seemed to him Simon looked
cold. 'Don't you want to sit down?' he asked.
'I'm
okay.'
'Come
on.'
Simon
shrugged and sat down on the couch. Now that they were all seated here, facing
each other and keeping their hands folded in their laps, it seemed more awkward
than before. It seemed they should be having a conversation of some
kind, something that made sense. Not these little jagged bits of words. He
tried smiling at Joan but all she did was smile back, using only her mouth
while her eyes stayed serious and maybe even angry; he didn't know. 'Would you
rather I come back another time?' he asked.
'It's
all right.'
'Well.'
He sat further forward and looked at his fingernails. 'I guess your uncle's
working today,' he said.
'Didn't
Ansel tell you so?'
'In
away he did.'
'There's
nothing bad about it,' said Joan.
'Why, no, of course not.'
'You
have to do something. You can't sit around. It's not fair to sit around,
reminding people all the time -'She stopped, and James looked sideways at her
while he kept his head bent over his fingernails. Her voice was so sharp
sounding it made him uneasy, and he didn't know what he was supposed to say to
her. But then she said, "Well. So you don't have to work tobacco any
more.'
'No,
'James said.
'That's
good.'
He
waited a minute, and then cleared his throat and said, 'It'll be a good season,
they say.'
'Billy
Brandon told me that,' Simon said suddenly.
'Barns
are nearly full already.'
In
his shirt pocket he found a plastic comb, with little pieces of lint sticking
to it. By running his index finger across its teeth he made a sound like a tiny
xylophone, flat and tinny. Joan and Simon both sat watching him. When he saw
them watching he stopped and put the comb back in his pocket. 'I guess I'll be
going,' he said helplessly. 'I could come some other time.'
'All
right,' said Joan.
'Do
you want me to?'
'What?'
'Do
you want me to come back?'
'Oh.
Yes.'
'Okay,'
he said, but he still wasn't sure. He stood up and went over to the door, with
Joan and Simon following solemnly behind. Then he turned around and said, 'I
could take you to the movies, maybe, Thursday night. The two
of you.'
'We'll
see,' Joan said.
'Do
you want to come or don't you?'
'I
don't know yet if we can,' she said.
'Well,
I wouldn't ask so far in advance, but tomorrow night I can't go. I'm going to
take Ansel playing cribbage. But Thursday-'
‘We'll
see, 'said Joan.
‘I
know I wasn't going to chauffeur him around no more, but lately he's
been - Well. We don't have to go into that.'
‘I'm
not going into anything,' Joan said.
‘Yes,
you are.'
‘I
wasn't saying a word.'
‘I
could tell the way you were looking.'
‘I
wasn't looking any way. I wasn't even thinking about it.’
She
sounded near tears. James stood there, trying to think of what to say next, but
he figured anything he came up with would only make things worse. So he waited
a minute, and then he said, 'I think I'd better leave. Goodbye.'
'Goodbye,'
Simon said.
He
was down the porch steps and halfway across the yard when he heard their door
close; Joan had never said goodbye . The only sounds
now were from Ansel's window - the birdlike sounds of women laughing, all
clustered around his brother, their laughter pealing out in clear happy trills
that drifted through the window and hung like a curtain across the empty porch.
10
That
afternoon, Joan had a telephone call from her mother. She was upstairs when it came,
getting Mrs Pike out of bed for the second time and finding it a little easier
now than it had been in the morning. 'What do you want to wear?' she asked, and
her aunt actually answered, with only a slight pause beforehand. 'The beige, I
guess,' she said. She waited while Joan lifted it off the hanger. 'Can I wear
the abalone pin with that?'
'Of
course,' Joan said. She would have agreed if her aunt had wanted to wear the
kitchen curtains. She picked the pin out of the bureau drawer and laid it
beside the dress, and then the phone rang. Both of them stopped to listen.
'Hey, Joan!' Simon called.
'I'm
up here.'
'Someone
wants you on the telephone.'
'Well,
I'll be back,' Joan told her aunt, and she went down the stairs very fast, two
steps at a time. She didn't know who she was expecting, but when she heard only
the ice-cold, nasal voice of the operator she was disappointed.
'Miss
Joan Pike?' the operator asked.
'Yes.'
'Are
you Miss Joan Pike?'
'Yes.'
'Long distance calling.'
'All
right,' Joan said.
There
was a pause, and then her mother said, 'Is that Joan?',
formally, and waited for Joan to go through the whole business of identifying
herself again.
'It's
me,' said Joan. 'Hello, Mother.'
'Hello,'
her mother said. 'I called to see how Lou was. Your father said to ask.'
'She's
getting better,' said Joan. She heard her mother turn and murmur to her father,
probably relaying Joan's answer. In normal speech her mother had a very soft
voice, held in as if there was somebody sick in the next room. But when she
returned to the phone her tea-party voice came back, louder and more distinct,
the voice of a plump woman who stood very straight and placed the points of her
shoes outward when she walked.
'Your
father feels bad we couldn't make it to the funeral,' she was saying. 'He says
it's only a sniffle he has, but I don't like the sound of it. Is there anything
we can do for Lou?'
'Not
that I can think of. The flowers were very nice -Uncle Roy said to tell you.'
'Well.
We weren't quite sure. Some people have a dislike of gladioli.'
'No,
they were fine,' said Joan.
"That's
good. How's Simon?'
'He's
all right, I guess.'
‘Tell
him hello for us, now. Tell him -'
Her
voice had grown almost as soft as it normally was. Joan could picture her,
sitting on the edge of that rocker with the needlework seat, with Joan's father
standing behind her and bending cautiously forward to hear what was going on.
He was a little afraid of telephones himself; he treated them as though they
might explode. She saw how her mother would be smoothing down that little
crease between her eyebrows with her index finger, and then letting the crease
come back the minute she dropped her hand. The thought of that made Joan miss
her; she said suddenly, 'I'm tired.'
'What?'
'I'm
just tired. I want to come home. I don't want to stay here any more.'
'Why,
Joan -' her mother said, and then let her voice trail off. Finally she said,
'Don't you think you should be with Lou now?'
'I'm
not helping,' said Joan. 'She just sits. Every place I look, Janie Rose is
there, and I don't feel like staying here. Nothing is right.'
'Doesn't
Simon need you?'
'Well
-' Joan said, and then stopped because her father must have asked to know what
was going on. The two of them murmured together a while, her mother's voice
sounding faintly impatient. Joan's father was growing deaf; he had to be told
twice. When her mother finally returned to Joan she was sighing, and her voice
was loud again.
'You
know we'd love to have you,' she said. 'As soon as you can
come. When were you planning on?'
'I
don't know. A day or two, maybe. By
bus.'
'Or
maybe James could drive you,' said her mother. 'We'd love to have him.'
'He
won't be coming.'
'Your
father's been asking about him.'
'He
won't be coming,' Joan said firmly.
There
was another pause, and then her mother said, 'Is something wrong?'
'What
would be wrong?'
'Well,
I don't know. Shall we expect you when we see you, then?'
'All right. Don't go to any trouble.'
'It'll
be no trouble. Goodbye, now.'
'Goodbye.
And thank you for calling.'
She
hung up, but she stayed in the same position, her hand on the receiver. Out of
the corner of her eye she caught sight of Simon. He was leaning against the
frame of the kitchen door, eating another peanut butter and mayonnaise
sandwich. 'Hey,' she said, but he only bit off a hunk of sandwich and chewed
steadily, keeping his eyes on her face. 'That was your Aunt Abby,' she told
him.
'I
know.'
'She
called to see how everyone is.'
He
straightened up from the doorframe and came over to her, planting his feet very
carefully and straight in front of him. When he had reached her he said, 'I
hear how you're going there,' and waited, with the sandwich raised halfway to
his mouth.
'We'll
see,' said Joan.
'You going by bus?'
'I
might not go at all. I don't know yet.'
'How
long would you go for?'
'Look,'
said Joan. 'I don't know that I'm going. I just think it might be good to get
away. So don't tell anyone, all right?'
'Well,
all right.'
'Not
even James.'
'All
right,' said Simon. He was good at keeping secrets; it was an insult to
suggest he might tell somebody. 'If you do go -' he said.
'I
might not.'
'But
if you do go, can I go with you?'
'Oh,
Simon,' Joan began, and stopped there because she didn't know what else to say.
'Your parents need you here,' she said finally.
They
won't notice.'
'Your
daddy will. So will your mother, pretty soon.'
'No.'
'Yes.
See, she's coming downtstairs now.'
He
turned and looked toward the stairs. Mrs Pike was coming down of her own
accord, taking each step uncertainly but not asking for help. She had pinned
the abalone pin at the neck of her dress, and it was bunching up the material a
little. When she reached the bottom of the stairs she looked from Joan to Simon
and back again, as if she were expecting them to tell her what to do next. Joan
went over to her.
'I
could fix you a bite to eat,' she said.
'I
came to sew.'
To sew?'
'I
came to sew Connie's dress together.'
'Oh,'
Joan said. She looked around at the sewing machine, and was glad to see that
the dress still lay there. (Mrs Hammond had gone away all helter-skelter,
talking to herself, leaving everything behind her.) 'It's all here,' Joan told
her. 'Is there anything else you need?'
'No.
I just want to sew.'
'Shall
we sit here and keep you company?'
'I
just want to sew.'
'All
right,' said Joan, but she waited a minute anyway, and so did Simon. Mrs Pike
didn't look their way again. She went over to the chair at the sewing machine
and lowered herself stiffly into it, and then she picked up the material and
began sewing on it. She did it just that suddenly, without examining what she
was about to do first or even looking at it - just jammed two pieces of cloth
beneath the needle of the sewing machine and stepped hard on the treadle.
Finally Joan turned away, because there was nothing more she could do. 'Let's
go to the kitchen,' she told Simon. She steered him gently by one shoulder and
he went, but he kept looking back over his shoulder at his mother. When they
reached the kitchen he said, 'See?' but she said, 'Hush,' without even asking
what he meant. 'Maybe we could go for a walk,' she said.
'I
found my ball.'
'What
ball?'
"The
one I lost. I found it.'
'Well,
I'm glad to hear it,' said Joan. 'Is it all beat up?'
'It's
fine. You want to play catch?'
'Not
really.'
'Aw,
come on, Joan.'
She
frowned at him. 'We should have taken you to a barber,' she said finally.
'Just for fifteen minutes or so? I won't throw hard.'
'Oh,
all right, 'she said.
Simon
went over to the door and picked up the baseball that lay beside it. It was
greyer than before, and grass-stained, but lying out in the field for two weeks
hadn't hurt it any. He began throwing it up in the air and catching it, while
he led the way through the kitchen and out the back door.
'If
we had a big mowed lawn, we could play roll-a-bat,' Joan said.
‘Roll-a-bat's a baby game.'
They
cut through the tall grass behind the house, parting the weeds ahead of them
with swimming motions and advancing beyond the garbage cans and the rusted junk
to a place where the grass was shorter. Janie Rose had set fire to this spot
not a year ago, while trailing through here in her mother's treasured wedding
dress and holding a lighted cigarette high in front of her with her little
finger stuck out. James and Mr Pike and Mr Terry had had to fight the fire with
their own shirts, their faces glistening with sweat and their voices hoarse
from smoke, while Ansel leaned out the back window calling 'Shame! Shame!' and
Janie Rose sat perched in the tin can tree, crying and cleaning her glasses
with the lace hem of the wedding dress. Now the weeds had grown up again, but
they were shorter and sparser, with black scorched earth showing around them,
Joan and Simon took up their positions, one at each end of the burned patch,
and Simon scraped a standing-place for himself by kicking down the brittle
weeds and scuffing at the charred surface of the soil 'Here goes,' he said, and
wound up his arm so hard that Joan raised both hands in front of her to ward it
off before he had even let go of the ball. Simon stopped winding up and pounded
the ball into the palm of his other hand.
'Hey,
now,' he said. 'You going to play like a girl?' 'Not
if you throw easy like you promised.' He squinted across at her a minute, and
then nodded and raised his throwing arm again. This time the ball came without
any windup, cutting in a straight clean arc through the blue of the sky. Joan
caught it neatly, remembering not to close her eyes,
and threw it back to him underhanded. 'Overhand,' said Simon. 'Sorry.'
Little
prickles of sweat came out on her forehead. She tugged her blouse out of her bermudas, so as to make herself cooler, and almost missed
the next ball when it whizzed low and straight toward her stomach. 'Watch
it,' Simon said. 'You watch it. That one burned my hands.' She threw
it overhand this time, and it fell a little short, so
that Simon had to run forward to catch it. While he was walking back to his
place a screen door slammed behind them, and Joan automatically turned her head
and listened to find out what end of the house it had come from. 'Coming,' said
Simon, and just then Joan saw, in the corner of her eye, someone tall in
James's plaid shirt, untangling his way through the field and toward Joan. She
turned all the way. 'Watch _ !' Simon said, and
something slammed into the side of her head and made everything green and
smarting. She sat down, not because she had been knocked down but because she
was so startled her knees were weak. Beside her, nestled in a clump of grass,
was the baseball, looking whiter than she remembered. Her temple began
throbbing and she lay all the way down on her back, with the scorched ground
underneath her making little crisp brittle sounds. 'Joan!' Simon was
shouting, and whoever wore James's plaid shirt was thudding closer and closer.
