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6173 lines
510 KiB
Plaintext
1
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*Please note: There may be some problems with paragraph breaks. When they occur, just
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keep reading!
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Toni Morrison
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Beloved
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Sixty million and more
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I will call them my people,
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which were not my people;
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and her beloved,
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which was not beloved.
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ROMANS 9: 25
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BOOK ONE
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Chapter 1
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124 WAS SPITEFUL. Full of a baby's venom. The women in the house knew it and so did the children. For years each put
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up with the spite in his own way, but by 1873 Sethe and her daughter Denver were its only victims. The grandmother,
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Baby Suggs, was dead, and the sons, Howard and Buglar, had run away by the time they were thirteen years old--as soon
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as merely looking in a mirror shattered it (that was the signal for Buglar); as soon as two tiny hand prints appeared in the
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cake (that was it for Howard). Neither boy waited to see more; another kettleful of chickpeas smoking in a heap on the
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floor; soda crackers crumbled and strewn in a line next to the door sill. Nor did they wait for one of the relief periods:
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the weeks, months even, when nothing was disturbed. No. Each one fled at once--the moment the house committed
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what was for him the one insult not to be borne or witnessed a second time. Within two months, in the dead of winter,
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leaving their grandmother, Baby Suggs; Sethe, their mother; and their little sister, Denver, all by themselves in the gray
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and white house on Bluestone Road. It didn't have a number then, because Cincinnati didn't stretch that far. In fact,
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Ohio had been calling itself a state only seventy years when first one brother and then the next stuffed quilt packing into
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his hat, snatched up his shoes, and crept away from the lively spite the house felt for them.
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Baby Suggs didn't even raise her head. From her sickbed she heard them go but that wasn't the reason she lay still. It
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was a wonder to her that her grandsons had taken so long to realize that every house wasn't like the one on Bluestone
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Road. Suspended between the nas tiness of life and the meanness of the dead, she couldn't get interested in leaving life
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or living it, let alone the fright of two creeping-off boys. Her past had been like her present--intolerable--and since she
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knew death was anything but forgetfulness, she used the little energy left her for pondering color.
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"Bring a little lavender in, if you got any. Pink, if you don't."
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And Sethe would oblige her with anything from fabric to her own tongue. Winter in Ohio was especially rough if you
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had an appetite for color. Sky provided the only drama, and counting on a Cincinnati horizon for life's principal joy was
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reckless indeed. So Sethe and the girl Denver did what they could, and what the house permitted, for her. Together they
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waged a perfunctory battle against the outrageous behavior of that place; against turned-over slop jars, smacks on the
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behind, and gusts of sour air. For they understood the source of the outrage as well as they knew the source of light.
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Baby Suggs died shortly after the brothers left, with no interest whatsoever in their leave-taking or hers, and right
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afterward Sethe and Denver decided to end the persecution by calling forth the ghost that tried them so. Perhaps a
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2
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conversation, they thought, an exchange of views or something would help. So they held hands and said, "Come on.
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Come on. You may as well just come on."
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The sideboard took a step forward but nothing else did.
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"Grandma Baby must be stopping it," said Denver. She was ten and still mad at Baby Suggs for dying.
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Sethe opened her eyes. "I doubt that," she said.
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"Then why don't it come?"
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"You forgetting how little it is," said her mother. "She wasn't even two years old when she died. Too little to understand.
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Too little to talk much even."
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"Maybe she don't want to understand," said Denver.
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"Maybe. But if she'd only come, I could make it clear to her."
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Sethe released her daughter's hand and together they pushed the sideboard back against the wall. Outside a driver
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whipped his horse into the gallop local people felt necessary when they passed 124.
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"For a baby she throws a powerful spell," said Denver.
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"No more powerful than the way I loved her," Sethe answered and there it was again. The welcoming cool of unchiseled
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headstones; the one she selected to lean against on tiptoe, her knees wide open as any grave. Pink as a fingernail it was,
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and sprinkled with glittering chips. Ten minutes, he said. You got ten minutes I'll do it for free.
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Ten minutes for seven letters. With another ten could she have gotten "Dearly" too? She had not thought to ask him
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and it bothered her still that it might have been possible--that for twenty minutes, a half hour, say, she could have had
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the whole thing, every word she heard the preacher say at the funeral (and all there was to say, surely) engraved on her
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baby's headstone: Dearly Beloved. But what she got, settled for, was the one word that mattered. She thought it would
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be enough, rutting among the headstones with the engraver, his young son looking on, the anger in his face so old; the
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appetite in it quite new. That should certainly be enough. Enough to answer one more preacher, one more abolitionist
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and a town full of disgust.
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Counting on the stillness of her own soul, she had forgotten the other one: the soul of her baby girl. Who would have
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thought that a little old baby could harbor so much rage? Rutting among the stones under the eyes of the engraver's son
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was not enough. Not only did she have to live out her years in a house palsied by the baby's fury at having its throat cut,
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but those ten minutes she spent pressed up against dawn-colored stone studded with star chips, her knees wide open as
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the grave, were longer than life, more alive, more pulsating than the baby blood that soaked her fingers like oil.
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"We could move," she suggested once to her mother-in-law.
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"What'd be the point?" asked Baby Suggs. "Not a house in the country ain't packed to its rafters with some dead Negro's
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grief. We lucky this ghost is a baby. My husband's spirit was to come back in here? or yours? Don't talk to me. You lucky.
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You got three left.
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Three pulling at your skirts and just one raising hell from the other side. Be thankful, why don't you? I had eight. Every
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one of them gone away from me. Four taken, four chased, and all, I expect, worrying somebody's house into evil." Baby
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Suggs rubbed her eyebrows.
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"My first-born. All I can remember of her is how she loved the burned bottom of bread. Can you beat that? Eight
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children and that's all I remember."
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"That's all you let yourself remember," Sethe had told her, but she was down to one herself--one alive, that is--the boys
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chased off by the dead one, and her memory of Buglar was fading fast. Howard at least had a head shape nobody could
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3
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forget. As for the rest, she worked hard to remember as
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close to nothing as was safe. Unfortunately her brain was devious. She might be hurrying across a field, running
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practically, to get to the pump quickly and rinse the chamomile sap from her legs. Nothing else would be in her mind.
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The picture of the men coming to nurse her was as lifeless as the nerves in her back where the skin buckled like a
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washboard. Nor was there the faintest scent of ink or the cherry gum and oak bark from which it was made. Nothing.
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Just the breeze cooling her face as she rushed toward water. And then sopping the chamomile away with pump water
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and rags, her mind fixed on getting every last bit of sap off--on her carelessness in taking a shortcut across the field
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just to save a half mile, and not noticing how high the weeds had grown until the itching was all the way to her knees.
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Then something. The plash of water, the sight of her shoes and stockings awry on the path where she had flung them;
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or Here Boy lapping in the puddle near her feet, and suddenly there was Sweet Home rolling, rolling, rolling out before
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her eyes, and although there was not a leaf on that farm that did not make her want to scream, it rolled itself out before
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her in shameless beauty. It never looked as terrible as it was and it made her wonder if hell was a pretty place too.
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Fire and brimstone all right, but hidden in lacy groves. Boys hanging from the most beautiful sycamores in the world. It
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shamed her--remembering the wonderful soughing trees rather than the boys. Try as she might to make it otherwise,
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the sycamores beat out the children every time and she could not forgive her memory for that.
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When the last of the chamomile was gone, she went around to the front of the house, collecting her shoes and stockings
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on the way.
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As if to punish her further for her terrible memory, sitting on the porch not forty feet away was Paul D, the last of the
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Sweet Home men. And although she she said, "Is that you?"
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"What's left." He stood up and smiled. "How you been, girl, besides barefoot?"
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When she laughed it came out loose and young. "Messed up my legs back yonder. Chamomile."
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He made a face as though tasting a teaspoon of something bitter.
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"I don't want to even hear 'bout it. Always did hate that stuff."
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Sethe balled up her stockings and jammed them into her pocket.
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"Come on in."
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"Porch is fine, Sethe. Cool out here." He sat back down and looked at the meadow on the other side of the road,
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knowing the eagerness he felt would be in his eyes.
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"Eighteen years," she said softly.
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"Eighteen," he repeated. "And I swear I been walking every one of em. Mind if I join you?" He nodded toward her feet
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and began unlacing his shoes.
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"You want to soak them? Let me get you a basin of water." She moved closer to him to enter the house.
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"No, uh uh. Can't baby feet. A whole lot more tramping they got to do yet."
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"You can't leave right away, Paul D. You got to stay awhile."
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"Well, long enough to see Baby Suggs, anyway. Where is she?"
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"Dead."
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"Aw no. When?"
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"Eight years now. Almost nine."
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4
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"Was it hard? I hope she didn't die hard."
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Sethe shook her head. "Soft as cream. Being alive was the hard part. Sorry you missed her though. Is that what you came
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by for?"
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"That's some of what I came for. The rest is you. But if all the truth be known, I go anywhere these days. Anywhere they
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let me sit down."
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"You looking good."
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"Devil's confusion. He lets me look good long as I feel bad." He looked at her and the word "bad" took on another
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meaning.
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Sethe smiled. This is the way they were--had been. All of the Sweet Home men, before and after Halle, treated her to a
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mild brotherly flirtation, so subtle you had to scratch for it.
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Except for a heap more hair and some waiting in his eyes, he looked the way he had in Kentucky. Peachstone skin;
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straight-backed.
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For a man with an immobile face it was amazing how ready it was to smile, or blaze or be sorry with you. As though all
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you had to do was get his attention and right away he produced the feeling you were feeling. With less than a blink, his
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face seemed to change--underneath it lay the activity.
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"I wouldn't have to ask about him, would I? You'd tell me if there was anything to tell, wouldn't you?" Sethe looked
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down at her feet and saw again the sycamores.
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"I'd tell you. Sure I'd tell you. I don't know any more now than I did then." Except for the churn, he thought, and you
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don't need to know that. "You must think he's still alive."
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"No. I think he's dead. It's not being sure that keeps him alive."
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"What did Baby Suggs think?"
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"Same, but to listen to her, all her children is dead. Claimed she felt each one go the very day and hour."
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"When she say Halle went?"
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"Eighteen fifty-five. The day my baby was born."
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"You had that baby, did you? Never thought you'd make it."
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He chuckled. "Running off pregnant."
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"Had to. Couldn't be no waiting." She lowered her head and thought, as he did, how unlikely it was that she had made it.
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And if it hadn't been for that girl looking for velvet, she never would have.
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"All by yourself too." He was proud of her and annoyed by her.
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Proud she had done it; annoyed that she had not needed Halle or him in the doing.
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"Almost by myself. Not all by myself. A whitegirl helped me."
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"Then she helped herself too, God bless her."
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"You could stay the night, Paul D."
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"You don't sound too steady in the offer."
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5
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Sethe glanced beyond his shoulder toward the closed door. "Oh it's truly meant. I just hope you'll pardon my house.
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Come on in.
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Talk to Denver while I cook you something."
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Paul D tied his shoes together, hung them over his shoulder and followed her through the door straight into a pool of
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red and undulating light that locked him where he stood.
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"You got company?" he whispered, frowning.
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"Off and on," said Sethe.
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"Good God." He backed out the door onto the porch. "What kind of evil you got in here?"
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"It's not evil, just sad. Come on. Just step through."
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He looked at her then, closely. Closer than he had when she first rounded the house on wet and shining legs, holding her
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shoes and stockings up in one hand, her skirts in the other. Halle's girl--the one with iron eyes and backbone to match.
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He had never seen her hair in Kentucky. And though her face was eighteen years older than when last he saw her, it was
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softer now. Because of the hair. A face too still for comfort; irises the same color as her skin, which, in that still face,
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used to make him think of a mask with mercifully punched out eyes. Halle's woman. Pregnant every year including the
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year she sat by the fire telling him she was going to run. Her three children she had already packed into a wagonload of
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others in a caravan of Negroes crossing the river. They were to be left with Halle's mother near Cincinnati. Even in that
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tiny shack, leaning so close to the fire you could smell the heat in her dress, her
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eyes did not pick up a flicker of light. They were like two wells into which he had trouble gazing. Even punched out they
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needed to be covered, lidded, marked with some sign to warn folks of what that emptiness held. So he looked instead
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at the fire while she told him, because her husband was not there for the telling. Mr. Garner was dead and his wife
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had a lump in her neck the size of a sweet potato and unable to speak to anyone. She leaned as close to the fire as her
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pregnant belly allowed and told him, Paul D, the last of the Sweet Home men.
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There had been six of them who belonged to the farm, Sethe the only female. Mrs. Garner, crying like a baby, had sold
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his brother to pay off the debts that surfaced the minute she was widowed. Then schoolteacher arrived to put things in
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order. But what he did broke three more Sweet Home men and punched the glittering iron out of Sethe's eyes, leaving
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two open wells that did not reflect firelight.
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Now the iron was back but the face, softened by hair, made him trust her enough to step inside her door smack into a
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pool of pulsing red light.
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She was right. It was sad. Walking through it, a wave of grief soaked him so thoroughly he wanted to cry. It seemed a
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long way to the normal light surrounding the table, but he made it--dry-eyed and lucky.
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"You said she died soft. Soft as cream," he reminded her.
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"That's not Baby Suggs," she said.
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"Who then?"
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"My daughter. The one I sent ahead with the boys."
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"She didn't live?"
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"No. The one I was carrying when I run away is all I got left.
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Boys gone too. Both of em walked off just before Baby Suggs died."
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Paul D looked at the spot where the grief had soaked him. The red was gone but a kind of weeping clung to the air
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6
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where it had been.
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Probably best, he thought. If a Negro got legs he ought to use them. Sit down too long, somebody will figure out a way
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to tie them up. Still... if her boys were gone...
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"No man? You here by yourself?"
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"Me and Denver," she said.
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"That all right by you?"
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"That's all right by me."
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She saw his skepticism and went on. "I cook at a restaurant in town. And I sew a little on the sly."
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Paul D smiled then, remembering the bedding dress. Sethe was thirteen when she came to Sweet Home and already
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iron-eyed. She was a timely present for Mrs. Garner who had lost Baby Suggs to her husband's high principles. The five
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Sweet Home men looked at the new girl and decided to let her be. They were young and so sick with the absence of
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women they had taken to calves. Yet they let the iron-eyed girl be, so she could choose in spite of the fact that each
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one would have beaten the others to mush to have her. It took her a year to choose--a long, tough year of thrashing on
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pallets eaten up with dreams of her. A year of yearning, when rape seemed the solitary gift of life. The restraint they had
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exercised possible only because they were Sweet Home men--the ones Mr. Garner bragged about while other farmers
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shook their heads in warning at the phrase.
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"Y'all got boys," he told them. "Young boys, old boys, picky boys, stroppin boys. Now at Sweet Home, my niggers is men
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every one of em. Bought em thataway, raised em thataway. Men every one."
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"Beg to differ, Garner. Ain't no nigger men."
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"Not if you scared, they ain't." Garner's smile was wide. "But if you a man yourself, you'll want your niggers to be men
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too."
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"I wouldn't have no nigger men round my wife."
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It was the reaction Garner loved and waited for. "Neither would I," he said. "Neither would I," and there was always a
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pause before the neighbor, or stranger, or peddler, or brother-in-law or whoever it was got the meaning. Then a fierce
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argument, sometimes a fight, and Garner came home bruised and pleased, having demonstrated one more time what a
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real Kentuckian was: one tough enough and smart enough to make and call his own niggers men.
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And so they were: Paul D Garner, Paul F Garner, Paul A Garner, Halle Suggs and Sixo, the wild man. All in their twenties,
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minus women, fucking cows, dreaming of rape, thrashing on pallets, rubbing their thighs and waiting for the new girl--
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the one who took Baby Suggs' place after Halle bought her with five years of Sundays.
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Maybe that was why she chose him. A twenty-year-old man so in love with his mother he gave up five years of Sabbaths
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just to see her sit down for a change was a serious recommendation.
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She waited a year. And the Sweet Home men abused cows while they waited with her. She chose Halle and for their first
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bedding she sewed herself a dress on the sly.
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"Won't you stay on awhile? Can't nobody catch up on eighteen years in a day."
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Out of the dimness of the room in which they sat, a white staircase climbed toward the blue-and-white wallpaper of the
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second floor.
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Paul D could see just the beginning of the paper; discreet flecks of yellow sprinkled among a blizzard of snowdrops all
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backed by blue.
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7
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The luminous white of the railing and steps kept him glancing toward it. Every sense he had told him the air above the
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stairwell was charmed and very thin. But the girl who walked down out of that air was round and brown with the face of
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an alert doll.
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Paul D looked at the girl and then at Sethe who smiled saying, "Here she is my Denver. This is Paul D, honey, from Sweet
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Home."
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"Good morning, Mr. D."
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"Garner, baby. Paul D Garner."
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"Yes sir."
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"Glad to get a look at you. Last time I saw your mama, you were pushing out the front of her dress."
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"Still is," Sethe smiled, "provided she can get in it."
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Denver stood on the bottom step and was suddenly hot and shy.
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It had been a long time since anybody (good-willed whitewoman, preacher, speaker or newspaperman) sat at their
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table, their sympathetic voices called liar by the revulsion in their eyes. For twelve years, long before Grandma Baby
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died, there had been no visitors of any sort and certainly no friends. No coloredpeople. Certainly no hazelnut man with
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too long hair and no notebook, no charcoal, no oranges, no questions. Someone her mother wanted to talk to and
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would even consider talking to while barefoot. Looking, in fact acting, like a girl instead of the quiet, queenly woman
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Denver had known all her life. The one who never looked away, who when a man got stomped to death by a mare right
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in front of Sawyer's restaurant did not look away; and when a sow began eating her own litter did not look away then
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either. And when the baby's spirit picked up Here Boy and slammed him into the wall hard enough to break two of his
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legs and dislocate his eye, so hard he went into convulsions and chewed up his tongue, still her mother had not looked
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away. She had taken a hammer, knocked the dog unconscious, wiped away the blood and saliva, pushed his eye back
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in his head and set his leg bones. He recovered, mute and off-balance, more because of his untrustworthy eye than his
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bent legs, and winter, summer, drizzle or dry, nothing could persuade him to enter the house again.
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Now here was this woman with the presence of mind to repair a dog gone savage with pain rocking her crossed ankles
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and looking away from her own daughter's body. As though the size of it was more than vision could bear. And neither
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she nor he had on shoes.
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Hot, shy, now Denver was lonely. All that leaving: first her brothers, then her grandmother--serious losses since there
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were no children willing to circle her in a game or hang by their knees from
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her porch railing. None of that had mattered as long as her mother did not look away as she was doing now, making
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Denver long, downright long, for a sign of spite from the baby ghost.
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"She's a fine-looking young lady," said Paul D. "Fine-looking.
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Got her daddy's sweet face."
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"You know my father?"
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"Knew him. Knew him well."
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"Did he, Ma'am?" Denver fought an urge to realign her affection.
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"Of course he knew your daddy. I told you, he's from Sweet Home."
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Denver sat down on the bottom step. There was nowhere else gracefully to go. They were a twosome, saying "Your
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daddy" and "Sweet Home" in a way that made it clear both belonged to them and not to her. That her own father's
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absence was not hers. Once the absence had belonged to Grandma Baby--a son, deeply mourned because he was the
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8
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one who had bought her out of there. Then it was her mother's absent husband. Now it was this hazelnut stranger's
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absent friend. Only those who knew him ("knew him well") could claim his absence for themselves. Just as only those
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who lived in Sweet Home could remember it, whisper it and glance sideways at one another while they did. Again she
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wished for the baby ghost--its anger thrilling her now where it used to wear her out. Wear her out.
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"We have a ghost in here," she said, and it worked. They were not a twosome anymore. Her mother left off swinging
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her feet and being girlish. Memory of Sweet Home dropped away from the eyes of the man she was being girlish for. He
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looked quickly up the lightning-white stairs behind her.
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"So I hear," he said. "But sad, your mama said. Not evil."
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"No sir," said Denver, "not evil. But not sad either."
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"What then?"
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"Rebuked. Lonely and rebuked."
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"Is that right?" Paul D turned to Sethe.
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"I don't know about lonely," said Denver's mother. "Mad, maybe, but I don't see how it could be lonely spending every
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minute with us like it does."
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"Must be something you got it wants."
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Sethe shrugged. "It's just a baby."
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"My sister," said Denver. "She died in this house."
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Paul D scratched the hair under his jaw. "Reminds me of that headless bride back behind Sweet Home. Remember that,
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Sethe? Used to roam them woods regular."
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"How could I forget? Worrisome..."
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"How come everybody run off from Sweet Home can't stop talking about it? Look like if it was so sweet you would have
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stayed."
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||
"Girl, who you talking to?"
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||
Paul D laughed. "True, true. She's right, Sethe. It wasn't sweet and it sure wasn't home." He shook his head.
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||
"But it's where we were," said Sethe. "All together. Comes back whether we want it to or not." She shivered a little. A
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||
light ripple of skin on her arm, which she caressed back into sleep. "Denver," she said, "start up that stove. Can't have a
|
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friend stop by and don't feed him."
|
||
"Don't go to any trouble on my account," Paul D said.
|
||
"Bread ain't trouble. The rest I brought back from where I work.
|
||
Least I can do, cooking from dawn to noon, is bring dinner home.
|
||
You got any objections to pike?"
|
||
"If he don't object to me I don't object to him."
|
||
At it again, thought Denver. Her back to them, she jostled the kindlin and almost lost the fire. "Why don't you spend the
|
||
night, Mr. Garner? You and Ma'am can talk about Sweet Home all night long."
|
||
Sethe took two swift steps to the stove, but before she could yank Denver's collar, the girl leaned forward and began to
|
||
9
|
||
cry.
|
||
"What is the matter with you? I never knew you to behave this way."
|
||
"Leave her be," said Paul D. "I'm a stranger to her."
|
||
"That's just it. She got no cause to act up with a stranger. Oh baby, what is it? Did something happen?"
|
||
But Denver was shaking now and sobbing so she could not speak.
|
||
The tears she had not shed for nine years wetting her far too womanly breasts.
|
||
"I can't no more. I can't no more."
|
||
"Can't what? What can't you?"
|
||
"I can't live here. I don't know where to go or what to do, but I can't live here. Nobody speaks to us. Nobody comes by.
|
||
Boys don't like me. Girls don't either."
|
||
"Honey, honey."
|
||
"What's she talking 'bout nobody speaks to you?" asked Paul D.
|
||
"It's the house. People don't--"
|
||
"It's not! It's not the house. It's us! And it's you!"
|
||
"Denver!"
|
||
"Leave off, Sethe. It's hard for a young girl living in a haunted house. That can't be easy."
|
||
"It's easier than some other things."
|
||
"Think, Sethe. I'm a grown man with nothing new left to see or do and I'm telling you it ain't easy. Maybe you all ought
|
||
to move.
|
||
Who owns this house?"
|
||
Over Denver's shoulder Sethe shot Paul D a look of snow. "What you care?"
|
||
"They won't let you leave?"
|
||
"No."
|
||
"Sethe."
|
||
"No moving. No leaving. It's all right the way it is."
|
||
"You going to tell me it's all right with this child half out of her mind?"
|
||
Something in the house braced, and in the listening quiet that followed Sethe spoke.
|
||
"I got a tree on my back and a haint in my house, and nothing in between but the daughter I am holding in my arms.
|
||
No more running--from nothing. I will never run from another thing on this earth. I took one journey and I paid for the
|
||
ticket, but let me tell you something, Paul D Garner: it cost too much! Do you hear me?
|
||
It cost too much. Now sit down and eat with us or leave us be."
|
||
Paul D fished in his vest for a little pouch of tobacco--concentrating on its contents and the knot of its string while Sethe
|
||
10
|
||
led Denver into the keeping room that opened off the large room he was sitting in. He had no smoking papers, so he
|
||
fiddled with the pouch and listened through the open door to Sethe quieting her daughter. When she came back she
|
||
avoided his look and went straight to a small table next
|
||
to the stove. Her back was to him and he could see all the hair he wanted without the distraction of her face.
|
||
"What tree on your back?"
|
||
"Huh." Sethe put a bowl on the table and reached under it for flour.
|
||
"What tree on your back? Is something growing on your back?
|
||
I don't see nothing growing on your back."
|
||
"It's there all the same."
|
||
"Who told you that?"
|
||
"Whitegirl. That's what she called it. I've never seen it and never will. But that's what she said it looked like. A
|
||
chokecherry tree.
|
||
Trunk, branches, and even leaves. Tiny little chokecherry leaves. But that was eighteen years ago. Could have cherries
|
||
too now for all I know."
|
||
Sethe took a little spit from the tip of her tongue with her forefinger.
|
||
Quickly, lightly she touched the stove. Then she trailed her fingers through the flour, parting, separating small hills and
|
||
ridges of it, looking for mites. Finding none, she poured soda and salt into the crease of her folded hand and tossed both
|
||
into the flour. Then she reached into a can and scooped half a handful of lard. Deftly she squeezed the flour through it,
|
||
then with her left hand sprinkling water, she formed the dough.
|
||
"I had milk," she said. "I was pregnant with Denver but I had milk for my baby girl. I hadn't stopped nursing her when I
|
||
sent her on ahead with Howard and Buglar."
|
||
Now she rolled the dough out with a wooden pin. "Anybody could smell me long before he saw me. And when he
|
||
saw me he'd see the drops of it on the front of my dress. Nothing I could do about that. All I knew was I had to get my
|
||
milk to my baby girl. Nobody was going to nurse her like me. Nobody was going to get it to her fast enough, or take it
|
||
away when she had enough and didn't know it. Nobody knew that she couldn't pass her air if you held her up on your
|
||
shoulder, only if she was lying on my knees. Nobody knew that but me and nobody had her milk but me. I told that
|
||
to the women in the wagon. Told them to put sugar water in cloth to suck from so when I got there in a few days she
|
||
wouldn't have forgot me. The milk would be there and I would be there with it."
|
||
"Men don't know nothing much," said Paul D, tucking his pouch back into his vest pocket, "but they do know a suckling
|
||
can't be away from its mother for long."
|
||
"Then they know what it's like to send your children off when your breasts are full."
|
||
"We was talking 'bout a tree, Sethe."
|
||
"After I left you, those boys came in there and took my milk.
|
||
That's what they came in there for. Held me down and took it. I told Mrs. Garner on em. She had that lump and couldn't
|
||
speak but her eyes rolled out tears. Them boys found out I told on em. Schoolteacher made one open up my back, and
|
||
when it closed it made a tree. It grows there still."
|
||
"They used cowhide on you?"
|
||
11
|
||
"And they took my milk."
|
||
"They beat you and you was pregnant?"
|
||
"And they took my milk!"
|
||
The fat white circles of dough lined the pan in rows. Once more Sethe touched a wet forefinger to the stove. She opened
|
||
the oven door and slid the pan of biscuits in. As she raised up from the heat she felt Paul D behind her and his hands
|
||
under her breasts. She straightened up and knew, but could not feel, that his cheek was pressing into the branches of
|
||
her chokecherry tree.
|
||
Not even trying, he had become the kind of man who could walk into a house and make the women cry. Because with
|
||
him, in his presence, they could. There was something blessed in his manner.
|
||
Women saw him and wanted to weep--to tell him that their chest hurt and their knees did too. Strong women and wise
|
||
saw him and told him things they only told each other: that way past the Change of Life, desire in them had suddenly
|
||
become enormous, greedy, more savage than when they were fifteen, and that it embarrassed them and made them
|
||
sad; that secretly they longed to die--to be quit of it--that sleep was more precious to them than any waking day. Young
|
||
girls sidled up to him to confess or describe how well-dressed the visitations were that had followed them straight from
|
||
their dreams.
|
||
Therefore, although he did not understand why this was so, he was not surprised when Denver dripped tears into
|
||
the stovefire. Nor, fifteen minutes later, after telling him about her stolen milk, her mother wept as well. Behind her,
|
||
bending down, his body an arc of kindness, he held her breasts in the palms of his hands. He rubbed his cheek on her
|
||
back and learned that way her sorrow, the roots of it; its wide trunk and intricate branches. Raising his fingers to the
|
||
hooks of her dress, he knew without seeing them or hearing any sigh that the tears were coming fast. And when the
|
||
top of her dress was around her hips and he saw the sculpture her back had become, like the decorative work of an
|
||
ironsmith too passionate for display, he could think but not say, "Aw, Lord, girl." And he would tolerate no peace until
|
||
he had touched every ridge and leaf of it with his mouth, none of which Sethe could feel because her back skin had been
|
||
dead for years. What she knew was that the responsibility for her breasts, at last, was in somebody else's hands.
|
||
Would there be a little space, she wondered, a little time, some way to hold off eventfulness, to push busyness into the
|
||
corners of the room and just stand there a minute or two, naked from shoulder blade to waist, relieved of the weight of
|
||
her breasts, smelling the stolen milk again and the pleasure of
|
||
baking bread? Maybe this one time she could stop dead still in the middle of a cooking meal--not even leave the stove-
|
||
-and feel the hurt her back ought to. Trust things and remember things because the last of the Sweet Home men was
|
||
there to catch her if she sank?
|
||
The stove didn't shudder as it adjusted to its heat. Denver wasn't stirring in the next room. The pulse of red light
|
||
hadn't come back and Paul D had not trembled since 1856 and then for eighty-three days in a row. Locked up and
|
||
chained down, his hands shook so bad he couldn't smoke or even scratch properly. Now he was trembling again but
|
||
in the legs this time. It took him a while to realize that his legs were not shaking because of worry, but because the
|
||
floorboards were and the grinding, shoving floor was only part of it. The house itself was pitching. Sethe slid to the floor
|
||
and struggled to get back into her dress. While down on all fours, as though she were holding her house down on the
|
||
ground, Denver burst from the keeping room, terror in her eyes, a vague smile on her lips.
|
||
"God damn it! Hush up!" Paul D was shouting, falling, reaching for anchor. "Leave the place alone! Get the hell out!" A
|
||
table rushed toward him and he grabbed its leg. Somehow he managed to stand at an angle and, holding the table by
|
||
two legs, he bashed it about, wrecking everything, screaming back at the screaming house. "You want to fight, come on!
|
||
God damn it! She got enough without you.
|
||
She got enough!"
|
||
The quaking slowed to an occasional lurch, but Paul D did not stop whipping the table around until everything was rock
|
||
12
|
||
quiet.
|
||
Sweating and breathing hard, he leaned against the wall in the space the sideboard left. Sethe was still crouched next
|
||
to the stove, clutching her salvaged shoes to her chest. The three of them, Sethe, Denver, and Paul D, breathed to the
|
||
same beat, like one tired person. Another breathing was just as tired.
|
||
It was gone. Denver wandered through the silence to the stove.
|
||
She ashed over the fire and pulled the pan of biscuits from the oven.
|
||
The jelly cupboard was on its back, its contents lying in a heap in the corner of the bottom shelf. She took out a jar, and,
|
||
looking around for a plate, found half of one by the door. These things she carried out to the porch steps, where she sat
|
||
down.
|
||
The two of them had gone up there. Stepping lightly, easy-footed, they had climbed the white stairs, leaving her down
|
||
below. She pried the wire from the top of the jar and then the lid. Under it was cloth and under that a thin cake of wax.
|
||
She removed it all and coaxed the jelly onto one half of the half a plate. She took a biscuit and pulled off its black top.
|
||
Smoke curled from the soft white insides.
|
||
She missed her brothers. Buglar and Howard would be twenty two and twenty-three now. Although they had been
|
||
polite to her during the quiet time and gave her the whole top of the bed, she remembered how it was before: the
|
||
pleasure they had sitting clustered on the white stairs--she
|
||
between the knees of Howard or Buglar--while they made up die-witch! stories with proven ways of killing her dead.
|
||
And Baby Suggs telling her things in the keeping room.
|
||
She smelled like bark in the day and leaves at night, for Denver would not sleep in her old room after her brothers ran
|
||
away.
|
||
Now her mother was upstairs with the man who had gotten rid of the only other company she had. Denver dipped a bit
|
||
of bread into the jelly. Slowly, methodically, miserably she ate it.
|
||
Chapter 2
|
||
NOT QUITE in a hurry, but losing no time, Sethe and Paul D climbed the white stairs. Overwhelmed as much by the
|
||
downright luck of finding her house and her in it as by the certainty of giving her his sex, Paul D dropped twenty-five
|
||
years from his recent memory. A stair step before him was Baby Suggs' replacement, the new girl they dreamed of at
|
||
night and fucked cows for at dawn while waiting for her to choose. Merely kissing the wrought iron on her back had
|
||
shook the house, had made it necessary for him to beat it to pieces.
|
||
Now he would do more.
|
||
She led him to the top of the stairs, where light came straight from the sky because the second-story windows of that
|
||
house had been placed in the pitched ceiling and not the walls. There were two rooms and she took him into one of
|
||
them, hoping he wouldn't mind the fact that she was not prepared; that though she could remember desire, she had
|
||
forgotten how it worked; the clutch and helplessness that resided in the hands; how blindness was altered so that what
|
||
leapt to the eye were places to lie down, and all else--door knobs, straps, hooks, the sadness that crouched in corners,
|
||
and the passing of time--was interference.
|
||
It was over before they could get their clothes off. Half-dressed and short of breath, they lay side by side resentful of
|
||
one another and the skylight above them. His dreaming of her had been too long and too long ago. Her deprivation had
|
||
been not having any dreams of her own at all. Now they were sorry and too shy to make talk.
|
||
Sethe lay on her back, her head turned from him. Out of the corner of his eye, Paul D saw the float of her breasts and
|
||
disliked it, the spread-away, flat roundness of them that he could definitely live without, never mind that downstairs he
|
||
13
|
||
had held them as though they were the most expensive part of himself. And the wrought-iron maze he had explored
|
||
in the kitchen like a gold miner pawing through pay dirt was in fact a revolting clump of scars. Not a tree, as she said.
|
||
Maybe shaped like one, but nothing like any tree he knew because trees were inviting; things you could trust and be
|
||
near; talk to if you wanted to as he frequently did since way back when he took the midday meal in the fields of Sweet
|
||
Home. Always in the same place if he could, and choosing the place had been hard because Sweet Home
|
||
had more pretty trees than any farm around. His choice he called Brother, and sat under it, alone sometimes, sometimes
|
||
with Halle or the other Pauls, but more often with Sixo, who was gentle then and still speaking English. Indigo with a
|
||
flame-red tongue, Sixo experimented with night-cooked potatoes, trying to pin down exactly when to put smoking-
|
||
hot rocks in a hole, potatoes on top, and cover the whole thing with twigs so that by the time they broke for the meal,
|
||
hitched the animals, left the field and got to Brother, the potatoes would be at the peak of perfection. He might get up
|
||
in the middle of the night, go all the way out there, start the earth-over by starlight; or he would make the stones less
|
||
hot and put the next day's potatoes on them right after the meal. He never got it right, but they ate those undercooked,
|
||
overcooked, dried-out or raw potatoes anyway, laughing, spitting and giving him advice.
|
||
Time never worked the way Sixo thought, so of course he never got it right. Once he plotted down to the minute a
|
||
thirty-mile trip to see a woman. He left on a Saturday when the moon was in the place he wanted it to be, arrived at
|
||
her cabin before church on Sunday and had just enough time to say good morning before he had to start back again so
|
||
he'd make the field call on time Monday morning. He had walked for seventeen hours, sat down for one, turned around
|
||
and walked seventeen more. Halle and the Pauls spent the whole day covering Sixo's fatigue from Mr. Garner. They ate
|
||
no potatoes that day, sweet or white. Sprawled near Brother, his flame-red tongue hidden from them, his indigo face
|
||
closed, Sixo slept through dinner like a corpse. Now there was a man, and that was a tree. Himself lying in the bed and
|
||
the "tree" lying next to him didn't compare.
|
||
Paul D looked through the window above his feet and folded his hands behind his head. An elbow grazed Sethe's
|
||
shoulder. The touch of cloth on her skin startled her. She had forgotten he had not taken off his shirt. Dog, she thought,
|
||
and then remembered that she had not allowed him the time for taking it off. Nor herself time to take off her petticoat,
|
||
and considering she had begun undressing before she saw him on the porch, that her shoes and stockings were already
|
||
in her hand and she had never put them back on; that he had looked at her wet bare feet and asked to join her; that
|
||
when she rose to cook he had undressed her further; considering how quickly they had started getting naked, you'd
|
||
think by now they would be. But maybe a man was nothing but a man, which is what Baby Suggs always said. They
|
||
encouraged you to put some of your weight in their hands and soon as you felt how light and lovely that was, they
|
||
studied your scars and tribulations, after which they did what he had done: ran her children out and tore up the house.
|
||
She needed to get up from there, go downstairs and piece it all back together. This house he told her to leave as though
|
||
a house was a little thing--a shirtwaist or a sewing basket you could walk off from or give away any old time. She who
|
||
had never had one but this one; she who left a dirt floor to come to this one; she who had to bring a fistful of salsify
|
||
into Mrs. Garner's kitchen every day just to be able to work in it, feel like some part of it was hers, because she wanted
|
||
to love the work she did, to take the ugly out of it, and the only way she could feel at home on Sweet Home was if she
|
||
picked some pretty growing thing and took it with her. The day she forgot was the day butter wouldn't come or the
|
||
brine in the barrel blistered her arms.
|
||
At least it seemed so. A few yellow flowers on the table, some myrtle tied around the handle of the flatiron holding the
|
||
door open for a breeze calmed her, and when Mrs. Garner and she sat down to sort bristle, or make ink, she felt fine.
|
||
Fine. Not scared of the men beyond. The five who slept in quarters near her, but never came in the night. Just touched
|
||
their raggedy hats when they saw her and stared. And if she brought food to them in the fields, bacon and bread
|
||
wrapped in a piece of clean sheeting, they never took it from her hands. They stood back and waited for her to put it
|
||
on the ground (at the foot of a tree) and leave. Either they did not want to take anything from her, or did not want her
|
||
to see them eat. Twice or three times she lingered. Hidden behind honeysuckle she watched them. How different they
|
||
were without her, how they laughed and played and urinated and sang. All but Sixo, who laughed once--at the very end.
|
||
Halle, of course, was the nicest. Baby Suggs' eighth and last child, who rented himself out all over the county to buy her
|
||
away from there. But he too, as it turned out, was nothing but a man.
|
||
"A man ain't nothing but a man," said Baby Suggs. "But a son?
|
||
14
|
||
Well now, that's somebody."
|
||
It made sense for a lot of reasons because in all of Baby's life, as well as Sethe's own, men and women were moved
|
||
around like checkers.
|
||
Anybody Baby Suggs knew, let alone loved, who hadn't run off or been hanged, got rented out, loaned out, bought up,
|
||
brought back, stored up, mortgaged, won, stolen or seized. So Baby's eight children had six fathers. What she called the
|
||
nastiness of life was the shock she received upon learning that nobody stopped playing checkers just because the pieces
|
||
included her children. Halle she was able to keep the longest. Twenty years. A lifetime. Given to her, no doubt, to make
|
||
up for hearing that her two girls, neither of whom had their adult teeth, were sold and gone and she had not been able
|
||
to wave goodbye. To make up for coupling with a straw boss for four months in exchange for keeping her third child, a
|
||
boy, with her--only to have him traded for lumber in the spring of the next year and to find herself pregnant by the man
|
||
who promised not to and did. That child she could not love and the rest she would not. "God take what He would," she
|
||
said. And He did, and He did, and He did and then gave her Halle who gave her freedom when it didn't mean a thing.
|
||
Sethe had the amazing luck of six whole years of marriage to that "somebody" son who had fathered every one of her
|
||
children.
|
||
A blessing she was reckless enough to take for granted, lean on, as though Sweet Home really was one. As though a
|
||
handful of myrtle stuck in the handle of a pressing iron propped against the door in a whitewoman's kitchen could make
|
||
it hers. As though mint sprig in the mouth changed the breath as well as its odor. A bigger fool never lived.
|
||
Sethe started to turn over on her stomach but changed her mind.
|
||
She did not want to call Paul D's attention back to her, so she settled for crossing her ankles.
|
||
But Paul D noticed the movement as well as the change in her breathing. He felt obliged to try again, slower this time,
|
||
but the appetite was gone. Actually it was a good feeling--not wanting her.
|
||
Twenty-five years and blip! The kind of thing Sixo would do--like the time he arranged a meeting with Patsy the Thirty-
|
||
Mile Woman.
|
||
It took three months and two thirty-four-mile round trips to do it.
|
||
To persuade her to walk one-third of the way toward him, to a place he knew. A deserted stone structure that Redmen
|
||
used way back when they thought the land was theirs. Sixo discovered it on one of his night creeps, and asked its
|
||
permission to enter. Inside, having felt what it felt like, he asked the Redmen's Presence if he could bring his woman
|
||
there. It said yes and Sixo painstakingly instructed her how to get there, exactly when to start out, how his welcoming
|
||
or warning whistles would sound. Since neither could go anywhere on business of their own, and since the Thirty-Mile
|
||
Woman was already fourteen and scheduled for somebody's arms, the danger was real.
|
||
When he arrived, she had not. He whistled and got no answer. He went into the Redmen's deserted lodge. She was not
|
||
there. He returned to the meeting spot. She was not there. He waited longer. She still did not come. He grew frightened
|
||
for her and walked down the road in the direction she should be coming from. Three or four miles, and he stopped.
|
||
It was hopeless to go on that way, so he stood in the wind and asked for help. Listening close for some sign, he heard
|
||
a whimper. He turned toward it, waited and heard it again. Uncautious now, he hollered her name. She answered in
|
||
a voice that sounded like life to him--not death. "Not move!" he shouted. "Breathe hard I can find you." He did. She
|
||
believed she was already at the meeting place and was crying because she thought he had not kept his promise.
|
||
Now it was too late for the rendezvous to happen at the Redmen's house, so they dropped where they were. Later he
|
||
punctured her calf to simulate snakebite so she could use it in some way as an excuse for not being on time to shake
|
||
worms from tobacco leaves. He gave her detailed directions about following the stream as a shortcut back, and saw her
|
||
off. When he got to the road it was very light and he had his clothes in his hands. Suddenly from around a bend a wagon
|
||
trundled toward him. Its driver, wide-eyed, raised a whip while the woman seated beside him covered her face. But Sixo
|
||
had already melted into the woods before the lash could unfurl itself on his indigo behind.
|
||
15
|
||
He told the story to Paul F, Halle, Paul A and Paul D in the peculiar way that made them cry-laugh. Sixo went among
|
||
trees at night. For dancing, he said, to keep his bloodlines open, he said.
|
||
Privately, alone, he did it. None of the rest of them had seen him at it, but they could imagine it, and the picture they
|
||
pictured made them eager to laugh at him--in daylight, that is, when it was safe.
|
||
But that was before he stopped speaking English because there was no future in it. Because of the Thirty-Mile Woman
|
||
Sixo was the only one not paralyzed by yearning for Sethe. Nothing could be as good as the sex with her Paul D had been
|
||
imagining off and on for twenty-five years. His foolishness made him smile and think fondly of himself as he turned over
|
||
on his side, facing her. Sethe's eyes were
|
||
closed, her hair a mess. Looked at this way, minus the polished eyes, her face was not so attractive. So it must have been
|
||
her eyes that kept him both guarded and stirred up. Without them her face was manageable--a face he could handle.
|
||
Maybe if she would keep them closed like that... But no, there was her mouth. Nice. Halle never knew what he had.
|
||
Although her eyes were closed, Sethe knew his gaze was on her face, and a paper picture of just how bad she must look
|
||
raised itself up before her mind's eye. Still, there was no mockery coming from his gaze. Soft. It felt soft in a waiting kind
|
||
of way. He was not judging her--or rather he was judging but not comparing her. Not since Halle had a man looked at
|
||
her that way: not loving or passionate, but interested, as though he were examining an ear of corn for quality.
|
||
Halle was more like a brother than a husband. His care suggested a family relationship rather than a man's laying
|
||
claim. For years they saw each other in full daylight only on Sundays. The rest of the time they spoke or touched or ate
|
||
in darkness. Predawn darkness and the afterlight of sunset. So looking at each other intently was a Sunday morning
|
||
pleasure and Halle examined her as though storing up what he saw in sunlight for the shadow he saw the rest of the
|
||
week. And he had so little time. After his Sweet Home work and on Sunday afternoons was the debt work he owed
|
||
for his mother. When he asked her to be his wife, Sethe happily agreed and then was stuck not knowing the next step.
|
||
There should be a ceremony, shouldn't there? A preacher, some dancing, a party, a something. She and Mrs.
|
||
Garner were the only women there, so she decided to ask her.
|
||
"Halle and me want to be married, Mrs. Garner."
|
||
"So I heard." She smiled. "He talked to Mr. Garner about it. Are you already expecting?"
|
||
"No, ma'am."
|
||
"Well, you will be. You know that, don't you?"
|
||
"Yes, ma'am."
|
||
"Halle's nice, Sethe. He'll be good to you."
|
||
"But I mean we want to get married."
|
||
"You just said so. And I said all right."
|
||
"Is there a wedding?"
|
||
Mrs. Garner put down her cooking spoon. Laughing a little, she touched Sethe on the head, saying, "You are one sweet
|
||
child." And then no more.
|
||
Sethe made a dress on the sly and Halle hung his hitching rope from a nail on the wall of her cabin. And there on top
|
||
of a mattress on top of the dirt floor of the cabin they coupled for the third time, the first two having been in the tiny
|
||
cornfield Mr. Garner kept because it was a crop animals could use as well as humans. Both Halle and Sethe were under
|
||
the impression that they were hidden.
|
||
Scrunched down among the stalks they couldn't see anything, including the corn tops waving over their heads and
|
||
16
|
||
visible to everyone else.
|
||
Sethe smiled at her and Halle's stupidity. Even the crows knew and came to look. Uncrossing her ankles, she managed
|
||
not to laugh aloud.
|
||
The jump, thought Paul D, from a calf to a girl wasn't all that mighty. Not the leap Halle believed it would be. And taking
|
||
her in the corn rather than her quarters, a yard away from the cabins of the others who had lost out, was a gesture
|
||
of tenderness. Halle wanted privacy for her and got public display. Who could miss a ripple in a cornfield on a quiet
|
||
cloudless day? He, Sixo and both of the Pauls sat under Brother pouring water from a gourd over their heads, and
|
||
through eyes streaming with well water, they watched the confusion of tassels in the field below. It had been hard, hard,
|
||
hard sitting there erect as dogs, watching corn stalks dance at noon. The water running over their heads made it worse.
|
||
Paul D sighed and turned over. Sethe took the opportunity afforded by his movement to shift as well. Looking at Paul
|
||
D's back, she remembered that some of the corn stalks broke, folded down over Halle's back, and among the things her
|
||
fingers clutched were husk and cornsilk hair.
|
||
How loose the silk. How jailed down the juice.
|
||
The jealous admiration of the watching men melted with the feast of new corn they allowed themselves that night.
|
||
Plucked from the broken stalks that Mr. Garner could not doubt was the fault of the raccoon. Paul F wanted his roasted;
|
||
Paul A wanted his boiled and now Paul D couldn't remember how finally they'd cooked those ears too young to eat.
|
||
What he did remember was parting the hair to get to the tip, the edge of his fingernail just under, so as not to graze a
|
||
single kernel.
|
||
The pulling down of the tight sheath, the ripping sound always convinced her it hurt.
|
||
As soon as one strip of husk was down, the rest obeyed and the ear yielded up to him its shy rows, exposed at last. How
|
||
loose the silk. How quick the jailed-up flavor ran free.
|
||
No matter what all your teeth and wet fingers anticipated, there was no accounting for the way that simple joy could
|
||
shake you.
|
||
How loose the silk. How fine and loose and free.
|
||
Chapter 3
|
||
DENVER'S SECRETS were sweet. Accompanied every time by wild veronica until she discovered cologne. The first bottle
|
||
was a gift, the next she stole from her mother and hid among boxwood until it froze and cracked. That was the year
|
||
winter came in a hurry at suppertime and stayed eight months. One of the
|
||
War years when Miss Bodwin, the whitewoman, brought Christmas cologne for her mother and herself, oranges for the
|
||
boys and another good wool shawl for Baby Suggs. Talking of a war full of dead people, she looked happy--flush-faced,
|
||
and although her voice was heavy as a man's, she smelled like a roomful of flowers--excitement that Denver could have
|
||
all for herself in the boxwood. Back beyond 1x4 was a narrow field that stopped itself at a wood. On the yonder side of
|
||
these woods, a stream.
|
||
In these woods, between the field and the stream, hidden by post oaks, five boxwood bushes, planted in a ring, had
|
||
started stretching toward each other four feet off the ground to form a round, empty room seven feet high, its walls fifty
|
||
inches of murmuring leaves.
|
||
Bent low, Denver could crawl into this room, and once there she could stand all the way up in emerald light.
|
||
It began as a little girl's houseplay, but as her desires changed, so did the play. Quiet, primate and completely secret
|
||
except for the noisome cologne signal that thrilled the rabbits before it confused them. First a playroom (where the
|
||
silence was softer), then a refuge (from her brothers' fright), soon the place became the point. In that bower, closed
|
||
17
|
||
off from the hurt of the hurt world, Denver's imagination produced its own hunger and its own food, which she badly
|
||
needed because loneliness wore her out. Wore her out. Veiled and protected by the live green walls, she felt ripe and
|
||
clear, and salvation was as easy as a wish.
|
||
Once when she was in the boxwood, an autumn long before Paul D moved into the house with her mother, she was
|
||
made suddenly cold by a combination of wind and the perfume on her skin. She dressed herself, bent down to leave
|
||
and stood up in snowfall: a thin and whipping snow very like the picture her mother had painted as she described the
|
||
circumstances of Denver's birth in a canoe straddled by a whitegirl for whom she was named.
|
||
Shivering, Denver approached the house, regarding it, as she always did, as a person rather than a structure. A person
|
||
that wept, sighed, trembled and fell into fits. Her steps and her gaze were the cautious ones of a child approaching a
|
||
nervous, idle relative (someone dependent but proud). A breastplate of darkness hid all the windows except one. Its
|
||
dim glow came from Baby Suggs' room. When Denver looked in, she saw her mother on her knees in prayer, which was
|
||
not unusual. What was unusual (even for a girl who had lived all her life in a house peopled by the living activity of the
|
||
dead) was that a white dress knelt down next to her mother and had its sleeve around her mother's waist. And it was
|
||
the tender embrace of the dress sleeve that made Denver remember the details of her birth--that and the thin, whipping
|
||
snow she was standing in, like the fruit of common flowers. The dress and her mother together looked like two friendly
|
||
grown-up women--one (the dress) helping out the other.
|
||
And the magic of her birth, its miracle in fact, testified to that friendliness as did her own name.
|
||
Easily she stepped into the told story that lay before her eyes on the path she followed away from the window. There
|
||
was only one door to the house and to get to it from the back you had to walk all the way around to the front of 124,
|
||
past the storeroom, past the cold house, the privy, the shed, on around to the porch. And to get to the part of the story
|
||
she liked best, she had to start way back: hear
|
||
the birds in the thick woods, the crunch of leaves underfoot; see her mother making her way up into the hills where no
|
||
houses were likely to be. How Sethe was walking on two feet meant for standing still. How they were so swollen she
|
||
could not see her arch or feel her ankles. Her leg shaft ended in a loaf of flesh scalloped by five toenails. But she could
|
||
not, would not, stop, for when she did the little antelope rammed her with horns and pawed the ground of her womb
|
||
with impatient hooves. While she was walking, it seemed to graze, quietly--so she walked, on two feet meant, in this
|
||
sixth month of pregnancy, for standing still. Still, near a kettle; still, at the churn; still, at the tub and ironing board. Milk,
|
||
sticky and sour on her dress, attracted every small flying thing from gnats to grasshoppers.
|
||
By the time she reached the hill skirt she had long ago stopped waving them off. The clanging in her head, begun as a
|
||
churchbell heard from a distance, was by then a tight cap of pealing bells around her ears. She sank and had to look
|
||
down to see whether she was in a hole or kneeling. Nothing was alive but her nipples and the little antelope. Finally, she
|
||
was horizontal--or must have been because blades of wild onion were scratching her temple and her cheek. Concerned
|
||
as she was for the life of her children's mother, Sethe told Denver, she remembered thinking: "Well, at least I don't have
|
||
to take another step." A dying thought if ever there was one, and she waited for the little antelope to protest, and why
|
||
she thought of an antelope Sethe could not imagine since she had never seen one. She guessed it must have been an
|
||
invention held on to from before Sweet Home, when she was very young. Of that place where she was born (Carolina
|
||
maybe? or was it Louisiana?) she remembered only song and dance. Not even her own mother, who was pointed out
|
||
to her by the eight-year-old child who watched over the young ones--pointed out as the one among many backs turned
|
||
away from her, stooping in a watery field. Patiently Sethe waited for this particular back to gain the row's end and stand.
|
||
What she saw was a cloth hat as opposed to a straw one, singularity enough in that world of cooing women each of
|
||
whom was called Ma'am.
|
||
"Seth--thuh."
|
||
"Ma'am."
|
||
"Hold on to the baby."
|
||
"Yes, Ma'am."
|
||
18
|
||
"Seth--thuh."
|
||
"Ma'am."
|
||
"Get some kindlin in here."
|
||
"Yes, Ma'am."
|
||
Oh but when they sang. And oh but when they danced and sometimes they danced the antelope. The men as well as
|
||
the ma'ams, one of whom was certainly her own. They shifted shapes and became something other. Some unchained,
|
||
demanding other whose feet knew her pulse better than she did. Just like this one in her stomach.
|
||
"I believe this baby's ma'am is gonna die in wild onions on the bloody side of the Ohio River." That's what was on her
|
||
mind and what she told Denver. Her exact words. And it didn't seem such a bad idea, all in all, in view of the step she
|
||
would not have to take, but the thought of herself stretched out dead while the little antelope lived on--an hour? a day?
|
||
a day and a night?--in her lifeless body grieved her so she made the groan that made the person walking on a path not
|
||
ten yards away halt and stand right still. Sethe had not heard the walking, but suddenly she heard the standing still and
|
||
then she smelled the hair. The voice, saying, "Who's in there?" was all she needed to know that she was about to be
|
||
discovered by a white boy. That he too had mossy teeth, an appetite. That on a ridge of pine near the Ohio River, trying
|
||
to get to her three children, one of whom was starving for the food she carried; that after her husband had disappeared;
|
||
that after her milk had been stolen, her back pulped, her children orphaned, she was not to have an easeful death. No.
|
||
She told Denver that a something came up out of the earth into her--like a freezing, but moving too, like jaws
|
||
inside. "Look like I was just cold jaws grinding," she said. Suddenly she was eager for his eyes, to bite into them; to gnaw
|
||
his cheek.
|
||
"I was hungry," she told Denver, "just as hungry as I could be for his eyes. I couldn't wait."
|
||
So she raised up on her elbow and dragged herself, one pull, two, three, four, toward the young white voice talking
|
||
about "Who that back in there?"
|
||
" 'Come see,' I was thinking. 'Be the last thing you behold,' and sure enough here come the feet so I thought well that's
|
||
where I'll have to start God do what He would, I'm gonna eat his feet off. I'm laughing now, but it's true. I wasn't just set
|
||
to do it. I was hungry to do it. Like a snake. All jaws and hungry.
|
||
"It wasn't no whiteboy at all. Was a girl. The raggediest-looking trash you ever saw saying, 'Look there. A nigger. If that
|
||
don't beat all.' "
|
||
And now the part Denver loved the best: Her name was Amy and she needed beef and pot liquor like nobody in this
|
||
world. Arms like cane stalks and enough hair for four or five heads. Slow-moving eyes. She didn't look at anything quick.
|
||
Talked so much it wasn't clear how she could breathe at the same time. And those cane-stalk arms, as it turned out,
|
||
were as strong as iron.
|
||
"You 'bout the scariest-looking something I ever seen. What you doing back up in here?"
|
||
Down in the grass, like the snake she believed she was, Sethe opened her mouth, and instead of fangs and a split
|
||
tongue, out shot the truth.
|
||
"Running," Sethe told her. It was the first word she had spoken all day and it came out thick because of her tender
|
||
tongue.
|
||
"Them the feet you running on? My Jesus my." She squatted down and stared at Sethe's feet. "You got anything on you,
|
||
gal, pass for food?"
|
||
"No." Sethe tried to shift to a sitting position but couldn t.
|
||
19
|
||
"I like to die I'm so hungry." The girl moved her eyes slowly, examining the greenery around her. "Thought there'd be
|
||
huckleberries.
|
||
Look like it. That's why I come up in here. Didn't expect to find no nigger woman. If they was any, birds ate em. You like
|
||
huckleberries?"
|
||
"I'm having a baby, miss."
|
||
Amy looked at her. "That mean you don't have no appetite? Well I got to eat me something."
|
||
Combing her hair with her fingers, she carefully surveyed the landscape once more. Satisfied nothing edible was around,
|
||
she stood up to go and Sethe's heart stood up too at the thought of being left alone in the grass without a fang in her
|
||
head.
|
||
"Where you on your way to, miss?"
|
||
She turned and looked at Sethe with freshly lit eyes. "Boston. Get me some velvet. It's a store there called Wilson. I seen
|
||
the pictures of it and they have the prettiest velvet. They don't believe I'm a get it, but I am."
|
||
Sethe nodded and shifted her elbow. "Your ma'am know you on the lookout for velvet?"
|
||
The girl shook her hair out of her face. "My mama worked for these here people to pay for her passage. But then she
|
||
had me and since she died right after, well, they said I had to work for em to pay it off. I did, but now I want me some
|
||
velvet."
|
||
They did not look directly at each other, not straight into the eyes anyway. Yet they slipped effortlessly into yard chat
|
||
about nothing in particular--except one lay on the ground.
|
||
"Boston," said Sethe. "Is that far?"
|
||
"Ooooh, yeah. A hundred miles. Maybe more."
|
||
"Must be velvet closer by."
|
||
"Not like in Boston. Boston got the best. Be so pretty on me.
|
||
You ever touch it?"
|
||
"No, miss. I never touched no velvet." Sethe didn't know if it was the voice, or Boston or velvet, but while the whitegirl
|
||
talked, the baby slept. Not one butt or kick, so she guessed her luck had turned.
|
||
"Ever see any?" she asked Sethe. "I bet you never even seen any."
|
||
"If I did I didn't know it. What's it like, velvet?"
|
||
Amy dragged her eyes over Sethe's face as though she would never give out so confidential a piece of information as
|
||
that to a perfect stranger.
|
||
"What they call you?" she asked.
|
||
However far she was from Sweet Home, there was no point in giving out her real name to the first person she saw. "Lu,"
|
||
said Sethe.
|
||
"They call me Lu."
|
||
"Well, Lu, velvet is like the world was just born. Clean and new and so smooth. The velvet I seen was brown, but in
|
||
Boston they got all colors. Carmine. That means red but when you talk about velvet you got to say 'carmine.' " She raised
|
||
her eyes to the sky and then, as though she had wasted enough time away from Boston, she moved off saying, "I gotta
|
||
20
|
||
go."
|
||
Picking her way through the brush she hollered back to Sethe, "What you gonna do, just lay there and foal?"
|
||
"I can't get up from here," said Sethe.
|
||
"What?" She stopped and turned to hear.
|
||
"I said I can't get up."
|
||
Amy drew her arm across her nose and came slowly back to where Sethe lay. "It's a house back yonder," she said.
|
||
"A house?"
|
||
"Mmmmm. I passed it. Ain't no regular house with people in it though. A lean-to, kinda."
|
||
"How far?"
|
||
"Make a difference, does it? You stay the night here snake get you."
|
||
"Well he may as well come on. I can't stand up let alone walk and God help me, miss, I can't crawl."
|
||
"Sure you can, Lu. Come on," said Amy and, with a toss of hair enough for five heads, she moved toward the path.
|
||
So she crawled and Amy walked alongside her, and when Sethe needed to rest, Amy stopped too and talked some more
|
||
about Boston and velvet and good things to eat. The sound of that voice, like a sixteen-year-old boy's, going on and on
|
||
and on, kept the little antelope quiet and grazing. During the whole hateful crawl to the lean to, it never bucked once.
|
||
Nothing of Sethe's was intact by the time they reached it except the cloth that covered her hair. Below her bloody
|
||
knees, there was no feeling at all; her chest was two cushions of pins. It was the voice full of velvet and Boston and good
|
||
things to eat that urged her along and made her think that maybe she wasn't, after all, just a crawling graveyard for a
|
||
six-month baby's last hours.
|
||
The lean-to was full of leaves, which Amy pushed into a pile for Sethe to lie on. Then she gathered rocks, covered them
|
||
with more leaves and made Sethe put her feet on them, saying: "I know a woman had her feet cut off they was so
|
||
swole." And she made sawing gestures with the blade of her hand across Sethe's ankles. "Zzz Zzz Zzz Zzz."
|
||
"I used to be a good size. Nice arms and everything. Wouldn't think it, would you? That was before they put me in the
|
||
root cellar.
|
||
I was fishing off the Beaver once. Catfish in Beaver River sweet as chicken. Well I was just fishing there and a nigger
|
||
floated right by me. I don't like drowned people, you? Your feet remind me of him.
|
||
All swole like."
|
||
Then she did the magic: lifted Sethe's feet and legs and massaged them until she cried salt tears.
|
||
"It's gonna hurt, now," said Amy. "Anything dead coming back to life hurts."
|
||
A truth for all times, thought Denver. Maybe the white dress holding its arm around her mother's waist was in pain. If so,
|
||
it could mean the baby ghost had plans. When she opened the door, Sethe was just leaving the keeping room.
|
||
"I saw a white dress holding on to you," Denver said.
|
||
"White? Maybe it was my bedding dress. Describe it to me."
|
||
"Had a high neck. Whole mess of buttons coming down the back."
|
||
21
|
||
"Buttons. Well, that lets out my bedding dress. I never had a button on nothing."
|
||
"Did Grandma Baby?"
|
||
Sethe shook her head. "She couldn't handle them. Even on her shoes. What else?"
|
||
"A bunch at the back. On the sit-down part."
|
||
"A bustle? It had a bustle?"
|
||
"I don't know what it's called."
|
||
"Sort of gathered-like? Below the waist in the back?"
|
||
"Um hm."
|
||
"A rich lady's dress. Silk?"
|
||
"Cotton, look like."
|
||
"Lisle probably. White cotton lisle. You say it was holding on to me. How?"
|
||
"Like you. It looked just like you. Kneeling next to you while you were praying. Had its arm around your waist."
|
||
"Well, I'll be."
|
||
"What were you praying for, Ma'am?"
|
||
"Not for anything. I don't pray anymore. I just talk."
|
||
"What were you talking about?"
|
||
"You won't understand, baby."
|
||
"Yes, I will."
|
||
"I was talking about time. It's so hard for me to believe in it.
|
||
Some things go. Pass on. Some things just stay. I used to think it was my rememory. You know. Some things you forget.
|
||
Other things you never do. But it's not. Places, places are still there. If a house burns down, it's gone, but the place--
|
||
the picture of it--stays, and not just in my rememory, but out there, in the world. What I remember is a picture floating
|
||
around out there outside my head. I mean, even if I don't think it, even if I die, the picture of what I did, or knew, or saw
|
||
is still out there. Right in the place where it happened."
|
||
"Can other people see it?" asked Denver.
|
||
"Oh, yes. Oh, yes, yes, yes. Someday you be walking down the road and you hear something or see something going on.
|
||
So clear.
|
||
And you think it's you thinking it up. A thought picture. But no. It's when you bump into a rememory that belongs to
|
||
somebody else.
|
||
Where I was before I came here, that place is real. It's never going away. Even if the whole farm--every tree and grass
|
||
blade of it dies.
|
||
The picture is still there and what's more, if you go there--you who never was there--if you go there and stand in the
|
||
place where it was, it will happen again; it will be there for you, waiting for you. So, Denver, you can't never go there.
|
||
Never. Because even though it's all over--over and done with--it's going to always be there waiting for you. That's how
|
||
22
|
||
come I had to get all my children out. No matter what."
|
||
Denver picked at her fingernails. "If it's still there, waiting, that must mean that nothing ever dies."