It was Ansel. She saw that and closed her eyes. In the same moment Simon
arrived, with his breath coming fast and loud. He thumped down beside her and
said, 'Joan, oh, shit, Joan,' which made her suddenly grin, even
with her eyes closed and her head aching. She looked up at him and said, 'Simon
Pike -'and tried to sit up, but someone yanked her back by the shoulders. Where
did you - 'she began, but then Ansel clapped his hand over her mouth. His
hand smelled of Noxzema.
'You
lie still,' he said. 'Don't you sit and don't you talk. I'll call an
ambulance.'
'An ambulance?' And this time she out and out laughed, and sat up even
with Ansel trying to press her back down again. 'Ansel,' she said, 'I really
don't need an ambulance. I just got surprised.'
'I
warned you,' Simon said. 'Oh Lord, people break so easy.' He settled
back on his haunches, clutching his knees, and for a minute it looked as if he
would cry.
'Oh,
hey, now,' Joan told him. She struggled all the way up, letting Ansel keep hold
of one of her elbows, and then reached down to give Simon a hand up. When she
stood her head hurt more; it was throbbing. She patted Simon's shoulder. 'It
was my doing,' she said. 'I turned to see who was coming.'
Ansel
kept hanging on to her elbow, too tightly. She tried to pull away but he only
tightened his grasp and bent closer over her, looking long and pale and worried
with his light eyes blinking anxiously in the strong sunlight. 'You're coming
inside,' he told her. 'I'll call a doctor.'
'I
don't need a doctor, Ansel.'
'Terrible
things can happen.'
'Oh,
for heaven's sake,' she said. 'I'm not about to die on you.'
'You
never know. You never can -'
She
pulled away from him, this time so hard that he had to let her go, and reached
out for Simon's hand instead, in case she got dizzier. Simon accepted her hand
like a grave responsibility and led her soberly, toward the house. Ansel
followed, panting from all this unexpected exercise.
'We'll
go to my house,' he said, 'where I have iced tea.'
'No,
thank you.'
'I
want you to go to my house. I feel responsible. And anyway, I'm lonely.
James has gone off to Dan Thompson's.'
'Oh,
all right,' Joan said. It was true that she didn't want to go back to that
parlour again. They veered toward the Greens' end of the house, with Ansel
parting weeds ahead of them and kicking aside bits of rusted car parts so that
Joan could have a clear passage. When they reached the back door he held it
open for them and ushered them in with a bow, though neither
Simon or Joan paid any attention to him.
'Head
on to the front room,' he said. ‘I’ll tell you what, Joan: you can lie
on my couch.'
'Oh,
well, Ansel, I don't need -'
'It's
not often I let someone do that.'
'All
right,' she said, and went on toward the couch, feeling too aching to argue.
The house smelled like James -a mixture of darkroom chemicals and shaving soap
and sunshine - and there was a little of that medicine smell of Ansel's there
too. She lay back on the couch and closed her eyes.
Ansel
brought iced tea, with the ice cubes tinkling in the glasses and a sprig of
fresh mint floating on top. It surprised her, because Ansel was used to being
waited on himself. She had thought he wouldn't even
know where the glasses were. He set the tray down on the coffee table and
handed a glass to both Simon and Joan. Then he picked up his own glass and
carried it over to the easy chair, where he sat down a little uncertainly, as
if he had never sat there before. Maybe he hadn't. 'Cheers,' he said, and held
his glass up high. 'In reference to this doctor business, Joan -'
'I
feel fine.'
'But
maybe you should see one anyway,' said Simon. 'You just don't know what might
have happened.'
'Nothing
happened. Will you hush?'
She
took a sip of iced tea and closed her eyes. It felt good to be cool again. The
room was dim and quiet, and the couch was comfortable, and the heat of outdoors
had made her feel relaxed and sleepy.
'What
else is good,' Ansel was telling Simon, 'is to drink
iced tea with peppermint candy on it. You ever tried that?' His voice was far
away and faint, because Joan was half-asleep. She heard him shift his position
in the creaky old chair. 'You ever tried it?' he asked again.
'No,'
said Simon. He was still being cautious with Ansel, although Joan couldn't
figure out why.
'You
ought to have your mother make it for you,' Ansel told him.
'She
won't care.'
'Sure
she will. Sure she will.'
'We
drink mainly Cokes,' said Simon.
"This
is better.'
There
was a long silence. Joan reached over to set her glass on the floor, and then
she lay down again and put the back of her hand across her eyes to shut the
light out.
'James
is at Dan Thompson's,' Ansel said.
'You
told me that,' said Simon.
'He
just walked out and left me here, alone.'
'I
don't care.'
'If
I drop dead today, he'll forget what name to put on the headstone.'
'I
don't care.'
'Ah,
well,' Ansel sighed, and there was the sound of his stretching in the chair.
"There is a collection, in this world,' he said, 'of people who could die
and be mourned approximately a week. If they're lucky.
Then that's the end of it. You think I'm one?'
'I
don't know,' said Simon. 'I'm not listening.'
'Oh.'
There
was another pause, and someone's ice tinkled. Ansel's,
probably. Ansel said, 'I'm going to go away from here.'
'Everyone
is,' said Simon.
'What?'
'Grown-ups
can go and not even let on they're going. I wish I could.’
'You
can come with me,' Ansel said.
'Where's
that?'
‘This town of mine. This place I come from.'
'Is
it north?' Simon asked.
'North of what?'
'North north. Is it?'
'It's south,' said Ansel.
'Oh.
I want to go north.'
'It's
all the same. Who you kidding? This town has got a cop that acts like a night watchman.
He goes through the town on foggy nights crying out the hours, singing
"Sunshine on the Mountain" and all other sunny songs, middle of the
night. Ain't that a thing to wake in the night to, boy.'
'Yeah, 'said Simon.
'To wake up after a nightmare to.'
'Yeah.'
The
throbbing in Joan's head kept time to Ansel's words. She wanted to leave now,
and stop listening to that thin voice of his going on and on, but the throbbing
made a weight on her head that kept her down. She listened dreamily, without
interrupting.
'Lately
I've been thinking about home,' Ansel said. 'It was the funeral that did it,
somehow.'
'You
didn't go to the funeral.'
'It
did it anyway. The only problem is, it's hard
to know what way to think about it. No telling how it's changed,
and I get no letters from there. James does, from our sisters. He writes them
once a month, letters all full of facts, but when he gets an answer he pretends
he doesn't. I don't know why. I mean he goes on writing but never mentions what
their letters to him have said, never comments on them. Why do you think
he does that?'
'I
don't know,' Simon said. 'This cop, does he sing every night?'
'Just about.
And there's a feed store that gives away free hats. Big straw hats, with red
plumes curling down like Sir Walter Raleigh's. Walk down
'How
about me?' asked Simon.
'How about you.'
'If
I was to ask, would they give me one too?'
'Why, surely.'
'I'll
ask, then.'
'You
do that.'
More
ice tinkled. Joan's hand had stuck to her damp forehead and she took it away,
making a tearing sound, and sighed and turned over on her side.
'What
exactly is the name of this town?' Simon asked.
'Caraway,
N.C.'
'Is
there buses to it?'
'Six a day.'
'Is
there people my age?'
'Is
there?' Ansel asked, and he laughed suddenly, a chuckle deep in his throat so
that he sounded a little like James, 'Is
there, boy. Well, lots. I ought to know. Another thing.
This is something I've never seen in any other town, now: the boys wear one
gold ring in their ear.'
'Earrings?'
'Oh, no. No, this is like pirates wear. Pierce their ears and put
one gold hoop through. Everyone did it.'
'Did
you?'
'My
family didn't want me to. Well, I wasn't actually “in" that particular group, anyway. But James was. He had a
hoop, but he took it off finally. Only got one because the
family told him not to. Eventually everyone takes them off, when
they've grown up and settled down. You'll hear someone say, "So-and-so's
engaged now. He's got a steady job, and there's no more gold in his ear."
But I never had gold in my ear to begin with.'
'Does
it hurt?' Simon asked.
'Does
what hurt?'
'When they pierce your ears.'
'Oh, no. At least, I don't think so. Not for long.'
'If
I went there, would I wear a earring?'
'Sure
you would.'
'How
long is it by bus?'
Joan
felt herself drifting off. The house seemed to be spinning around her, making
streaky yellow shimmers of sunshine through her eyelids, but when she found
that she wasn't even hearing the others' voices now she pulled herself sharply
awake. She opened her eyes and found that she was looking at one of Ansel's
shoes, tapping lazily on the floor. 'Have I been asleep?' she asked. Simon and
Ansel looked over at her. 'What time is it?'
'Not
yet three,' said Ansel. 'How's your head?'
'It's
fine.'
'You sure?'
‘Yes. Sorry to disappoint you.' She sat up and
tucked her blouse in. 'Simon, we got to get going,' she said.
‘Aw, I was just hearing something interesting.'
'It
can wait.'
She
let him go through the door first, and then she turned to Ansel and smiled at
him. 'Thank you for the use of the couch,' she said.
'Nothing to it.' He poked his head out the door, past Joan, and looked at
Simon. 'You be making your plans, now,' he said.
'All right.'
'Plans for what?' Joan asked.
'Nothing,'
said Simon.
Joan
yawned, and followed him down the porch toward home.
11
'There's
not much difference between one person and the next,' Ansel said. 'I've found
that to be true. Would you agree with me?' He raised himself up from a prone
position on the couch to look at James, who was sitting nearby with the paper.
'Would you?' he asked.
'Well,
more or less,' said James, and turned to the sports section.
'Course
you do. You have to. Is that the Larksville paper?'
'Larksville
paper's not out till tomorrow.'
'Oh.
I thought today was Wednesday.'
'It
is,' said James. 'The paper comes on Thursday.'
'Oh.'
Ansel
lay down again and stared thoughtfully upwards, lacing his fingers across his chest.
He had been flat on his back all morning, complaining of dizzy spells, and
James had been sitting here keeping him company. It was easier that way.
Otherwise Ansel would continually think up reasons to call him into the room
and things to ask him for. 'James,' he would call, 'what was the name of that
old woman who gave sermons on the street corner?' Or, 'Whatever happened to
that seersucker suit I used to have?' And in the long run James would have to
spend just as much time in this room as if he'd been sitting there all along.
He yawned now and turned another page of his newspaper, and Ansel switched his
eyes back over to him.
'It's
a fact, James,' he said. 'People don't vary a heck of a lot, one from the
other.'
'You
told me that,' said James.
'Well,
yes, I did. Because it's true. If you will hark your mind back to that Edwards boy, that bucktoothed
one that joined the Army - what was his name?'
'I
don't know.'
'Oh,
sure you know. Sure you know. What was his name?'
'Ansel,'
said James, 'I just don't make a point of remembering all these things.'
'Well,
I wouldn't brag about it. Clarence, that was it. Or
Clayton; I don't know which. Now, Clarence, he went almost around the world
with that Army outfit of his. Almost everywhere. And
you know what he said when he got back? He said that every single country he'd
been in, one thing always held true: when mothers and children climb into a car
to go visiting, the first act a mother undertakes is spitting on a hanky and
scrubbing her children's faces with it. Always.
James
ran his eyes down the baseball scores. He frowned over them, absentmindedly
making a little tch sound under his breath when he came upon a score he
didn't like. After a while he became aware of the silence, and he looked up to
see Ansel watching him with his eyes wide and hurt. 'You weren't even
listening,' Ansel said, and James sighed and folded his paper up.
'I
was listening and reading both,' he said.
'No.
What's it take to make a man listen?'
'Well,
I'm sorry. You can tell it to me again, if you want.'
'No.'
Ansel
turned slightly, so that his cheek was resting on the sofa cushion, and closed
his eyes. 'I've noticed more and more,' he said, 'that
no one listens when I talk. I don't know why. Usually I think about a thing
before I say it, making sure it's worthwhile. I plan it in my mind, like. When
I am dead, what will they remember but the things I talked about? Not the way I
looked, or moved; I didn't look like much and I hardly moved at all. But only
the things I talked about, and what is that to
remember when you never even listened?'
'I
listen,' said James.
'No.
Sometimes in one of those quiet periods after I've said something, when no
one's saying anything back because they didn't hear me, I look at myself and
think, well, my goodness. Am I here? Do I even exist?'
'Oh,
for heaven's sake,' said James. He opened the paper again.
'When
I am dead, I wonder what people will miss me. You?
Simon? Mrs Pike will wish she'd brought more hot soup. Joan won't notice I'm
gone. Will you miss me?'
James
read on. He learned all about a boy named Ralph Combs, who was planning to be
Because
of the way he felt, the view from the window took on a sad, deserted look.