|
||
Sethe looked right in Denver's face. "Nothing ever does," she said.
|
||
"You never told me all what happened. Just that they whipped you and you run off, pregnant. With me."
|
||
"Nothing to tell except schoolteacher. He was a little man. Short.
|
||
Always wore a collar, even in the fields. A schoolteacher, she said.
|
||
That made her feel good that her husband's sister's husband had book learning and was willing to come farm Sweet
|
||
Home after Mr.
|
||
Garner passed. The men could have done it, even with Paul F sold.
|
||
But it was like Halle said. She didn't want to be the only white person on the farm and a woman too. So she was satisfied
|
||
when the schoolteacher agreed to come. He brought two boys with him. Sons or nephews. I don't know. They called
|
||
him Onka and had pretty man ners, all of em. Talked soft and spit in handkerchiefs. Gentle in a lot of ways. You know,
|
||
the kind who know Jesus by His first name, but out of politeness never use it even to His face. A pretty good farmer,
|
||
Halle said. Not strong as Mr. Garner but smart enough. He liked the ink I made. It was her recipe, but he preferred how
|
||
I mixed it and it was important to him because at night he sat down to write in his book. It was a book about us but we
|
||
didn't know that right away. We just thought it was his manner to ask us questions. He commenced to carry round a
|
||
notebook and write down what we said. I still think it was them questions that tore Sixo up. Tore him up for all time."
|
||
She stopped.
|
||
Denver knew that her mother was through with it--for now anyway. The single slow blink of her eyes; the bottom lip
|
||
sliding up slowly to cover the top; and then a nostril sigh, like the snuff of a candle flame--signs that Sethe had reached
|
||
the point beyond which she would not go.
|
||
"Well, I think the baby got plans," said Denver.
|
||
"What plans?"
|
||
"I don't know, but the dress holding on to you got to mean something."
|
||
"Maybe," said Sethe. "Maybe it does have plans."
|
||
Whatever they were or might have been, Paul D messed them up for good. With a table and a loud male voice he had
|
||
rid 124 of its claim to local fame. Denver had taught herself to take pride in the condemnation Negroes heaped on
|
||
them; the assumption that the haunting was done by an evil thing looking for more. None of them knew the downright
|
||
pleasure of enchantment, of not suspecting but
|
||
knowing the things behind things. Her brothers had known, but it scared them; Grandma Baby knew, but it saddened
|
||
her. None could appreciate the safety of ghost company. Even Sethe didn't love it.
|
||
She just took it for granted--like a sudden change in the weather.
|
||
But it was gone now. Whooshed away in the blast of a hazelnut man's shout, leaving Denver's world flat, mostly, with
|
||
the exception of an emerald closet standing seven feet high in the woods. Her mother had secrets--things she wouldn't
|
||
tell; things she halfway told.
|
||
Well, Denver had them too. And hers were sweet--sweet as lily-of-the-valley cologne.
|
||
Sethe had given little thought to the white dress until Paul D came, and then she remembered Denver's interpretation:
|
||
23
|
||
plans. The morning after the first night with Paul D, Sethe smiled just thinking about what the word could mean. It was a
|
||
luxury she had not had in eighteen years and only that once. Before and since, all her effort was directed not on avoiding
|
||
pain but on getting through it as quickly as possible. The one set of plans she had made--getting away from Sweet
|
||
Home--went awry so completely she never dared life by making more.
|
||
Yet the morning she woke up next to Paul D, the word her daughter had used a few years ago did cross her mind
|
||
and she thought about what Denver had seen kneeling next to her, and thought also of the temptation to trust and
|
||
remember that gripped her as she stood before the cooking stove in his arms. Would it be all right? Would it be all right
|
||
to go ahead and feel? Go ahead and count on something?
|
||
She couldn't think clearly, lying next to him listening to his breathing, so carefully, carefully, she had left the bed.
|
||
Kneeling in the keeping room where she usually went to talk-think it was clear why Baby Suggs was so starved for color.
|
||
There wasn't any except for two orange squares in a quilt that made the absence shout. The walls of the room were
|
||
slate-colored, the floor earth-brown, the wooden dresser the color of itself, curtains white, and the dominating feature,
|
||
the quilt over an iron cot, was made up of scraps of blue serge, black, brown and gray wool--the full range of the dark
|
||
and the muted that thrift and modesty allowed. In that sober field, two patches of orange looked wild--like life in the
|
||
raw.
|
||
Sethe looked at her hands, her bottle-green sleeves, and thought how little color there was in the house and how
|
||
strange that she had not missed it the way Baby did. Deliberate, she thought, it must be deliberate, because the last
|
||
color she remembered was the pink chips in the headstone of her baby girl. After that she became as color conscious as
|
||
a hen. Every dawn she worked at fruit pies, potato dishes and vegetables while the cook did the soup, meat and all the
|
||
rest. And she could not remember remembering a molly apple or a yellow squash. Every dawn she saw the dawn, but
|
||
never acknowledged or remarked its color. There was something wrong with that.
|
||
It was as though one day she saw red baby blood, another day the pink gravestone chips, and that was the last of it.
|
||
124 was so full of strong feeling perhaps she was oblivious to the loss of anything at all. There was a time when she
|
||
scanned the fields every morning and every evening for her boys. When she stood at the open window, unmindful of
|
||
flies, her head cocked to her left shoulder, her eyes searching to the right for them. Cloud shadow on the road, an old
|
||
woman, a wandering goat untethered and gnawing bramble--each one looked at first like Howard--no, Buglar. Little by
|
||
little she stopped and their thirteen-year-old faces faded completely into their baby ones, which came to her only in
|
||
sleep. When her dreams roamed outside 124, anywhere they wished, she saw them sometimes in beautiful trees, their
|
||
little legs barely visible in the leaves.
|
||
Sometimes they ran along the railroad track laughing, too loud, apparently, to hear her because they never did turn
|
||
around. When she woke the house crowded in on her: there was the door where the soda crackers were lined up in a
|
||
row; the white stairs her baby girl loved to climb; the corner where Baby Suggs mended shoes, a pile of which were still
|
||
in the cold room; the exact place on the stove where Denver burned her fingers. And of course the spite of the house
|
||
itself. There was no room for any other thing or body until Paul D arrived and broke up the place, making room, shifting
|
||
it, moving it over to someplace else, then standing in the place he had made.
|
||
So, kneeling in the keeping room the morning after Paul D came, she was distracted by the two orange squares that
|
||
signaled how barren 124 really was.
|
||
He was responsible for that. Emotions sped to the surface in his company. Things became what they were: drabness
|
||
looked drab; heat was hot. Windows suddenly had view. And wouldn't you know he'd be a singing man.
|
||
Little rice, little bean,
|
||
No meat in between.
|
||
Hard work ain't easy,
|
||
24
|
||
Dry bread ain't greasy.
|
||
He was up now and singing as he mended things he had broken the day before. Some old pieces of song he'd learned on
|
||
the prison farm or in the War afterward. Nothing like what they sang at Sweet Home, where yearning fashioned every
|
||
note.
|
||
The songs he knew from Georgia were flat-headed nails for pounding and pounding and pounding.
|
||
Lay my bead on the railroad line,
|
||
Train come along, pacify my mind.
|
||
If I had my weight in lime,
|
||
I'd whip my captain till he went stone blind.
|
||
Five-cent nickel, Ten-cent dime,
|
||
Busting rocks is busting time.
|
||
But they didn't fit, these songs. They were too loud, had too much power for the little house chores he was engaged in--
|
||
resetting table legs; glazing.
|
||
He couldn't go back to "Storm upon the Waters" that they sang under the trees of Sweet Home, so he contented himself
|
||
with mmmmmmmmm, throwing in a line if one occurred to him, and what occurred over and over was "Bare feet and
|
||
chamomile sap,/ Took off my shoes; took off my hat."
|
||
It was tempting to change the words (Gimme back my shoes; gimme back my hat), because he didn't believe he could
|
||
live with a woman--any woman--for over two out of three months. That was about as long as he could abide one place.
|
||
After Delaware and before that Alfred, Georgia, where he slept underground and crawled into sunlight for the sole
|
||
purpose of breaking rock, walking off when he got ready was the only way he could convince himself that he would no
|
||
longer have to sleep, pee, eat or swing a sledge hammer in chains.
|
||
But this was not a normal woman in a normal house. As soon as he had stepped through the red light he knew that,
|
||
compared to 124, the rest of the world was bald. After Alfred he had shut down a generous portion of his head,
|
||
operating on the part that helped him walk, eat, sleep, sing. If he could do those things--with a little work and a little sex
|
||
thrown in--he asked for no more, for more required him to dwell on Halle's face and Sixo laughing. To recall trembling
|
||
in a box built into the ground. Grateful for the daylight spent doing mule work in a quarry because he did not tremble
|
||
when he had a hammer in his hands. The box had done what Sweet Home had not, what working like an ass and living
|
||
like a dog had not: drove him crazy so he would not lose his mind.
|
||
By the time he got to Ohio, then to Cincinnati, then to Halle Suggs' mother's house, he thought he had seen and felt it
|
||
all. Even now as he put back the window frame he had smashed, he could not account for the pleasure in his surprise
|
||
at seeing Halle's wife alive, barefoot with uncovered hair--walking around the corner of the house with her shoes and
|
||
stockings in her hands. The closed portion of his head opened like a greased lock.
|
||
"I was thinking of looking for work around here. What you think?"
|
||
"Ain't much. River mostly. And hogs."
|
||
"Well, I never worked on water, but I can pick up anything heavy as me, hogs included."
|
||
"Whitepeople better here than Kentucky but you may have to scramble some."
|
||
"It ain't whether I scramble; it's where. You saying it's all right to scramble here?"
|
||
"Better than all right."
|
||
25
|
||
"Your girl, Denver. Seems to me she's of a different mind."
|
||
"Why you say that?"
|
||
"She's got a waiting way about her. Something she's expecting and it ain't me."
|
||
"I don't know what it could be."
|
||
"Well, whatever it is, she believes I'm interrupting it."
|
||
"Don't worry about her. She's a charmed child. From the beginning."
|
||
"Is that right?"
|
||
"Uh huh. Nothing bad can happen to her. Look at it. Everybody I knew dead or gone or dead and gone. Not her. Not my
|
||
Denver.
|
||
Even when I was carrying her, when it got clear that I wasn't going to make it--which meant she wasn't going to make it
|
||
either--she pulled a whitegirl out of the hill. The last thing you'd expect to help.
|
||
And when the schoolteacher found us and came busting in here with the law and a shotgun--"
|
||
"Schoolteacher found you?"
|
||
"Took a while, but he did. Finally."
|
||
"And he didn't take you back?"
|
||
"Oh, no. I wasn't going back there. I don't care who found who.
|
||
Any life but not that one. I went to jail instead. Denver was just a baby so she went right along with me. Rats bit
|
||
everything in there but her."
|
||
Paul D turned away. He wanted to know more about it, but jail talk put him back in Alfred, Georgia.
|
||
"I need some nails. Anybody around here I can borrow from or should I go to town?"
|
||
"May as well go to town. You'll need other things."
|
||
One night and they were talking like a couple. They had skipped love and promise and went directly to "You saying it's all
|
||
right to scramble here?"
|
||
To Sethe, the future was a matter of keeping the past at bay. The "better life" she believed she and Denver were living
|
||
was simply not that other one.
|
||
The fact that Paul D had come out of "that other one" into her bed was better too; and the notion of a future with him,
|
||
or for that matter without him, was beginning to stroke her mind. As for Denver, the job Sethe had of keeping her from
|
||
the past that was still waiting for her was all that mattered.
|
||
Chapter 4
|
||
PLEASANTLY TROUBLED, Sethe avoided the keeping room and Denver's sidelong looks. As she expected, since life was
|
||
like that--it didn't do any good. Denver ran a mighty interference and on the third day flat-out asked Paul D how long he
|
||
was going to hang around.
|
||
The phrase hurt him so much he missed the table. The coffee cup hit the floor and rolled down the sloping boards
|
||
toward the front door.
|
||
26
|
||
"Hang around?" Paul D didn't even look at the mess he had made.
|
||
"Denver! What's got into you?" Sethe looked at her daughter, feeling more embarrassed than angry.
|
||
Paul D scratched the hair on his chin. "Maybe I should make tracks."
|
||
"No!" Sethe was surprised by how loud she said it.
|
||
"He know what he needs," said Denver.
|
||
"Well, you don't," Sethe told her, "and you must not know what you need either. I don't want to hear another word out
|
||
of you."
|
||
"I just asked if--"
|
||
"Hush! You make tracks. Go somewhere and sit down."
|
||
Denver picked up her plate and left the table but not before adding a chicken back and more bread to the heap she was
|
||
carrying away.
|
||
Paul D leaned over to wipe the spilled coffee with his blue handkerchief.
|
||
"I'll get that." Sethe jumped up and went to the stove. Behind it various cloths hung, each in some stage of drying. In
|
||
silence she wiped the floor and retrieved the cup. Then she poured him another cupful, and set it carefully before him.
|
||
Paul D touched its rim but didn't say anything--as though even "thank you" was an obligation he could not meet and the
|
||
coffee itself a gift he could not take.
|
||
Sethe resumed her chair and the silence continued. Finally she realized that if it was going to be broken she would have
|
||
to do it.
|
||
"I didn't train her like that."
|
||
Paul D stroked the rim of the cup.
|
||
"And I'm as surprised by her manners as you are hurt by em."
|
||
Paul D looked at Sethe. "Is there history to her question?"
|
||
"History? What you mean?"
|
||
"I mean, did she have to ask that, or want to ask it, of anybody else before me?"
|
||
Sethe made two fists and placed them on her hips. "You as bad as she is."
|
||
"Come on, Sethe."
|
||
"Oh, I am coming on. I am!"
|
||
"You know what I mean."
|
||
"I do and I don't like it."
|
||
"Jesus," he whispered.
|
||
"Who?" Sethe was getting loud again.
|
||
"Jesus! I said Jesus! All I did was sit down for supper! and I get cussed out twice. Once for being here and once for asking
|
||
why I was cussed in the first place!"
|
||
27
|
||
"She didn't cuss."
|
||
"No? Felt like it."
|
||
"Look here. I apologize for her. I'm real--"
|
||
"You can't do that. You can't apologize for nobody. She got to do that."
|
||
"Then I'll see that she does." Sethe sighed.
|
||
"What I want to know is, is she asking a question that's on your mind too?"
|
||
"Oh no. No, Paul D. Oh no."
|
||
"Then she's of one mind and you another? If you can call what ever's in her head a mind, that is."
|
||
"Excuse me, but I can't hear a word against her. I'll chastise her.
|
||
You leave her alone."
|
||
Risky, thought Paul D, very risky. For a used-to-be-slave woman to love anything that much was dangerous, especially if
|
||
it was her children she had settled on to love. The best thing, he knew, was to love just a little bit; everything, just a little
|
||
bit, so when they broke its back, or shoved it in a croaker sack, well, maybe you'd have a little love left over for the next
|
||
one. "Why?" he asked her. "Why you think you have to take up for her? Apologize for her? She's grown."
|
||
"I don't care what she is. Grown don't mean nothing to a mother.
|
||
A child is a child. They get bigger, older, but grown? What's that supposed to mean? In my heart it don't mean a thing."
|
||
"It means she has to take it if she acts up. You can't protect her every minute. What's going to happen when you die?"
|
||
"Nothing! I'll protect her while I'm live and I'll protect her when I ain't."
|
||
"Oh well, I'm through," he said. "I quit."
|
||
"That's the way it is, Paul D. I can't explain it to you no better than that, but that's the way it is. If I have to choose--well,
|
||
it's not even a choice."
|
||
"That's the point. The whole point. I'm not asking you to choose.
|
||
Nobody would. I thought--well, I thought you could--there was some space for me."
|
||
"She's asking me."
|
||
"You can't go by that. You got to say it to her. Tell her it's not about choosing somebody over her--it's making space for
|
||
somebody along with her. You got to say it. And if you say it and mean it, then you also got to know you can't gag me.
|
||
There's no way I'm going to hurt her or not take care of what she need if I can, but I can't be told to keep my mouth shut
|
||
if she's acting ugly. You want me here, don't put no gag on me."
|
||
"Maybe I should leave things the way they are," she said.
|
||
"How are they?"
|
||
"We get along."
|
||
"What about inside?"
|
||
"I don't go inside."
|
||
28
|
||
"Sethe, if I'm here with you, with Denver, you can go anywhere you want. Jump, if you want to, 'cause I'll catch you,
|
||
girl. I'll catch you "fore you fall. Go as far inside as you need to, I'll hold your ankles. Make sure you get back out. I'm not
|
||
saying this because I need a place to stay. That's the last thing I need. I told you, I'm a walking man, but I been heading in
|
||
this direction for seven years.
|
||
Walking all around this place. Upstate, downstate, east, west; I been in territory ain't got no name, never staying
|
||
nowhere long. But when I got here and sat out there on the porch, waiting for you, well, I knew it wasn't the place I was
|
||
heading toward; it was you. We can make a life, girl. A life."
|
||
"I don't know. I don't know."
|
||
"Leave it to me. See how it goes. No promises, if you don't want to make any. Just see how it goes. All right?"
|
||
"All right."
|
||
"You willing to leave it to me?"
|
||
"Well--some of it."
|
||
"Some?" he smiled. "Okay. Here's some. There's a carnival in town. Thursday, tomorrow, is for coloreds and I got two
|
||
dollars.
|
||
Me and you and Denver gonna spend every penny of it. What you say?"
|
||
"No" is what she said. At least what she started out saying (what would her boss say if she took a day off?), but even
|
||
when she said it she was thinking how much her eyes enjoyed looking in his face.
|
||
The crickets were screaming on Thursday and the sky, stripped of blue, was white hot at eleven in the morning. Sethe
|
||
was badly dressed for the heat, but this being her first social outing in eighteen years, she felt obliged to wear her one
|
||
good dress, heavy as it was, and a hat. Certainly a hat. She didn't want to meet Lady Jones or Ella with her head wrapped
|
||
like she was going to work. The dress, a good-wool castoff, was a Christmas present to Baby Suggs from Miss Bodwin,
|
||
the whitewoman who loved her. Denver and Paul D fared better in the heat since neither felt the occasion required
|
||
special clothing. Denver's bonnet knocked against her shoulder blades; Paul D wore his vest open, no jacket and his
|
||
shirt sleeves rolled above his elbows. They were not holding hands, but their shadows were. Sethe looked to her left
|
||
and all three of them were gliding over the dust holding hands. Maybe he was right. A life. Watching their hand holding
|
||
shadows, she was embarrassed at being dressed for church.
|
||
The others, ahead and behind them, would think she was putting on airs, letting them know that she was different
|
||
because she lived in a house with two stories; tougher, because she could do and
|
||
survive things they believed she should neither do nor survive. She was glad Denver had resisted her urgings to dress up-
|
||
-rebraid her hair at least.
|
||
But Denver was not doing anything to make this trip a pleasure. She agreed to go--sullenly--but her attitude
|
||
was "Go 'head. Try and make me happy." The happy one was Paul D. He said howdy to everybody within twenty feet.
|
||
Made fun of the weather and what it was doing to him, yelled back at the crows, and was the first to smell the doomed
|
||
roses. All the time, no matter what they were doing-- whether Denver wiped perspiration from her forehead or stooped
|
||
to retie her shoes; whether Paul D kicked a stone or reached over to meddle a child's face leaning on its mother's
|
||
shoulder--all the time the three shadows that shot out of their feet to the left held hands.
|
||
Nobody noticed but Sethe and she stopped looking after she decided that it was a good sign. A life. Could be.
|
||
Up and down the lumberyard fence old roses were dying. The sawyer who had planted them twelve years ago to give
|
||
his workplace a friendly feel--something to take the sin out of slicing trees for a living--was amazed by their abundance;
|
||
how rapidly they crawled all over the stake-and-post fence that separated the lumberyard from the open field next to
|
||
it where homeless men slept, children ran and, once a year, carnival people pitched tents. The closer the roses got to
|
||
29
|
||
death, the louder their scent, and everybody who attended the carnival associated it with the stench of the rotten roses.
|
||
It made them a little dizzy and very thirsty but did nothing to extinguish the eagerness of the coloredpeople filing down
|
||
the road. Some walked on the grassy shoulders, others dodged the wagons creaking down the road's dusty center. All,
|
||
like Paul D, were in high spirits, which the smell of dying roses (that Paul D called to everybody's attention) could not
|
||
dampen. As they pressed to get to the rope entrance they were lit like lamps. Breathless with the excitement of seeing
|
||
white people loose: doing magic, clowning, without heads or with two heads, twenty feet tall or two feet tall, weighing
|
||
a ton, completely tattooed, eating glass, swallowing fire, spitting ribbons, twisted into knots, forming pyramids, playing
|
||
with snakes and beating each other up.
|
||
All of this was advertisement, read by those who could and heard by those who could not, and the fact that none of it
|
||
was true did not extinguish their appetite a bit. The barker called them and their children names ("Pickaninnies free!")
|
||
but the food on his vest and the hole in his pants rendered it fairly harmless. In any case it was a small price to pay for
|
||
the fun they might not ever have again. Two pennies and an insult were well spent if it meant seeing the spectacle of
|
||
whitefolks making a spectacle of themselves. So, although the carnival was a lot less than mediocre (which is why it
|
||
agreed to a Colored Thursday), it gave the four hundred black people in its audience thrill upon thrill upon thrill.
|
||
One-Ton Lady spit at them, but her bulk shortened her aim and they got a big kick out of the helpless meanness in her
|
||
little eyes.
|
||
Arabian Nights Dancer cut her performance to three minutes instead of the usual fifteen she normally did-earning the
|
||
gratitude of the children, who could hardly wait for Abu Snake Charmer, who followed her.
|
||
Denver bought horehound, licorice, peppermint and lemonade at a table manned by a little whitegirl in ladies' high-
|
||
topped shoes.
|
||
Soothed by sugar, surrounded by a crowd of people who did not find her the main attraction, who, in fact, said, "Hey,
|
||
Denver," every now and then, pleased her enough to consider the possibility that Paul D wasn't all that bad. In fact there
|
||
was something about him-- when the three of them stood together watching Midget dance--that made the stares of
|
||
other Negroes kind, gentle, something Denver did not remember seeing in their faces. Several even nodded and smiled
|
||
at her mother, no one, apparently, able to withstand sharing the pleasure Paul D. was having. He slapped his knees
|
||
when Giant danced with Midget; when Two-Headed Man talked to himself. He bought everything Denver asked for and
|
||
much she did not. He teased Sethe into tents she was reluctant to enter. Stuck pieces of candy she didn't want between
|
||
her lips. When Wild African Savage shook his bars and said wa wa, Paul D told everybody he knew him back in Roanoke.
|
||
Paul D made a few acquaintances; spoke to them about what work he might find. Sethe returned the smiles she got.
|
||
Denver was swaying with delight. And on the way home, although leading them now, the shadows of three people still
|
||
held hands.
|
||
Chapter 5
|
||
A FULLY DRESSED woman walked out of the water. She barely gained the dry bank of the stream before she sat down
|
||
and leaned against a mulberry tree. All day and all night she sat there, her head resting on the trunk in a position
|
||
abandoned enough to crack the brim in her straw hat. Everything hurt but her lungs most of all.
|
||
Sopping wet and breathing shallow she spent those hours trying to negotiate the weight of her eyelids. The day breeze
|
||
blew her dress dry; the night wind wrinkled it. Nobody saw her emerge or came accidentally by. If they had, chances
|
||
are they would have hesitated before approaching her. Not because she was wet, or dozing or had what sounded like
|
||
asthma, but because amid all that she was smiling.
|
||
It took her the whole of the next morning to lift herself from the ground and make her way through the woods past a
|
||
giant temple of boxwood to the field and then the yard of the slate-gray house.
|
||
Exhausted again, she sat down on the first handy place--a stump not far from the steps of 124. By then keeping her eyes
|
||
open was less of an effort. She could manage it for a full two minutes or more.
|
||
30
|
||
Her neck, its circumference no wider than a parlor-service saucer, kept bending and her chin brushed the bit of lace
|
||
edging her dress.
|
||
Women who drink champagne when there is nothing to celebrate can look like that: their straw hats with broken brims
|
||
are often askew; they nod in public places; their shoes are undone. But their skin is not like that of the woman breathing
|
||
near the steps of 124. She had new skin, lineless and smooth, including the knuckles of her hands.
|
||
By late afternoon when the carnival was over, and the Negroes were hitching rides home if they were lucky--walking if
|
||
they were not--the woman had fallen asleep again. The rays of the sun struck her
|
||
full in the face, so that when Sethe, Denver and Paul D rounded the curve in the road all they saw was a black dress, two
|
||
unlaced shoes below it, and Here Boy nowhere in sight.
|
||
"Look," said Denver. "What is that?"
|
||
And, for some reason she could not immediately account for, the moment she got close enough to see the face, Sethe's
|
||
bladder filled to capacity. She said, "Oh, excuse me," and ran around to the back of 124. Not since she was a baby
|
||
girl, being cared for by the eight year-old girl who pointed out her mother to her, had she had an emergency that
|
||
unmanageable. She never made the outhouse. Right in front of its door she had to lift her skirts, and the water she
|
||
voided was endless. Like a horse, she thought, but as it went on and on she thought, No, more like flooding the boat
|
||
when Denver was born. So much water Amy said, "Hold on, Lu. You going to sink us you keep that up." But there was no
|
||
stopping water breaking from a breaking womb and there was no stopping now. She hoped Paul D wouldn't take it upon
|
||
himself to come looking for her and be obliged to see her squatting in front of her own privy making a mudhole too deep
|
||
to be witnessed without shame. Just about the time she started wondering if the carnival would accept another freak,
|
||
it stopped. She tidied herself and ran around to the porch. No one was there. All three were insidePaul D and Denver
|
||
standing before the stranger, watching her drink cup after cup of water.
|
||
"She said she was thirsty," said Paul D. He took off his cap.
|
||
"Mighty thirsty look like."
|
||
The woman gulped water from a speckled tin cup and held it out for more. Four times Denver filled it, and four times
|
||
the woman drank as though she had crossed a desert. When she was finished a little water was on her chin, but she did
|
||
not wipe it away. Instead she gazed at Sethe with sleepy eyes. Poorly fed, thought Sethe, and younger than her clothes
|
||
suggested--good lace at the throat, and a rich woman's hat. Her skin was flawless except for three vertical scratches on
|
||
her forehead so fine and thin they seemed at first like hair, baby hair before it bloomed and roped into the masses of
|
||
black yarn under her hat.
|
||
"You from around here?" Sethe asked her.
|
||
She shook her head no and reached down to take off her shoes.
|
||
She pulled her dress up to the knees and rolled down her stockings.
|
||
When the hosiery was tucked into the shoes, Sethe saw that her feet were like her hands, soft and new. She must have
|
||
hitched a wagon ride, thought Sethe. Probably one of those West Virginia girls looking for something to beat a life of
|
||
tobacco and sorghum. Sethe bent to pick up the shoes.
|
||
"What might your name be?" asked Paul D.
|
||
"Beloved," she said, and her voice was so low and rough each one looked at the other two. They heard the voice first--
|
||
later the name.
|
||
"Beloved. You use a last name, Beloved?" Paul D asked her.
|
||
"Last?" She seemed puzzled. Then "No," and she spelled it for them, slowly as though the letters were being formed as
|
||
31
|
||
she spoke them.
|
||
Sethe dropped the shoes; Denver sat down and Paul D smiled.
|
||
He recognized the careful enunciation of letters by those, like himself, who could not read but had memorized the
|
||
letters of their name. He was about to ask who her people were but thought better of it. A young coloredwoman drifting
|
||
was drifting from ruin. He had been in Rochester four years ago and seen five women arriving with fourteen female
|
||
children. All their men--brothers, uncles, fathers, husbands, sons--had been picked off one by one by one. They had a
|
||
single piece of paper directing them to a preacher on DeVore Street.
|
||
The War had been over four or five years then, but nobody white or black seemed to know it. Odd clusters and strays of
|
||
Negroes wandered the back roads and cowpaths from Schenectady to Jackson.
|
||
Dazed but insistent, they searched each other out for word of a cousin, an aunt, a friend who once said, "Call on me.
|
||
Anytime you get near Chicago, just call on me." Some of them were running from family that could not support them,
|
||
some to family; some were running from dead crops, dead kin, life threats, and took-over land. Boys younger than
|
||
Buglar and Howard; configurations and blends of families of women and children, while elsewhere, solitary, hunted
|
||
and hunting for, were men, men, men. Forbidden public transportation, chased by debt and filthy "talking sheets," they
|
||
followed secondary routes, scanned the horizon for signs and counted heavily on each other. Silent, except for social
|
||
courtesies, when they met one another they neither described nor asked about the sorrow that drove them from one
|
||
place to another. The whites didn't bear speaking on. Everybody knew.
|
||
So he did not press the young woman with the broken hat about where from or how come. If she wanted them to know
|
||
and was strong enough to get through the telling, she would. What occupied them at the moment was what it might
|
||
be that she needed. Underneath the major question, each harbored another. Paul D wondered at the newness of her
|
||
shoes. Sethe was deeply touched by her sweet name; the remembrance of glittering headstone made her feel especially
|
||
kindly toward her. Denver, however, was shaking. She looked at this sleepy beauty and wanted more.
|
||
Sethe hung her hat on a peg and turned graciously toward the girl. "That's a pretty name, Beloved. Take off your hat,
|
||
why don't you, and I'll make us something. We just got back from the carnival over near Cincinnati. Everything in there is
|
||
something to see."
|
||
Bolt upright in the chair, in the middle of Sethe's welcome, Beloved had fallen asleep again.
|
||
"Miss. Miss." Paul D shook her gently. "You want to lay down a spell?"
|
||
She opened her eyes to slits and stood up on her soft new feet which, barely capable of their job, slowly bore her to
|
||
the keeping room. Once there, she collapsed on Baby Suggs' bed. Denver removed her hat and put the quilt with two
|
||
squares of color over her feet.
|
||
She was breathing like a steam engine.
|
||
"Sounds like croup," said Paul D, closing the door.
|
||
"Is she feverish? Denver, could you tell?"
|
||
"No. She's cold."
|
||
"Then she is. Fever goes from hot to cold."
|
||
"Could have the cholera," said Paul D.
|
||
"Reckon?"
|
||
"All that water. Sure sign."
|
||
"Poor thing. And nothing in this house to give her for it. She'll just have to ride it out. That's a hateful sickness if ever
|
||
32
|
||
there was one."
|
||
"She's not sick!" said Denver, and the passion in her voice made them smile.
|
||
Four days she slept, waking and sitting up only for water. Denver tended her, watched her sound sleep, listened to
|
||
her labored breathing and, out of love and a breakneck possessiveness that charged her, hid like a personal blemish
|
||
Beloved's incontinence. She rinsed the sheets secretly, after Sethe went to the restaurant and Paul D went scrounging
|
||
for barges to help unload. She boiled the underwear and soaked it in bluing, praying the fever would pass without
|
||
damage.
|
||
So intent was her nursing, she forgot to eat or visit the emerald closet.
|
||
"Beloved?" Denver would whisper. "Beloved?" and when the black eyes opened a slice all she could say was "I'm here.
|
||
I'm still here."
|
||
Sometimes, when Beloved lay dreamy-eyed for a very long time, saying nothing, licking her lips and heaving deep sighs,
|
||
Denver panicked.
|
||
"What is it?" she would ask.
|
||
"Heavy," murmured Beloved. "This place is heavy."
|
||
"Would you like to sit up?"
|
||
"No," said the raspy voice.
|
||
It took three days for Beloved to notice the orange patches in the darkness of the quilt. Denver was pleased because
|
||
it kept her patient awake longer. She seemed totally taken with those faded scraps of orange, even made the effort to
|
||
lean on her elbow and stroke them.
|
||
An effort that quickly exhausted her, so Denver rearranged the quilt so its cheeriest part was in the sick girl's sight line.
|
||
Patience, something Denver had never known, overtook her. As long as her mother did not interfere, she was a model of
|
||
compassion, turning waspish, though, when Sethe tried to help.
|
||
"Did she take a spoonful of anything today?" Sethe inquired.