Everything was bowed low under the breeze, straightening up for a second only
to bow again. Simon's bicycle lay on its side with a drooping buttercup tangled
in its spokes. At the edge of the yard the Potters' insurance man was just
climbing out of his Volkswagen (He came every week, because the Potters had to
be constantly reassured that their policy really was all right.) He looked
tired and sad. While he was crossing the yard he mopped his face and
straightened the plastic carnation in his buttonhole, and then on the first
porch step he snapped his head erect and put a bright look on his face. After
that James lost sight of him. But he could hear the knocking, and the sound of
the Potters' door cautiously opening and the bolts being slid back after the
insurance man was taken inside. They slid easily in their little oiled tracks.
The quickness of them made James smile, and he could picture Miss Lucy's eager
fingers fumbling rapidly at the locks, shutting little Mr Harding in and the
loneliness out for as long as she and Miss Faye could manage. He stopped
smiling and moved away from the window.
Back
in the kitchen it was even worse. There was one daisy on the counter, a stray
one from the field in back, and it was dead and collapsed against Ansel's
untouched lunch tray. ('I'm not eating today,' Ansel had said. 'Do you care?'
'Suit yourself,' said James.) Out the back window was
the half-mowed field, looking bald and straggly. Simon Pike was leaning against
an incinerator staring at it all, and while James watched, Simon straightened
slowly and began wandering in small thoughtful circles around the incinerator.
With the toes of his leather boots he kicked at things occasionally, and he had
his shoulders hunched up again so that he looked small and worried. James stuck
his head out the window.
'Hey,
Simon,' he said, 'why don't you come in?'
Simon
raised his head and looked at him. 'What for?' he asked.
'Well,
you look kind of lonely out there.'
'Aw, no.'
'Well,
anyway,' said James, 'I want to take a picture of you.’
That made Simon think twice. He stood still for a moment to consider it,
with his chin stuck out and his eyes gazing away from James and across the
field. Then he said, 'What kind of picture?'
'The
kind you like. A portrait.'
'Well,
then, I reckon I might. I'll come in and think about it.'
‘That's
the way,' said
James.
He
let Simon come in his own good time, stopping to kick at a bootscraper and
wasting several minutes examining some blistered paint on the door. When Simon
was troubled about something, this was the way he acted. He circled all around
the kitchen without once looking at James or speaking to him, and he picked up
several things from counters and turned them over and over in his hands before
setting them down again. Then he jammed his hands into his back pockets and
went to the window. 'Mama's hemming a dress,' he said.
"That's
good.'
'She
talks a little, too, but not about any concern of mine.'
'Well,
you got to give her time,' said James. 'First thing people talk about is
weather and things.'
'I
know,' Simon said. 'Daddy is at the fields, and Joan
too. It's her tobacco day. Everybody's busy.'
'So're
you,' said James. 'You're having your picture taken.'
'Yeah,
well.'
But
when James headed toward the darkroom Simon followed him. 'Where are we going
to take it?' he asked.
'Outdoors, if you like.'
'I'd
rather the living room.'
'All
right,' James said. He opened the door of the darkroom and led the way to where
his cameras stood. 'You got to be quiet, though, because that's where Ansel's
sleeping.'
‘Now?'
'It's
one of his dizzy days.'
'Oh,
cripes,' said Simon, and he started walking in circles again. He put the heel
of one boot exactly in front of the toe of the other, and keeping his balance
that way made him fling both arms out and tilt sideways slightly. 'It's a bad
day for everyone.’ he said. 'I declare.' He seemed to be walking
on an imaginary hoop, suspended high above the ground.
James
had seen the kind of portraits that Simon and Janie Rose liked best - the ones
taken against a dead white screen, with the faces retouched afterwards. He
favoured a homier picture, himself. He left the screen behind and brought only
a couple of lamps, not the glaring ones, and his favourite old box camera.
'We'll put you in the easy chair,' he told Simon. He had given the camera to
Simon to carry, and Simon was squinting through the view-finder as he walked.
'Do you want to be doing anything special?'
'Yes,'
Simon said. 'I want to be smoking a cigar.'
'Be
serious, now.'
'I
am serious. You asked me what I wanted to be doing. Well, all my life
I've been waiting to get my picture took with a cigar. I been
counting on it.'
'Oh,
what the hell,' said James. He set his lamps down and went over to the
living-room mantelpiece. From the old wooden cigar box that had belonged to his
grandfather he took a cigar, the fat black kind that he smoked on special
evenings when no one was around to complain. 'Here you go,' he said. 'But don't
you light it, now. Just get your picture took with it.'
'Well,
thank you,' said Simon. He crossed to the easy chair, giving Ansel a sideways
glance as he passed, but Ansel only stirred and didn't wake up. 'He don't know what he's missing,' Simon whispered. 'Me with a cigar, boy.'
'It'll
all be recorded for posterity,' said James.
While
James was setting up the lights, Simon practised with the cigar. He opened it
and slid the paper ring off, and then he sat with his elbow resting on the
chair arm and his face in a furious frown every time he took a suck from the
unlit cigar. 'I'm getting the hang of it,' he said, and looked around for an
ashtray to practise tapping ashes into. 'When do you reckon they'll let me
smoke these for real?'
'Never,
probably,' said James. 'Always someone around that objects to
the smell.'
'Ah,
I wouldn't care. I'm going to start as soon as I'm out on my own, boy. Soon as I turn sixteen or so.'
James
smiled and tilted a lamp closer to Simon. He had been listening to Simon for
some years how, and he had a mental list of what he was planning to do at age
sixteen. Smoke cigars, take tap-dance lessons, buy his own Wool-worth's, and
grow sideburns. Janie Rose hadn't even been going to wait that long. She
asked her mother weekly, 'Do you think it's time I should be thinking of
getting married?' And then she would smile hopefully, showing two front teeth
so new that they still had scalloped edges, and everyone would laugh at her.
James could see their point, though - Janie's and Simon's. He couldn't remember
that being a child was so much fun. So he nodded at Simon and said, 'When you
turn sixteen, I'll buy you a box,' and Simon smiled and settled back in the
chair.
'Might
not wait till then even,' he said. 'You never can tell.'
'Well,
I would,' said James. 'Tobacco stunts your growth.'
'No,
I mean to go out on my own. I might go earlier.' He stuck out his tongue and
flicked an imaginary piece of tobacco off the tip of it. 'I
been thinking where I could go.'
'It's
kind of early for that,' James said.
'I
don't know. You know Caraway, N.C.?'
James
stopped fiddling with his camera and looked up. 'What about it?' he asked.
'I
just thought you could tell me about it. If that's where you are from.'
'Nothing
to tell,' said James.
'Well,
there's hats with feathers on them, and them gold
earrings the boys all wear. Do you think I might like that town?'
In
the view-finder his face was small and pointed, with a worried line between his
eyes. He was leaning toward James with the cigar poised forgotten between his
thumb and forefinger, and in the second of stillness that followed his question
James snapped the picture. 'That'll be a good one,' he said.
'Will
I like Caraway?'
'I
don't see how. Do you ever see me going to Caraway?'
'Well,
the boys wear gold earrings,' Simon said again, and he sighed and rubbed the
top of his head and James snapped that picture too.
'Sure,
the boys,' he told Simon. They're the worst in the state, Caraway boys. Got tight little
'I
could board with your family,' Simon said.
James
looked up from his camera with his mouth open and then threw back his head and
laughed. 'Hoo!' he said, and Ansel stirred in his sleep at the noise. ‘I’d
like to see that,' he went on more quietly. 'Would you turn sideways in your
chair now, please?'
Simon
turned, but he kept his eyes on James. 'Ansel says-' he began.
'Ansel
don't know.'
'Ain't
he from there?'
'He
don't know.'
'Well,
anyway,' said Simon. 'I could go and look it over.'
'Your
mother would love that. Now, quit watching out of the corner of your eye, Simon.
Look at the fireplace.'
'Do
you think she'd miss me?' Simon asked.
James
clicked the picture and stood up, squinting at him sideways to see which way to
turn him next.
'I
think my mother'd say, "Who you say's gone? Oh, Simon!" she'd
say. "Him. My goodness. Did
you remember to bring the eggs?" ' He sat forward
again then and frowned at James, twining the cigar over and under the fingers
of his left hand. 'You see how it'd be,' he said.
'You
know that ain't so,' said James.
He
stepped a little to one side and got Simon focussed in the camera again, all
the while waiting for the argument to continue. But it didn't. In the square of
the viewfinder Simon suddenly sighed and slumped down like a little old man,
staring abstractedly at the wet end of his cigar. 'Ah, hell,' he said. 'It don't matter.'
That
made James look up, but he didn't say anything. Instead he snapped the picture
and frowned over at the lamps, measuring how much light there was. 'Outdoors
would've been better,' he said finally.
'I
also hear,' said Simon, 'that they sing all night in the dark. And them plumed hats, why, even the mules wear them. With holes
cut for ears.'
'Look
over toward your left,' James said.
"There's six buses going there a day, Ansel told me.'
James
folded his arms across the top of the camera and watched Simon a minute,
thinking. Simon stared straight back at him. In the light from the lamps his
eyes seemed black, and it was hard to see beyond the flat surface of them. His
chin was tilted outward a little, and his lashes with their sunbleached tips
gleaming were like curtains over his expression. Who knew what was in his mind?
James uncrossed his arms then and said, ‘Put your cigar, away, now. This
last one's for your mother.'
'Aw,
my mother won't even -'
'She
wants a picture she can show to the relatives. What would they think, you with
a big fat cigar in your hand?'
'She
won't -' Simon began again.
But
James said, 'You're growing so much, this summer. She wants to get you in a
picture before you're too big to fit in one.'
'She
tell you that?' asked Simon.
'Why, sure.'
'She
ask you out and out for a picture of me?'
'Sure
she did,' James said. 'She said, "James, if you got time, I wish you'd
snap a picture of Simon. We don't have a picture that looks like him no
more." I said I'd try.'
'Well,
then,' said Simon after a minute. He rose and crossed over to the mantelpiece,
where he laid down the cigar. When he returned to his chair he settled himself
very carefully, tugging his jeans down tight into his boots, running both hands
hard through his hair to smooth it back. He looked more posed now; the relaxed
expression that he had worn in the other pictures was gone. With both hands
placed symmetrically on the arms of the chair, his back very straight and his face
drawn tight in the beginnings of a smile, he stared unblinkingly into the lens
of the camera. James waited a minute, and then he pressed the button and
straightened up. 'Thank you,' he said formally.
'Oh,
that's all right.'
'I'll
have them for you this afternoon, maybe. Or tomorrow, early.
Perle Simpson is coming by for a passport photo and I want to take that before
I start developing.'
'Okay,'
said Simon. He stood up, frowningly tucking in his shirt, and then suddenly he
looked over at James and gave him a wide, slow smile, so big that the two dents
he was always trying to hide showed up in the centre of his cheeks. 'Well, I'll
be seeing you,' he said, and sauntered on out, slamming the screen door behind
him. When James went to the window to look after him he saw him in the front
yard, picking up the bicycle he hadn't ridden for days and twirling the pedal
into a position where he could step on it. The buttercup still hung in the
spokes, its little yellow head dangling drunkenly from the front wheel and its
withered leaves fluttering out like banners when Simon rode slowly off. He rode
in the direction of the Terry's farm; he would be going to see the tobacco
pickers, the way he used to do.
When
Simon was out of sight, and when James had turned and seen that Ansel was
sleeping still, he himself went out the screen door and down the long front
porch. The Pikes' window shades were up now. He peered in through the dark
screen door and saw Mrs Pike at her sewing machine, not running it at the
minute but sewing by hand on something that was in her lap. 'Mrs Pike,' he
called gently. She lowered the sewing and looked up at him, her mouth screwed
up and lopsided because of the pins in one corner of it. 'Mrs Pike, can I come
in a minute?'
'Joan's
handing tobacco,' she said. Speaking around the pins made her seem like a
different woman, like the waitress at the Royal Crown who always had a
cigarette in her mouth when she talked. 'Did you want to see Joan?'
'Well,
no, I just wanted to tell you -' said James. He pulled open the screen door and
stepped just inside it, even though he hadn't been asked. 'I took a picture of
Simon,' he said.
'Oh.'
'Sitting in an easy chair.'
'Well,
that's real nice,' said Mrs Pike, and bowed her head to nip a thread off the
dress she was sewing.
'Well,
I took it for you, Mrs Pike.'
'That's
real nice of you,' she said again. She held the dress up at arm's length and
frowned at it. James shifted his weight to his other foot.
'What
I actually told him,' he said, 'was that you asked for it. Asked me to take it for you.'
She
lowered the dress to her lap again and looked over at him, and James thought
that surely she would say something now. But when she did speak, all she said
was, 'It must be right hard, taking pictures of children'- politely, as if he
were a stranger she was trying to make conversation with.
James
waited a minute, but she didn't say more. She had lowered her head to her
sewing again, fumbling at it with quick, blunt fingers and absentmindedly
working the pins from one side of her mouth to the other. So he said, 'Well,
ma'am, not really,' and then turned and quietly let himself out the door again.
All the way down to his end of the porch he kept thinking of going back and
trying once more, but he knew already it wasn't any use. So he entered his own
part of the house and then just stood there a minute, thinking it over,
watching Ansel as he slept.