|
||
"She shouldn't eat with cholera."
|
||
"You sure that's it? Was just a hunch of Paul D's."
|
||
"I don't know, but she shouldn't eat anyway just yet."
|
||
"I think cholera people puke all the time."
|
||
"That's even more reason, ain't it?"
|
||
"Well she shouldn't starve to death either, Denver."
|
||
"Leave us alone, Ma'am. I'm taking care of her."
|
||
"She say anything?"
|
||
"I'd let you know if she did."
|
||
Sethe looked at her daughter and thought, Yes, she has been lonesome. Very lonesome.
|
||
"Wonder where Here Boy got off to?" Sethe thought a change of subject was needed.
|
||
33
|
||
"He won't be back," said Denver.
|
||
"How you know?"
|
||
"I just know." Denver took a square of sweet bread off the plate.
|
||
Back in the keeping room, Denver was about to sit down when Beloved's eyes flew wide open. Denver felt her heart
|
||
race. It wasn't that she was looking at that face for the first time with no trace of sleep in it, or that the eyes were big
|
||
and black. Nor was it that the whites of them were much too white--blue-white. It was that deep down in those big black
|
||
eyes there was no expression at all.
|
||
"Can I get you something?"
|
||
Beloved looked at the sweet bread in Denver's hands and Denver held it out to her. She smiled then and Denver's heart
|
||
stopped bouncing and sat down---relieved and easeful like a traveler who had made it home.
|
||
From that moment and through everything that followed, sugar could always be counted on to please her. It was as
|
||
though sweet things were what she was born for. Honey as well as the wax it came in, sugar sandwiches, the sludgy
|
||
molasses gone hard and brutal in the can, lemonade, taffy and any type of dessert Sethe brought home from the
|
||
restaurant. She gnawed a cane stick to flax and kept the strings in her mouth long after the syrup had been sucked away.
|
||
Denver laughed, Sethe smiled and Paul D said it made him sick to his stomach.
|
||
Sethe believed it was a recovering body's need---after an illness-- for quick strength. But it was a need that went on
|
||
and on into glowing health because Beloved didn't go anywhere. There didn't seem anyplace for her to go. She didn't
|
||
mention one, or have much of an idea of what she was doing in that part of the country or where she had been. They
|
||
believed the fever had caused her memory to fail just as it kept her slow-moving. A young woman, about nineteen or
|
||
twenty, and slender, she moved like a heavier one or an older one, holding on to furniture, resting her head in the palm
|
||
of her hand as though it was too heavy for a neck alone.
|
||
"You just gonna feed her? From now on?" Paul D, feeling ungenerous, and surprised by it, heard the irritability in his
|
||
voice.
|
||
"Denver likes her. She's no real trouble. I thought we'd wait till her breath was better. She still sounds a little lumbar to
|
||
me."
|
||
"Something funny 'bout that gal," Paul D said, mostly to himself.
|
||
"Funny how?"
|
||
"Acts sick, sounds sick, but she don't look sick. Good skin, bright eyes and strong as a bull."
|
||
"She's not strong. She can hardly walk without holding on to something."
|
||
"That's what I mean. Can't walk, but I seen her pick up the rocker with one hand."
|
||
"You didn't."
|
||
"Don't tell me. Ask Denver. She was right there with her."
|
||
"Denver! Come in here a minute."
|
||
Denver stopped rinsing the porch and stuck her head in the window.
|
||
"Paul D says you and him saw Beloved pick up the rocking chair single-handed. That so?"
|
||
Long, heavy lashes made Denver's eyes seem busier than they were; deceptive, even when she held a steady gaze as she
|
||
34
|
||
did now on Paul D. "No," she said. "I didn't see no such thing."
|
||
Paul D frowned but said nothing. If there had been an open latch between them, it would have closed.
|
||
Chapter 6
|
||
RAINWATER held on to pine needles for dear life and Beloved could not take her eyes off Sethe. Stooping to shake the
|
||
damper, or snapping sticks for kindlin, Sethe was licked, tasted, eaten by Beloved's eyes. Like a familiar, she hovered,
|
||
never leaving the room Sethe was in unless required and told to. She rose early in the dark to be there, waiting, in the
|
||
kitchen when Sethe came down to make fast bread before she left for work. In lamplight, and over the flames of the
|
||
cooking stove, their two shadows clashed and crossed on the ceiling like black swords. She was in the window at two
|
||
when Sethe returned, or the doorway; then the porch, its steps, the path, the road, till finally, surrendering to the habit,
|
||
Beloved began inching down Bluestone Road further and further each day to meet Sethe and walk her back to 124. It
|
||
was as though every afternoon she doubted anew the older woman's return.
|
||
Sethe was flattered by Beloved's open, quiet devotion. The same adoration from her daughter (had it been forthcoming)
|
||
would have annoyed her; made her chill at the thought of having raised a ridiculously dependent child. But the company
|
||
of this sweet, if peculiar, guest pleased her the way a zealot pleases his teacher.
|
||
Time came when lamps had to be lit early because night arrived sooner and sooner. Sethe was leaving for work in the
|
||
dark; Paul D was walking home in it. On one such evening dark and cool, Sethe cut a rutabaga into four pieces and left
|
||
them stewing. She gave Denver a half peck of peas to sort and soak overnight. Then she sat herself down to rest. The
|
||
heat of the stove made her drowsy and she was sliding into sleep when she felt Beloved touch her. A touch no heavier
|
||
than a feather but loaded, nevertheless, with desire. Sethe stirred and looked around. First at Beloved's soft new hand
|
||
on her shoulder, then into her eyes. The longing she saw there was bottomless. Some plea barely in control. Sethe
|
||
patted Beloved's fingers and glanced at Denver, whose eyes were fixed on her pea-sorting task.
|
||
"Where your diamonds?" Beloved searched Sethe's face.
|
||
"Diamonds? What would I be doing with diamonds?"
|
||
"On your ears."
|
||
"Wish I did. I had some crystal once. A present from a lady I worked for."
|
||
"Tell me," said Beloved, smiling a wide happy smile. "Tell me your diamonds."
|
||
It became a way to feed her. Just as Denver discovered and relied on the delightful effect sweet things had on Beloved,
|
||
Sethe learned the profound satisfaction Beloved got from storytelling. It amazed Sethe (as much as it pleased Beloved)
|
||
because every mention of her past life hurt. Everything in it was painful or lost. She and Baby Suggs had agreed without
|
||
saying so that it was unspeakable; to Denver's inquiries Sethe gave short replies or rambling incomplete reveries.
|
||
Even with Paul D, who had shared some of it and to whom she could talk with at least a measure of calm, the hurt was
|
||
always there-like a tender place in the corner of her mouth that the bit left.
|
||
But, as she began telling about the earrings, she found herself wanting to, liking it. Perhaps it was Beloved's distance
|
||
from the events itself, or her thirst for hearing it--in any case it was an unexpected pleasure.
|
||
Above the patter of the pea sorting and the sharp odor of cooking rutabaga, Sethe explained the crystal that once hung
|
||
from her ears.
|
||
"That lady I worked for in Kentucky gave them to me when I got married. What they called married hack there and back
|
||
then. I guess she saw how bad I felt when I found out there wasn't going to be no ceremony, no preacher. Nothing. I
|
||
thought there should be something--something to say it was right and true. I didn't want it to be just me moving over
|
||
a bit of pallet full of corn husks. Or just me bringing my night bucket into his cabin. I thought there should be some
|
||
35
|
||
ceremony. Dancing maybe. A little sweet william in my hair." Sethe smiled. "I never saw a wedding, but I saw Mrs.
|
||
Garner's wedding gown in the press, and heard her go on about what it was like. Two pounds of currants in the cake, she
|
||
said, and four whole sheep. The people were still eating the next day. That's what I wanted.
|
||
A meal maybe, where me and Halle and all the Sweet Home men sat down and ate something special. Invite some of the
|
||
other colored people from over by Covington or High Trees--those places Sixo used to sneak off to. But it wasn't going to
|
||
be nothing. They said it was all right for us to be husband and wife and that was it. All of it.
|
||
"Well, I made up my mind to have at the least a dress that wasn't the sacking I worked in. So I took to stealing fabric, and
|
||
wound up with a dress you wouldn't believe. The top was from two pillow cases in her mending basket. The front of the
|
||
skirt was a dresser scarf a candle fell on and burnt a hole in, and one of her old sashes we used to test the flatiron on.
|
||
Now the back was a problem for the longest time. Seem like I couldn't find a thing that wouldn't be missed right away.
|
||
Because I had to take it apart afterwards and put all the pieces back where they were. Now Halle was patient, waiting
|
||
for me to finish it. He knew I wouldn't go ahead without having it.
|
||
Finally I took the mosquito netting from a nail out the barn. We used it to strain jelly through. I washed it and soaked it
|
||
best I could and tacked it on for the back of the skirt. And there I was, in the worst-looking gown you could imagine. Only
|
||
my wool shawl kept me from looking like a haint peddling. I wasn't but fourteen years old, so I reckon that's why I was so
|
||
proud of myself.
|
||
"Anyhow, Mrs. Garner must have seen me in it. I thought I was stealing smart, and she knew everything I did. Even our
|
||
honeymoon: going down to the cornfield with Halle. That's where we went first.
|
||
A Saturday afternoon it was. He begged sick so he wouldn't have to go work in town that day. Usually he worked
|
||
Saturdays and Sundays to pay off Baby Suggs' freedom. But he begged sick and I put on my dress and we walked into
|
||
the corn holding hands. I can still smell the ears roasting yonder where the Pauls and Sixo was. Next day Mrs. Garner
|
||
crooked her finger at me and took me upstairs to her bedroom. She opened up a wooden box and took out a pair of
|
||
crystal earrings. She said, 'I want you to have these, Sethe.' I said, 'Yes, ma'am.'
|
||
'Are your ears pierced?' she said. I said, 'No, ma'am.'
|
||
'Well do it,' she said, 'so you can wear them. I want you to have them and I want you and Halle to be happy.' I thanked
|
||
her but I never did put them on till I got away from there. One day after I walked into this here house Baby Suggs
|
||
unknotted my underskirt and took em out. I sat right here by the stove with Denver in my arms and let her punch holes
|
||
in my ears for to wear them."
|
||
"I never saw you in no earrings," said Denver. "Where are they now?"
|
||
"Gone," said Sethe. "Long gone," and she wouldn't say another word. Until the next time when all three of them ran
|
||
through the wind back into the house with rainsoaked sheets and petticoats.
|
||
Panting, laughing, they draped the laundry over the chairs and table.
|
||
Beloved filled herself with water from the bucket and watched while Sethe rubbed Denver's hair with a piece of
|
||
toweling.
|
||
"Maybe we should unbraid it?" asked Sethe.
|
||
"Oh uh. Tomorrow." Denver crouched forward at the thought of a fine-tooth comb pulling her hair.
|
||
"Today is always here," said Sethe. "Tomorrow, never."
|
||
"It hurts," Denver said.
|
||
"Comb it every day, it won't."
|
||
36
|
||
"Ouch."
|
||
"Your woman she never fix up your hair?" Beloved asked.
|
||
Sethe and Denver looked up at her. After four weeks they still had not got used to the gravelly voice and the song that
|
||
seemed to lie in it. Just outside music it lay, with a cadence not like theirs.
|
||
"Your woman she never fix up your hair?" was clearly a question for sethe, since that's who she was looking at.
|
||
"My woman? You mean my mother? If she did, I don't remember.
|
||
I didn't see her but a few times out in the fields and once when she was working indigo. By the time I woke up in the
|
||
morning, she was in line. If the moon was bright they worked by its light. Sunday she slept like a stick. She must of
|
||
nursed me two or three weeks--that's the way the others did. Then she went back in rice and I sucked from another
|
||
woman whose job it was. So to answer you, no. I reckon not. She never fixed my hair nor nothing. She didn't even sleep
|
||
in the same cabin most nights I remember. Too far from the line-up, I guess. One thing she did do. She picked me up and
|
||
carried me behind the smokehouse. Back there she opened up her dress front and lifted her breast and pointed under
|
||
it. Right on her rib was a circle and a cross burnt right in the skin. She said, 'This is your ma'am. This,' and she pointed. 'I
|
||
am the only one got this mark now. The rest dead. If something happens to me and you can't tell me by my face, you
|
||
can know me by this mark.' Scared me so. All I could think of was how important this was and how I needed to have
|
||
something important to say back, but I couldn't think of anything so I just said what I thought. 'Yes, Ma'am,' I said. 'But
|
||
how will you know me?
|
||
How will you know me? Mark me, too,' I said. 'Mark the mark on me too.'" Sethe chuckled.
|
||
"Did she?" asked Denver.
|
||
"She slapped my face."
|
||
"What for?"
|
||
"I didn't understand it then. Not till I had a mark of my own."
|
||
"What happened to her?"
|
||
"Hung. By the time they cut her down nobody could tell whether she had a circle and a cross or not, least of all me and I
|
||
did look."
|
||
Sethe gathered hair from the comb and leaning back tossed it into the fire. It exploded into stars and the smell infuriated
|
||
them. "Oh, my Jesus," she said and stood up so suddenly the comb she had parked in Denver's hair fell to the floor.
|
||
"Ma'am? What's the matter with you, Ma'am?"
|
||
Sethe walked over to a chair, lifted a sheet and stretched it as wide as her arms would go. Then she folded, refolded
|
||
and double folded it. She took another. Neither was completely dry but the folding felt too fine to stop. She had to do
|
||
something with her hands because she was remembering something she had forgotten she knew.
|
||
Something privately shameful that had seeped into a slit in her mind right behind the slap on her face and the circled
|
||
cross.
|
||
"Why they hang your ma'am?" Denver asked. This was the first time she had heard anything about her mother's mother.
|
||
Baby Suggs was the only grandmother she knew.
|
||
"I never found out. It was a lot of them," she said, but what was getting clear and clearer as she folded and refolded
|
||
damp laundry was the woman called Nan who took her hand and yanked her away from the pile before she could make
|
||
out the mark. Nan was the one she knew best, who was around all day, who nursed babies, cooked, had one good arm
|
||
and half of another. And who used different words.
|
||
37
|
||
Words Sethe understood then but could neither recall nor repeat now. She believed that must be why she remembered
|
||
so little before Sweet Home except singing and dancing and how crowded it was.
|
||
What Nan told her she had forgotten, along with the language she told it in. The same language her ma'am spoke, and
|
||
which would never come back. But the message--that was and had been there all along. Holding the damp white sheets
|
||
against her chest, she was picking meaning out of a code she no longer understood. Nighttime.
|
||
Nan holding her with her good arm, waving the stump of the other in the air. "Telling you. I am telling you, small girl
|
||
Sethe," and she did that. She told Sethe that her mother and Nan were together from the sea. Both were taken up many
|
||
times by the crew. "She threw them all away but you. The one from the crew she threw away on the island. The others
|
||
from more whites she also threw away. Without names, she threw them. You she gave the name of the black man.
|
||
She put her arms around him. The others she did not put her arms around. Never. Never. Telling you. I am telling you,
|
||
small girl Sethe."
|
||
As small girl Sethe, she was unimpressed. As grown-up woman Sethe she was angry, but not certain at what. A mighty
|
||
wish for Baby Suggs broke over her like surf. In the quiet following its splash, Sethe looked at the two girls sitting by the
|
||
stove: her sickly, shallow-minded boarder, her irritable, lonely daughter. They seemed little and far away.
|
||
"Paul D be here in a minute," she said.
|
||
Denver sighed with relief. For a minute there, while her mother stood folding the wash lost in thought, she clamped her
|
||
teeth and prayed it would stop. Denver hated the stories her mother told that did not concern herself, which is why Amy
|
||
was all she ever asked about. The rest was a gleaming, powerful world made more so by Denver's absence from it. Not
|
||
being in it, she hated it and wanted Beloved to hate it too, although there was no chance of that at all.
|
||
Beloved took every opportunity to ask some funny question and get Sethe going. Denver noticed how greedy she was to
|
||
hear Sethe talk.
|
||
Now she noticed something more. The questions Beloved asked: "Where your diamonds?"
|
||
"Your woman she never fix up your hair?"
|
||
And most perplexing: Tell me your earrings.
|
||
How did she know?
|
||
Chapter 7
|
||
BELOVED WAS SHINING and Paul D didn’t like it. Women did what strawberry plants did before they shot out their thin
|
||
vines: the quality of the green changed. Then the vine threads came, then the buds. By the time the white petals died
|
||
and the mint-colored berry poked out, the leaf shine was gilded fight and waxy. That's how Beloved looked-- gilded
|
||
and shining. Paul D took to having Sethe on waking, so that later, when he went down the white stairs where she made
|
||
bread under Beloved's gaze, his head was clear.
|
||
In the evening when he came home and the three of them were all there fixing the supper table, her shine was so
|
||
pronounced he wondered why Denver and Sethe didn't see it. Or maybe they did.
|
||
Certainly women could tell, as men could, when one of their number was aroused. Paul D looked carefully at Beloved
|
||
to see if she was aware of it but she paid him no attention at all--frequently not even answering a direct question put
|
||
to her. She would look at him and not open her mouth. Five weeks she had been with them, and they didn't know any
|
||
more about her than they did when they found her asleep on the stump.
|
||
They were seated at the table Paul D had broken the day he arrived at 124. Its mended legs stronger than before. The
|
||
cabbage was all gone and the shiny ankle bones of smoked pork were pushed in a heap on their plates. Sethe was
|
||
38
|
||
dishing up bread pudding, murmuring her hopes for it, apologizing in advance the way veteran cooks always do, when
|
||
something in Beloved's face, some petlike adoration that took hold of her as she looked at Sethe, made Paul D speak.
|
||
"Ain't you got no brothers or sisters?"
|
||
Beloved diddled her spoon but did not look at him. "I don't have nobody."
|
||
"What was you looking for when you came here?" he asked her.
|
||
"This place. I was looking for this place I could be in."
|
||
"Somebody tell you about this house?"
|
||
"She told me. When I was at the bridge, she told me."
|
||
"Must be somebody from the old days," Sethe said. The days when 124 was a way station where messages came and
|
||
then their senders. Where bits of news soaked like dried beans in spring water--until they were soft enough to digest.
|
||
"How'd you come? Who brought you?"
|
||
Now she looked steadily at him, but did not answer.
|
||
He could feel both Sethe and Denver pulling in, holding their stomach muscles, sending out sticky spiderwebs to touch
|
||
one another.
|
||
He decided to force it anyway.
|
||
"I asked you who brought you here?"
|
||
"I walked here," she said. "A long, long, long, long way. Nobody bring me. Nobody help me."
|
||
"You had new shoes. If you walked so long why don't your shoes show it?"
|
||
"Paul D, stop picking on her."
|
||
"I want to know," he said, holding the knife handle in his fist like a pole.
|
||
"I take the shoes! I take the dress! The shoe strings don't fix!" she shouted and gave him a look so malevolent Denver
|
||
touched her arm.
|
||
"I'll teach you," said Denver, "how to tie your shoes," and got a smile from Beloved as a reward.
|
||
Paul D had the feeling a large, silver fish had slipped from his hands the minute he grabbed hold of its tail. That it was
|
||
streaming back off into dark water now, gone but for the glistening marking its route. But if her shining was not for him,
|
||
who then? He had never known a woman who lit up for nobody in particular, who just did it as a general announcement.
|
||
Always, in his experience, the light appeared when there was focus. Like the Thirty-Mile Woman, dulled to smoke while
|
||
he waited with her in the ditch, and starlight when Sixo got there. He never knew himself to mistake it. It was there the
|
||
instant he looked at Sethe's wet legs, otherwise he never would have been bold enough to enclose her in his arms that
|
||
day and whisper into her back.
|
||
This girl Beloved, homeless and without people, beat all, though he couldn't say exactly why, considering the
|
||
coloredpeople he had run into during the last twenty years. During, before and after the War he had seen Negroes so
|
||
stunned, or hungry, or tired or bereft it was a wonder they recalled or said anything. Who, like him, had hidden in caves
|
||
and fought owls for food; who, like him, stole from pigs; who, like him, slept in trees in the day and walked by night;
|
||
who, like him, had buried themselves in slop and jumped in wells to avoid regulators, raiders, paterollers, veterans, hill
|
||
men, posses and merrymakers. Once he met a Negro about fourteen years old who lived by himself in the woods and
|
||
said he couldn't remember living anywhere else. He saw a witless coloredwoman jailed and hanged for stealing ducks
|
||
39
|
||
she believed were her own babies.
|
||
Move. Walk. Run. Hide. Steal and move on. Only once had it been possible for him to stay in one spot--with a woman,
|
||
or a family--for longer than a few months. That once was almost two years with a weaver lady in Delaware, the meanest
|
||
place for Negroes he had ever seen outside Pulaski County, Kentucky, and of course the prison camp in Georgia.
|
||
From all those Negroes, Beloved was different. Her shining, her new shoes. It bothered him. Maybe it was just the fact
|
||
that he didn't bother her. Or it could be timing. She had appeared and been taken in on the very day Sethe and he had
|
||
patched up their quarrel, gone out in public and had a right good time--like a family. Denver had come around, so to
|
||
speak; Sethe was laughing; he had a promise of steady work, 124 was cleared up from spirits. It had begun to look like a
|
||
life. And damn! a water-drinking woman fell sick, got took in, healed, and hadn't moved a peg since.
|
||
He wanted her out, but Sethe had let her in and he couldn't put her out of a house that wasn't his. It was one thing to
|
||
beat up a ghost, quite another to throw a helpless coloredgirl out in territory infected by the Klan. Desperately thirsty for
|
||
black blood, without which it could not live, the dragon swam the Ohio at will.
|
||
Sitting at table, chewing on his after-supper broom straw, Paul D decided to place her. Consult with the Negroes in town
|
||
and find her her own place.
|
||
No sooner did he have the thought than Beloved strangled on one of the raisins she had picked out of the bread
|
||
pudding. She fell backward and off the chair and thrashed around holding her throat.
|
||
Sethe knocked her on the back while Denver pried her hands away from her neck. Beloved, on her hands and knees,
|
||
vomited up her food and struggled for breath.
|
||
When she was quiet and Denver had wiped up the mess, she said, "Go to sleep now."
|
||
"Come in my room," said Denver. "I can watch out for you up there."
|
||
No moment could have been better. Denver had worried herself sick trying to think of a way to get Beloved to share her
|
||
room. It was hard sleeping above her, wondering if she was going to be sick again, fall asleep and not wake, or (God,
|
||
please don't) get up and wander out of the yard just the way she wandered in. They could have their talks easier there:
|
||
at night when Sethe and Paul D were asleep; or in the daytime before either came home. Sweet, crazy conversations full
|
||
of half sentences, daydreams and misunderstandings more thrilling than understanding could ever be.
|
||
When the girls left, Sethe began to clear the table. She stacked the plates near a basin of water.
|
||
"What is it about her vex you so?"
|
||
Paul D frowned, but said nothing.
|
||
"We had one good fight about Denver. Do we need one about her too?" asked Sethe.
|
||
"I just don't understand what the hold is. It's clear why she holds on to you, but just can't see why you holding on to
|
||
her."
|
||
Sethe turned away from the plates toward him. "what you care who's holding on to who? Feeding her is no trouble. I
|
||
pick up a little extra from the restaurant is all. And she's nice girl company for Denver. You know that and I know you
|
||
know it, so what is it got your teeth on edge?"
|
||
"I can't place it. It's a feeling in me."
|
||
"Well, feel this, why don't you? Feel how it feels to have a bed to sleep in and somebody there not worrying you to
|
||
death about what you got to do each day to deserve it. Feel how that feels. And if that don't get it, feel how it feels to be
|
||
a coloredwoman roaming the roads with anything God made liable to jump on you. Feel that."
|
||
"I know every bit of that, Sethe. I wasn't born yesterday and I never mistreated a woman in my life."
|
||
40
|
||
"That makes one in the world," Sethe answered.
|
||
"Not two?"
|
||
"No. Not two."
|
||
"What Halle ever do to you? Halle stood by you. He never left you."
|
||
"What'd he leave then if not me?"
|
||
"I don't know, but it wasn't you. That's a fact."
|
||
"Then he did worse; he left his children."
|
||
"You don't know that."
|
||
"He wasn't there. He wasn't where he said he would be."
|
||
"He was there."
|
||
"Then why didn't he show himself? Why did I have to pack my babies off and stay behind to look for him?"
|
||
"He couldn't get out the loft."
|
||
"Loft? What loft?"
|
||
"The one over your head. In the barn."
|
||
Slowly, slowly, taking all the time allowed, Sethe moved toward the table.
|
||
"He saw?"
|
||
"He saw."
|
||
"He told you?"
|
||
"You told me."
|
||
"What?"
|
||
"The day I came in here. You said they stole your milk. I never knew what it was that messed him up. That was it, I guess.
|
||
All I knew was that something broke him. Not a one of them years of Saturdays, Sundays and nighttime extra never
|
||
touched him. But whatever he saw go on in that barn that day broke him like a twig."
|
||
"He saw?" Sethe was gripping her elbows as though to keep them from flying away.
|
||
"He saw. Must have."
|
||
"He saw them boys do that to me and let them keep on breathing air? He saw? He saw? He saw?"
|
||
"Hey! Hey! Listen up. Let me tell you something. A man ain't a goddamn ax. Chopping, hacking, busting every goddamn
|
||
minute of the day. Things get to him. Things he can't chop down because they're inside."
|
||
Sethe was pacing up and down, up and down in the lamplight.
|
||
"The underground agent said, By Sunday. They took my milk and he saw it and didn't come down? Sunday came and he
|
||
didn't. Monday came and no Halle. I thought he was dead, that's why; then I thought they caught him, that's why. Then
|
||
I thought, No, he's not dead because if he was I'd know it, and then you come here after all this time and you didn't say
|
||
he was dead, because you didn't know either, so I thought, Well, he just found him another better way to live.
|
||
41
|
||
Because if he was anywhere near here, he'd come to Baby Suggs, if not to me. But I never knew he saw."
|
||
"What does that matter now?"
|
||
"If he is alive, and saw that, he won't step foot in my door. Not Halle."
|
||
"It broke him, Sethe." Paul D looked up at her and sighed. "You may as well know it all. Last time I saw him he was sitting
|
||
by the chum. He had butter all over his face."
|
||
Nothing happened, and she was grateful for that. Usually she could see the picture right away of what she heard.
|
||
But she could not picture what Paul D said. Nothing came to mind. Carefully, carefully, she passed on to a reasonable
|
||
question.
|
||
"What did he say?"
|
||
"Nothing."
|
||
"Not a word?"
|
||
"Not a word."
|
||
"Did you speak to him? Didn't you say anything to him? Something!"
|
||
"I couldn't, Sethe. I just.., couldn't."
|
||
"Why!"
|
||
"I had a bit in my mouth."
|
||
Sethe opened the front door and sat down on the porch steps.
|
||
The day had gone blue without its sun, but she could still make out the black silhouettes of trees in the meadow beyond.
|
||
She shook her head from side to side, resigned to her rebellious brain. Why was there nothing it reused? No misery, no
|
||
regret, no hateful picture too rotten to accept? Like a greedy child it snatched up everything. Just once, could it say, No
|
||
thank you? I just ate and can't hold another bite? I am full God damn it of two boys with mossy teeth, one sucking on
|
||
my breast the other holding me down, their book-reading teacher watching and writing it up. I am still full of that, God
|
||
damn it, I can't go back and add more. Add my husband to it, watching, above me in the loft--hiding close by--the one
|
||
place he thought no one would look for him, looking down on what I couldn't look at at all.
|
||
And not stopping them--looking and letting it happen. But my greedy brain says, Oh thanks, I'd love more--so I add
|
||
more. And no sooner than I do, there is no stopping. There is also my husband squatting by the churn smearing the
|
||
butter as well as its clabber all over his face because the milk they took is on his mind. And as far as he is concerned, the
|
||
world may as well know it. And if he was that broken then, then he is also and certainly dead now. And if Paul D saw
|
||
him and could not save or comfort him because the iron bit was in his mouth, then there is still more that Paul D could
|
||
tell me and my brain would go right ahead and take it and never say, No thank you. I don't want to know or have to
|
||
remember that. I have other things to do: worry, for example, about tomorrow, about Denver, about Beloved, about age
|
||
and sickness not to speak of love.
|
||
But her brain was not interested in the future. Loaded with the past and hungry for more, it left her no room to imagine,
|
||
let alone plan for, the next day. Exactly like that afternoon in the wild onions-- when one more step was the most she
|
||
could see of the future. Other people went crazy, why couldn't she? Other people's brains stopped, turned around and
|
||
went on to something new, which is what must have happened to Halle. And how sweet that would have been: the two
|
||
of them back by the milk shed, squatting by the churn, smashing cold, lumpy butter into their faces with not a care in
|
||
the world.
|
||
Feeling it slippery, sticky--rubbing it in their hair, watching it squeeze through their fingers. What a relief to stop it right
|
||
42
|
||
there. Close. Shut.
|
||
Squeeze the butter. But her three children were chewing sugar teat under a blanket on their way to Ohio and no butter
|
||
play would change that.
|
||
Paul D stepped through the door and touched her shoulder.
|
||
"I didn't plan on telling you that."
|
||
"I didn't plan on hearing it."
|
||
"I can't take it back, but I can leave it alone," Paul D said.
|
||
He wants to tell me, she thought. He wants me to ask him about what it was like for him--about how offended the
|
||
tongue is, held down by iron, how the need to spit is so deep you cry for it. She already knew about it, had seen it time
|
||
after time in the place before Sweet Home. Men, boys, little
|
||
girls, women. The wildness that shot up into the eye the moment the lips were yanked back. Days after it was taken out,
|
||
goose fat was rubbed on the corners of the mouth but nothing to soothe the tongue or take the wildness out of the eye.
|
||
Sethe looked up into Paul D's eyes to see if there was any trace left in them.
|
||
"People I saw as a child," she said, "who'd had the bit always looked wild after that. Whatever they used it on them for,
|
||
it couldn't have worked, because it put a wildness where before there wasn't any. When I look at you, I don't see it.
|
||
There ain't no wildness in your eye nowhere."
|
||
"There's a way to put it there and there's a way to take it out. I know em both and I haven't figured out yet which is
|
||
worse." He sat down beside her. Sethe looked at him. In that unlit daylight his face, bronzed and reduced to its bones,
|
||
smoothed her heart down.
|
||
"You want to tell me about it?" she asked him.
|
||
"I don't know. I never have talked about it. Not to a soul. Sang it sometimes, but I never told a soul."
|
||
"Go ahead. I can hear it."
|
||
"Maybe. Maybe you can hear it. I just ain't sure I can say it. Say it right, I mean, because it wasn't the bit--that wasn't it."
|
||
"What then?" Sethe asked.
|
||
"The roosters," he said. "Walking past the roosters looking at them look at me."
|
||
Sethe smiled. "In that pine?"
|
||
"Yeah." Paul D smiled with her. "Must have been five of them perched up there, and at least fifty hens."
|
||
"Mister, too?"
|
||
"Not right off. But I hadn't took twenty steps before I seen him.
|
||
He come down off the fence post there and sat on the tub."
|
||
"He loved that tub," said Sethe, thinking, No, there is no stopping now.
|
||
"Didn't he? Like a throne. Was me took him out the shell, you know. He'd a died if it hadn't been for me. The hen had
|
||
walked on off with all the hatched peeps trailing behind her. There was this one egg left. Looked like a blank, but then
|
||
I saw it move so I tapped it open and here come Mister, bad feet and all. I watched that son a bitch grow up and whup
|
||
everything in the yard."
|
||
43
|
||
"He always was hateful," Sethe said.
|
||
"Yeah, he was hateful all right. Bloody too, and evil. Crooked feet flapping. Comb as big as my hand and some kind of
|
||
red. He sat right there on the tub looking at me. I swear he smiled. My head was full of what I'd seen of Halle a while
|
||
back. I wasn't even thinking about the bit. Just Halle and before him Sixo, but when I saw Mister I knew it was me too.
|
||
Not just them, me too. One crazy, one sold, one missing, one burnt and me licking iron with my hands crossed behind
|
||
me. The last of the Sweet Home men.
|
||
"Mister, he looked so... free. Better than me. Stronger, tougher.
|
||
Son a bitch couldn't even get out the shell by hisself but he was still king and I was..." Paul D stopped and squeezed his
|
||
left hand with his right. He held it that way long enough for it and the world to quiet down and let him go on.
|
||
"Mister was allowed to be and stay what he was. But I wasn't allowed to be and stay what I was. Even if you cooked
|
||
him you'd be cooking a rooster named Mister. But wasn't no way I'd ever be Paul D again, living or dead. Schoolteacher
|
||
changed me. I was something else and that something was less than a chicken sitting in the sun on a tub."
|
||
Sethe put her hand on his knee and rubbed.
|
||
Paul D had only begun, what he was telling her was only the beginning when her fingers on his knee, soft and reassuring,
|
||
stopped him. Just as well. Just as well. Saying more might push them both to a place they couldn't get back from. He
|
||
would keep the rest where it belonged: in that tobacco tin buried in his chest where a red heart used to be. Its lid rusted
|
||
shut. He would not pry it loose now in front of this sweet sturdy woman, for if she got a whiff of the contents it would
|
||
shame him. And it would hurt her to know that there was no red heart bright as Mister's comb beating in him.
|
||
Sethe rubbed and rubbed, pressing the work cloth and the stony curves that made up his knee. She hoped it calmed him
|
||
as it did her.
|
||
Like kneading bread in the half-light of the restaurant kitchen. Before the cook arrived when she stood in a space no
|
||
wider than a bench is long, back behind and to the left of the milk cans. Working dough.
|
||
Working, working dough. Nothing better than that to start the day's serious work of beating back the past.
|
||
Chapter 8
|
||
UPSTAIRS BELOVED was dancing. A little two-step, two-step, make-a-new-step, slide, slide and strut on down.
|
||
Denver sat on the bed smiling and providing the music.
|
||
She had never seen Beloved this happy. She had seen her pouty lips open wide with the pleasure of sugar or some piece
|
||
of news Denver gave her. She had felt warm satisfaction radiating from Beloved's skin when she listened to her mother
|
||
talk about the old days.
|
||
But gaiety she had never seen. Not ten minutes had passed since Beloved had fallen backward to the floor, pop-eyed,
|
||
thrashing and holding her throat. Now, after a few seconds lying in Denver's bed, she was up and dancing.
|
||
"Where'd you learn to dance?" Denver asked her.
|
||
"Nowhere. Look at me do this." Beloved put her fists on her hips and commenced to skip on bare feet. Denver laughed.
|
||
"Now you. Come on," said Beloved. "You may as well just come on." Her black skirt swayed from side to side.
|
||
Denver grew ice-cold as she rose from the bed. She knew she was twice Beloved's size but she floated up, cold and light
|
||
as a snowflake.
|
||
Beloved took Denver's hand and placed another on Denver's shoulder. They danced then. Round and round the tiny
|
||
44
|
||
room and it may have been dizziness, or feeling light and icy at once, that made Denver laugh so hard. A catching laugh
|
||
that Beloved caught. The two of them, merry as kittens, swung to and fro, to and fro, until exhausted they sat on the
|
||
floor. Beloved let her head fall back on the edge of the bed while she found her breath and Denver saw the tip of the
|
||
thing she always saw in its entirety when Beloved undressed to sleep. Looking straight at it she whispered, "Why you call
|
||
yourself Beloved?"
|
||
Beloved closed her eyes. "In the dark my name is Beloved."
|
||
Denver scooted a little closer. "What's it like over there, where you were before? Can you tell me?"
|
||
"Dark," said Beloved. "I'm small in that place. I'm like this here."
|
||
She raised her head off the bed, lay down on her side and curled up.
|
||
Denver covered her lips with her fingers. "Were you cold?"
|
||
Beloved curled tighter and shook her head. "Hot. Nothing to breathe down there and no room to move in."
|
||
"You see anybody?"
|
||
"Heaps. A lot of people is down there. Some is dead."
|
||
"You see Jesus? Baby Suggs?"
|
||
"I don't know. I don't know the names." She sat up.
|
||
"Tell me, how did you get here?"
|
||
"I wait; then I got on the bridge. I stay there in the dark, in the daytime, in the dark, in the daytime. It was a long time."
|
||
"All this time you were on a bridge?"
|
||
"No. After. When I got out."
|
||
"What did you come back for?"
|
||
Beloved smiled. "To see her face."
|
||
"Ma'am's? Sethe?"
|
||
"Yes, Sethe."
|
||
Denver felt a little hurt, slighted that she was not the main reason for Beloved's return. "Don't you remember we played
|
||
together by the stream?"
|
||
"I was on the bridge," said Beloved. "You see me on the bridge?"
|
||
"No, by the stream. The water back in the woods."
|
||
"Oh, I was in the water. I saw her diamonds down there. I could touch them."
|
||
"What stopped you?"
|
||
"She left me behind. By myself," said Beloved. She lifted her eyes to meet Denver's and frowned, perhaps. Perhaps not.
|
||
The tiny scratches on her forehead may have made it seem so.
|
||
Denver swallowed. "Don't," she said. "Don't. You won't leave us, will you?"
|
||
"No. Never. This is where I am."
|
||
45
|
||
Suddenly Denver, who was sitting cross-legged, lurched forward and grabbed Beloved's wrist. "Don't tell her. Don't let
|
||
Ma'am know who you are. Please, you hear?"
|
||
"Don't tell me what to do. Don't you never never tell me what to do."
|
||
"But I'm on your side, Beloved."
|
||
"She is the one. She is the one I need. You can go but she is the one I have to have." Her eyes stretched to the limit,
|
||
black as the all night sky.
|
||
"I didn't do anything to you. I never hurt you. I never hurt anybody," said Denver.
|
||
"Me either. Me either."
|
||
"What you gonna do?"
|
||
"Stay here. I belong here."
|
||
"I belong here too."
|
||
"Then stay, but don't never tell me what to do. Don't never do that."
|
||
"We were dancing. Just a minute ago we were dancing together.
|
||
Let's."
|
||
"I don't want to." Beloved got up and lay down on the bed. Their quietness boomed about on the walls like birds in
|
||
panic. Finally Denver's breath steadied against the threat of an unbearable loss.
|
||
"Tell me," Beloved said. "Tell me how Sethe made you in the boat."
|
||
"She never told me all of it," said Denver.
|
||
"Tell me."
|
||
Denver climbed up on the bed and folded her arms under her apron. She had not been in the tree room once since
|
||
Beloved sat on their stump after the carnival, and had not remembered that she hadn't gone there until this very
|
||
desperate moment. Nothing was out there that this sister-girl did not provide in abundance: a racing heart, dreaminess,
|
||
society, danger, beauty. She swallowed twice to prepare for the telling, to construct out of the strings she had heard all
|
||
her life a net to hold Beloved.
|
||
"She had good hands, she said. The whitegirl, she said, had thin little arms but good hands. She saw that right away,
|
||
she said. Hair enough for five heads and good hands, she said. I guess the hands made her think she could do it: get us
|
||
both across the river. But the mouth was what kept her from being scared. She said there ain't nothing to go by with
|
||
whitepeople. You don't know how they'll jump. Say one thing, do another. But if you looked at the mouth sometimes
|
||
you could tell by that. She said this girl talked a storm, but there wasn't no meanness around her mouth. She took
|
||
Ma'am to that lean-to and rubbed her feet for her, so that was one thing.
|
||
And Ma'am believed she wasn't going to turn her over. You could get money if you turned a runaway over, and she
|
||
wasn't sure this girl Amy didn't need money more than anything, especially since all she talked about was getting hold of
|
||
some velvet."
|
||
"What's velvet?"
|
||
"It's a cloth, kind of deep and soft."
|
||
"Go ahead."
|
||
46
|
||
"Anyway, she rubbed Ma'am's feet back to life, and she cried, she said, from how it hurt. But it made her think she could
|
||
make it on over to where Grandma Baby Suggs was and..."
|
||
"Who is that?"
|
||
"I just said it. My grandmother."
|
||
"Is that Sethe's mother?"
|
||
"No. My father's mother."
|
||
"Go ahead."
|
||
"That's where the others was. My brothers and.., the baby girl.
|
||
She sent them on before to wait for her at Grandma Baby's. So she had to put up with everything to get there. And this
|
||
here girl Amy helped."
|
||
Denver stopped and sighed. This was the part of the story she loved. She was coming to it now, and she loved it because
|
||
it was all about herself; but she hated it too because it made her feel like a bill was owing somewhere and she, Denver,
|
||
had to pay it. But who she owed or what to pay it with eluded her. Now, watching Beloved's alert and hungry face,
|
||
how she took in every word, asking questions about the color of things and their size, her downright craving to know,
|
||
Denver began to see what she was saying and not just to hear it: there is this nineteen-year-old slave girl--a year older
|
||
than her self--walking through the dark woods to get to her children who are far away. She is tired, scared maybe, and
|
||
maybe even lost. Most of all she is by herself and inside her is another baby she has to think about too. Behind her dogs,
|
||
perhaps; guns probably; and certainly mossy teeth. She is not so afraid at night because she is the color of it, but in the
|
||
day every sound is a shot or a tracker's quiet step.
|
||
Denver was seeing it now and feeling it--through Beloved. Feeling how it must have felt to her mother. Seeing how it
|
||
must have looked.
|
||
And the more fine points she made, the more detail she provided, the more Beloved liked it. So she anticipated the
|
||
questions by giving blood to the scraps her mother and grandmother had told herwand a heartbeat. The monologue
|
||
became, iri fact, a duet as they lay down together, Denver nursing Beloved's interest like a lover whose pleasure was to
|
||
overfeed the loved. The dark quilt with two orange patches was there with them because Beloved wanted it near her
|
||
when she slept. It was smelling like grass and feeling like hands-- the unrested hands of busy women: dry, warm, prickly.
|
||
Denver spoke, Beloved listened, and the two did the best they could to create what really happened, how it really was,
|
||
something only Sethe knew because she alone had the mind for it and the time afterward to shape it: the quality of
|
||
Amy's voice, her breath like burning wood. The quick-change weather up in those hills---cool at night, hot in the day,
|
||
sudden fog. How recklessly she behaved with this whitegirlNa recklessness born of desperation and encouraged by
|
||
Amy's fugitive eyes and her tenderhearted mouth.
|
||
"You ain't got no business walking round these hills, miss."
|
||
"Looka here who's talking. I got more business here 'n you got.
|
||
They catch you they cut your head off. Ain't nobody after me but I know somebody after you." Amy pressed her fingers
|
||
into the soles of the slavewoman's feet. "Whose baby that?"
|
||
Sethe did not answer.
|
||
"You don't even know. Come here, Jesus," Amy sighed and shook her head. "Hurt?"
|
||
"A touch."
|
||
"Good for you. More it hurt more better it is. Can't nothing heal without pain, you know. What you wiggling for?"
|
||
47
|
||
Sethe raised up on her elbows. Lying on her back so long had raised a ruckus between her shoulder blades. The fire in
|
||
her feet and the fire on her back made her sweat.
|
||
"My back hurt me," she said.
|
||
"Your back? Gal, you a mess. Turn over here and let me see."
|
||
In an effort so great it made her sick to her stomach, Sethe turned onto her right side. Amy unfastened the back of her
|
||
dress and said, "Come here, Jesus," when she saw. Sethe guessed it must be bad because after that call to Jesus Amy
|
||
didn't speak for a while. In the silence of an Amy struck dumb for a change, Sethe felt the fingers of those good hands
|
||
lightly touch her back. She could hear her breathing but still the whitegirl said nothing. Sethe could not move. She
|
||
couldn't lie on her stomach or her back, and to keep on her side meant pressure on her screaming feet. Amy spoke at
|
||
last in her dreamwalker's voice.
|
||
"It's a tree, Lu. A chokecherry tree. See, here's the trunk--it's red and split wide open, full of sap, and this here's the
|
||
parting for the branches. You got a mighty lot of branches. Leaves, too, look like, and dern if these ain't blossoms. Tiny
|
||
little cherry blossoms, just as white. Your back got a whole tree on it. In bloom. What God have in mind, I wonder. I had
|
||
me some whippings, but I don't remember nothing like this. Mr. Buddy had a right evil hand too. Whip you for looking
|
||
at him straight. Sure would. I looked right at him one time and he hauled off and threw the poker at me. Guess he knew
|
||
what I was a-thinking.'"
|
||
Sethe groaned and Amy cut her reverie short--long enough to shift Sethe's feet so the weight, resting on leaf-covered
|
||
stones, was above the ankles.
|
||
"That better? Lord what a way to die. You gonna die in here, you know. Ain't no way out of it. Thank your Maker I come
|
||
along so's you wouldn't have to die outside in them weeds. Snake come along he bite you. Bear eat you up. Maybe you
|
||
should of stayed where you was, Lu. I can see by your back why you didn't ha ha.
|
||
Whoever planted that tree beat Mr. Buddy by a mile. Glad I ain't you. Well, spiderwebs is 'bout all I can do for you.
|
||
What's in here ain't enough. I'll look outside. Could use moss, but sometimes bugs and things is in it. Maybe I ought
|
||
to break them blossoms open. Get that pus to running, you think? Wonder what God had in mind. You must of did
|
||
something. Don't run off nowhere now."
|
||
Sethe could hear her humming away in the bushes as she hunted spiderwebs. A humming she concentrated on because
|
||
as soon as Amy ducked out the baby began to stretch. Good question, she was thinking.
|
||
What did He have in mind? Amy had left the back of Sethe's dress open and now a tail of wind hit it, taking the pain
|
||
down a step. A relief that let her feel the lesser pain of her sore tongue. Amy returned with two palmfuls of web, which
|
||
she cleaned of prey and then draped on Sethe's back, saying it was like stringing a tree for Christmas.
|
||
"We got a old nigger girl come by our place. She don't know nothing. Sews stuff for Mrs. Buddy--real fine lace but can't
|
||
barely stick two words together. She don't know nothing, just like you. You don't know a thing. End up dead, that's what.
|
||
Not me. I'm a get to Boston and get myself some velvet. Carmine. You don't even know about that, do you? Now you
|
||
never will. Bet you never even sleep with the sun in your face. I did it a couple of times. Most times I'm feeding stock
|
||
before light and don't get to sleep till way after dark comes. But I was in the back of the wagon once and fell asleep.
|
||
Sleeping with the sun in your face is the best old feeling. Two times I did it. Once when I was little. Didn't nobody bother
|
||
me then. Next time, in back of the wagon, it happened again and doggone if the chickens didn't get loose. Mr. Buddy
|
||
whipped my tail. Kentucky ain't no good place to be in. Boston's the place to be in. That's where my mother was before
|
||
she was give to Mr. Buddy. Joe Nathan said Mr.
|
||
Buddy is my daddy but I don't believe that, you?"
|
||
Sethe told her she didn't believe Mr. Buddy was her daddy.
|
||
"You know your daddy, do you?"
|
||
48
|
||
"No," said Sethe.
|
||
"Neither me. All I know is it ain't him." She stood up then, having finished her repair work, and weaving about the lean-
|
||
to, her slow-moving eyes pale in the sun that lit her hair, she sang: "'When the busy day is done And my weary little one
|
||
Rocketh gently to and fro; When the night winds softly blow, And the crickets in the glen Chirp and chirp and chirp again;
|
||
Where "pon the haunted green Fairies dance around their queen, Then from yonder misty skies Cometh Lady Button
|
||
Eyes."
|
||
Suddenly she stopped weaving and rocking and sat down, her skinny arms wrapped around her knees, her good good
|
||
hands cupping her elbows. Her slow-moving eyes stopped and peered into the dirt at her feet. "That's my mama's song.
|
||
She taught me it."
|
||
"Through the muck and mist and glaam To our quiet cozy home, Where to singing sweet and low Rocks a cradle to and
|
||
fro.
|
||
Where the clock's dull monotone
|
||
Telleth of the day that's done,
|
||
Where the moonbeams hover o'er
|
||
Playthings sleeping on the floor,
|
||
Where my weary wee one lies
|
||
Cometh Lady Button Eyes.
|
||
Layeth she her hands upon
|
||
My dear weary little one,
|
||
And those white hands overspread
|
||
Like a veil the curly head,
|
||
Seem to fondle and caress
|
||
Every little silken tress.
|
||
Then she smooths the eyelids down
|
||
Over those two eyes of brown
|
||
In such soothing tender wise
|
||
Cometh Lady Button Eyes."
|
||
Amy sat quietly after her song, then repeated the last line before she stood, left the lean-to and walked off a little ways
|
||
to lean against a young ash. When she came back the sun was in the valley below and they were way above it in blue
|
||
Kentucky light.
|
||
"'You ain't dead yet, Lu? Lu?"
|
||
"Not yet."
|
||
"Make you a bet. You make it through the night, you make it all the way." Amy rearranged the leaves for comfort and
|
||
knelt down to massage the swollen feet again. "Give these one more real good rub," she said, and when Sethe sucked
|
||
air through her teeth, she said, "Shut up. You got to keep your mouth shut."
|
||
49
|
||
Careful of her tongue, Sethe bit down on her lips and let the good hands go to work to the tune of "So bees, sing soft
|
||
and bees, sing low." Afterward, Amy moved to the other side of the lean-to where, seated, she lowered her head toward
|
||
her shoulder and braided her hair, saying, "Don't up and die on me
|
||
in the night, you hear? I don't want to see your ugly black face hankering over me. If you do die, just go on off
|
||
somewhere where I can't see you, hear?"
|
||
"I hear," said Sethe. I'll do what I can, miss."
|
||
Sethe never expected to see another thing in this world, so when she felt toes prodding her hip it took a while to come
|
||
out of a sleep she thought was death. She sat up, stiff and shivery, while Amy looked in on her juicy back.
|
||
"Looks like the devil," said Amy. "But you made it through.
|
||
Come down here, Jesus, Lu made it through. That's because of me.
|
||
I'm good at sick things. Can you walk, you think?"
|
||
"I have to let my water some kind of way."
|
||
"Let's see you walk on em."
|
||
It was not good, but it was possible, so Sethe limped, holding on first to Amy, then to a sapling.
|
||
"Was me did it. I'm good at sick things ain't I?"
|
||
"Yeah," said Sethe, "you good."
|
||
"We got to get off this here hill. Come on. I'll take you down to the river. That ought to suit you. Me, I'm going to the
|
||
Pike. Take me straight to Boston. What's that all over your dress?"
|
||
"Milk."
|
||
"You one mess."
|
||
Sethe looked down at her stomach and touched it. The baby was dead. She had not died in the night, but the baby had.
|
||
If that was the case, then there was no stopping now. She would get that milk to her baby girl if she had to swim.
|
||
"Ain't you hungry?" Amy asked her.
|
||
"I ain't nothing but in a hurry, miss."
|
||
"Whoa. Slow down. Want some shoes?"
|
||
"Say what?"
|
||
"I figured how," said Amy and so she had. She tore two pieces from Sethe's shawl, filled them with leaves and tied them
|
||
over her feet, chattering all the while.
|
||
"How old are you, Lu? I been bleeding for four years but I ain't having nobody's baby. Won't catch me sweating milk
|
||
cause..."
|
||
"I know," said Sethe. "You going to Boston."
|
||
At noon they saw it; then they were near enough to hear it. By late afternoon they could drink from it if they wanted to.
|
||
Four stars were visible by the time they found, not a riverboat to stow Sethe away on, or a ferryman willing to take on a
|
||
fugitive passenger--nothing like that--but a whole boat to steal. It had one oar, lots of holes and two bird nests.
|
||
50
|
||
"There you go, Lu. Jesus looking at you."
|
||
Sethe was looking at one mile of dark water, which would have to be split with one oar in a useless boat against a
|
||
current dedicated to the Mississippi hundreds of miles away. It looked like home to her, and the baby (not dead in the
|
||
least) must have thought so too.
|
||
As soon as Sethe got close to the river her own water broke loose to join it. The break, followed by the redundant
|
||
announcement of labor, arched her back.
|
||
"What you doing that for?" asked Amy. "Ain't you got a brain in your head? Stop that right now. I said stop it, Lu. You the
|
||
dumbest thing on this here earth. Lu! Lu!"
|
||
Sethe couldn't think of anywhere to go but in. She waited for the sweet beat that followed the blast of pain. On her
|
||
knees again, she crawled into the boat. It waddled under her and she had just enough time to brace her leaf-bag feet on
|
||
the bench when another rip took her breath away. Panting under four summer stars, she threw her legs over the sides,
|
||
because here come the head, as Amy informed her as though she did not know it--as though the rip was a breakup of
|
||
walnut logs in the brace, or of lightning's jagged tear through a leather sky.
|
||
It was stuck. Face up and drowning in its mother's blood. Amy stopped begging Jesus and began to curse His daddy.
|
||
"Push!" screamed Amy.
|
||
"Pull," whispered Sethe.
|
||
And the strong hands went to work a fourth time, none too soon, for river water, seeping through any hole it chose,
|
||
was spreading over Sethe's hips. She reached one arm back and grabbed the rope while Amy fairly clawed at the head.
|
||
When a foot rose from the river bed and kicked the bottom of the boat and Sethe's behind, she knew it was done and
|
||
permitted herself a short faint. Coming to, she heard no cries, just Amy's encouraging coos. Nothing happened for so
|
||
long they both believed they had lost it. Sethe arched suddenly and the afterbirth shot out. Then the baby whimpered
|
||
and Sethe looked.
|
||
Twenty inches of cord hung from its belly and it trembled in the cooling evening air. Amy wrapped her skirt around it
|
||
and the wet sticky women clambered ashore to see what, indeed, God had in mind.
|
||
Spores of bluefern growing in the hollows along the riverbank float toward the water in silver-blue lines hard to see
|
||
unless you are in or near them, lying right at the river's edge when the sunshots
|
||
are low and drained. Often they are mistook for insects--but they are seeds in which the whole generation sleeps
|
||
confident of a future.
|
||
And for a moment it is easy to believe each one has one--will become all of what is contained in the spore: will live out
|
||
its days as planned.
|
||
This moment of certainty lasts no longer than that; longer, perhaps, than the spore itself.
|
||
On a riverbank in the cool of a summer evening two women struggled under a shower of silvery blue. They never
|
||
expected to see each other again in this world and at the moment couldn't care less.
|
||
But there on a summer night surrounded by bluefern they did something together appropriately and well. A pateroller
|
||
passing would have sniggered to see two throw-away people, two lawless outlaws-- a slave and a barefoot whitewoman
|
||
with unpinned hair--wrapping a ten-minute-old baby in the rags they wore. But no pateroller came and no preacher.
|
||
The water sucked and swallowed itself beneath them. There was nothing to disturb them at their work. So they did it
|
||
appropriately and well.
|
||
Twilight came on and Amy said she had to go; that she wouldn't be caught dead in daylight on a busy river with a
|
||
runaway. After rinsing her hands and face in the river, she stood and looked down at the baby wrapped and tied to
|
||
51
|
||
Sethe's chest.
|
||
"She's never gonna know who I am. You gonna tell her? Who brought her into this here world?" She lifted her chin,
|
||
looked off into the place where the sun used to be. "You better tell her. You hear? Say Miss Amy Denver. Of Boston."
|
||
Sethe felt herself falling into a sleep she knew would be deep. On the lip of it, just before going under, she
|
||
thought, "That's pretty.
|
||
Denver. Real pretty."
|
||
Chapter 9
|
||
IT WAS TIME to lay it all down. Before Paul D came and sat on her porch steps, words whispered in the keeping room
|
||
had kept her going. Helped her endure the chastising ghost; refurbished the baby faces of Howard and Buglar and kept
|
||
them whole in the world because in her dreams she saw only their parts in trees; and kept her husband shadowy but
|
||
there--somewhere. Now Halle's face between the butter press and the churn swelled larger and larger, crowding her
|
||
eyes and making her head hurt. She wished for Baby Suggs' fingers molding her nape, reshaping it, saying, "Lay em
|
||
down, Sethe. Sword and shield. Down. Down. Both of em down. Down by the riverside.
|
||
Sword and shield. Don't study war no more. Lay all that mess down.
|
||
Sword and shield." And under the pressing fingers and the quiet instructive voice, she would. Her heavy knives of
|
||
defense against misery, regret, gall and hurt, she placed one by one on a bank where dear water rushed on below.
|
||
Nine years without the fingers or the voice of Baby Suggs was too much. And words whispered in the keeping room
|
||
were too little.
|
||
The butter-smeared face of a man God made none sweeter than demanded more: an arch built or a robe sewn. Some
|
||
fixing ceremony.
|
||
Sethe decided to go to the Clearing, back where Baby Suggs had danced in sunlight.
|
||
Before 124 and everybody in it had closed down, veiled over and shut away; before it had become the plaything of
|
||
spirits and the home of the chafed, 124 had been a cheerful, buzzing house where Baby Suggs, holy, loved, cautioned,
|
||
fed, chastised and soothed. Where not one but two pots simmered on the stove; where the lamp burned all night long.
|
||
Strangers rested there while children tried on their shoes. Messages were left there, for whoever needed them was
|
||
sure to stop in one day soon. Talk was low and to the point--for Baby Suggs, holy, didn't approve of extra. "Everything
|
||
depends on knowing how much," she said, and "Good is knowing when to stop."
|
||
It was in front of that 124 that Sethe climbed off a wagon, her newborn tied to her chest, and felt for the first time the
|
||
wide arms of her mother-in-law, who had made it to Cincinnati. Who decided that, because slave life had "busted her
|
||
legs, back, head, eyes, hands, kidneys, womb and tongue," she had nothing left to make a living with but her heart--
|
||
which she put to work at once. Accepting no title of honor before her name, but allowing a small caress after it, she
|
||
became an unchurched preacher, one who visited pulpits and opened her great heart to those who could use it. In
|
||
winter and fall she carried it to AME's and Baptists, Holinesses and Sanctifieds, the Church of the Redeemer and the
|
||
Redeemed. Uncalled, unrobed, un anointed, she let her great heart beat in their presence. When warm weather came,
|
||
Baby Suggs, holy, followed by every black man, woman and child who could make it through, took her great heart to
|
||
the Clearing--a wide-open place cut deep in the woods nobody knew for what at the end of a path known only to deer
|
||
and whoever cleared the land in the first place. In the heat of every Saturday afternoon, she sat in the clearing while the
|
||
people waited among the trees.
|
||
After situating herself on a huge flat-sided rock, Baby Suggs bowed her head and prayed silently. The company watched
|
||
her from the trees. They knew she was ready when she put her stick down. Then she shouted, "Let the children come!"
|
||
52
|
||
and they ran from the trees toward her.
|
||
"Let your mothers hear you laugh," she told them, and the woods rang. The adults looked on and could not help smiling.
|
||
Then "Let the grown men come," she shouted. They stepped out one by one from among the ringing trees.
|
||
"Let your wives and your children see you dance," she told them, and groundlife shuddered under their feet.
|
||
Finally she called the women to her. "Cry," she told them. "For the living and the dead. Just cry." And without covering
|
||
their eyes the women let loose.
|
||
It started that way: laughing children, dancing men, crying women and then it got mixed up. Women stopped crying and
|
||
danced; men sat down and cried; children danced, women laughed, children cried until, exhausted and riven, all and
|
||
each lay about the Clearing damp and gasping for breath. In the silence that followed, Baby Suggs, holy, offered up to
|
||
them her great big heart.
|
||
She did not tell them to clean up their lives or to go and sin no more. She did not tell them they were the blessed of the
|
||
earth, its inheriting meek or its glorybound pure.
|
||
She told them that the only grace they could have was the grace they could imagine. That if they could not see it, they
|
||
would not have it.
|
||
"Here," she said, "in this here place, we flesh; flesh that weeps, laughs; flesh that dances on bare feet in grass. Love it.
|
||
Love it hard.
|
||
Yonder they do not love your flesh. They despise it. They don't love your eyes; they'd just as soon pick em out. No more
|
||
do they love the skin on your back. Yonder they flay it. And O my people they do not love your hands. Those they only
|
||
use, tie, bind, chop off and leave empty. Love your hands! Love them. Raise them up and kiss them. Touch others with
|
||
them, pat them together, stroke them on your face 'cause they don't love that either. You got to love it, you! And no,
|
||
they ain't in love with your mouth. Yonder, out there, they will see it broken and break it again. What you say out of it
|
||
they will not heed. What you scream from it they do not hear. What you put into it to nourish your body they will snatch
|
||
away and give you leavins instead. No, they don't love your mouth. You got to love it.
|
||
This is flesh I'm talking about here. Flesh that needs to be loved.
|
||
Feet that need to rest and to dance; backs that need support; shoulders that need arms, strong arms I'm telling you. And
|
||
O my people, out yonder, hear me, they do not love your neck unnoosed and straight. So love your neck; put a hand on
|
||
it, grace it, stroke it and hold it up. And all your inside parts that they'd just as soon slop for hogs, you got to love them.
|
||
The dark, dark liver--love it, love it, and the beat and beating heart, love that too. More than eyes or feet.
|
||
More than lungs that have yet to draw free air. More than your life holding womb and your life-giving private parts, hear
|
||
me now, love your heart. For this is the prize." Saying no more, she stood up then and danced with her twisted hip the
|
||
rest of what her heart had to say while the others opened their mouths and gave her the music.
|
||
Long notes held until the four-part harmony was perfect enough for their deeply loved flesh.
|
||
Sethe wanted to be there now. At the least to listen to the spaces that the long-ago singing had left behind. At the most
|
||
to get a clue from her husband's dead mother as to what she should do with her sword and shield now, dear Jesus, now
|
||
nine years after Baby Suggs, holy, proved herself a liar, dismissed
|
||
her great heart and lay in the keeping-room bed roused once in a while by a craving for color and not for another thing.
|
||
"Those white things have taken all I had or dreamed," she said, "and broke my heartstrings too. There is no bad luck
|
||
in the world but whitefolks." 124 shut down and put up with the venom of its ghost. No more lamp all night long,
|
||
or neighbors dropping by. No low conversations after supper. No watched barefoot children playing in the shoes of
|
||
strangers. Baby Suggs, holy, believed she had lied.
|
||
53
|
||
There was no grace-imaginary or real--and no sunlit dance in a Clearing could change that. Her faith, her love, her
|
||
imagination and her great big old heart began to collapse twenty-eight days after her daughter-in-law arrived.
|
||
Yet it was to the Clearing that Sethe determined to go--to pay tribute to Halle. Before the light changed, while it was still
|
||
the green blessed place she remembered: misty with plant steam and the decay of berries.
|
||
She put on a shawl and told Denver and Beloved to do likewise.
|
||
All three set out late one Sunday morning, Sethe leading, the girls trotting behind, not a soul in sight.
|
||
When they reached the woods it took her no time to find the path through it because big-city revivals were held there
|
||
regularly now, complete with food-laden tables, banjos and a tent. The old path was a track now, but still arched over
|
||
with trees dropping buckeyes onto the grass below.
|
||
There was nothing to be done other than what she had done, but Sethe blamed herself for Baby Suggs' collapse.
|
||
However many times Baby denied it, Sethe knew the grief at 124 started when she jumped down off the wagon, her
|
||
newborn tied to her chest in the underwear of a whitegirl looking for Boston.
|
||
Followed by the two girls, down a bright green corridor of oak and horse chestnut, Sethe began to sweat a sweat just
|
||
like the other one when she woke, mud-caked, on the banks of the Ohio.
|
||
Amy was gone. Sethe was alone and weak, but alive, and so was her baby. She walked a ways downriver and then
|
||
stood gazing at the glimmering water. By and by a flatbed slid into view, but she could not see if the figures on it were
|
||
whitepeople or not. She began to sweat from a fever she thanked God for since it would certainly keep her baby warm.
|
||
When the flatbed was beyond her sight she stumbled on and found herself near three coloredpeople fishing-- two
|
||
boys and an older man. She stopped and waited to be spoken to. One of the boys pointed and the man looked over his
|
||
shoulder at her--a quick look since all he needed to know about her he could see in no time.
|
||
No one said anything for a while. Then the man said, "Headin'
|
||
'cross?"
|
||
"Yes, sir," said Sethe.
|
||
"Anybody know you coming?"
|
||
"Yes, sir."