12
The
things Joan Pike owned in this world could be packed in two suitcases, with room
to spare. She was putting them there now, one by one, folding the skirts in two
and laying them gently on the bottom of the big leather suitcase her father's
parents had given him to take to a debating contest fifty years ago. Her own suitcase, newer and shinier, stood waiting on the
floor already filled and locked. She had saved out her big straw pocketbook,
which was hard to pack and could hold all the things she might need on the bus.
It stood on the floor, with one corner of a Greyhound ticket envelope sticking
out of it. The ticket she had bought this morning, after spending all Wednesday
night lying in bed rolling up the hem of her top sheet while she thought what
to do. She had ridden into town for it on Simon's bicycle, and come back with
it hidden inside her white shirt. Nobody knew she was going.
When
her closet was empty she cleaned it out carefully, picking up every stray bobby
pin and button from the floor and bunching the hangers neatly at one end of the
rod with the hooks all pointing the same way. Mainly she wanted to save her
aunt the trouble, but also she wanted to go away feeling that she had left a
clean sweep behind her - not a thread, not a scrap of hers remaining that she
could want to return for. She would like to have it seem as if she had never
been here, if that was possible. So she closed the closet door firmly and
turned the key in its lock. Then she began on the rest of the room.
She
rolled her silver-backed dresser set in sweaters, so that none of the pieces
would get scratched. Seeing the set, which her parents had given her on her
eighteenth birthday, made her remember that she should be bringing back
presents for them, and she frowned into the mirror when she thought about it.
Always before, after two weeks at Scout camp even, she had brought back gifts
for each of them and formally presented them, and her parents had done the
same. But this time she hadn't thought far enough in advance; she would have to
come home empty-handed. The idea bothered her, as if this were some basic point
of guest etiquette that she, always a guest, had somehow forgotten. She shook
her head, and laid the wrapped silver pieces carefully on top of her skirts.
Out
in the back yard Simon was running an imaginary machine gun, shouting
'ta-ta-ta-ta-tat' in a high voice that cracked and aiming at unknowing wrens
who sat in the bushes behind the house. She could see him from her window - his
foreshortened, blue denim body, the swirl of hair radiating out from a tiny
white point on the back of his head. With luck, he wouldn't see her go. He
would stay there in the back yard, and his mother would stay in bed for her
afternoon nap, and she could sneak out of the house and across the fields
without anyone's seeing her. It might even be supper before they noticed. Mr
Pike would fuss a little, feeling responsible for his brother's child. Mrs Pike
was still too sad to care, but Simon would care. He would ask why she had left
without telling them, and how would they answer him? How would she even
answer him? 'Because I don't want to think I'm really going,' she would say. It
was the first time she had thought that out, in words. She stopped folding a
slip and looked down at where Simon sat, with his legs bent under him and the
toes of his boots pointing out, sighting along a long straight stick and
pulling the trigger. As soon as she got home, she decided, she would telephone
to make it all right with him.
Then
after supper James would come. 'Joan ready?' he'd say. 'She's gone,' They'd tell him. Then what would he do? She couldn't imagine
that, no matter how hard she tried. Maybe he would say, 'Well, I'm sorry to
hear that,' and remain where he was, his face dark and stubborn. Or maybe he
would say, 'I'll go bring her back.' But that was something she didn't expect
would ever happen now. A week ago, she might have expected it. She'd thought
anything could happen, anyone would change. But now all she felt sure of was
that ten years from now, and twenty, James would still be enduring, on and on,
in that stuffy little parlour with Ansel in it; and she couldn't endure a
minute longer.
She
turned away from the window and went back to her suitcase. Everything was in it
now. The bureau was left as blank as the bureau in a hotel room; its drawers
were empty and smelled of wood again. On the back of the door hung her towel
and washcloth, the only things left of her. She plucked them off the rack and
carried them out to the laundry hamper in the hall, and then she was finished.
No one would ever know she had lived here. When she had locked the second
suitcase, and stepped into the high heels that she had taken off so as not to
make a noise, she stood in the doorway a minute making sure of the blankness in
the room. Then she picked up the two suitcases and the pocket book and went downstairs.
Carrying
it all was harder than she remembered. She kept having
to switch the pocket book strap from one arm to the other, and although the
suitcases weren't heavy they were big and bulky and banged against her legs
when she walked. Before she was even off the front porch she was breathing
hard. Then in the yard, the spikes of her high heels kept sinking into the
earth and making things more difficult. If she'd had any sense, she thought,
she would have called Mr Carleton and his taxi service. Except then everybody
and his brother would have known she was leaving. She waited until she had
crossed the road and was into the field and then she took her first breather,
chafing the red palms of her hands and looking anxiously back at the house. No
one had seen her yet.
All
the evening walks through this field with James or the children had taught her the shortest way to town - the straight line through
burrs and bushes, leading apparently to nowhere but more field, emerging
suddenly upon Emmett Smith's backyard and from there to
When
he came up even with her he was out of breath, and covered with burrs. For a
while he just stood there panting, but then his breath came more slowly and he
straightened up. 'Can I come?' he asked.
'Oh,
Simon-' '
'I
came in to see what you was doing. I couldn't find you;
I thought -' He stopped, and switched his eyes from her face to the field
behind her. 'I wouldn't be a bit of trouble,' he said softly. She leaned
forward, trying to catch his words and he said it louder: 'I wouldn't be a bit
of-'
'Well,
I know that.'
'Old
James came over with that picture he took yesterday,' he said. 'You were gone
off on my bicycle. He brought it in a special brown envelope like he does to
customers. I said, "Mama, here is that picture you was asking for."
She says, "What?" I pulled it out to show her. She said, "Oh,"
and then went back to her sewing and didn't look any more. I put it back on
James's doorstep.'
‘Well, now, don't you worry-' said Joan, but she had
to stop there, because she wasn't sure what he was talking about. She stood
frowning at him, with the wind whipping the hair around her face and her hands
clenched white on the pocketbook.
'I
won't be a bit of trouble,' he said again.
She
said, 'No,' and stooped nearer to him. 'I can't take you,' she said. 'I have to
go off, Simon. And you have to stay with your family. When they are back to
normal, though, you can come and visit.'
Simon
just stood there, very straight. She didn't know what to do, because he had his
head drawn back in that way he had and if she'd hugged him he would have hated
her. So she waited a minute, and then she said, 'Well, goodbye.' He didn't
answer. 'Goodbye,' she said again. She kept on facing him, though, because she
couldn't turn first and just leave him there. Then when she was beginning to
think they would stand that way forever he swung around and left, and she
watched him go. He stumbled through the field in a zig-zagging line, not
parting the grass ahead of him but pressing on with his hands at his sides.
'Simon?' she called once. But Simon never answered.
When
she turned away herself, and bent to pick up her bags again, she was thinking
that out of all the bad things she had ever done this might be the one sin. It
made her feel suddenly heavy and old; the weight of her sadness dragged behind
her through the fields like another suitcase, and she couldn't look up or let
herself think about anything but walking, putting one foot ahead of the other.
The
Smith house loomed up suddenly, just beyond a little rise in the ground. Inside
a wire fence the hens scratched irritably at the dirt, and from the house came
the sound of someone's singing. Joan set her suitcases down and looked back, thinking to see some sign of what she had left, but
there was only the gentle slope of wild grass stretching as far as she could
see. Behind that was James, dark and slow and calm, rocking easily in his chair
and never knowing. And that long front porch where she and
Simon used to shell peas on summer evenings, while Janie Rose sang ‘The
Murder of James A. Garfield' through the open window. She picked up her
suitcases and walked on, with that sudden light, lost feeling that came from
walking in a straight line away from people she loved.
The
clock in the drugstore where the buses stopped said there were ten minutes to
go. Tommy Jones behind the soda fountain checked her bags and handed her the
tags, and she said, 'Thank you,' and smiled at him dazedly without thinking
about him.
'Coke
while you wait?' he asked.
'No,
thank you.'
'On the house.'
'Oh.
No.'
Her
voice sounded thin and sad. She felt like a stick, very straight and alone,
standing upright with nothing to lean against. Surely people should have
noticed it, but they didn't; Tommy smiled at her as if this were any normal
day, and the two other people in the store went on leafing through their
magazines. Dan Thompson's wife came in, wearing one of Dan's baggy printing
aprons the way she usually did and carrying a fresh stack of this week's
newspapers. The insides of her forearms were smeared with ink from them. When
she saw Joan she smiled and came over toward her. 'Hi,' she said. 'You want a
paper?'
'I
guess so,' said Joan. She fished in her purse for the money and handed it over,
and Carol gave her a paper off the top of the stack.
'Nothing
but the most startling news,' she said. 'We took it all from the
'Well,
that's all right,' Joan said. 'I haven't read the
'Good.
You know what I think sometimes?' She heaved the papers onto a soda fountain stool
and began rubbing the muscles of her arm. 'Sometimes I think, what if every paper
gets its news from the other papers? What if this is twenty-year-old news we're
reading, just circulating around and around among newspapers?'
'I
don't suppose it'd make much difference,' Joan said absently.
'Well,
maybe not.' She picked up the papers again. 'You bring James over for supper
some night, you hear? We haven't had the two of you together in a long time.'
'All
right,' said Joan. She didn't see much point in telling Carol she was leaving,
not if Carol hadn't noticed for herself. And she hadn't. She went off jauntily,
with a wave of her hand, and threw the papers on the floor in front of the
magazine rack and left the store. Yet there was Joan, all dressed up in her
high-heeled shoes. She looked around at the other customers again, but they
went on reading their magazines.
When
the bus drew up, she was the only person to board it. The driver didn't smile
or even look at her; already she was outside the little circle of Larksville,
and only another stranger to the people on this bus. She sat in a seat by
herself, toward the rear, and smoothed her skirt down and then looked at the
other passengers. None of them looked back except a sailor, who stopped chewing
his gum and winked, and she quickly looked away again and sat up straight. The
bus started with a jerk and wheezed up to full speed along Main Street, making
a sad, going-away noise. Through the green-tinted windows Larksville looked
like an old dull photograph, and that made her sad too, but once they had
passed the town limits she began to feel better. Some of that light feeling
came back. It crossed her mind, as she was pulling on her gloves, that all she
was going to was another bedroom, to years spent reading alone in a little
house kept by old people, remembering to greet her mother's friends on the
street, smiling indulgently at other people's children. But then she shook that
thought away, and folded her gloved hands in her lap and began looking out the
window again.
It
was almost an hour before the bus made its next stop, in a town called Howrell
that Joan had always hated. Gangling men stood lined along the street, spitting
tobacco juice and commenting on the passengers whose faces appeared in the bus
windows. Underneath Joan was the slamming and banging of bags being shoved into
the luggage compartment, and then the driver helped a little old lady up the
steps and into the bus. She wore a hat made entirely of flowers. From the way
she advanced, clutching her pocketbook in both hands, examining the face of
each passenger and sniffing a little as she passed them, Joan knew she would
sit beside her. Old ladies always did. She stopped next to Joan and said, 'This
seat taken?' and then slid in, not waiting for an answer. While she was getting
settled she huffed and puffed, making little comments under her breath; she
would be the talkative kind. 'I thought this bus would never come,' she
said. 'I thought it had laid down and died on the
way.' Joan smiled, and turned her face full to the window.
When
the bus had started up again, and was rolling through the last of Howrell, Joan
checked her watch. It would be nearly suppertime now. If she were in Larksville
she would be sitting at the kitchen table cutting up a salad. She pictured
herself there, her bare feet curled around the rungs of the chair. In her mind
she seemed to be sitting an inch or so above the seat, not resting on anything
but air. She ran through other pictures of herself - sitting in her parents' parlour,
sitting on the porch with James, even sitting now beside this old lady on a bus
rolling west. In all the pictures, she was resting on nothing. She turned her
mind back to the firmest seat she knew-James's lap, in the evenings when Ansel
had already gone to bed. But even there, there was a good two inches of air
beneath her and she seemed to be balanced there precariously, her arms tight
around James. She turned away from the window quickly, and said to the old
lady, 'It'll be getting dark soon.'
'It
certainly will,' said the lady. 'My daughter will be getting supper on now. The married one. I left them a cold hen, barbecued the way I
like to do it.'
Joan
went back to looking out the window. She stared steadily at the clay banks that
rose high and red along the side of the road, and the tall thin tobacco barns
from which little strings of brightly dressed women were scattering home for
supper. Who would take her place tomorrow at the tobacco table? She stopped
watching the barns. All around her in the bus, people were settled firmly in
their seats, with their hands relaxed on the arm rests and their heads tipped
against the white starched bibs on the backs of the seats. They talked to one
another in murmuring voices that mingled with the sound of the motor. A little
boy was playing a tonette.
'I'm
going to my other daughter,' the old lady told her. 'The
one that never married. She has a kidney ailment.'
'I'm
sorry to hear that,' said Joan.
'She's
in terrible pain, and there's no one to take care of her.'