|
||
He looked at her again and nodded toward a rock that stuck out of the ground above him like a bottom lip. Sethe walked
|
||
to it and sat down. The stone had eaten the sun's rays but was nowhere near as hot as she was. Too tired to move, she
|
||
stayed there, the sun in her eyes making her dizzy. Sweat poured over her and bathed the baby completely. She must
|
||
have slept sitting up, because when next she opened her eyes the man was standing in front of her with a smoking-hot
|
||
piece of fried eel in his hands. It was an effort to reach for, more to smell, impossible to eat. She begged him for water
|
||
and he gave her some of the Ohio in a jar. Sethe drank it all and begged more. The clanging was back in her head but she
|
||
refused to believe that she had come all that way, endured all she had, to die on the wrong side of the river.
|
||
The man watched her streaming face and called one of the boys over.
|
||
"Take off that coat," he told him.
|
||
"Sir?"
|
||
"You heard me."
|
||
The boy slipped out of his jacket, whining, "What you gonna do? What I'm gonna wear?"
|
||
The man untied the baby from her chest and wrapped it in the boy's coat, knotting the sleeves in front.
|
||
54
|
||
"What I'm gonna wear?"
|
||
The old man sighed and, after a pause, said, "You want it back, then go head and take it off that baby. Put the baby
|
||
naked in the grass and put your coat back on. And if you can do it, then go on 'way somewhere and don't come back."
|
||
The boy dropped his eyes, then turned to join the other. With eel in her hand, the baby at her feet, Sethe dozed, dry-
|
||
mouthed and sweaty. Evening came and the man touched her shoulder.
|
||
Contrary to what she expected they poled upriver, far away from the rowboat Amy had found. Just when she thought
|
||
he was taking her back to Kentucky, he turned the flatbed and crossed the Ohio like a shot. There he helped her up the
|
||
steep bank, while the boy without a jacket carried the baby who wore it. The man led her to a brush-covered hutch with
|
||
a beaten floor.
|
||
"Wait here. Somebody be here directly. Don't move. They'll find you."
|
||
"Thank you," she said. "I wish I knew your name so I could remember you right."
|
||
"Name's Stamp," he said. "Stamp Paid. Watch out for that there baby, you hear?"
|
||
"I hear. I hear," she said, but she didn't. Hours later a woman was right up on her before she heard a thing. A short
|
||
woman, young, with a croaker sack, greeted her.
|
||
"'Saw the sign a while ago," she said. "But I couldn't get here no quicker."
|
||
"What sign?" asked Sethe.
|
||
"Stamp leaves the old sty open when there's a crossing. Knots a white rag on the post if it's a child too."
|
||
She knelt and emptied the sack. "My name's Ella," she said, taking a wool blanket, cotton cloth, two baked sweet
|
||
potatoes and a pair of men's shoes from the sack. "My husband, John, is out yonder a ways. Where you heading?"
|
||
Sethe told her about Baby Suggs where she had sent her three children.
|
||
Ella wrapped a cloth strip tight around the baby's navel as she listened for the holes--the things the fugitives did not say;
|
||
the questions they did not ask. Listened too for the unnamed, unmentioned people left behind. She shook gravel from
|
||
the men's shoes and tried to force Sethe's feet into them. They would not go. Sadly, they split them down the heel, sorry
|
||
indeed to ruin so valuable an item. Sethe put on the boy's jacket, not daring to ask whether there was any word of the
|
||
children.
|
||
"They made it," said Ella. "Stamp ferried some of that party.
|
||
Left them on Bluestone. It ain't too far."
|
||
Sethe couldn't think of anything to do, so grateful was she, so she peeled a potato, ate it, spit it up and ate more in quiet
|
||
celebration.
|
||
"They be glad to see you," said Ella. "When was this one born?"
|
||
"Yesterday," said Sethe, wiping sweat from under her chin. "I hope she makes it."
|
||
Ella looked at the tiny, dirty face poking out of the wool blanket and shook her head. "Hard to say," she said. "If
|
||
anybody was to ask me I'd say, 'Don't love nothing.' " Then, as if to take the edge off her pronouncement, she smiled at
|
||
Sethe. "You had that baby by yourself?"
|
||
"No. Whitegirl helped."
|
||
"Then we better make tracks."
|
||
55
|
||
Baby Suggs kissed her on the mouth and refused to let her see the children. They were asleep she said and Sethe was
|
||
too uglylooking to wake them in the night. She took the newborn and handed it to a young woman in a bonnet, telling
|
||
her not to clean the eyes till she got the mother's urine.
|
||
"Has it cried out yet?" asked Baby.
|
||
"A little."
|
||
"Time enough. Let's get the mother well."
|
||
She led Sethe to the keeping room and, by the light of a spirit lamp, bathed her in sections, starting with her face. Then,
|
||
while waiting for another pan of heated water, she sat next to her and stitched gray cotton. Sethe dozed and woke
|
||
to the washing of her hands and arms. After each bathing, Baby covered her with a quilt and put another pan on in
|
||
the kitchen. Tearing sheets, stitching the gray cotton, she supervised the woman in the bonnet who tended the baby
|
||
and cried into her cooking. When Sethe's legs were done, Baby looked at her feet and wiped them lightly. She cleaned
|
||
between Sethe's legs with two separate pans of hot water and then tied her stomach and vagina with sheets. Finally she
|
||
attacked the unrecognizable feet.
|
||
"You feel this?"
|
||
"Feel what?" asked Sethe.
|
||
"Nothing. Heave up." She helped Sethe to a rocker and lowered her feet into a bucket of salt water and juniper. The rest
|
||
of the night Sethe sat soaking. The crust from her nipples Baby softened with lard and then washed away. By dawn the
|
||
silent baby woke and took her mother's milk.
|
||
"Pray God it ain't turned bad," said Baby. "And when you through, call me." As she turned to go, Baby Suggs caught a
|
||
glimpse of something dark on the bed sheet. She frowned and looked at her daughter-in-law bending toward the baby.
|
||
Roses of blood blossomed in the blanket covering Sethe's shoulders. Baby Suggs hid her mouth with her hand. When
|
||
the nursing was over and the newborn was asleep--its eyes half open, its tongue dream-sucking--wordlessly the older
|
||
woman greased the flowering back and pinned a double thickness of cloth to the inside of the newly stitched dress.
|
||
It was not real yet. Not yet. But when her sleepy boys and crawl ing-already? girl were brought in, it didn't matter
|
||
whether it was real or not. Sethe lay in bed under, around, over, among but especially with them all. The little girl
|
||
dribbled clear spit into her face, and Sethe's laugh of delight was so loud the crawling-already? baby blinked.
|
||
Buglar and Howard played with her ugly feet, after daring each other to be the first to touch them. She kept kissing
|
||
them. She kissed the backs of their necks, the tops of their heads and the centers of their palms, and it was the boys
|
||
who decided enough was enough when she liked their shirts to kiss their tight round bellies. She stopped when and
|
||
because they said, "Pappie come?"
|
||
She didn't cry. She said "soon" and smiled so they would think the brightness in her eyes was love alone. It was some
|
||
time before she let Baby Suggs shoo the boys away so Sethe could put on the gray cotton dress her mother-in-law had
|
||
started stitching together the night before. Finally she lay back and cradled the crawling already? girl in her arms. She
|
||
enclosed her left nipple with two fingers of her right hand and the child opened her mouth. They hit home together.
|
||
Baby Suggs came in and laughed at them, telling Sethe how strong the baby girl was, how smart, already crawling. Then
|
||
she stooped to gather up the ball of rags that had been Sethe's clothes.
|
||
"Nothing worth saving in here," she said.
|
||
Sethe liked her eyes. "Wait," she called. "Look and see if there's something still knotted up in the petticoat."
|
||
Baby Suggs inched the spoiled fabric through her fingers and came upon what felt like pebbles. She held them out
|
||
toward Sethe. "Going away present?"
|
||
56
|
||
"Wedding present."
|
||
"Be nice if there was a groom to go with it." She gazed into her hand. "What you think happened to him?"
|
||
"I don't know," said Sethe. "He wasn't where he said to meet him at. I had to get out. Had to." Sethe watched the
|
||
drowsy eyes of the sucking girl for a moment then looked at Baby Suggs' face. "He'll make it. If I made it, Halle sure can."
|
||
"Well, put these on. Maybe they'll light his way." Convinced her son was dead, she handed the stones to Sethe.
|
||
"I need holes in my ears."
|
||
"I'll do it," said Baby Suggs. "Soon's you up to it."
|
||
Sethe jingled the earrings for the pleasure of the crawling-already? girl, who reached for them over and over again.
|
||
In the Clearing, Sethe found Baby's old preaching rock and remembered the smell of leaves simmering in the sun,
|
||
thunderous feet and the shouts that ripped pods off the limbs of the chestnuts. With Baby Suggs' heart in charge, the
|
||
people let go.
|
||
Sethe had had twenty-eight days--the travel of one whole moon--of unslaved life. From the pure clear stream of spit
|
||
that the little girl dribbled into her face to her oily blood was twenty-eight days. Days of healing, ease and real-talk. Days
|
||
of company: knowing the names of forty, fifty other Negroes, their views, habits; where they had been and what done;
|
||
of feeling their fun and sorrow along with her own, which made it better. One taught her the alphabet; another a stitch.
|
||
All taught her how it felt to wake up at dawn and decide what to do with the day. That's how she got through the
|
||
waiting for Halle.
|
||
Bit by bit, at 124 and in the Clearing, along with the others, she had claimed herself. Freeing yourself was one thing;
|
||
claiming ownership of that freed self was another.
|
||
Now she sat on Baby Suggs' rock, Denver and Beloved watching her from the trees. There will never be a day, she
|
||
thought, when Halle will knock on the door. Not knowing it was hard; knowing it was harder.
|
||
Just the fingers, she thought. Just let me feel your fingers again on the back of my neck and I will lay it all down, make
|
||
a way out of this no way. Sethe bowed her head and sure enough--they were there. Lighter now, no more than the
|
||
strokes of bird feather, but unmistakably caressing fingers. She had to relax a bit to let them do their work, so light was
|
||
the touch, childlike almost, more finger kiss than kneading. Still she was grateful for the effort; Baby Suggs' long distance
|
||
love was equal to any skin-close love she had known. The desire, let alone the gesture, to meet her needs was good
|
||
enough to lift her spirits to the place where she could take the next step: ask for some clarifying word; some advice
|
||
about how to keep on with a brain greedy for news nobody could live with in a world happy to provide it.
|
||
She knew Paul D was adding something to her life--something she wanted to count on but was scared to. Now he had
|
||
added more: new pictures and old rememories that broke her heart. Into the empty space of not knowing about Halle--
|
||
-a space sometimes colored with righteous resentment at what could have been his cowardice, or stupidity or bad luck-
|
||
-that empty place of no definite news was filled now with a brand-new sorrow and who could tell how many more on
|
||
the way. Years ago--when 124 was alive--she had women friends, men friends from all around to share grief with. Then
|
||
there was no one, for they would not visit her while the baby ghost filled the house, and she returned their disapproval
|
||
with the potent pride of the mistreated. But now there was someone to share it, and he had beat the spirit away the
|
||
very day he entered her house and no sign of it since. A blessing, but in its place he brought another kind of haunting:
|
||
Halle's face smeared with butter and the dabber too; his own mouth jammed full of iron, and Lord knows what else he
|
||
could tell her if he wanted to.
|
||
The fingers touching the back of her neck were stronger now-- the strokes bolder as though Baby Suggs were gathering
|
||
strength.
|
||
Putting the thumbs at the nape, while the fingers pressed the sides.
|
||
57
|
||
Harder, harder, the fingers moved slowly around toward her windpipe, making little circles on the way. Sethe was
|
||
actually more surprised than frightened to find that she was being strangled. Or so it seemed. In any case, Baby Suggs'
|
||
fingers had a grip on her that would not let her breathe. Tumbling forward from her seat on the rock, she clawed at the
|
||
hands that were not there. Her feet were thrashing by the time Denver got to her and then Beloved.
|
||
"Ma'am! Ma'am!" Denver shouted. "Ma'ammy!" and turned her mother over on her back.
|
||
The fingers left off and Sethe had to swallow huge draughts of air before she recognized her daughter's face next to her
|
||
own and Beloved's hovering above.
|
||
"You all right?"
|
||
"Somebody choked me," said Sethe.
|
||
"Who?"
|
||
Sethe rubbed her neck and struggled to a sitting position. "Grandma Baby, I reckon. I just asked her to rub my neck, like
|
||
she used to and she was doing fine and then just got crazy with it, I guess."
|
||
"She wouldn't do that to you, Ma'am. Grandma Baby? Uh uh."
|
||
"Help me up from here."
|
||
"Look." Beloved was pointing at Sethe's neck.
|
||
"What is it? What you see?" asked Sethe.
|
||
"Bruises," said Denver.
|
||
"On my neck?"
|
||
"Here," said Beloved. "Here and here, too." She reached out her hand and touched the splotches, gathering color darker
|
||
than Sethe's dark throat, and her fingers were mighty cool.
|
||
"That don't help nothing," Denver said, but Beloved was leaning in, her two hands stroking the damp skin that felt like
|
||
chamois and looked like taffeta.
|
||
Sethe moaned. The girl's fingers were so cool and knowing. Sethe's knotted, private, walk-on-water life gave in a bit,
|
||
softened, and it seemed that the glimpse of happiness she caught in the shadows swinging hands on the road to the
|
||
carnival was a likelihood--if she could just manage the news Paul D brought and the news he kept to himself. Just
|
||
manage it. Not break, fall or cry each time a hateful picture drifted in front of her face. Not develop some permanent
|
||
craziness like Baby Suggs' friend, a young woman in a bonnet whose food was full of tears. Like Aunt Phyllis, who slept
|
||
with her eyes wide open. Like Jackson Till, who slept under the bed. All she wanted was to go on. As she had. Alone with
|
||
her daughter in a haunted house she managed every damn thing. Why now, with Paul D instead of the ghost, was she
|
||
breaking up? getting scared? needing Baby?
|
||
The worst was over, wasn't it? She had already got through, hadn't she? With the ghost in 124 she could bear, do, solve
|
||
anything. Now a hint of what had happened to Halie and she cut out like a rabbit looking for its mother.
|
||
Beloved's fingers were heavenly. Under them and breathing evenly again, the anguish rolled down. The peace Sethe had
|
||
come there to find crept into her.
|
||
We must look a sight, she thought, and closed her eyes to see it: the three women in the middle of the Clearing, at the
|
||
base of the rock where Baby Suggs, holy, had loved. One seated, yielding up her throat to the kind hands of one of the
|
||
two kneeling before her.
|
||
Denver watched the faces of the other two. Beloved watched the work her thumbs were doing and must have loved
|
||
58
|
||
what she saw because she leaned over and kissed the tenderness under Sethe's chin.
|
||
They stayed that way for a while because neither Denver nor Sethe knew how not to: how to stop and not love the look
|
||
or feel of the lips that kept on kissing. Then Sethe, grabbing Beloved's hair
|
||
and blinking rapidly, separated herself. She later believed that it was because the girl's breath was exactly like new milk
|
||
that she said to her, stern and frowning, "You too old for that."
|
||
She looked at Denver, and seeing panic about to become something more, stood up quickly, breaking the tableau apart.
|
||
"Come on up! Up!" Sethe waved the girls to their feet. As they left the Clearing they looked pretty much the same
|
||
as they had when they had come: Sethe in the lead, the girls a ways back. All silent as before, but with a difference.
|
||
Sethe was bothered, not because of the kiss, but because, just before it, when she was feeling so fine letting Beloved
|
||
massage away the pain, the fingers she was loving and the ones that had soothed her before they strangled her had
|
||
reminded her of something that now slipped her mind. But one thing for sure, Baby Suggs had not choked her as first
|
||
she thought. Denver was right, and walking in the dappled tree-light, clearer-headed now-- away from the enchantment
|
||
of the Clearing--Sethe remembered the tou ch of those fingers that she knew better than her own. They had bathed her
|
||
in sections, wrapped her womb, combed her hair, oiled her nipples, stitched her clothes, cleaned her feet, greased her
|
||
back and dropped just about anything they were doing to massage Sethe's nape when, especially in the early days, her
|
||
spirits fell down under the weight of the things she remembered and those she did not: schoolteacher writing in ink she
|
||
herself had made while his nephews played on her; the face of the woman in a felt hat as she rose to stretch in the field.
|
||
If she lay among all the hands in the world, she would know Baby Suggs' just as she did the good hands of the whitegirl
|
||
looking for velvet. But for eighteen years she had lived in a house full of touches from the other side. And the thumbs
|
||
that pressed her nape were the same. Maybe that was where it had gone to. After Paul D beat it out of 124, maybe it
|
||
collected itself in the Clearing. Reasonable, she thought.
|
||
Why she had taken Denver and Beloved with her didn't puzzle her now--at the time it seemed impulse, with a vague
|
||
wish for protection.
|
||
And the girls had saved her, Beloved so agitated she behaved like a two-year-old.
|
||
Like a faint smell of burning that disappears when the fire is cut off or the window opened for a breeze, the suspicion
|
||
that the girl's touch was also exactly like the baby's ghost dissipated. It was only a tiny disturbance anyway--not strong
|
||
enough to divert her from the ambition welling in her now: she wanted Paul D. No matter what he told and knew, she
|
||
wanted him in her life. More than commemorating Halle, that is what she had come to the Clearing to figure out, and
|
||
now it was figured. Trust and rememory, yes, the way she believed it could be when he cradled her before the cooking
|
||
stove.
|
||
The weight and angle of him; the true-to-life beard hair on him; arched back, educated hands. His waiting eyes and
|
||
awful human power. The mind of him that knew her own. Her story was bearable because it was his as well--to tell, to
|
||
refine and tell again. The things neither knew about the other--the things neither had word-shapes for--well, it would
|
||
come in time: where they led him off to sucking iron; the perfect death of her crawling-already? baby.
|
||
She wanted to get back--fast. Set these idle girls to some work that would fill their wandering heads. Rushing through
|
||
the green corridor, cooler now because the sun had moved, it occurred to her that the two were alike as sisters.
|
||
Their obedience and absolute reliability shot through with surprise. Sethe understood Denver. Solitude had made
|
||
her secretive--self-manipulated. Years of haunting had dulled her in ways you wouldn't believe and sharpened her in
|
||
ways you wouldn't believe either. The consequence was a timid but hard-headed daughter Sethe would die to protect.
|
||
The other, Beloved, she knew less, nothing, about---except that there was nothing she wouldn't do for Sethe and that
|
||
Denver and she liked each other's company. Now she thought she knew why. They spent up or held on to their feelings
|
||
in harmonious ways. What one had to give the other was pleased to take. They hung back in the trees that ringed the
|
||
Clearing, then rushed into it with screams and kisses when Sethe choked--anyhow that's how she explained it to herself
|
||
for she noticed neither competition between the two nor domination by one. On her mind was the supper she wanted
|
||
to fix for Paul D--something difficult to do, something she would do just so--to launch her newer, stronger life with a
|
||
59
|
||
tender man. Those litty bitty potatoes browned on all sides, heavy on the pepper; snap beans seasoned with rind; yellow
|
||
squash sprinkled with vinegar and sugar. Maybe corn cut from the cob and fried with green onions and butter. Raised
|
||
bread, even.
|
||
Her mind, searching the kitchen before she got to it, was so full of her offering she did not see right away, in the space
|
||
under the white stairs, the wooden tub and Paul D sitting in it. She smiled at him and he smiled back.
|
||
"Summer must be over," she said.
|
||
"Come on in here."
|
||
"Uh uh. Girls right behind me."
|
||
"I don't hear nobody."
|
||
"I have to cook, Paul D."
|
||
"Me too." He stood up and made her stay there while he held her in his arms. Her dress soaked up the water from his
|
||
body. His jaw was near her ear. Her chin touched his shoulder.
|
||
"What you gonna cook?"
|
||
"I thought some snap beans."
|
||
"Oh, yeah."
|
||
"Fry up a little corn?"
|
||
"Yeah."
|
||
There was no question but that she could do it. Just like the day she arrived at 124--sure enough, she had milk enough
|
||
for all.
|
||
Beloved came through the door and they ought to have heard her tread, but they didn't.
|
||
Breathing and murmuring, breathing and murmuring. Beloved heard them as soon as the door banged shut behind her.
|
||
She jumped at the slam and swiveled her head toward the whispers coming from behind the white stairs. She took a
|
||
step and felt like crying. She had been so close, then closer. And it was so much better than the anger that ruled when
|
||
Sethe did or thought anything that excluded herself.
|
||
She could bear the hours---nine or ten of them each day but one--- when Sethe was gone. Bear even the nights when
|
||
she was close but out of sight, behind walls and doors lying next to him. But now-- even the daylight time that Beloved
|
||
had counted on, disciplined herself to be content with, was being reduced, divided by Sethe's willingness to pay
|
||
attention to other things. Him mostly. Him who said something to her that made her run out into the woods and talk to
|
||
herself on a rock. Him who kept her hidden at night behind doors.
|
||
And him who had hold of her now whispering behind the stairs after Beloved had rescued her neck and was ready now
|
||
to put her hand in that woman's own.
|
||
Beloved turned around and left. Denver had not arrived, or else she was waiting somewhere outside. Beloved went to
|
||
look, pausing to watch a cardinal hop from limb to branch. She followed the blood spot shifting in the leaves until she
|
||
lost it and even then she walked on, backward, still hungry for another glimpse.
|
||
She turned finally and ran through the woods to the stream.
|
||
Standing close to its edge she watched her reflection there. When Denver's face joined hers, they stared at each other in
|
||
the water.
|
||
60
|
||
"You did it, I saw you," said Denver.
|
||
"What?"
|
||
"I saw your face. You made her choke."
|
||
"I didn't do it."
|
||
"You told me you loved her."
|
||
"I fixed it, didn't I? Didn't I fix her neck?"
|
||
"After. After you choked her neck."
|
||
"I kissed her neck. I didn't choke it. The circle of iron choked it."
|
||
"I saw you." Denver grabbed Beloved's arm.
|
||
"Look out, girl," said Beloved and, snatching her arm away, ran ahead as fast as she could along the stream that sang on
|
||
the other side of the woods.
|
||
Left alone, Denver wondered if, indeed, she had been wrong. She and Beloved were standing in the trees whispering,
|
||
while Sethe sat on the rock. Denver knew that the Clearing used to be where Baby Suggs preached, but that was when
|
||
she was a baby. She had never been there herself to remember it .124 and the field behind it were all the world she
|
||
knew or wanted.
|
||
Once upon a time she had known more and wanted to. Had walked the path leading to a real other house. Had stood
|
||
outside the window listening. Four times she did it on her own--crept away from 12 4 early in the afternoon when her
|
||
mother and grandmother had their guard down, just before supper, after chores; the blank hour before gears changed
|
||
to evening occupations. Denver had walked off looking for the house other children visited but not her. When she found
|
||
it she was too timid to go to the front door so she peeped in the window. Lady Jones sat in a straight-backed chair;
|
||
several children sat cross-legged on the floor in front of her. Lady Jones had a book. The children had slates. Lady Jones
|
||
was saying something too soft for Denver to hear. The children were saying it after her. Four times Denver went to look.
|
||
The fifth time Lady Jones caught her and said, "Come in the front door, Miss Denver. This is not a side show."
|
||
So she had almost a whole year of the company of her peers and along with them learned to spell and count. She was
|
||
seven, and those two hours in the afternoon were precious to her. Especially so because she had done it on her own
|
||
and was pleased and surprised by the pleasure and surprise it created in her mother and her brothers. For a nickel a
|
||
month, Lady Jones did what whitepeople thought unnecessary if not illegal: crowded her little parlor with the colored
|
||
children who had time for and interest in book learning. The nickel, tied to a handkerchief knot, tied to her belt, that she
|
||
carried to Lady Jones, thrilled her. The effort to handle chalk expertly and avoid the scream it would make; the capital
|
||
w, the little i, the beauty of the letters in her name, the deeply mournful sentences from the Bible Lady Jones used as
|
||
a textbook. Denver practiced every morning; starred every afternoon. She was so happy she didn't even know she was
|
||
being avoided by her classmates--that they made excuses and altered their pace not to walk with her. It was Nelson
|
||
Lord--the boy as smart as she was--who put a stop to it; who asked her the question about her mother that put chalk,
|
||
the little i and all the rest that those afternoons held, out of reach forever. She should have laughed when he said it, or
|
||
pushed him down, but there was no meanness in his face or his voice. Just curiosity. But the thing that leapt up in her
|
||
when he asked it was a thing that had been lying there all along.
|
||
She never went back. The second day she didn't go, Sethe asked her why not. Denver didn't answer. She was too scared
|
||
to ask her brothers or anyone else Nelson Lord's question because certain odd and terrifying feelings about her mother
|
||
were collecting around the thing that leapt up inside her. Later on, after Baby Suggs died, she did not wonder why
|
||
Howard and Buglar had run away. She did not agree with Sethe that they left because of the ghost. If so, what took them
|
||
so long? They had lived with it as long as she had. But if Nelson Lord was right--no wonder they were sulky, staying away
|
||
from home as much as they could.
|
||
61
|
||
Meanwhile the monstrous and unmanageable dreams about Sethe found release in the concentration Denver began to
|
||
fix on the baby ghost. Before Nelson Lord, she had been barely interested in its antics.
|
||
The patience of her mother and grandmother in its presence made her indifferent to it. Then it began to irritate her,
|
||
wear her out with its mischief. That was when she walked off to follow the children to Lady Jones' house-school. Now
|
||
it held for her all the anger, love and fear she didn't know what to do with. Even when she did muster the courage to
|
||
ask Nelson Lord's question, she could not hear Sethe's answer, nor Baby Suggs' words, nor anything at all thereafter.
|
||
For two years she walked in a silence too solid for penetration but which gave her eyes a power even she found hard
|
||
to believe. The black nostrils of a sparrow sitting on a branch sixty feet above her head, for instance. For two years
|
||
she heard nothing at all and then she heard close thunder crawling up the stairs. Baby Suggs thought it was Here Boy
|
||
padding into places he never went. Sethe thought it was the India-rubber ball the boys played with bounding down the
|
||
stairs.
|
||
"Is that damn dog lost his mind?" shouted Baby Suggs.
|
||
"He's on the porch," said Sethe. "See for yourself."
|
||
"Well, what's that I'm hearing then?"
|
||
Sethe slammed the stove lid. "Buglar! Buglar! I told you all not to use that ball in here." She looked at the white stairs
|
||
and saw Denver at the top.
|
||
"She was trying to get upstairs."
|
||
"What?" The cloth she used to handle the stove lid was balled in Sethe's hand.
|
||
"The baby," said Denver. "Didn't you hear her crawling?"
|
||
What to jump on first was the problem: that Denver heard anything at all or that the crawling-already? baby girl was still
|
||
at it but more so, The return of Denver's hearing, cut off by an answer she could not hear to hear, cut on by the sound
|
||
of her dead sister trying to climb the stairs, signaled another shift in the fortunes of the people of 124. From then on the
|
||
presence was full of spite. Instead of sighs and accidents there was pointed and deliberate abuse. Buglar and Howard
|
||
grew furious at the company of the women in the house, and spent in sullen reproach any time they had away from
|
||
their odd work in town carrying water and feed at the stables. Until the spite became so personal it drove each off. Baby
|
||
Suggs grew tired, went to bed and stayed there until her big old heart quit. Except for an occasional request for color
|
||
she said practically nothing--until the afternoon of the last day of her life when she got out of bed, skipped slowly to the
|
||
door of the keeping room and announced to Sethe and Denver the lesson she had learned from her sixty years a slave
|
||
and ten years free: that there was no bad luck in the world but white people. "They don't know when to stop," she said,
|
||
and returned to her bed, pulled up the quilt and left them to hold that thought forever.
|
||
Shortly afterward Sethe and Denver tried to call up and reason with the baby ghost, but got nowhere. It took a man,
|
||
Paul D, to shout it off, beat it off and take its place for himself. And carnival or no carnival, Denver preferred the
|
||
venomous baby to him any day.
|
||
During the first days after Paul D moved in, Denver stayed in her emerald closet as long as she could, lonely as a
|
||
mountain and almost as big, thinking everybody had somebody but her; thinking even a ghost's company was denied
|
||
her. So when she saw the black dress with two unlaced shoes beneath it she trembled with secret thanks.
|
||
Whatever her power and however she used it, Beloved was hers. Denver was alarmed by the harm she thought Beloved
|
||
planned for Sethe, but felt helpless to thwart it, so unrestricted was her need to love another. The display she witnessed
|
||
at the Clearing shamed her because the choice between Sethe and Beloved was without conflict.
|
||
Walking toward the stream, beyond her green bush house, she let herself wonder what if Beloved really decided to
|
||
choke her mother.
|
||
Would she let it happen? Murder, Nelson Lord had said. "Didn't your mother get locked away for murder? Wasn't you in
|
||
62
|
||
there with her when she went?"
|
||
It was the second question that made it impossible for so long to ask Sethe about the first. The thing that leapt up had
|
||
been coiled in just such a place: a darkness, a stone, and some other thing that moved by itself. She went deaf rather
|
||
than hear the answer, and like the little four o'clocks that searched openly for sunlight, then closed themselves tightly
|
||
when it left, Denver kept watch for the baby and withdrew from everything else. Until Paul D came. But the damage he
|
||
did came undone with the miraculous resurrection of Beloved.
|
||
Just ahead, at the edge of the stream, Denver could see her silhouette, standing barefoot in the water, liking her black
|
||
skirts up above her calves, the beautiful head lowered in rapt attention.
|
||
Blinking fresh tears Denver approached her--eager for a word, a sign of forgiveness.
|
||
Denver took off her shoes and stepped into the water with her.
|
||
It took a moment for her to drag her eyes from the spectacle of Beloved's head to see what she was staring at.
|
||
A turtle inched along the edge, turned and climbed to dry ground.
|
||
Not far behind it was another one, headed in the same direction.
|
||
Four placed plates under a hovering motionless bowl. Behind her in the grass the other one moving quickly, quickly to
|
||
mount her. The impregnable strength of him--earthing his feet near her shoulders.
|
||
The embracing necks--hers stretching up toward his bending down, the pat pat pat of their touching heads. No height
|
||
was beyond her yearning neck, stretched like a finger toward his, risking everything outside the bowl just to touch his
|
||
face. The gravity of their shields, clashing, countered and mocked the floating heads touching.
|
||
Beloved dropped the folds of her skirt. It spread around her. The hem darkened in the water.
|
||
Chapter 10
|
||
OUT OF SIGHT of Mister's sight, away, praise His name, from the smiling boss of roosters, Paul D began to tremble. Not
|
||
all at once and not so anyone could tell. When he turned his head, aiming for a last look at Brother, turned it as much as
|
||
the rope that connected his neck to the axle of a buckboard allowed, and, later on, when they fastened the iron around
|
||
his ankles and clamped the wrists as well, there was no outward sign of trembling at all. Nor eighteen days after that
|
||
when he saw the ditches; the one thousand feet of earth--five feet deep, five feet wide, into which wooden boxes had
|
||
been fitted. A door of bars that you could lift on hinges like a cage opened into three walls and a roof of scrap lumber
|
||
and red dirt. Two feet of it over his head; three feet of open trench in front of him with anything that crawled or scurried
|
||
welcome to share that grave calling itself quarters. And there were forty-five more. He was sent there after trying to kill
|
||
Brandywine, the man schoolteacher sold him to.
|
||
Brandywine was leading him, in a coffle with ten others, through Kentucky into Virginia. He didn't know exactly what
|
||
prompted him to try--other than Halle, Sixo, Paul A, Paul F and Mister. But the trembling was fixed by the time he knew
|
||
it was there.
|
||
Still no one else knew it, because it began inside. A flutter of a kind, in the chest, then the shoulder blades. It felt like
|
||
rippling-- gentle at first and then wild. As though the further south they led him the more his blood, frozen like an ice
|
||
pond for twenty years, began thawing, breaking into pieces that, once melted, had no choice but to swirl and eddy.