Out
of the corner of her eye Joan saw the Larksville paper she had bought, folded
neatly and tucked down between her seat and the wall of the bus. She picked it
up quickly and unfolded it, and the old lady turned away again.
There
would be nothing interesting in the paper, but she read it anyway. She began
with the first page and read through the whole paper methodically, not even
skipping the ladies' meeting announcements or the advertisements.
There
had been one birth in Larksville this week, she saw, and two deaths. The first
death was Jones, Laramie D., whom she had never heard of, but she read all
about him anyway - the circumstances of his death, the highlights of his life,
the list of relatives who had survived him. The second death was Pike, Janie Rose.
The name hit into her stomach, as if she hadn't known of the death until this
instant. She started to pass over it, but then she went back to it and read it
through:
Pike, Janie Rose. At
of internal injuries caused by an
accident. Beloved
daughter of Mr and Mrs Roy J. Pike, sister
of Simon
Lockwood Pike. Funeral was held from Collins
Memorial Home, July 16, interment
in family cemetery.
She read it twice, but it
seemed unreal still, something vague and far off. Nothing that bad could
happen. When she had finished with it a second time she folded the paper very
carefully in half, so that the obituaries were out of sight, and then went on
to the rest of the paper. She read very closely now, even moving her lips, so
as to shut out all thought of anything she had read before. 'Teller-Hokes
Wedding Held in
She
looked quickly out the window and saw the town of
'No.'
'Oh.
You just sat up so sudden -'
'No,'
said Joan, 'but I think I might buy a Coke.'
She
stood and wormed her way out past the woman's knees, and as soon as she was out
the woman slid quickly over to the window. Joan didn't care. She went down the
aisle without looking at anyone, and then descended the bus steps. A team of
some kind was waiting to board, a group of boys in white satin wind-breakers
with numbers on them, and when Joan stepped down among them they remained
stolidly in her path, ignoring her. 'Excuse me,' she said, 'excuse me, please,'
and then when no one noticed she shouted, 'Excuse me!' For a minute they
stopped talking and stared at her; then they moved aside to let her through.
She walked very quickly, holding her head up. Out here she felt thinner and
more alone than before, with the team of boys all watching her down the long
path to the Coke machine. And when she reached the machine she found she didn't
even want a Coke. But she put her dime in anyway, and just as she was reaching
for the bottle someone said, 'Ma'am?'
It
was a young man in sunglasses, standing beside her and looking straight at her.
She felt scared suddenly, even with all those people around (had he been able
to see how alone she felt?) and she decided not to answer. Instead she
uncapped the Coke bottle and then turned to go.
'Ma'am?'
he said again.
She
couldn't just leave him there, still asking. 'What is it?' she said.
'Can
you show me where the restroom is?'
'Why,
it's right inside, I guess. Over there.'
'Where?'
'Over
there.'
'I
don't see.'
'Over
there.'
'I
don't see. I'm blind.'
'Oh,'
said Joan, and then she just felt silly, and even sadder than before. 'Wait a
minute,' she told him. She turned around and saw two bus drivers walking toward
her, looking kind and cheerful. When they came even with her she tapped the
older driver on the arm and said, 'Um, excuse me.'
'Yes.'
'Can
you show this man the restroom? He doesn't see.'
'Why,
surely,' said the driver. He smiled at her and then took the blind man by the
elbow. 'You come with me,' he said.
'Thank
you, sir. Thank you, ma'am.'
'You're
welcome,' Joan said.
The
other driver stayed behind, next to Joan. He said, 'Can you imagine travelling
blind?' and stared after the two men, frowning a little.
'No,
I can't' Joan said. She automatically followed the driver's eyes. Now that she
looked, she couldn't think why the blind man had frightened her at first. He
wore his clothes obediently, as if someone else had put them on him - the neat
dark suit with the handkerchief in the pocket, the shoes tied lovingly in
double knots. He reminded her of something. For a minute she couldn't think
what, and then she remembered and smiled. That slow, trusting way he let
himself be guided forward with his hands folded gently in front of him, was
like Simon during the first year she'd lived there, when he was six and still
had to be awakened at night and taken to the bathroom so he wouldn't wet his
bed. He had gone just that obediently, but with his eyes closed and the shadows
of some dream still flickering across his face. (You couldn't stop walking with
him for a minute, not in a doorway nor going around the bend in the hall, or he
would think he had reached the bathroom and proceed to go right then and
there.) He had held his elbows in close to his body that way, too, against the
coolness of the night. Joan stopped smiling and looked down at her feet.
'You
all right?' the driver asked.
'I
want to go back.'
'Ma'am?'
'I
want to go back where I came from. Can I take my bags off my bus and wait for
the next one going back?'
'Why,
surely,' the driver said. 'You on that bus over there?'
'Yes.
I know this is -'
'Women
got a right to change their minds,' the driver called. He was already
heading toward her bus, and Joan followed him with her untouched Coke bottle
still in her hands.
'I
always do this,' she said. 'But this time it's -'
'You
got the right,' said the driver.
'This
time it's different. I can't help it, this time; I'm not just -'
But
the driver didn't hear her. He was walking up ahead of her and laughing over
his shoulder, thinking it was all a joke. She stopped trying to tell him it
wasn't.
13
Something
was wrong at home. James knew it instantly, the moment he stepped out of the
pickup carrying his two bags of groceries. There on the porch stood the Potter sisters
and Ansel and Mrs Pike, all huddling together, and Mr Pike was a little
distance away from them. He was facing toward the road, frowning down at an
Indian elephant bell that he held in his hand. When he heard the pickup door
slam he looked up and said, 'James.' The light from the setting sun turned his
face strange and orange. 'What's wrong?' said James.
'We
can't find Simon.'
'Well,
where is he?' he asked, and then to cover up the stupidity of that question he
said quickly, 'He was here at lunchtime.'
'We
thought you might have him with you,' Mr Pike said.
'No.'
They
all kept looking at him. Even Ansel. James hoisted his
groceries up higher and then said again, 'No. No, I've been running errands all
afternoon. All by myself.'
'Well,
then,' Mr Pike said. He sighed and turned back to the others, who still waited.
Finally he said, 'He's not with James.'
'Maybe
he's with Joan,' James offered.
'No.
Joan must have gone off somewhere, but after she left Simon was still around.
Lou says so.'
James
looked over at Mrs Pike. She was dry-eyed and watchful; her arms were folded
firmly across her chest.
'When
was the last time you noticed him?' he asked her.
'I
don't know.'
Ma'am?'
'I
don't know,' she said, with her voice slightly raised.
'Oh.'
'We
called the boys he plays with,' Mr Pike said, 'And we
called the movie-house.'
'Did
you ask about buses?'
'No.
Why?'
'I'd
do that,' said James. He climbed the steps at his end of the porch and set the
groceries on Ansel's chair, and then he straightened up and rubbed the muscles
of his arms. 'Call the drugstore,' he said. 'Ask them if he's -'
'Well,
I went to the drugstore, to see if he'd gone there for a soda. Mary
Bennett was on; only been there a half hour or so, but she hadn't seen him.'
'Might
have gone earlier,' said James. 'Did you look at the bus schedule?'
No
I didn't. What would I want to do that for?'
'Just
in case,' James said. 'Who was there before Mary Bennett?'
'Tommy
was, but I can't find him. If it weren't for Lou I'd just sit and wait for
Simon, but Lou thinks he left with a purpose. Thinks she
might have sent him away somehow.'
James
looked over at Mrs Pike again. For a minute she stared back at him; then she
said, 'You believe he's on some bus.'
'I
didn't say that,' said James.
'You
think it.'
'Now,
Lou,' Mr Pike told her.
'I
can tell.'
'Well,
it wouldn't hurt to ask,' said James. 'I'd track that Tommy down, if I was
you.'
'Oh,
now,' Mr Pike
said, and accidentally clanged the elephant bell. Everyone jumped. 'Sorry,' he
said. For the first time, Ansel lost his blank tense look; he winced, and
leaned back limply against the front of the house. Mr Pike said, 'Sorry, Ansel.
But where would he take a bus to?
'There's lots of places,' said James.
'Not
as many as you'd think,' Ansel said. 'World's shrinking.'
'Hush,'
James told him. He jingled his keys thoughtfully. '
'What for?'
'Let
him,' Mrs Pike said. The Potter sisters stepped closer to her on either side
and patted her shoulders, as if she had suddenly had an outburst of some kind.
'You know where it is,' she told James.
'Yes, ma'am.'
He
walked toward the Pikes' end of the porch, with everyone's eyes following him.
At the door he stopped and said, 'Did he have any money?'
'He
gets an allowance,' said Mr Pike. 'I don't know if he saved it.'
'Did
he get some this week?'
He
was asking this of Mrs Pike, but she just shook her head. 'I don't know,' she
said. Finally James turned back again and went on inside.
It
was Tommy Jones's mother who answered the telephone. Her voice was breathless,
as if she had had to come running from some other part of the house. 'Hello?'
she said.
'Mrs
Jones, this is James Green. Is Tommy there?'
'No,
he's not.'
'Do
you know where he is?'
'No.
Is this about Simon still?'
'Yes, ma'am.'
They
haven't found him?'
'No.
Do you think Tommy'll be getting back soon?'
'I
really don't, 'she said. 'He's off someplace with his girl. Shall I have him
call?'
'No,
thank you. Sorry to bother you.'
'It's
no bother.'
He
hung up and stood thinking a while, and then he went out to the front porch
again. In just the short time that the telephone call had taken the colour of
the evening had shifted, turning from sunset into twilight. The others were
standing where he had left them, still looking in his direction as if their eyes
had never moved from the spot where he had disappeared. ‘Tommy's not
there,' he said.
'Well,
I could have told you that,' Mr Pike
said irritably. He swung his arms down, making the bell clang again, and
started toward the front yard. Tm going to round up a couple others,' he called
back. 'We'll look in all the places where he goes, and ring bells or fire guns
if we find him. Want to come, James?'
'I'm
not sure that's the way,' James said.
'Only
thing I can think of. Mind if I use your truck?'
'Well,
wait,' said James. He came down the steps and crossed over to Mr Pike. 'No, I'd
like to take the truck and follow up an idea of my own, I think I -'
'When
I was a little boy . . .' Ansel announced, and everyone turned around to
look at him. He had recovered from that last clang and was standing erect now,
placing the tips of his fingers together. 'When I was a little boy, I had to
tell my mother everywhere I went. It was a rule. And I could never go out of
hearing range of this old Army bugle, that my father would stand in the doorway
and blow at suppertime -'
'If
you could come along,' Mr Pike told James, 'and bring a noisemaker of some
kind, why, we could start by -'
'I
was thinking of Caraway,' James said.
'Caraway?'
'I
was thinking that was where he might've gone.'
'Oh,
Caraway,’ Mr Pike said impatiently. ‘I been there. No, more likely he
went off on some hike or other, and forgot to let us know.’
'Well,
I'd like to try Caraway anyhow,' said James.
'But
James, that's a waste of-'
'Let
him,' said Mrs Pike, and once again the Potter sisters closed in on her and
patted her shoulders. 'Hush, hush,' they whispered. James pulled out his
billfold and checked his money; there was plenty for gas. He turned to Mr Pike.
'I'm
sorry,' he said. 'I just feel I know where he's at.'
'Well,
that's all right,' said Mr Pike. 'Sure wish I could have the loan of your
pickup, though.'
'I'll
make the trip as fast as I can.'
'Well,
sure.' Mr Pike sighed, and then he set off wearily across the yard. He carried
the elephant bell upside down, with his fingers poked through the
inward-curling teeth of it to hold the clapper silent. When he reached the
gravel road he turned back and said, 'Ansel? You feel up to coming along?'
'Not
really,' said Ansel. 'I just feel miserable about all this.'
Mr
Pike nodded several times and then continued down the road in the direction of
the Terry's. 'Poor man,' said Miss Lucy, and then she and Miss Faye began
patting Mrs Pike harder than before.
James
said, 'Ansel, take in the groceries. And fix yourself something for supper, in
case I'm late getting back.'
'Well,
all right,' Ansel said.
'I
don't expect you want to come with me.'
'No.'
James
descended the porch steps. In the distance he could see Mr Pike, far and small
already, marching on steadily with his shoulders set. It seemed so clear to
James that Simon was in Caraway - where else would he be? that he felt
sorry to see Mr Pike going to all this trouble. He wanted to call him back, but
he knew there was no use. So he just turned around and said, 'Ansel -'and
bumped squarely into Mrs Pike, who was standing right behind him. 'Oh, excuse
me,' he said. 'I didn't hear you coming.' She remained silent, with her arms
still folded and her head bowed meekly. 'Well, 'he said. 'Ansel, I'm going to
call you at the Pikes' number when I get there. To tell you what happens, in
case Mrs Pike is going to be over at the Potters'.'
'All
right,' said Ansel. 'Does that mean I can stay at the Pikes' until you call?'
'I
don't care, for heaven's sake.'
He
continued on toward the pickup, and Mrs Pike kept following after him. When he
opened the door on the driver's side she opened the other door, and it was only
then that he realized she meant to come along. They stood staring at each other
for a minute across the expanse of seat; then Mrs Pike lowered her eyes and
climbed in, and he did the same. He could see that the others on the porch were
just as surprised as he was - they came closer together, and turned to look at
each other - but Mrs Pike didn't offer to explain herself. She sat quietly,
with her eyes straight ahead and her hands clasped in her lap. Even when he
craned his neck around to look out the rear window as he was backing out, she
stared ahead. The stoniness of her face gave her a calm, sure look, as sure as
James felt inside; she must know where Simon was by instinct.
When
they were on the main highway James turned his lights on. Already the opaque
white look of early twilight was growing bluer and more transparent,
and other cars as they came towards him clicked their own lights on. But he
could see around him clearly still: the landmarks of the journey to town
slipping by, and then a brief glimpse of
'I'm
just waiting,' she told him.
'Oh.'
'I'll
take what I get. Whatever I deserve.'
'Yes,
ma'am,' James said.
He
swerved around a little boy riding a bicycle. Where was Simon at this minute?
Maybe swaggering down a street alone, trying to look as if he knew where he was
going. Searching for some sign - a boy with a ring in his ear or a woman in a
red-plumed hat, someone who would expect him the way he had expected them.
James frowned. The clomping of Simon's leather boots seemed louder than the
sound of the motor; the fuzz down the back of Simon's neck seemed clearer than
the road ahead of him.
'It's
been a pretty day,' he said.
'Yes.'
'Where's
Joan?'
'I
don't know,' said Mrs Pike. She looked out at the road a while, and then she
said, 'I sewed a dress today.'
'Oh,
did you?'
'Yes.'
'Well,
now,' James said. He cleared his throat. 'I always thought a dress would take days
to make.'
'Anything
happens,' said Mrs Pike, 'it's only my fault. My fault.'
'Well,
now,' James said again.
The
truck was travelling too fast, he thought. Already the countryside looked like
Caraway countryside; not Larksville. In his mind he had added mile upon mile to
this trip, stretching the road out long and thin till Caraway might have been
in
Mr
Stevens himself washed the windshield and filled the tank, with only a brief
smile to James because he didn't recognize him. "Three dollars, ten,' he
said. 'Nice evening.' He held his hand out flat, palm
up, outside James's window, and James counted out the exact change very slowly.
When he had paid he said, 'This the road to Caraway?'
to stretch the stop out even longer.
'Sure
is,' the man said.
'How much further?'
'Be
there half an hour.'
'Thank
you,' James said. He started the motor and looked over at Mrs Pike, but she
didn't seem surprised at the questions he had asked. She just looked down at
her hands and waited for him to drive on.
Almost
no one else was on the road now. He drove at a steady pace, and in silence,
looking at the country around him whenever they were on a straight stretch of
road. At first it was just the occasional, very noticeable things that he
recognized - that humped bridge that looked like something off a willowware
plate, the funny barbecue house off in the middle of nowhere with pigs chasing
each other rapidly in neon lights across the front porch. But after another ten or fifteen minutes, he began to recognize
everything. The objects that flashed by were all worn and familiar-looking, as
if perhaps without knowing it he had been dreaming of them nightly. Even the
new things - the brick ranch houses rising baldly out of fresh red clay, the
drive-ins and Dairy Queens - seemed familiar, and he glanced at them mildly and
without surprise. When he reached the town limits it was just beginning to grow
really dark, and his headlights glared briefly against the slick white surface
of a newly painted sign. 'Caraway. Bird Sanctuary,' it
read. The last time he had been here it had said only 'Caraway.' And he had
looked at it and thought, I'll never see that sign again, not for any reason.
He hadn't known the Pikes then, nor Joan, nor the
Potters; he hadn't foreseen the existence of Simon.
He
slowed down as soon as they reached the actual town, and Mrs Pike straightened
up and began looking out the window more intently, perhaps already searching
for Simon. James kept his eyes straight ahead until they got to
'Oh,'
said Mrs Pike.
'Do
you want to go ask if they've seen him?'
'I
guess so,' she said , but she was looking at him,
obviously expecting that he would be the one to ask. He sighed and swung the
truck into a diagonal parking place.
'I'll
be right out,' he told her.
'All right.'
Once
on the street, out from behind the shield of the pickup, he felt clumsy and
conspicuous. Girls in bare-backed dresses waited with their dates in front of
the movie theatre next door and when he stepped on to the sidewalk they pivoted
on their high heels and glanced over at him. He stared back, but there was no
one he recognized. And the waitress in the grill was a new one a fat blonde he didn't know. He came up
and laid both hands palm down on the counter and said, 'Were you here when the
last bus from Larksville came?'
'Yes,'
she said. Her voice was tired, and she seemed hardly able to raise her eyes and
look at him.
'Did
you see a little boy get off?'
'I
wasn't watching,' she said.
She
began swabbing off the counter with a pink sponge, and James walked out again
without thanking her. On the street he looked up and down, hooking his thumbs
in his belt and staring over the heads of passersby, but there was no sign of
Simon. For the first time he felt uncertain about him, and frightened. He
returned to the truck.
'She
wasn't watching,' he told Mrs Pike.
'She
wasn't,' she agreed, and went on looking calmly out the window.
James
knew where he was heading, but he was hoping he didn't have to go there. So he
drove down
Mrs
Pike didn't ask what he was doing when he turned off
'All right.'
He
opened the truck door and climbed out stiffly, careful not to make too much
noise. But no dog barked. In his mind, he saw now, he had pictured the dog's
barking first. He had imagined that everyone would come to the doer to
investigate, long before he had reached the front steps; he had seen the long
rectangle of yellow light from the doorway and the silhouettes of many people,
watching as he' walked awkwardly through the dandelions. Yet he came to the
door in utter silence, with no one noticing. He opened the screen, which
creaked, and knocked several times on the weatherbeaten wooden door and waited.
For a while no one came. Then there were footsteps, and he stepped back a pace.
He fixed his eyes on a point just a little above his own eye level, where he
would see that hard white face as soon as the door opened.
But
when the door did open, he had to look lower than that. He had to look down to
the level of his shoulders, much lower than he had remembered, into the old
man's small lined face and his eyes in their pockets of bone. His hair was all
white now, gleamingly clean. He wore suspenders, snapped over a frayed white
collarless shirt which was only folded shut, without buttons. And his trousers
bagged at the knees.
The
dog didn't bark,' said James.
'She
died,' his father said, and stepped back a step to let him into the house.
14
The
first thing Simon said was, 'if I'd known you were coming, I'd of
hitched a ride with you.' He was sitting in old Mr Green's platform rocker,
with his elbows resting lightly on the arms of it and his fingers laced in
front of him. 'Did you just leave home and not tell anyone?' he asked.
'I
told everyone,' said James, and looked straight across at the others.
They stood in a line behind Simon, the three of them - his father, Claude, and
Clara, the one brother and sister still at home. They were standing very still,
all three of them in almost exactly the same position, with their eyes on
James. When James looked at them Simon turned around and looked too, and just
in that one turn of his head, with his chin pointed upwards and the shock of
hair falling back off his forehead, he seemed to be claiming them
somehow marking them as his own. James's father looked down at him soberly, and
Clara smiled, but by then Simon had turned to James again and couldn't see her.
'I came on a bus,' he said.
'I
guessed you had.'
'I
found them in a telephone book.'
Clara
said, 'James, will you sit down?'
'Oh,
I guess not,' said James. 'Did you call the police?'
'I
don't hold with police,' his father said.
'I
forgot.'
'We
figured you'd come after him. We didn't call no one.'
'I
see,' James said. He folded his arms and stared down at one shoe. 'His mother
was wondering where he was.
'Well,
now she'll know,' said his father. 'Your mother used to wonder.'
'Sir?'
'What
did she say?' Simon asked. 'Did she see I was gone? What did she say about it?'
Instead
of answering, James turned around and looked out the open door. There was Mrs
Pike, picking her way through the dandelions and toward that rectangle of light
across the porch. She had come unasked, having waited long enough in the
pickup, and because she didn't know whose house this was or what she was doing
here her face had a puckered look. She stumbled a little on the porch and then
came forward, her eyes squinting against the light. 'James -' she began, and
then saw Simon and stopped. 'Is that Simon?' she asked. Her finger began
plucking at her skirt, and she stayed poised there on the porch.
Simon
stood up and looked at James, but he didn't say anything.
'Simon,
is that you?' his mother asked.
'Yes.’
'Where
did you go?' She called this into the room from her place on the porch; she
didn't seem able to step inside. 'Why did you leave?'
'Oh,
well,' Simon said uncertainly. He looked over at James's family, as if they
might tell him what was going on here, but they were all staring at Mrs Pike.
'I just came to see these people,' he said.
'Oh,'
said his mother. She looked down at her skirt. The longer she stood there the
more distant she seemed to become, so that now James couldn't imagine her ever
walking in of her own accord. He said, 'Mrs Pike, will you come in?' and then
Clara, who had been gazing open-mouthed, came to life and said, 'Oh. Yes, please
come in.'
Mrs
Pike took a few steps, just enough to get her safely into the room, without
moving her eyes from Simon. 'What happened to your hair?' she asked him.
'What
hair?'
'I
wish you'd have a seat,' Clara said.
'Simon,
were you not going to come back?'
'Well,
I don't know,' said Simon. 'I just came away, I guess.'
'Oh,'
Mrs Pike said. She wet her lips and said, 'Will you come back now?’ not
looking at Simon any more but at James, as if he were the one she was asking.
'What for?' Simon asked.
'Why-just to be back.'
Whatever
Simon was thinking, he didn't show it. He began walking in those small circles
of his, with his eyes on his boots. And James suddenly thought,
what if he won't come back? The same idea must have hit Mrs Pike. She
said, 'Don't you want to come?'
'Well,
'Simon said.
'You
can't stay here.'
'How
did you happen to come by?' he asked.
'James
thought of it.'
'I
mean, what for? Did you just go off driving?'
Mrs
Pike frowned at him, not understanding. ‘James thought of it,' she
said. 'He thought you'd be in Caraway.'
'You
mean you came specially?'
'Well,
yes,' said Mrs Pike. 'What did you think?'
'Oh,'
Simon said, and
the sudden clear look that came across his face made James feel
light inside and relieved. It was that simple, he thought; Simon didn't know
they had come just for him. 'You mean you're here on account of my going
off,' he said.
'Of
course we are. Will you let us take you home?'
'Sure,
I guess so.'
Everyone
seemed to loosen up then. James's father said, 'Well, now,' and Mrs Pike
crossed over to Simon and hugged him tightly. He stood straight while she
hugged him, looking very stiff and grown up, but there was a little shy,
pleased smile pulling at the corners of his mouth. 'I came on a bus,' he said.
'Wasn't
anyone with you?'
'No.'
'I'm
glad I didn't know about it, then. I'm glad I - oh, goodness. Miss, um -'
'Green,'
James said. 'Clara Green, and Claude, and my father.
This is Mrs Pike.'
'Your
family?' said Mrs Pike. She looked at
them more closely. 'Well, of all things,' she said. 'I never thought
I'd-well. Miss Green, do you have a telephone?'
'In
the dining room,' said Clara. 'I'll show you.'
'I
want to reach my husband somehow. I hope someone's at the house.'
She
followed after Clara, with one arm still around Simon, and James watched after
them because he didn't know where else to look. Simon walked very straight,
holding up the weight of his mother's arm but keeping himself tall and separate
from her, and Mrs Pike moved almost briskly. 'They'll be half insane,' James
heard her say. 'Oh, good. Thank you.' They were out of
sight now. Clara reappeared in the doorway, and James turned away and put his
hands in his pockets.
He
was standing squarely in front of the fireplace, a small one with a marble
mantelpiece. Everything in the room was exactly the way it had been before -
the linoleum rug with the roses painted on it, the bead curtains, the turquoise
walls made up of tongue-and-groove slats. On the mantelpiece was
a Seth Thomas clock that his mother had brought when she came, and a picture of
Jesus knocking at the door and a glass plate that looked like lace. At first,
not knowing what else to do with himself, James
absent-mindedly stooped nearer to the fireplace and held out his hands to be
warmed. It was only after a minute that he remembered it was summer and the
fire unlit. So he had to straighten up again, his hands in his back pockets and
his face toward the others. They were all looking at him. Clara had sat down on
the footstool, thinner and sharper and with the look of an old maid beginning
to set in around her mouth. And Claude was on the couch, twisting a leather
lanyard in his hands. He was grown now. The last time James had seen him, Claude was in his early teens and had turned red from
the neck up every time he was directly addressed. There had been more of them
then. His mother, small and dark, scared of everything, humming hymns under her
breath in a tinny monotone as she sewed. His sister Madge, whose one romance they
had broken up and who was now in
If
he had ever imagined coming back here - and it seemed to him now he had,
without knowing it -he had not imagined standing like this, wordless. He had
thought that of all the mixed-up, many-sided things in the world, his dislike
of his father was one complete and pure emotion and that that alone could send
words enough swarming to his mouth. Yet his father stood before him like a
small, battered bird, the buttonless shirt folded gently over his thin chest
and the worn leather slippers searching out the floorboards hesitantly when he
walked. He was making his way to the rocker. All the time that Simon had sat
there, the old man must have been watching shyly and eagerly, waiting for his
chance to reclaim it. (It had always been his property alone, forbidden to the
children. On Bible Class nights, when both parents were gone, James would sit
in that chair and rock fiercely, and the other children stood around him with
wide scared eyes.) Now James's father sat down almost gratefully, feeling
behind him first to make sure it was there and then slowly lowering himself
into it. When he rocked, the chair complained; it had grown old and sullen with
time.