|
||
Sometimes it was in his leg. Then again it moved to the base of his spine. By the time they unhitched him from the
|
||
wagon and he saw nothing but dogs and two shacks in a world of sizzling grass, the roiling blood was shaking him to and
|
||
fro. But no one could tell. The wrists he held out for the bracelets that evening were steady as were the legs he stood
|
||
on when chains were attached to the leg irons. But when they shoved him into the box and dropped the cage door
|
||
down, his hands quit taking instruction. On their own, they traveled. Nothing could stop them or get their attention.
|
||
They would not hold his penis to urinate or a spoon to scoop lumps of lima beans into his mouth. The miracle of their
|
||
63
|
||
obedience came with the hammer at dawn.
|
||
All forty-six men woke to rifle shot. All forty-six. Three whitemen walked along the trench unlocking the doors one by
|
||
one. No one stepped through. When the last lock was opened, the three returned and lifted the bars, one by one. And
|
||
one by one the blackmen emerged--promptly and without the poke of a rifle butt if they had been there more than a
|
||
day; promptly with the butt if, like Paul D,
|
||
they had just arrived. When all forty-six were standing in a line in the trench, another rifle shot signaled the climb out
|
||
and up to the ground above, where one thousand feet of the best hand-forged chain in Georgia stretched. Each man
|
||
bent and waited. The first man picked up the end and threaded it through the loop on his leg iron. He stood up then,
|
||
and, shuffling a little, brought the chain tip to the next prisoner, who did likewise. As the chain was passed on and each
|
||
man stood in the other's place, the line of men turned around, facing the boxes they had come out of. Not one spoke to
|
||
the other. At least not with words. The eyes had to tell what there was to tell: "Help me this mornin; 's bad"; "I'm a make
|
||
it"; "New man"; "Steady now steady."
|
||
Chain-up completed, they knelt down. The dew, more likely than not, was mist by then. Heavy sometimes and if the
|
||
dogs were quiet and just breathing you could hear doves. Kneeling in the mist they waited for the whim of a guard, or
|
||
two, or three. Or maybe all of them wanted it. Wanted it from one prisoner in particular or none-- or all.
|
||
"Breakfast? Want some breakfast, nigger?"
|
||
"Yes, sir."
|
||
"Hungry, nigger?"
|
||
"Yes, sir."
|
||
"Here you go."
|
||
Occasionally a kneeling man chose gunshot in his head as the price, maybe, of taking a bit of foreskin with him to Jesus.
|
||
Paul D did not know that then. He was looking at his palsied hands, smelling the guard, listening to his soft grunts so like
|
||
the doves', as he stood before the man kneeling in mist on his right. Convinced he was next, Paul D retched--vomiting up
|
||
nothing at all. An observing guard smashed his shoulder with the rifle and the engaged one decided to skip the new man
|
||
for the time being lest his pants and shoes got soiled by nigger puke.
|
||
"Hiiii"
|
||
It was the first sound, other than "Yes, sir" a blackman was allowed to speak each morning, and the lead chain gave
|
||
it everything he had. "Hiiii!" It was never clear to Paul D how he knew when to shout that mercy. They called him Hi
|
||
Man and Paul D thought at first the guards told him when to give the signal that let the prisoners rise up off their knees
|
||
and dance two-step to the music of hand forged iron. Later he doubted it. He believed to this day that the "Hiiii!" at
|
||
dawn and the "Hoooo!" when evening came were the responsibility Hi Man assumed because he alone knew what was
|
||
enough, what was too much, when things were over, when the time had come.
|
||
They chain-danced over the fields, through the woods to a trail that ended in the astonishing beauty of feldspar, and
|
||
there Paul D's hands disobeyed the furious rippling of his blood and paid attention.
|
||
With a sledge hammer in his hands and Hi Man's lead, the men got through. They sang it out and beat it up, garbling the
|
||
words so they could not be understood; tricking the words so their syllables yielded up other meanings. They sang the
|
||
women they knew; the children they had been; the animals they had tamed themselves or seen others tame. They sang
|
||
of bosses and masters and misses; of mules and dogs and the shamelessness of life. They sang lovingly of graveyards and
|
||
sisters long gone. Of pork in the woods; meal in the pan; fish on the line; cane, rain and rocking chairs.
|
||
And they beat. The women for having known them and no more, no more; the children for having been them but never
|
||
again. They killed a boss so often and so completely they had to bring him back to life to pulp him one more time.
|
||
Tasting hot mealcake among pine trees, they beat it away. Singing love songs to Mr. Death, they smashed his head.
|
||
64
|
||
More than the rest, they killed the flirt whom folks called Life for leading them on. Making them think the next sunrise
|
||
would be worth it; that another stroke of time would do it at last. Only when she was dead would they be safe. The
|
||
successful ones--the ones who had been there enough years to have maimed, mutilated, maybe even buried her--kept
|
||
watch over the others who were still in her cock-teasing hug, caring and looking forward, remembering and looking
|
||
back. They were the ones whose eyes said, "Help me, 's bad"; or "Look out," meaning this might be the day I bay or
|
||
eat my own mess or run, and it was this last that had to be guarded against, for if one pitched and ran--all, all forty-six,
|
||
would be yanked by the chain that bound them and no telling who or how many would be killed. A man could risk his
|
||
own life, but not his brother's. So the eyes said, "Steady now," and "Hang by me."
|
||
Eighty-six days and done. Life was dead. Paul D beat her butt all day every day till there was not a whimper in her.
|
||
Eighty-six days and his hands were still, waiting serenely each rat-rustling night for "Hiiii!" at dawn and the eager clench
|
||
on the hammer's shaft. Life rolled over dead. Or so he thought.
|
||
It rained.
|
||
Snakes came down from short-leaf pine and hemlock.
|
||
It rained.
|
||
Cypress, yellow poplar, ash and palmetto drooped under five days of rain without wind. By the eighth day the doves
|
||
were nowhere in sight, by the ninth even the salamanders were gone. Dogs laid their ears down and stared over their
|
||
paws. The men could not work.
|
||
Chain-up was slow, breakfast abandoned, the two-step became a slow drag over soupy grass and unreliable earth.
|
||
It was decided to lock everybody down in the boxes till it either stopped or lightened up so a whiteman could walk,
|
||
damnit, without flooding his gun and the dogs could quit shivering. The chain was threaded through forty-six loops of
|
||
the best hand-forged iron in Georgia.
|
||
It rained.
|
||
In the boxes the men heard the water rise in the trench and looked out for cottonmouths. They squatted in muddy
|
||
water, slept above it, peed in it. Paul D thought he was screaming; his mouth was open and there was this loud throat-
|
||
splitting sound--but it may have been somebody else. Then he thought he was crying. Something was running down his
|
||
cheeks. He lifted his hands to wipe away the tears and saw dark brown slime. Above him rivulets of mud slid through the
|
||
boards of the roof. When it come down, he thought, gonna crush me like a tick bug. It happened so quick he had no time
|
||
to ponder.
|
||
Somebody yanked the chain--once--hard enough to cross his legs and throw him into the mud. He never figured out how
|
||
he knew-- how anybody did--but he did know--he did--and he took both hands and yanked the length of chain at his left,
|
||
so the next man would know too. The water was above his ankles, flowing over the wooden plank he slept on. And then
|
||
it wasn't water anymore. The ditch was caving in and mud oozed under and through the bars.
|
||
They waited--each and every one of the forty-six. Not screaming, although some of them must have fought like the devil
|
||
not to. The mud was up to his thighs and he held on to the bars. Then it came-- another yank--from the left this time and
|
||
less forceful than the first because of the mud it passed through.
|
||
It started like the chain-up but the difference was the power of the chain. One by one, from Hi Man back on down the
|
||
line, they dove. Down through the mud under the bars, blind, groping. Some had sense enough to wrap their heads in
|
||
their shirts, cover their faces with rags, put on their shoes. Others just plunged, simply ducked down and pushed out,
|
||
fighting up, reaching for air. Some lost direction and their neighbors, feeling the confused pull of the chain, snatched
|
||
them around. For one lost, all lost. The chain that held them would save all or none, and Hi Man was the Delivery. They
|
||
talked through that chain like Sam Morse and, Great God, they all came up. Like the unshriven dead, zombies on the
|
||
loose, holding the chains in their hands, they trusted the rain and the dark, yes, but mostly Hi Man and each other.
|
||
65
|
||
Past the sheds where the dogs lay in deep depression; past the two guard shacks, past the stable of sleeping horses, past
|
||
the hens whose bills were bolted into their feathers, they waded. The moon did not help because it wasn't there. The
|
||
field was a marsh, the track a trough. All Georgia seemed to be sliding, melting away. Moss wiped their faces as they
|
||
fought the live-oak branches that blocked their way. Georgia took up all of Alabama and Mississippi then, so there was
|
||
no state line to cross and it wouldn't have mattered anyway. If they had known about it, they would have avoided not
|
||
only Alfred and the beautiful feldspar, but Savannah too and headed for the Sea Islands on the river that slid down from
|
||
the Blue Ridge Mountains.
|
||
But they didn't know.
|
||
Daylight came and they huddled in a copse of redbud trees. Night came and they scrambled up to higher ground,
|
||
praying the rain would go on shielding them and keeping folks at home. They were hoping for a shack, solitary, some
|
||
distance from its big house, where a slave might be making rope or heating potatoes at the grate. What they found was
|
||
a camp of sick Cherokee for whom a rose was named.
|
||
Decimated but stubborn, they were among those who chose a fugitive life rather than Oklahoma. The illness that swept
|
||
them now was reminiscent of the one that had killed half their number two hundred years earlier. In between that
|
||
calamity and this, they had visited George III in London, published a newspaper, made baskets, led Oglethorpe through
|
||
forests, helped Andrew Jackson fight Creek, cooked maize, drawn up a constitution, petitioned the King of Spain, been
|
||
experimented on by Dartmouth, established asylums, wrote their language, resisted settlers, shot bear and translated
|
||
scripture.
|
||
All to no avail. The forced move to the Arkansas River, insisted upon by the same president they fought for against the
|
||
Creek, destroyed another quarter of their already shattered number.
|
||
That was it, they thought, and removed themselves from those Cherokee who signed the treaty, in order to retire into
|
||
the forest and await the end of the world. The disease they suffered now was a mere inconvenience compared to the
|
||
devastation they remembered.
|
||
Still, they protected each other as best they could. The healthy were sent some miles away; the sick stayed behind with
|
||
the dead--to survive or join them.
|
||
The prisoners from Alfred, Georgia, sat down in semicircle near the encampment. No one came and still they sat. Hours
|
||
passed and the rain turned soft. Finally a woman stuck her head out of her house. Night came and nothing happened. At
|
||
dawn two men with barnacles covering their beautiful skin approached them. No one spoke for a moment, then Hi Man
|
||
raised his hand. The Cherokee saw the chains and went away. When they returned each carried a handful of small axes.
|
||
Two children followed with a pot of mush cooling and thinning in the rain.
|
||
Buffalo men, they called them, and talked slowly to the prisoners scooping mush and tapping away at their chains.
|
||
Nobody from a box in Alfred, Georgia, cared about the illness the Cherokee warned them about, so they stayed, all
|
||
forty-six, resting, planning their next move. Paul D had no idea of what to do and knew less than anybody, it seemed.
|
||
He heard his co-convicts talk knowledgeably of rivers and states, towns and territories. Heard Cherokee men describe
|
||
the beginning of the world and its end. Listened to tales of other Buffalo men they knew--three of whom were in the
|
||
healthy camp a few miles away. Hi Man wanted to join them; others wanted to join him. Some wanted to leave; some
|
||
to stay on. Weeks later Paul D was the only Buffalo man left--without a plan. All he could think of was tracking dogs,
|
||
although Hi Man said the rain they left in gave that no chance of success. Alone, the last man with buffalo hair among
|
||
the ailing Cherokee, Paul D finally woke up and, admitting his ignorance, asked how he might get North. Free North.
|
||
Magical North. Welcoming, benevolent North. The Cherokee smiled and looked around. The flood rains of a month ago
|
||
had turned everything to steam and blossoms.
|
||
"That way," he said, pointing. "Follow the tree flowers," he said.
|
||
"Only the tree flowers. As they go, you go. You will be where you want to be when they are gone."
|
||
So he raced from dogwood to blossoming peach. When they thinned out he headed for the cherry blossoms, then
|
||
66
|
||
magnolia, chinaberry, pecan, walnut and prickly pear. At last he reached a field of apple trees whose flowers were just
|
||
becoming tiny knots of fruit.
|
||
Spring sauntered north, but he had to run like hell to keep it as his traveling companion. From February to July he was
|
||
on the lookout for blossoms. When he lost them, and found himself without so much as a petal to guide him, he paused,
|
||
climbed a tree on a hillock and scanned the horizon for a flash of pink or white in the leaf world that surrounded him.
|
||
He did not touch them or stop to smell. He merely followed in their wake, a dark ragged figure guided by the blossoming
|
||
plums.
|
||
The apple field turned out to be Delaware where the weaver lady lived. She snapped him up as soon as he finished the
|
||
sausage she fed him and he crawled into her bed crying. She passed him off as her nephew from Syracuse simply by
|
||
calling him that nephew's name.
|
||
Eighteen months and he was looking out again for blossoms only this time he did the looking on a dray.
|
||
It was some time before he could put Alfred, Georgia, Sixo, schoolteacher, Halle, his brothers, Sethe, Mister, the taste
|
||
of iron, the sight of butter, the smell of hickory, notebook paper, one by one, into the tobacco tin lodged in his chest. By
|
||
the time he got to 124 nothing in this world could pry it open.
|
||
Chapter 11
|
||
SHE MOVED HIM.
|
||
Not the way he had beat off the baby's ghost--all bang and shriek with windows smashed and icily iars rolled in a heap.
|
||
But she moved him nonetheless, and Paul D didn't know how to stop it because it looked like he was moving himself.
|
||
Imperceptibly, downright reasonably, he was moving out of 124.
|
||
The beginning was so simple. One day, after supper, he sat in the rocker by the stove, bone-tired, river-whipped, and fell
|
||
asleep.
|
||
He woke to the footsteps of Sethe coming down the white stairs to make breakfast.
|
||
"I thought you went out somewhere," she said.
|
||
Paul D moaned, surprised to find himself exactly where he was the last time he looked.
|
||
"Don't tell me I slept in this chair the whole night."
|
||
Sethe laughed. "Me? I won't say a word to you."
|
||
"Why didn't you rouse me?"
|
||
"I did. Called you two or three times. I gave it up around midnight and then I thought you went out somewhere."
|
||
He stood, expecting his back to fight it. But it didn't. Not a creak or a stiff joint anywhere. In fact he felt refreshed. Some
|
||
things are like that, he thought, good-sleep places. The base of certain trees here and there; a wharf, a bench, a rowboat
|
||
once, a haystack usually, not always bed, and here, now, a rocking chair, which was strange because in his experience
|
||
furniture was the worst place for a good-sleep sleep.
|
||
The next evening he did it again and then again. He was accustomed to sex with Sethe just about every day, and to
|
||
avoid the confusion Beloved's shining caused him he still made it his business to take her back upstairs in the morning,
|
||
or lie down with her after supper. But he found a way and a reason to spend the longest part of the night in the rocker.
|
||
He told himself it must be his back-- something supportive it needed for a weakness left over from sleeping in a box in
|
||
Georgia.
|
||
It went on that way and might have stayed that way but one evening, after supper, after Sethe, he came downstairs,
|
||
67
|
||
sat in the rocker and didn't want to be there. He stood up and realized he didn't want to go upstairs either. Irritable
|
||
and longing for rest, he opened the door to Baby Suggs' room and dropped off to sleep on the bed the old lady died in.
|
||
That settled it--so it seemed. It became his room and Sethe didn't object--her bed made for two had been occupied by
|
||
one for eighteen years before Paul D came to call. And maybe it was better this way, with young girls in the house and
|
||
him not being her true-to-life husband. In any case, since there was no reduction in his before-breakfast or after-supper
|
||
appetites, he never heard her complain.
|
||
It went on that way and might have stayed that way, except one evening, after supper, after Sethe, he came downstairs
|
||
and lay on Baby Suggs' bed and didn't want to be there.
|
||
He believed he was having house-fits, the glassy anger men sometimes feel when a woman's house begins to bind
|
||
them, when they want to yell and break something or at least run off. He knew all about that--felt it lots of times--in the
|
||
Delaware weaver's house, for instance. But always he associated the house-fit with the woman in it. This nervousness
|
||
had nothing to do with the woman, whom he loved a little bit more every day: her hands among vegetables, her mouth
|
||
when she licked a thread end before guiding it through a needle or bit it in two when the seam was done, the blood in
|
||
her eye when she defended her girls (and Beloved was hers now) or any coloredwoman from a slur. Also in this house-
|
||
fit there was no anger, no suffocation, no yearning to be elsewhere. He just could not, would not, sleep upstairs or in the
|
||
rocker or, now, in Baby Suggs' bed. So he went to the storeroom.
|
||
It went on that way and might have stayed that way except one evening, after supper, after Sethe, he lay on a pallet in
|
||
the storeroom and didn't want to be there. Then it was the cold house and it was out there, separated from the main
|
||
part of 124, curled on top of two croaker sacks full of sweet potatoes, staring at the sides of a lard can, that he realized
|
||
the moving was involuntary. He wasn't being nervous; he was being prevented.
|
||
So he waited. Visited Sethe in the morning; slept in the cold room at night and waited.
|
||
She came, and he wanted to knock her down.
|
||
In Ohio seasons are theatrical. Each one enters like a prima donna, convinced its performance is the reason the world
|
||
has people in it.
|
||
When Paul D had been forced out of 124 into a shed behind it, summer had been hooted offstage and autumn with its
|
||
bottles of blood and gold had everybody's attention. Even at night, when there should have been a restful intermission,
|
||
there was none because the voices of a dying landscape were insistent and loud. Paul D packed newspaper under
|
||
himself and over, to give his thin blanket some help. But the chilly night was not on his mind. When he heard the door
|
||
open behind him he refused to turn and look.
|
||
"What you want in here? What you want?" He should have been able to hear her breathing.
|
||
"I want you to touch me on the inside part and call me my name."
|
||
Paul D never worried about his little tobacco tin anymore. It was rusted shut. So, while she hoisted her skirts and turned
|
||
her head over her shoulder the way the turtles had, he just looked at the lard can, silvery in moonlight, and spoke
|
||
quietly.
|
||
"When good people take you in and treat you good, you ought to try to be good back. You don't... Sethe loves you.
|
||
Much as her own daughter. You know that."
|
||
Beloved dropped her skirts as he spoke and looked at him with empty eyes. She took a step he could not hear and stood
|
||
close behind him.
|
||
"She don't love me like I love her. I don't love nobody but her."
|
||
"Then what you come in here for?"
|
||
"I want you to touch me on the inside part."
|
||
68
|
||
"Go on back in that house and get to bed."
|
||
"You have to touch me. On the inside part. And you have to call me my name."
|
||
As long as his eyes were locked on the silver of the lard can he was safe. If he trembled like Lot's wife and felt some
|
||
womanish need to see the nature of the sin behind him; feel a sympathy, perhaps, for the cursing cursed, or want to
|
||
hold it in his arms out of respect for the connection between them, he too would be lost.
|
||
"Call me my name."
|
||
"No."
|
||
"Please call it. I'll go if you call it."
|
||
"Beloved." He said it, but she did not go. She moved closer with a footfall he didn't hear and he didn't hear the whisper
|
||
that the flakes of rust made either as they fell away from the seams of his tobacco tin. So when the lid gave he didn't
|
||
know it. What he knew was that when he reached the inside part he was saying, "Red heart. Red heart," over and over
|
||
again. Softly and then so loud it woke Denver, then Paul D himself. "Red heart. Red heart. Red heart."
|
||
Chapter 12
|
||
TO GO BACK to the original hunger was impossible. Luckily for Denver, looking was food enough to last. But to be looked
|
||
at in turn was beyond appetite; it was breaking through her own skin to a place where hunger hadn't been discovered.
|
||
It didn't have to happen often, because Beloved seldom looked right at her, or when she did, Denver could tell that
|
||
her own face was just the place those eyes stopped while the mind behind it walked on. But sometimes--at moments
|
||
Denver could neither anticipate nor create--Beloved rested cheek on knuckles and looked at Denver with attention.
|
||
It was lovely. Not to be stared at, not seen, but being pulled into view by the interested, uncritical eyes of the other.
|
||
Having her hair examined as a part of her self, not as material or a style. Having her lips, nose, chin caressed as they
|
||
might be if she were a moss rose a gardener paused to admire. Denver's skin dissolved under that gaze and became soft
|
||
and bright like the lisle dress that had its arm around her mother's waist. She floated near but outside her own body,
|
||
feeling vague and intense at the same time. Needing nothing. Being what there was.
|
||
At such times it seemed to be Beloved who needed somethingm wanted something. Deep down in her wide black eyes,
|
||
back behind the expressionlessness, was a palm held out for a penny which Denver would gladly give her, if only she
|
||
knew how or knew enough about her, a knowledge not to be had by the answers to the questions Sethe occasionally put
|
||
to her: '"You disremember everything? I never knew my mother neither, but I saw her a couple of times. Did you never
|
||
see yours? What kind of whites was they? You don't remember none?"
|
||
Beloved, scratching the back of her hand, would say she remembered a woman who was hers, and she remembered
|
||
being snatched away from her. Other than that, the clearest memory she had, the one she repeated, was the bridge--
|
||
standing on the bridge looking down. And she knew one whiteman.
|
||
Sethe found that remarkable and more evidence to support her conclusions, which she confided to Denver.
|
||
"Where'd you get the dress, them shoes?"
|
||
Beloved said she took them.
|
||
"Who from?"
|
||
Silence and a faster scratching of her hand. She didn't know; she saw them and just took them.
|
||
"Uh huh," said Sethe, and told Denver that she believed Beloved had been locked up by some whiteman for his own
|
||
purposes, and never let out the door. That she must have escaped to a bridge or someplace and rinsed the rest out of
|
||
her mind. Something like that had happened to Ella except it was two men---a father and son--- and Ella remembered
|
||
69
|
||
every bit of it. For more than a year, they kept her locked in a room for themselves.
|
||
"You couldn't think up," Ella had said, "what them two done to me."
|
||
Sethe thought it explained Beloved's behavior around Paul D, whom she hated so.
|
||
Denver neither believed nor commented on Sethe's speculations, and she lowered her eyes and never said a word about
|
||
the cold house.
|
||
She was certain that Beloved was the white dress that had knelt with her mother in the keeping room, the true-to-life
|
||
presence of the baby that had kept her company most of her life. And to be looked at by her, however briefly, kept her
|
||
grateful for the rest of the time when she was merely the looker. Besides, she had her own set of questions which had
|
||
nothing to do with the past. The present alone interested Denver, but she was careful to appear uninquisitive about
|
||
the things she was dying to ask Beloved, for if she pressed too hard, she might lose the penny that the held-out palm
|
||
wanted, and lose, therefore, the place beyond appetite. It was better to feast, to have permission to be the looker,
|
||
because the old hunger--the before-Beloved hunger that drove her into boxwood and cologne for just a taste of a life, to
|
||
feel it bumpy and not flat--was out of the question. Looking kept it at bay.
|
||
So she did not ask Beloved how she knew about the earrings, the night walks to the cold house or the tip of the thing
|
||
she saw when Beloved lay down or came undone in her sleep. The look, when it came, came when Denver had been
|
||
careful, had explained things, or participated in things, or told stories to keep her occupied when Sethe was at the
|
||
restaurant. No given chore was enough to put out the licking fire that seemed always to burn in her. Not when they
|
||
wrung out sheets so tight the rinse water ran back up their arms. Not when they shoveled snow from the path to the
|
||
outhouse. Or broke three inches of ice from the rain barrel; scoured and boiled last summer's canning jars, packed mud
|
||
in the cracks of the hen house and warmed the chicks with their skirts. All the while Denver was obliged to talk about
|
||
what they were doing--the how and why of it. About people Denver knew once or had seen, giving them more life than
|
||
life had: the sweet-smelling whitewoman who brought her oranges and cologne and good wool skirts; Lady Jones who
|
||
taught them songs to spell and count by; a beautiful boy as smart as she was with a birthmark like a nickel on his cheek.
|
||
A white preacher who prayed for their souls while Sethe peeled potatoes and Grandma Baby sucked air. And she told
|
||
her about Howard and Buglar: the parts of the bed that belonged to each (the top reserved for herself); that before she
|
||
transferred to Baby Suggs' bed she never knew them to sleep without holding hands. She described them to Beloved
|
||
slowly, to keep her attention, dwelling on their habits, the games they taught her and not the fright that drove them
|
||
increasingly out of the house---anywhere--and finally far away.
|
||
This day they are outside. It's cold and the snow is hard as packed dirt. Denver has finished singing the counting song
|
||
Lady Jones taught her students. Beloved is holding her arms steady while Denver unclasps frozen underwear and towels
|
||
from the line. One by one she lays them in Beloved's arms until the pile, like a huge deck of cards, reaches her chin. The
|
||
rest, aprons and brown stockings, Denver carries herself. Made giddy by the cold, they return to the house. The clothes
|
||
will thaw slowly to a dampness perfect for the pressing iron, which will make them smell like hot rain. Dancing around
|
||
the room with Sethe's apron, Beloved wants to know if there are flowers in the dark. Denver adds sticks to the stovefire
|
||
and assures her there are. Twirling, her face framed by the neckband, her waist in the apron strings' embrace, she says
|
||
she is thirsty.
|
||
Denver suggests warming up some cider, while her mind races to something she might do or say to interest and
|
||
entertain the dancer.
|
||
Denver is a strategist now and has to keep Beloved by her side from the minute Sethe leaves for work until the hour
|
||
of her return when Beloved begins to hover at the window, then work her way out the door, down the steps and near
|
||
the road. Plotting has changed Denver markedly. Where she was once indolent, resentful of every task, now she is
|
||
spry, executing, even extending the assignments Sethe leaves for them. All to be able to say "We got to" and "Ma'am
|
||
said for us to." Otherwise Beloved gets private and dreamy, or quiet and sullen, and Denver's chances of being looked
|
||
at by her go down to nothing. She has no control over the evenings. When her mother is anywhere around, Beloved
|
||
has eyes only for Sethe. At night, in bed, anything might happen. She might want to be told a story in the dark when
|
||
Denver can't see her. Or she might get up and go into the cold house where Paul D has begun to sleep. Or she might cry,
|
||
70
|
||
silently. She might even sleep like a brick, her breath sugary from fingerfuls of molasses or sand-cookie crumbs. Denver
|
||
will turn toward her then, and if Beloved faces her, she will inhale deeply the sweet air from her mouth. If not, she will
|
||
have to lean up and over her, every once in a while, to catch a sniff. For anything is better than the original hunger--the
|
||
time when, after a year of the wonderful little i, sentences rolling out like pie dough and the company of other children,
|
||
there was no sound coming through. Anything is better than the silence when she answered to hands gesturing and
|
||
was indifferent to the movement of lips. When she saw every little thing and colors leaped smoldering into view. She
|
||
will forgo the most violent of sunsets, stars as fat as dinner plates and all the blood of autumn and settle for the palest
|
||
yellow if it comes from her Beloved.
|
||
The cider jug is heavy, but it always is, even when empty. Denver can carry it easily, yet she asks Beloved to help her. It is
|
||
in the cold house next to the molasses and six pounds of cheddar hard as bone.
|
||
A pallet is in the middle of the floor covered with newspaper and a blanket at the foot. It has been slept on for almost a
|
||
month, even though snow has come and, with it, serious winter.
|
||
It is noon, quite light outside; inside it is not. A few cuts of sun break through the roof and walls but once there they are
|
||
too weak to shift for themselves. Darkness is stronger and swallows them like minnows.
|
||
The door bangs shut. Denver can't tell where Beloved is standing.
|
||
"Where are you?" she whispers in a laughing sort of way.
|
||
"Here," says Beloved.
|
||
"Where?"
|
||
"Come find me," says Beloved.
|
||
Denver stretches out her right arm and takes a step or two. She trips and falls down onto the pallet. Newspaper crackles
|
||
under her weight. She laughs again. "Oh, shoot. Beloved?"
|
||
No one answers. Denver waves her arms and squinches her eyes to separate the shadows of potato sacks, a lard can and
|
||
a side of smoked pork from the one that might be human.
|
||
"Stop fooling," she says and looks up toward the light to check and make sure this is still the cold house and not
|
||
something going on in her sleep. The minnows of light still swim there; they can't make it down to where she is.
|
||
"You the one thirsty. You want cider or don't you?" Denver's voice is mildly accusatory. Mildly. She doesn't want to
|
||
offend and she doesn't want to betray the panic that is creeping over her like hairs. There is no sight or sound of
|
||
Beloved. Denver struggles to her feet amid the crackling newspaper. Holding her palm out, she moves slowly toward
|
||
the door. There is no latch or knob--just a loop of wire to catch a nail. She pushes the door open. Cold sunlight displaces
|
||
the dark. The room is just as it was when they entered-except Beloved is not there. There is no point in looking further,
|
||
for everything in the place can be seen at first sight. Denver looks anyway because the loss is ungovernable. She steps
|
||
back into the shed, allowing the door to close quickly behind her. Darkness or not, she moves rapidly around, reaching,
|
||
touching cobwebs, cheese, slanting shelves, the pallet interfering with each step. If she stumbles, she is not aware of
|
||
it because she does not know where her body stops, which part of her is an arm, a foot or a knee. She feels like an ice
|
||
cake torn away from the solid surface of the stream, floating on darkness, thick and crashing against the edges of things
|
||
around it.
|
||
Breakable, meltable and cold.
|
||
It is hard to breathe and even if there were light she wouldn't be able to see anything because she is crying. Just as she
|
||
thought it might happen, it has. Easy as walking into a room. A magical appearance on a stump, the face wiped out by
|
||
sunlight, and a magical disappearance in a shed, eaten alive by the dark.
|
||
"Don't," she is saying between tough swallows. "Don't. Don't go back."
|
||
71
|
||
This is worse than when Paul D came to 124 and she cried helplessly into the stove. This is worse. Then it was for herself.
|
||
Now she is crying because she has no self. Death is a skipped meal compared to this. She can feel her thickness thinning,
|
||
dissolving into nothing. She grabs the hair at her temples to get enough to uproot it and halt the melting for a while.
|
||
Teeth clamped shut, Denver brakes her sobs. She doesn't move to open the door because there is no world out there.
|
||
She decides to stay in
|
||
the cold house and let the dark swallow her like the minnows of light above. She won't put up with another leaving,
|
||
another trick. Waking up to find one brother then another not at the bottom of the bed, his foot jabbing her spine.
|
||
Sitting at the table eating turnips and saving the liquor for her grandmother to drink; her mother's hand on the keeping-
|
||
room door and her voice saying, "Baby Suggs is gone, Denver." And when she got around to worrying about what
|
||
would be the case if Sethe died or Paul D took her away, a dream-come-true comes true just to leave her on a pile of
|
||
newspaper in the dark.
|
||
No footfall announces her, but there she is, standing where before there was nobody when Denver looked. And smiling.
|
||
Denver grabs the hem of Beloved's skirt. "I thought you left me.
|
||
I thought you went back."
|
||
Beloved smiles, "I don't want that place. This the place I am."
|
||
She sits down on the pallet and, laughing, lies back looking at the cracklights above.
|
||
Surreptitiously, Denver pinches a piece of Beloved's skirt between her fingers and holds on. A good thing she does
|
||
because suddenly Beloved sits up.
|
||
"What is it?" asks Denver.
|
||
"Look," she points to the sunlit cracks.
|
||
"What? I don't see nothing." Denver follows the pointing finger.
|
||
Beloved drops her hand. "I'm like this."
|
||
Denver watches as Beloved bends over, curls up and rocks. Her eyes go to no place; her moaning is so small Denver can
|
||
hardly hear it.
|
||
"You all right? Beloved?"
|
||
Beloved focuses her eyes. "Over there. Her face."
|
||
Denver looks where Beloved's eyes go; there is nothing but darkness there.
|
||
"Whose face? Who is it?"
|
||
"Me. It's me."
|
||
She is smiling again.