'Yes,
the dog died,' he said. He surveyed his three children out of eyes the same
startling blue as Ansel's, and he smiled a little, 'She died.'
'I'm
sorry to hear that,' said James.
'It
happens.'
'She
had cancer,' Claude said.
'Can
dogs get cancer?'
'Get
everything people get,' said his father, rocking steadily. 'The vet told us so,
at the time.'
'I
never heard that.'
There
was a silence. Clara sat forward suddenly, throwing her arms around her knees
in that swooping way she had and craning her neck up, and everyone looked at
her as if they expected her to say something but she didn't. She just smiled at
them, with her lips tightly closed.
'You've
got your hair a different way,' James told her. Clara went on smiling at him
and nodded.
'Yes,
I do,' she said.
'Every
thought of every curl is another stroke for the devil,' said her father. 'Have
you ever thought of that? But Clara here don't
care; she likes short hair.'
'Yes,
I do,' Clara said again. The tone of her voice was indifferent, and she
included her father in her smile. No one seemed to be as James remembered.
Out
in the dining room, Mrs Pike said, 'Yes? Miss Lucy, I'm glad you're there. I
was hoping you would hear the phone and -'
'You're
back,' James's father said.
The
others looked at him.
'You're
back in this house.'
'Yes,'
James said. 'Just for -' He stopped.
'Just
for a while,' his father said. 'Just for the boy.'
'Yes.'
'Ah,
well.'
Mrs
Pike was talking loudly, apparently trying to break in on something Miss Lucy was
saying. 'Yes, I know,' she said. 'I know-Miss Lucy, will you try and find
"The
phone is a precarious instrument,' said James's father.
'Hush,
now,' Clara told him. 'There's not a machine in this world you don't say that
about.'
'A
wavery thing,' said the old man, overriding her. 'On a
thin line between what's real and what isn't. Is that person really sitting
next to you, the way he sounds? When I called you at your neighbours, three
Christmases ago -'
'Sir?'
said James.
'When
Clara called three Christmases ago, and Ansel wouldn't talk to her but stayed
in the other room, I happened to be passing near enough to hear what was going
on at the other end. Heard Ansel shouting how he wouldn't come. And it seemed
to me his voice was trembly-like, unsteady. Is his sickness worse?'
'No,'
James said. 'He's just a little weak sometimes.'
'It's
the forces from inside that weaken.'
'He's
all right,' James told him.
Simon
was on the telephone now. He was talking to Miss Lucy. 'Yes, ma'am,' he said.
'Then I got on the bus. I figured out the schedule in the drugstore.' James's
father rocked sharply forward and slapped both slippers on the floor.
'That
boy is too young to travel alone,' he said.
'He
ran away,' said James.
'I
realize that. He came to our door and asked to be a lodger. Did you tell him
this family ran a boarding house?'
'No.'
'He
seemed to think you had.'
He
rocked on in silence for a minute; the only sound was Simon's voice. Then Clara
looked up and, finding her father's eyes on her, gathered her skirts beneath
her and spoke. 'He likes mayonnaise,' she said.
'Who
does?' asked James.
'The little boy. He wanted a mayonnaise sandwich.'
'Oh.'
He frowned at her a minute, and then looked over at his father. 'What were you
going to do with him?' he asked.
'The boy? I figured someone'd come after him.'
'What
if they hadn't?'
'You
did,' said his father. 'Someone did. I don't hold with police.'
'You
could have called the parents.'
'I
don't speak on telephones.'
'His
sister just died,' said James. 'His mother had enough to worry about.'
'Most
do.'
'More than enough. Clara could have called.'
'I
never turn a stranger from my door,' his father said. He let his head fall back
against the rocker. 'Can you say that? Did you never let a man
down?' He looked at James from under white, papery eyelids, waiting for an
answer. Noone said anything. It seemed to James that his father had raised a
banner in the room - the same one as in old days, long and dark and heavy. His
lowered eyes were asking 'What can you do about it? Can you
take my flag down?' and smiling faintly. Yet the lines around those eyes
were deep and tired; his children sat limp, not bothering to answer. 'Ah me,'
said the old man, and rolled his head to the other side and then back again and
closed his eyes.
'This
has nothing to do with me,' James said. 'It was his mother you made
worry; it wasn't me.'
'Stop
it,' Clara told him.
'Clara,
are you against telephones?'
'You
could have telephoned here,' his father said suddenly. He opened his eyes and
looked over at James.
'I
was hoping he hadn't got this far,' said James.
'I
see. Have you got a telephone yet? I didn't think to ask.'
'No.'
'And
money. Have you made a lot of money in your life?'
'No.
But I get along.'
'Get
along, do you.' He nodded to himself, several times. 'Changed your ways?'
'No.'
'No,'
his father agreed, and relaxed against the back of the rocker again.
Mrs
Pike and Simon came out of the dining room, Mrs Pike's hand still on Simon's
shoulder. She said, 'We called collect. I'm sure you're relieved to hear that,'
and then laughed a little and looked down at Simon. 'They're going to relay the
message to Simon's daddy,' she said.
'Well,
I'm glad you got through to them,' said Clara. 'Will you have a seat?'
'Oh,
we couldn't. I'm sorry, I know I haven't said two
words to you. Mr Green, it's nice to see you.' She advanced, smiling, heading
straight for James's father and holding out one plump hand. He had to rise from
his rocker to take it. She said, 'You're smaller-boned
than James or Ansel. But you've got Ansel's fair skin.' The way she spoke of
him made him seem like a child being compared to his parents, but he smiled
graciously back.
'James
gets his skin from his mother,' he told her.
'I
guessed that.'
'He's
back in this house now.'
Clara
said, 'Mrs Pike, I wish you'd sit down and have some lemonade.'
'No,
we really can't. I have to get Simon home - and I do thank you for taking care
of him.' She said that directly to Clara, and Clara smiled at her with her
narrow, gaunt smile. 'He don't usually run away, I don't want you
thinking-'
'He's
too young to be on his own,' said Mr Green.
'He's
not on his own.'
'James
used to run away.' He sat down in his rocker and looked up at her, staring out
from under white arched eyebrows. Mrs Pike waited, and then when she saw that
he wasn't going to continue she turned to the others.
'I
thank my Lord we found him,' she said. 'I feel it's some kind of sign; I've
been let off with a warning.' She squeezed Simon tight against her, and he
smiled at the middle button of her dress and then broke away.
James
stood up, preparing to leave, and Mrs Pike said, 'James, I thought we could go
back by bus. You probably want to stay on a bit, now you're here.'
'No,
I'll drive you back,' said James. He crossed over to his father and said, 'I
guess I'll be going.'
'We
still have your old bed,' said his father, but he seemed to know beforehand
that James would say no. He rose again from the rocker, very slowly, and shook
James's hand while he looked at the floor. It was a small, clean hand, that offered no resistance when James pressed it. To
Mrs Pike, James's father said, 'It began when he was four. He ran everywhere.'
'What?'
asked Mrs Pike.
'James.'
'Oh,'
she said. 'Well, I'm glad to've met you, Mr Green -' and she shook his hand
once more, holding her wrist slightly curved and offering just the tips of her
fingers. 'I can't thank you enough for all you've done; any time you're in
Larksvillc you just stop in on us.'
'We
locked doors and tied knots,' said Mr Green, 'But he
was like Houdini.'
Mrs
Pike shook hands with Claude and Clara and made Simon do the same, and James followed
behind them. He shook Claude's hand but Clara he kissed, feeling that she would
prefer that. Her cheek was bonier than he had expected, and the skin dry. She
would probably never get married, he thought. None of them would.
When
they went out the door his father followed them, and stood on the porch in his
slippers. 'Well, goodbye, James,' he said. 'You'll be back someday, I expect.'
But his smile when he looked up at James was timid and uncertain, and James
smiled back.
'Tell
Madge hello for me,' he said.
'All right.'
They
climbed into the pickup at the edge of the yard -Mrs Pike at the window, and
Simon in the middle next to James. Simon said, 'Hey, James, can I steer?' but
James was starting the engine up and didn't answer. He looked in the rear-view
mirror and saw his father still standing on the porch, his arms hugging his
chest, his knees bagging, his small white head strained toward the truck. As
long as James took getting started, his father remained there, and when he
drove away Mr Green lifted one arm for a goodbye and stayed that way until the
truck was out of sight. James drove staring straight ahead for a while, holding
that picture of his father in his mind.
When
they had turned into the centre of Caraway again, Mrs Pike said, 'It's a nice
town, isn't it?'
'Some
ways,' James said.
'Yes.'
And she settled back, one hand patting the back of Simon's neck. Simon was
restless and fidgety after all his adventures. He sat on the edge of the seat,
kicking one foot nervously and gritting his jaw in that way he had when he'd
had too much excitement. The passing streetlights gleamed briefly on his face
and then left it dark again, and his eyes were strained wide against the night.
'Sit
back in your seat,' James told him.
‘I
am.'
'No,
you're not. You'll go through the windshield.'
'Yes,
Simon,' said his mother, and pulled him back.
Simon
leaned against her side, still kicking that one foot.
'James,'
he said, 'will we ever go back visiting there?'
'I
don't know.'
'I
better tell Ansel.'
‘Tell
him what?'
'I
bet
'Well,
maybe so,' James said.
'Those
earrings were just teeny gold wires, you know? And there weren't no feather hats.'
'Well,
that was just one summer they had those,' James said. 'Some
kind of free sample.'
'Why
didn't he tell me that?'
'I
don't know.'
'Why
did he say it was all year every year?'
'Go
to sleep,' said James. 'I don't know.'
15
Joan
arrived at the Pikes' house in Mr Carleton's taxi, rattling over the gravel road
in pitch dark with the taxi's one headlight making a swerving yellow shaft in
front of them. Her suitcases were on the back seat, where they bounced around
at every bump in the road, and she sat up front with Mr Carleton but she didn't
talk to him. Twice he tried to begin a conversation. He started off the first
time with, 'Well, now. Well, now. I didn't know you were even gone, Miss
Joan.' And when she didn't answer that, except for a single
motion of her head that might have been a nod, he rode on in silence for a
while and then tried again. 'Wherever you were,' he said, 'I sure hope
the weather was good.' But Joan's face was turned away from him, and she went
on looking out the window without even changing expression.
When
they turned into the Pikes' yard Joan sat up and opened her straw handbag. She
didn't look toward the house. Mr Carleton said, 'Some kind of party?' and then
she heard the noises that were floating from Ansel's window. Music,
and voices, and someone laughing. The light from that window flooded the
yard, fading out the pale yellow of the taxi's headlight. The rest of the house
was dark. 'I don't know,' she said, and reached forward to hand him his money.
'Don't worry about my bags; I'll take them in.'
'They
look pretty heavy for you.'
'I
can take them.'
He
climbed out his side of the taxi to drag the bags from the back seat. Somehow
the bag that had been her father's had had a strap broken; the strap dangled,
looking ridiculous and defeated. When Mr Carleton handed the bag to her she swayed
for a minute, surprised by the weight of it, and then she said, 'Okay. I've got
it.'
'You sure now.'
'Sure.
Thank you, Mr Carleton.'
'Oh,
it's nothing,' he said. 'Good night.' He climbed back into the taxi, slamming
the door behind him, and backed out into the road. Joan started for the porch.
The
suitcases were hard to get up the steps. She swung them onto the porch one at a
time, and then she climbed the steps herself and picked them up again. This all
felt so familiar; how many times had she lugged these suitcases into this
house? She thought of the first time, coming here in a dust storm, met on the
steps by Janie Rose who wore nothing but her underpants and carried one half a
brown rubber sheet that they hadn't been able to get
away from her in those days. Now there was no one at all to meet her. When she
opened the front door the house was so empty it seemed to echo. She turned on a
lamp, and it threw long, lonely shadows across the parlour walls.
The
first thing she did was put her suitcases back in her bedroom. Whether they had
noticed she was gone or not, she didn't want them to come back and find those
suitcases. Then she closed her bedroom door and went directly to Simon's room.
He wasn't there. The room was black and the door was open, and everything had a
strange blank look.
Downstairs,
she poured herself a glass of milk from the refrigerator and then wandered
through the rooms drinking the milk and switching on every light she came
across. Soon all in the house were on, but it didn't seem to change things.
When the motor in the refrigerator started up she jumped a little, half
frightened for a second. Then she set down the glass of milk and walked very
slowly and deliberately out of the house, with that feeling of loneliness
prickling the back of her neck as she walked.
The
way the music was pouring out, she couldn't identify the voices from Ansel's
window. All she heard was words and phrases, and occasional laughter. She
stopped at the Potters' window and peered in, but not a single light glimmered
there, not even from the very back of the house. They couldn't be far, then. If
they planned to be gone for any length of time they turned all the lamps on and
sat up a cardboard silhouette of a man reading that was guaranteed to fool
burglars. And they couldn't be in bed; it was no later than
No
one answered when she knocked. It was too noisy for them to hear her. She
opened the screen and knocked once more on the inner door, hard, and then she
heard Ansel say, 'Wait! Did someone knock?'
'I
didn't hear anyone,' said Miss Lucy.
Joan
knocked again, and Ansel said, 'See!' She felt the doorknob twist beneath her
hands; then Ansel was standing there, swaying slightly and smiling at her,
leaning his cheek against the edge of the door. 'Came back, did you,' he said.
'What?'
‘I
saw you go.'
'I
don't-'
'But
I didn't tell,' he said, and then swung the door all the way open and threw
back one arm to welcome her. 'Look what we got!' he called to the
others. 'Who we got. See?'
Joan stepped inside and
looked around her. The room was full; it looked as if someone had tipped the
house endwise so that everyone had slid down to James's parlour. Now they sat
in one smiling, rumpled cluster - the Potter sisters, the Pikes, Ansel, and
James. When Ansel shouted at them they all turned toward Joan and waved, with
their faces calm and friendly. The only one who seemed surprised was Simon. He
stood up, and said, 'Joan!' but she frowned at him. 'Hush,' she said. The
voices rose again, returning to whatever they'd been talking about before.
Simon shouted, 'What?'
'I
said, "Hush"!' called
Joan.
'Oh,
I didn't tell. It was like I promised
you, I didn't-'
The
rest of his words were drowned out, but Joan understood his meaning. Nobody had
told. Maybe they thought she'd just been to a movie, or off visiting. Maybe
they knew that wherever she'd gone, she'd be back. And now they sat here,
cheerful and in a party mood -but what was the party about? Just by looking,
she couldn't tell. Miss Lucy and Miss Faye were making a silhouette of James -
Miss Lucy holding a lamp up so that James winced in the light of it, and Miss Faye tracing the shadow of his wincing profile
on a sheet of paper held against the wall. But that was something they always
did; some instinct seemed to push them into making silhouettes at parties, and
now everyone in the house had at least one silhouette of everyone else. Nor
could she tell anything from Mr Pike, who seemed to be a little tiddly from
some wine he was drinking out of a measuring cup. He sat smiling placidly at
something beyond Joan's range of vision, tapping one finger against the cup in
time to a jazz version of 'Stardust' that the radio was sawing out. And the
person who confused her most was Mrs Pike, sitting in a chair in the
corner with her hands folded but her eyes alert to everything that was going
on. 'Fourteen!' she called out; she seemed to be counting the swallows Simon
took from his own glass of wine. But her voice was lost among all the other
voices, and Joan had to read her lips. She turned to Ansel, to see if he could
explain all this. He had lain back on his couch now, like an emperor at a Roman
festival, and when he saw her look his way he smiled and waved.
'Have
a seat!' he shouted. He pointed vaguely to several chairs that were already
occupied. 'We're celebrating.'
'Oh,'
Joan said. 'Celebrating.'
'Simon
ran away.'
'What?'
Simon
smiled at her and nodded. 'I went to Caraway on a bus,' he said.
'Oh, Simon.'
'I
saw those gold earrings.'
'But
how did-'
'James
and Mama came and got me. They made a special trip,' he said. 'We're drinking
Miss Faye's cooking wine.'
Joan
felt behind her for a footstool and sat down on it. 'Are you all right?' she asked.
'Sure
I am.'
'Oh,
I wish I hadn't gone off and -'
'No,
really, I'm all right,' said Simon. 'Look, they're letting me have wine. They
put ice cubes in it to make it watery but I drink it fast before the ice can
melt.'
'That's
nice,' Joan said vaguely. She kept looking around at the others. Ansel leaned
toward Joan with his own jelly glass of wine and said, 'Drink up,' and
thrust it at her, and then lay down again. 'Ansel had to find his own supper
tonight,' Simon told her. 'He had one slice of garlic bologna, all dried out.
James is going to cook him a steak tomorrow to make up for it.'
Joan
took a long swallow of cooking wine and looked over at James. He was swivelling
his eyes toward the silhouette while he kept his profile straight ahead, so
that he seemed cross-eyed. When he felt Joan looking at him he smiled and
called something to her that she couldn't hear, and then Miss Faye said, 'When
you talk your nose moves up and down,' and erased the line she had drawn for
his nose and left a smudge there. Mr Pike laughed. He clanged when he laughed;
it puzzled Joan for a minute, and then she examined him more closely and found
in his lap the elephant bell from Mrs Pike's mantlepiece. 'Why has he got that
bell?' she asked Simon.
Simon
shrugged, and Ansel answered for him. 'He used it while hunting for Simon,' he
called. 'Weird thing, ain't it? Such a funny shape it has. Everything Indians
do is backwards, seems to me -'
'Fifteen!' Mrs Pike said.
'
Miss
Faye's pencil had just hit the bottom of James's neck. She finished off with
that same little bump at the base of it that sculptors put on marble busts, and
then James stretched and turned toward Ansel.
'What,
'he said.
'Funny feeling in my feet, James.'
James
sighed and rose to go over to the couch. 'Well, thank you, Miss Faye,' he
called over his shoulder.
'No
trouble at all. Joan, dear, it's your turn.’
'How
about Simon?' asked Joan.
'They
did me first,' Simon told her. 'I'm the guest of honour.'
'Oh.'
She stood up and went over to the Potters, still carrying her glass of wine.
'My hair's not combed,' she told them.
'That's
all right, we'll just smooth over that part on the paper. Will you have a
seat?'
They
sat her down firmly, both of them pressing on her shoulders. The lamp glared at
her so brightly that it made a circular world that she sat in alone, facing
Miss Lucy's steadily breathing bosom while Miss Faye, strange without gloves,
skimmed the pencil around a suddenly too-big shadow of Joan. Outside the circle
was the noise, and the beating music and the dark, faceless
figures of the others. Their conversation seemed to be blurring together
now.
'I
had a cousin once, who did group silhouettes,' said Miss Faye. 'I don't
know how. It's a talent I never had - he could make everyone be doing something
so like themselves, even in a silhouette of twenty people you could name each
person present.'
'That
was Howard,' Miss Lucy said.
'Howard Potter Laskin. I remember him well. If he was
only here tonight, why, we could put him right to work. I wish I knew how he
did it.'
'Where
is he now?' Miss Lucy asked.
'I
don't know.'
Joan
looked at her shadow, staring almost sideways the way James had done. 'There is
a whole gallery of silhouettes in this house,' she said suddenly.
'Quiet,
dear, you've moved.'
'Didn't
I have this blouse on the last time? There was that same sticking-up frill
around my neck.'
'Yes,'
said Miss Faye. She sighed and her pencil moved briefly outside the shadow of
the frill. 'Simon had the same shirt, too,' she said.
'How
do you remember?'
The
collar's worn out. Little threads poking up.'
Joan
looked over at Simon; he nodded and held up the corner of his collar. 'This is
the shirt I ran away in,' he called.
'Didn't
you get dressed up to go?'
'You
didn't do the laundry yet.'
'Oh,'
said Joan, and she turned back to fit her head into the silhouette. Miss Faye
started on the back of her hair, skimming past the shadows of stray wisps the
way she had promised.
'The
mornings after parties,' she said, 'Miss Lucy and I cut these out and mount
them. Don't we, Lucy? We talk over the parties as we cut.'
'I
think we should take a picture,' said Simon.
'A what?'
'A picture. A photograph. With
a camera.' He took a swallow of wine.
'Sixteen,'
said his mother, still counting.
'I
know. James could take it when you're done with Joan here. Me in my shirt that I ran away in. Everybody
else standing around.'
'Cameras
are all very well,' Miss Faye said. 'But who can't press a button? If Howard
Potter Laskin was here -'
'Howard
did everything well,' said Miss Lucy.
'I
could take you and Miss Lucy drawing silhouettes,' James called. He looked up
from rubbing Ansel's feet. 'Could Howard Potter Laskin do that?'
'Well,
now-'Miss Faye said. She lowered her pencil and frowned into space a minute. 'A silhouette of a silhouette? I don't know. But Howard
could -'
'I'll
get my camera, then,' said James. He left Ansel's couch and crossed toward the
darkroom, stepping carefully through the other people. But the minute he was
gone, Miss Faye finished Joan's silhouette with two quick strokes, ending in a
point on top of her head that wasn't really there.
'You
weren't supposed to finish,' Joan said. 'How will we have you doing a
silhouette if there's no more left to do?'
'Oh,
now,' said Miss Lucy. 'People don't get photographed making silhouettes.
We'll just sit down, I think -maybe on Ansel's couch, if he doesn't object.'
They
began gathering up their pencils and paper. All over the room, people were
getting ready for that camera. Simon had buttoned the top button of his shirt,
so that he looked as if he would choke, and Ansel was sitting ramrod-straight
with his numb feet on the coffee table in front of him. By the time James
returned the whole room seemed tense and silent. Even the radio had been turned
off. James said, 'I don't hardly recognize you all,'
and everyone laughed a little and then got quiet again. 'You're going to have
to bunch up now,' he said.
They
moved closer in, heading toward Ansel who for once allowed someone else to sit
on the couch. 'Simon can sit on the floor,' said James. 'That would help.
Miss-Faye, can you move your silhouettes in?'
'Oh,
I don't think -' said Miss Faye, but James cut her off as if he already knew
what she would say.
'Sure
you can,' he said. 'Everyone gets photographed making silhouettes these
days.' And though Miss Faye smiled, to show she didn't believe him, she brought
one of her silhouettes over and set it on the back of the couch against the
wall. "That's better,' he said. He was carrying his little box camera, and
he held it in front of his stomach now and squinted into the viewfinder.
'Almost,' he said. 'Joan, where are you? All I get is your foot.'
Joan
moved over, squeezing in against Simon on the floor. 'Ouch,' said Simon.
'James, are you going to get in the picture?'
'Not
while I'm taking it I'm not,' said James.
'You
should,' Miss Lucy said. 'You're the one that went and got him.'
'No.
I hate being photographed.'
'Then
what's the use?' Simon said. He looked around at the others. 'James made
that special trip -'
'I'll
take it,' said Joan. She stood up. 'You show me how to aim it, James.'
'How
to-'
'No,
Joan should be in it too,' Simon said.
But
Mr Pike came to life suddenly and reached down to touch Simon's shoulder.
'Can't have everything, boy,' he said. 'Come on and get in the picture, James. Joan
didn't go nowhere; she don't mind.'
'No,
I don't,' Joan told James. 'Give it here.'
'Well,
all right.'
He
put it in her hands and then showed her the button. 'This is what you press,'
he told her. 'It's not all that hard.'
He
went over to sit on the arm of the sofa, next to Ansel, and now even James
looked self-conscious. When Joan peered at them through the view-finder she saw
all of their faces made clear and tiny, with their smiles stretched tight and
each person's hand clamped white around a glass of wine. Ansel's feet were
bigger than anyone. He still had them propped up, and when Joan raised her head
to glare at them he ducked a glance at her and said, They
hurt.'
'They're
in the way,' Joan told him.
‘They
hurt.'
'If
you'd get the right size shoes' said James.
Mr
Pike bent forward to stare at Ansel's feet; his elephant bell clanged again and
Ansel said suddenly, breaking in on what James was saying, 'I had a cousin engaged
to a India Indian. I ever mention that?'
'No,'
said Joan. 'Your feet, please, Ansel.' She lowered her head and stared into the
finder again, but Ansel showed no sign of moving his feet.
'I'd
nearly forgotten about it,' he said. 'This particular Indian used to sing a
lot. All the time long songs, India Indian songs, without no
tune. He'd finish and we'd clap and say, "Well, wasn't that -"when
oops, there he'd go, on to the next line. Got so we were afraid
to clap. On and on he'd go, on and on.'
'Are
you sure we shouldn't just sit in a chair?' asked Miss Lucy.
'Wednesday
came and went,' James said. 'When will you remember your shots?'
In
the finder of the camera Joan could see them moving, each person making his own
set of motions. But the glass of the finder seemed to hold them there, like
figures in a snowflurry paper-weight who would still be in their set positions
when the snow settled down again. She thought whole years could pass, they
could be born and die, they could leave and return, they could marry or live
out their separate lives alone, and nothing in this finder would change. They
were going to stay this way, she and all the rest of them, not because of
anyone else but because it was what they had chosen, what they would keep a
strong tight hold of. James bent over Ansel; Mrs Pike touched the top of
Simon's head, and Mr Pike sat smiling awkwardly into space. 'It starts near the
arches,' said Ansel, 'right about here . . .'
'Be
still,' said Joan.
She
kept her head down and stared at the camera, smiling as if it were she herself
being photographed. The others smiled back, each person motionless, each clutching
separately his glass of wine.