|
||
Chapter 13
|
||
THE LAST of the Sweet Home men, so named and called by one who would know, believed it. The other four believed it
|
||
too, once, but they were long gone. The sold one never returned, the lost one never found. One, he knew, was dead for
|
||
sure; one he hoped was, because butter and clabber was no life or reason to live it. He grew up thinking that, of all the
|
||
Blacks in Kentucky, only the five of them were men. Allowed, encouraged to correct Garner, even defy him.
|
||
72
|
||
To invent ways of doing things; to see what was needed and attack it without permission. To buy a mother, choose a
|
||
horse or a wife, handle guns, even learn reading if they wanted to--but they didn't want to since nothing important to
|
||
them could be put down on paper.
|
||
Was that it? Is that where the manhood lay? In the naming done by a whiteman who was supposed to know? Who gave
|
||
them the privilege not of working but of deciding how to? No. In their relationship with Garner was true metal: they
|
||
were believed and trusted, but most of all they were listened to.
|
||
He thought what they said had merit, and what they felt was serious. Deferring to his slaves' opinions did not deprive
|
||
him of authority or power. It was schoolteacher who taught them otherwise.
|
||
A truth that waved like a scarecrow in rye: they were only Sweet Home men at Sweet Home. One step off that ground
|
||
and they were trespassers among the human race. Watchdogs without teeth; steer bulls without horns; gelded
|
||
workhorses whose neigh and whinny could not be translated into a language responsible humans spoke.
|
||
His strength had lain in knowing that schoolteacher was wrong. Now he wondered. There was Alfred, Georgia, there
|
||
was Delaware, there was Sixo and still he wondered. If schoolteacher was right it explained how he had come to be a
|
||
rag doll--picked up and put back down anywhere any time by a girl young enough to be his daughter. Fucking her when
|
||
he was convinced he didn't want to. Whenever she turned her behind up, the calves of his youth (was that it?) cracked
|
||
his resolve. But it was more than appetite that humiliated him and made him wonder if schoolteacher was right. It was
|
||
being moved, placed where she wanted him, and there was nothing he was able to do about it. For his life he could not
|
||
walk up the glistening white stairs in the evening; for his life he could not stay in the kitchen, in the keeping room, in the
|
||
storeroom at night. And he tried. Held his breath the way he had when he ducked into the mud; steeled his heart the
|
||
way he had when the trembling began. But it was worse than that, worse than the blood eddy he had controlled with
|
||
a sledge hammer. When he stood up from the supper table at 124 and turned toward the stairs, nausea was first, then
|
||
repulsion. He, he. He who had eaten raw meat barely dead, who under plum trees bursting with blossoms had crunched
|
||
through a dove's breast before its heart stopped beating. Because he was a man and a man could do what he would: be
|
||
still for six hours in a dry well while night dropped; fight raccoon with his hands and win; watch another man, whom he
|
||
loved better than his brothers, roast without a tear just so the roasters would know what a man was like. And it was he,
|
||
that man, who had walked from Georgia to Delaware, who could not go or stay put where he wanted to in 124--shame.
|
||
Paul D could not command his feet, but he thought he could still talk and he made up his mind to break out that way.
|
||
He would tell Sethe about the last three weeks: catch her alone coming from work at the beer garden she called a
|
||
restaurant and tell it all.
|
||
He waited for her. The winter afternoon looked like dusk as he stood in the alley behind Sawyer's Restaurant.
|
||
Rehearsing, imagining her face and letting the words flock in his head like kids before lining up to follow the leader.
|
||
"Well, ah, this is not the, a man can't, see, but aw listen here, it ain't that, it really ain't, Ole Garner, what I mean is, it
|
||
ain't a weak- ness, the kind of weakness I can fight 'cause 'cause something is happening to me, that girl is doing it, I
|
||
know you think I never liked her nohow, but she is doing it to me. Fixing me. Sethe, she's fixed me and I can't break it."
|
||
What? A grown man fixed by a girl? But what if the girl was not a girl, but something in disguise? A lowdown something
|
||
that looked like a sweet young girl and fucking her or not was not the point, it was not being able to stay or go where
|
||
he wished in 124, and the danger was in losing Sethe because he was not man enough to break out, so he needed her,
|
||
Sethe, to help him, to know about it, and it shamed him to have to ask the woman he wanted to protect to help him do
|
||
it, God damn it to hell.
|
||
Paul D blew warm breath into the hollow of his cupped hands.
|
||
The wind raced down the alley so fast it sleeked the fur of four kitchen dogs waiting for scraps. He looked at the dogs.
|
||
The dogs looked at him.
|
||
Finally the back door opened and Sethe stepped through holding a scrap pan in the crook of her arm. When she saw
|
||
him, she said Oh, and her smile was both pleasure and surprise.
|
||
73
|
||
Paul D believed he smiled back but his face was so cold he wasn't sure.
|
||
"Man, you make me feel like a girl, coming by to pick me up after work. Nobody ever did that before. You better watch
|
||
out, I might start looking forward to it." She tossed the largest bones into the dirt rapidly so the dogs would know there
|
||
was enough and not fight each other. Then she dumped the skins of some things, heads of other things and the insides
|
||
of still more things--what the restaurant could not use and she would not--in a smoking pile near the animals' feet.
|
||
"Got to rinse this out," she said, "and then I'll be right with you."
|
||
He nodded as she returned to the kitchen.
|
||
The dogs ate without sound and Paul D thought they at least got what they came for, and if she had enough for them--
|
||
The cloth on her head was brown wool and she edged it down over her hairline against the wind.
|
||
"You get off early or what?"
|
||
"I took off early."
|
||
"Anything the matter?"
|
||
"In a way of speaking," he said and wiped his lips.
|
||
"Not cut back?"
|
||
"No, no. They got plenty work. I just--"
|
||
"Hm?"
|
||
"Sethe, you won't like what I'm 'bout to say."
|
||
She stopped then and turned her face toward him and the hateful wind. Another woman would have squinted or at
|
||
least teared if the wind whipped her face as it did Sethe's. Another woman might have shot him a look of apprehension,
|
||
pleading, anger even, because what he said sure sounded like part one of Goodbye, I'm gone.
|
||
Sethe looked at him steadily, calmly, already ready to accept, release or excuse an in-need-or-trouble man. Agreeing,
|
||
saying okay, all right, in advance, because she didn't believe any of them--over the long haul--could measure up. And
|
||
whatever the reason, it was all right. No fault. Nobody's fault.
|
||
He knew what she was thinking and even though she was wrong-- he was not leaving her, wouldn't ever--the thing he
|
||
had in mind to tell her was going to be worse. So, when he saw the diminished expectation in her eyes, the melancholy
|
||
without blame, he could not say it. He could not say to this woman who did not squint in the wind, "I am not a man."
|
||
"Well, say it, Paul D, whether I like it or not."
|
||
Since he could not say what he planned to, he said something he didn't know was on his mind. "I want you pregnant,
|
||
Sethe. Would you do that for me?"
|
||
Now she was laughing and so was he.
|
||
"You came by here to ask me that? You are one crazy-headed man. You right; I don't like it. Don't you think I'm too old
|
||
to start that all over again?" She slipped her fingers in his hand for all the world like the hand-holding shadows on the
|
||
side of the road.
|
||
"Think about it," he said. And suddenly it was a solution: a way to hold on to her, document his manhood and break out
|
||
of the girl's spell--all in one. He put the tips of Sethe's fingers on his cheek.
|
||
Laughing, she pulled them away lest somebody passing the alley see them misbehaving in public, in daylight, in the
|
||
74
|
||
wind.
|
||
Still, he'd gotten a little more time, bought it, in fact, and hoped the price wouldn't wreck him. Like paying for an
|
||
afternoon in the coin of life to come.
|
||
They left off playing, let go hands and hunched forward as they left the alley and entered the street. The wind was
|
||
quieter there but the dried-out cold it left behind kept pedestrians fast-moving, stiff inside their coats. No men leaned
|
||
against door frames or storefront windows. The wheels of wagons delivering feed or wood screeched as though
|
||
they hurt. Hitched horses in front of the saloons shivered and closed their eyes. Four women, walking two abreast,
|
||
approached, their shoes loud on the wooden walkway. Paul D touched Sethe's elbow to guide her as they stepped from
|
||
the slats to the dirt to let the women pass.
|
||
Half an hour later, when they reached the city's edge, Sethe and Paul D resumed catching and snatching each other's
|
||
fingers, stealing quick pats on the behind. Joyfully embarrassed to be that grownup and that young at the same time.
|
||
Resolve, he thought. That was all it took, and no motherless gal was going to break it up. No lazy, stray pup of a woman
|
||
could turn him around, make him doubt himself, wonder, plead or confess.
|
||
Convinced of it, that he could do it, he threw his arm around Sethe's shoulders and squeezed. She let her head touch his
|
||
chest, and since the moment was valuable to both of them, they stopped and stood that way--not breathing, not even
|
||
caring if a passerby passed them by. The winter light was low. Sethe closed her eyes. Paul D looked at the black trees
|
||
lining the roadside, their defending arms raised against attack. Softly, suddenly, it began to snow, like a present come
|
||
down from the sky. Sethe opened her eyes to it and said, "Mercy."
|
||
And it seemed to Paul D that it was--a little mercy--something given to them on purpose to mark what they were feeling
|
||
so they would remember it later on when they needed to.
|
||
Down came the dry flakes, fat enough and heavy enough to crash like nickels on stone. It always surprised him, how
|
||
quiet it was. Not like rain, but like a secret.
|
||
"Run!" he said.
|
||
"You run," said Sethe. "I been on my feet all day."
|
||
"Where I been? Sitting down?" and he pulled her along.
|
||
"Stop! Stop!" she said. "I don't have the legs for this."
|
||
"Then give em to me," he said and before she knew it he had backed into her, hoisted her on his back and was running
|
||
down the road past brown fields turning white.
|
||
Breathless at last, he stopped and she slid back down on her own two feet, weak from laughter.
|
||
"You need some babies, somebody to play with in the snow."
|
||
Sethe secured her headcloth.
|
||
Paul D smiled and warmed his hands with his breath. "I sure would like to give it a try. Need a willing partner though."
|
||
"I'll say," she answered. "Very, very willing."
|
||
It was nearly four o'clock now and 124 was half a mile ahead.
|
||
Floating toward them, barely visible in the drifting snow, was a figure, and although it was the same figure that had been
|
||
meeting Sethe for four months, so complete was the attention she and Paul D were paying to themselves they both felt
|
||
a jolt when they saw her close in.
|
||
75
|
||
Beloved did not look at Paul D; her scrutiny was for Sethe. She had no coat, no wrap, nothing on her head, but she held
|
||
in her hand a long shawl. Stretching out her arms she tried to circle it around Sethe.
|
||
"Crazy girl," said Sethe. "You the one out here with nothing on." And stepping away and in front of Paul D, Sethe took
|
||
the shawl and wrapped it around Beloved's head and shoulders. Saying, "You got to learn more sense than that," she
|
||
enclosed her in her left arm.
|
||
Snowflakes stuck now. Paul D felt icy cold in the place Sethe had been before Beloved came. Trailing a yard or so behind
|
||
the women, he fought the anger that shot through his stomach all the way home.
|
||
When he saw Denver silhouetted in the lamplight at the window, he could not help thinking, "And whose ally you?"
|
||
It was Sethe who did it. Unsuspecting, surely, she solved everything with one blow.
|
||
"Now I know you not sleeping out there tonight, are you, Paul D?" She smiled at him, and like a friend in need, the
|
||
chimney coughed against the rush of cold shooting into it from the sky. Window sashes shuddered in a blast of winter
|
||
air.
|
||
Paul D looked up from the stew meat.
|
||
"You come upstairs. Where you belong," she said, "... and stay there."
|
||
The threads of malice creeping toward him from Beloved's side of the table were held harmless in the warmth of Sethe's
|
||
smile.
|
||
Once before (and only once) Paul D had been grateful to a woman.
|
||
Crawling out of the woods, cross-eyed with hunger and loneliness, he knocked at the first back door he came to in the
|
||
colored section of Wilmington. He told the woman who opened it that he'd appreciate doing her woodpile, if she could
|
||
spare him something to eat.
|
||
She looked him up and down.
|
||
"A little later on," she said and opened the door wider. She fed him pork sausage, the worst thing in the world for a
|
||
starving man, but neither he nor his stomach objected. Later, when he saw pale cotton sheets and two pillows in her
|
||
bedroom, he had to wipe his eyes quickly, quickly so she would not
|
||
see the thankful tears of a man's first time. Soil, grass, mud, shucking, leaves, hay, cobs, sea shells---all that he'd slept
|
||
on. White cotton sheets had never crossed his mind. He fell in with a groan and the woman helped him pretend he was
|
||
making love to her and not her bed linen. He vowed that night, full of pork, deep in luxury, that he would never leave
|
||
her.
|
||
She would have to kill him to get him out of that bed. Eighteen months later, when he had been purchased by
|
||
Northpoint Bank and Railroad Company, he was still thankful for that introduction to sheets.
|
||
Now he was grateful a second time. He felt as though he had been plucked from the face of a cliff and put down on sure
|
||
ground.
|
||
In Sethe's bed he knew he could put up with two crazy girls---as long as Sethe made her wishes known. Stretched out
|
||
to his full length, watching snowflakes stream past the window over his feet, it was easy to dismiss the doubts that took
|
||
him to the alley behind the restaurant: his expectations for himself were high, too high. What he might call cowardice
|
||
other people called common sense.
|
||
Tucked into the well of his arm, Sethe recalled Paul D's face in the street when he asked her to have a baby for him.
|
||
Although she laughed and took his hand, it had frightened her. She thought quickly of how good the sex would be if that
|
||
is what he wanted, but mostly she was frightened by the thought of having a baby once more.
|
||
76
|
||
Needing to be good enough, alert enough, strong enough, that caring--again. Having to stay alive just that much longer.
|
||
O Lord, she thought, deliver me. Unless carefree, motherlove was a killer. What did he want her pregnant for? To hold
|
||
on to her? have a sign that he passed this way? He probably had children everywhere anyway.
|
||
Eighteen years of roaming, he would have to have dropped a few.
|
||
No. He resented the children she had, that's what. Child, she corrected herself. Child plus Beloved whom she thought of
|
||
as her own, and that is what he resented. Sharing her with the girls. Hearing the three of them laughing at something he
|
||
wasn't in on. The code they used among themselves that he could not break. Maybe even the time spent on their needs
|
||
and not his. They were a family somehow and he was not the head of it.
|
||
Can you stitch this up for me, baby?
|
||
Um hm. Soon's I finish this petticoat. She just got the one she came here in and everybody needs a change.
|
||
Any pie left?
|
||
I think Denver got the last of it.
|
||
And not complaining, not even minding that he slept all over and around the house now, which she put a stop to this
|
||
night out of courtesy.
|
||
Sethe sighed and placed her hand on his chest. She knew she was building a case against him in order to build a case
|
||
against getting pregnant, and it shamed her a little. But she had all the children she needed. If her boys came back one
|
||
day, and Denver and Beloved stayed on--well, it would be the way it was supposed to be, no?
|
||
Right after she saw the shadows holding hands at the side of the road hadn't the picture altered? And the minute she
|
||
saw the dress and shoes sitting in the front yard, she broke water. Didn't even have to see the face burning in the
|
||
sunlight. She had been dreaming it for years.
|
||
Paul D's chest rose and fell, rose and fell under her hand.
|
||
Chapter 14
|
||
DENVER FINISHED washing the dishes and sat down at the table.
|
||
Beloved, who had not moved since Sethe and Paul D left the room, sat sucking her forefinger. Denver watched her face
|
||
awhile and then said, "She likes him here."
|
||
Beloved went on probing her mouth with her finger. "Make him go away," she said.
|
||
"She might be mad at you if he leaves."
|
||
Beloved, inserting a thumb in her mouth along with the forefinger, pulled out a back tooth. There was hardly any blood,
|
||
but Denver said, "Ooooh, didn't that hurt you?"
|
||
Beloved looked at the tooth and thought, This is it. Next would be her arm, her hand, a toe. Pieces of her would drop
|
||
maybe one at a time, maybe all at once. Or on one of those mornings before Denver woke and after Sethe left she
|
||
would fly apart. It is difficult keeping her head on her neck, her legs attached to her hips when she is by herself. Among
|
||
the things she could not remember was when she first knew that she could wake up any day and find herself in pieces.
|
||
She had two dreams: exploding, and being swallowed. When her tooth came out--an odd fragment, last in the row--she
|
||
77
|
||
thought it was starting.
|
||
"Must be a wisdom," said Denver. "Don't it hurt?"
|
||
"Yes."
|
||
"Then why don't you cry?"
|
||
"What?"
|
||
"If it hurts, why don't you cry?"
|
||
And she did. Sitting there holding a small white tooth in the palm of her smooth smooth hand. Cried the way she wanted
|
||
to when turtles came out of the water, one behind the other, right after the blood-red bird disappeared back into the
|
||
leaves. The way she wanted to when Sethe went to him standing in the tub under the stairs. With the tip of her tongue
|
||
she touched the salt water that slid to the corner of her mouth and hoped Denver's arm around her shoulders would
|
||
keep them from falling apart.
|
||
The couple upstairs, united, didn't hear a sound, but below them, outside, all around 124 the snow went on and on and
|
||
on. Piling itself, burying itself. Higher. Deeper.
|
||
Chapter 15
|
||
AT THE BACK of Baby Suggs' mind may have been the thought that if Halle made it, God do what He would, it would be a
|
||
cause for celebration. If only this final son could do for himself what he had done for her and for the three children John
|
||
and Ella delivered to her door one summer night. When the children arrived and no Sethe, she was afraid and grateful.
|
||
Grateful that the part of the family that survived was her own grandchildren--the first and only she would know: two
|
||
boys and a little girl who was crawling already. But she held her heart still, afraid to form questions: What about Sethe
|
||
and Halle; why the delay? Why didn't Sethe get on board too? Nobody could make it alone. Not only because trappers
|
||
picked them off like buzzards or netted them like rabbits, but also because you couldn't run if you didn't know how to
|
||
go. You could be lost forever, if there wasn't nobody to show you the way.
|
||
So when Sethe arrived--all mashed up and split open, but with another grandchild in her arms--the idea of a whoop
|
||
moved closer to the front of her brain. But since there was still no sign of Halle and Sethe herself didn't know what had
|
||
happened to him, she let the whoop lie-not wishing to hurt his chances by thanking God too soon.
|
||
It was Stamp Paid who started it. Twenty days after Sethe got to 124 he came by and looked at the baby he had tied
|
||
up in his nephew's jacket, looked at the mother he had handed a piece of fried eel to and, for some private reason of
|
||
his own, went off with two buckets to a place near the river's edge that only he knew about where blackberries grew,
|
||
tasting so good and happy that to eat them was like being in church. Just one of the berries and you felt anointed.
|
||
He walked six miles to the riverbank; did a slide-run-slide down into a ravine made almost inaccessible by brush.
|
||
He reached through brambles lined with blood-drawing thorns thick as knives that cut through his shirt sleeves and
|
||
trousers. All the while suffering mosquitoes, bees, hornets, wasps and the meanest lady spiders in the state. Scratched,
|
||
raked and bitten, he maneuvered through and took hold of each berry with fingertips so gentle not a single one was
|
||
bruised. Late in the afternoon he got back to 124 and put two full buckets down on the porch. When Baby Suggs saw his
|
||
shredded clothes, bleeding hands, welted face and neck she sat down laughing out loud.
|
||
Buglar, Howard, the woman in the bonnet and Sethe came to look and then laughed along with Baby Suggs at the sight
|
||
of the sly, steely old black man: agent, fisherman, boatman, tracker, savior, spy, standing in broad daylight whipped
|
||
finally by two pails of blackberries.
|
||
Paying them no mind he took a berry and put it in the three week-old Denver's mouth. The women shrieked.
|
||
"She's too little for that, Stamp."
|
||
78
|
||
"Bowels be soup."
|
||
"Sickify her stomach."
|
||
But the baby's thrilled eyes and smacking lips made them follow suit, sampling one at a time the berries that tasted like
|
||
church. Finally Baby Suggs slapped the boys' hands away from the bucket and sent Stamp around to the pump to rinse
|
||
himself. She had decided to do something with the fruit worthy of the man's labor and his love.
|
||
That's how it began.
|
||
She made the pastry dough and thought she ought to tell Ella and John to stop on by because three pies, maybe four,
|
||
were too much to keep for one's own. Sethe thought they might as well back it up with a couple of chickens. Stamp
|
||
allowed that perch and catfish were jumping into the boat--didn't even have to drop a line.
|
||
From Denver's two thrilled eyes it grew to a feast for ninety people .124 shook with their voices far into the night. Ninety
|
||
people who ate so well, and laughed so much, it made them angry. They woke up the next morning and remembered
|
||
the meal-fried perch that Stamp Paid handled with a hickory twig, holding his left palm out against the spit and pop of
|
||
the boiling grease; the corn pudding made with cream; tired, overfed children asleep in the grass, tiny bones of roasted
|
||
rabbit still in their hands--and got angry.
|
||
Baby Suggs' three (maybe four) pies grew to ten (maybe twelve).
|
||
Sethe's two hens became five turkeys. The one block of ice brought all the way from Cincinnati---over which they poured
|
||
mashed watermelon mixed with sugar and mint to make a punch--became a wagonload of ice cakes for a washtub full of
|
||
strawberry shrug, 124, rocking with laughter, goodwill and food for ninety, made them angry. Too much, they thought.
|
||
Where does she get it all, Baby Suggs, holy? Why is she and hers always the center of things? How come she always
|
||
knows exactly what to do and when? Giving advice; passing messages; healing the sick, hiding fugitives, loving, cooking,
|
||
cooking, loving, preaching, singing, dancing and loving everybody like it was her job and hers alone.
|
||
Now to take two buckets of blackberries and make ten, maybe twelve, pies; to have turkey enough for the whole town
|
||
pretty near, new peas in September, fresh cream but no cow, ice and sugar, batter bread, bread pudding, raised bread,
|
||
shortbread--it made them mad.
|
||
Loaves and fishes were His powers--they did not belong to an ex slave who had probably never carried one hundred
|
||
pounds to the scale, or picked okra with a baby on her back. Who had never been lashed by a ten-year-old whiteboy as
|
||
God knows they had. Who had not even escaped slavery--had, in fact, been bought out of it by a doting son and driven
|
||
to the Ohio River in a wagon--free papers folded between her breasts (driven by the very man who had been her master,
|
||
who also paid her resettlement fee--name of Garner), and rented a house with two floors and a well from the Bodwins-
|
||
- the white brother and sister who gave Stamp Paid, Ella and John clothes, goods and gear for runaways because they
|
||
hated slavery worse than they hated slaves.
|
||
It made them furious. They swallowed baking soda, the morning after, to calm the stomach violence caused by the
|
||
bounty, the reckless generosity on display at 124. Whispered to each other in the yards about fat rats, doom and
|
||
uncalled-for pride.
|
||
The scent of their disapproval lay heavy in the air. Baby Suggs woke to it and wondered what it was as she boiled hominy
|
||
for her grandchildren. Later, as she stood in the garden, chopping at the tight soil over the roots of the pepper plants,
|
||
she smelled it again.
|
||
She lifted her head and looked around. Behind her some yards to the left Sethe squatted in the pole beans. Her
|
||
shoulders were distorted by the greased flannel under her dress to encourage the healing of her back. Near her in a
|
||
bushel basket was the three-week-old baby.
|
||
Baby Suggs, holy, looked up. The sky was blue and clear. Not one touch of death in the definite green of the leaves. She
|
||
could hear birds and, faintly, the stream way down in the meadow. The puppy, Here Boy, was burying the last bones
|
||
79
|
||
from yesterday's party. From somewhere at the side of the house came the voices of Buglar, Howard and the crawling
|
||
girl. Nothing seemed amiss--yet the smell of disapproval was sharp. Back beyond the vegetable garden, closer to the
|
||
stream but in full sun, she had planted corn. Much as they'd picked for the party, there were still ears ripening, which
|
||
she could see from where she stood. Baby Suggs leaned back into the peppers and the squash vines with her hoe.
|
||
Carefully, with the blade at just the right angle, she cut through a stalk of insistent rue. Its flowers she stuck through a
|
||
split in her hat; the rest she tossed aside. The quiet clok clok clok of wood splitting reminded her that Stamp was doing
|
||
the chore he promised to the night before. She sighed at her work and, a moment later, straightened up to sniff the
|
||
disapproval once again.
|
||
Resting on the handle of the hoe, she concentrated. She was accustomed to the knowledge that nobody prayed for her-
|
||
-but this free floating repulsion was new. It wasn't whitefolks--that much she could tell--so it must be colored ones. And
|
||
then she knew. Her friends and neighbors were angry at her because she had overstepped, given too much, offended
|
||
them by excess.
|
||
Baby closed her eyes. Perhaps they were right. Suddenly, behind the disapproving odor, way way back behind it, she
|
||
smelled another thing. Dark and coming. Something she couldn't get at because the other odor hid it.
|
||
She squeezed her eyes tight to see what it was but all she could make out was high-topped shoes she didn't like the look
|
||
of.
|
||
Thwarted yet wondering, she chopped away with the hoe. What could it be? This dark and coming thing. What was left
|
||
to hurt her now? News of Halle's death? No. She had been prepared for that better than she had for his life. The last of
|
||
her children, whom she barely glanced at when he was born because it wasn't worth the trouble to try to learn features
|
||
you would never see change into adulthood anyway. Seven times she had done that: held a little foot; examined the fat
|
||
fingertips with her own--fingers she never saw become the male or female hands a mother would recognize anywhere.
|
||
She didn't know to this day what their permanent teeth looked like; or how they held their heads when they walked. Did
|
||
Patty lose her lisp? What color did Famous' skin finally take? Was that a cleft in Johnny's chin or just a dimple that would
|
||
disappear soon's his jawbone changed? Four girls, and the last time she saw them there was no hair under their arms.
|
||
Does Ardelia still love the burned bottom of bread? All seven were gone or dead. What would be the point of looking
|
||
too hard at that youngest one? But for some reason they let her keep him. He was with her--everywhere.
|
||
When she hurt her hip in Carolina she was a real bargain (costing less than Halle, who was ten then) for Mr. Garner, who
|
||
took them both to Kentucky to a farm he called Sweet Home. Because of the hip she jerked like a three-legged dog when
|
||
she walked. But at Sweet Home there wasn't a rice field or tobacco patch in sight, and nobody, but nobody, knocked her
|
||
down. Not once. Lillian Garner called her Jenny for some reason but she never pushed, hit or called her mean names.
|
||
Even when she slipped in cow dung and broke every egg in her apron, nobody said you-blackbitchwhat'sthematterwith-
|
||
you and nobody knocked her down.
|
||
Sweet Home was tiny compared to the places she had been. Mr.
|
||
Garner, Mrs. Garner, herself, Halle, and four boys, over half named Paul, made up the entire population. Mrs. Garner
|
||
hummed when she worked; Mr. Garner acted like the world was a toy he was supposed to have fun with. Neither
|
||
wanted her in the field--Mr.
|
||
Garner's boys, including Halle, did all of that--which was a blessing since she could not have managed it anyway. What
|
||
she did was stand beside the humming Lillian Garner while the two of them cooked, preserved, washed, ironed, made
|
||
candles, clothes, soap and cider; fed chickens, pigs, dogs and geese; milked cows, churned butter, rendered fat, laid
|
||
fires.... Nothing to it. And nobody knocked her down.
|
||
Her hip hurt every single day--but she never spoke of it. Only Halle, who had watched her movements closely for the last
|
||
four years, knew that to get in and out of bed she had to lift her thigh with both hands, which was why he spoke to Mr.
|
||
Garner about buying her out of there so she could sit down for a change. Sweet boy. The one person who did something
|
||
hard for her: gave her his work, his life and now his children, whose voices she could just make out as she stood in the
|
||
garden wondering what was the dark and coming thing behind the scent of disapproval. Sweet Home was a marked
|
||
80
|
||
improvement. No question. And no matter, for the sadness was at her center, the desolated center where the self that
|
||
was no self made its home. Sad as it was that she did not know where her children were buried or what they looked like
|
||
if alive, fact was she knew more about them than she knew about herself, having never had the map to discover what
|
||
she was like.
|
||
Could she sing? (Was it nice to hear when she did?) Was she pretty? Was she a good friend? Could she have been a
|
||
loving mother?
|
||
A faithful wife? Have I got a sister and does she favor me? If my mother knew me would she like me?
|
||
In Lillian Garner's house, exempted from the field work that broke her hip and the exhaustion that drugged her mind; in
|
||
Lillian Garner's house where nobody knocked her down (or up), she listened to the whitewoman humming at her work;
|
||
watched her face light up when Mr. Garner came in and thought, It's better here, but I'm not. The Garners, it seemed to
|
||
her, ran a special kind of slavery, treating them like paid labor, listening to what they said, teaching what they wanted
|
||
known. And he didn't stud his boys. Never brought them to her cabin with directions to "lay down with her," like they
|
||
did in Carolina, or rented their sex out on other farms. It surprised and pleased her, but worried her too. Would he pick
|
||
women for them or what did he think was going to happen when those boys ran smack into their nature? Some danger
|
||
he was courting and he surely knew it. In fact, his order for them not to leave Sweet Home, except in his company, was
|
||
not so much because of the law, but the danger of men-bred slaves on the loose.
|
||
Baby Suggs talked as little as she could get away with because what was there to say that the roots of her tongue could
|
||
manage?
|
||
So the whitewoman, finding her new slave excellent if silent help, hummed to herself while she worked.
|
||
When Mr. Garner agreed to the arrangements with Halle, and when Halle looked like it meant more to him that she
|
||
go free than anything in the world, she let herself be taken 'cross the river. Of the two hard thingsstanding on her feet
|
||
till she dropped or leaving her last and probably only living child--she chose the hard thing that made him happy, and
|
||
never put to him the question she put to herself: What for? What does a sixty-odd-year-old slavewoman who walks like
|
||
a three-legged dog need freedom for? And when she stepped foot on free ground she could not believe that Halle knew
|
||
what she didn't; that Halle, who had never drawn one free breath, knew that there was nothing like it in this world. It
|
||
scared her.
|
||
Something's the matter. What's the matter? What's the matter? she asked herself. She didn't know what she looked
|
||
like and was not curious. But suddenly she saw her hands and thought with a clarity as simple as it was dazzling, "These
|
||
hands belong to me. These my hands." Next she felt a knocking in her chest and discovered something else new: her
|
||
own heartbeat. Had it been there all along? This pounding thing? She felt like a fool and began to laugh out loud.
|
||
Mr. Garner looked over his shoulder at her with wide brown eyes and smiled himself. "What's funny, Jenny?"
|
||
She couldn't stop laughing. "My heart's beating," she said.
|
||
And it was true.
|
||
Mr. Garner laughed. "Nothing to be scared of, Jenny. Just keep your same ways, you'll be all right."
|
||
She covered her mouth to keep from laughing too loud.
|
||
"These people I'm taking you to will give you what help you need. Name of Bodwin. A brother and a sister. Scots. I been
|
||
knowing them for twenty years or more."
|
||
Baby Suggs thought it was a good time to ask him something she had long wanted to know.
|
||
"Mr. Garner," she said, "why you all call me Jenny?"
|
||
'"Cause that what's on your sales ticket, gal. Ain't that your name? What you call yourself?"
|
||
81
|
||
"Nothings" she said. "I don't call myself nothing."
|
||
Mr. Garner went red with laughter. "When I took you out of Carolina, Whitlow called you Jenny and Jenny Whitlow is
|
||
what his bill said. Didn't he call you Jenny?"
|
||
"No, sir. If he did I didn't hear it."
|
||
"What did you answer to?"
|
||
"Anything, but Suggs is what my husband name."
|
||
"You got married, Jenny? I didn't know it."
|
||
"Manner of speaking."
|
||
"You know where he is, this husband?"
|
||
"No, sir."
|
||
"Is that Halle's daddy?"
|
||
"No, sir."
|
||
"why you call him Suggs, then? His bill of sale says Whitlow too, just like yours."
|
||
"Suggs is my name, sir. From my husband. He didn't call me Jenny."
|
||
"What he call you?"
|
||
"Baby."
|
||
"Well," said Mr. Garner, going pink again, "if I was you I'd stick to Jenny Whitlow. Mrs. Baby Suggs ain't no name for a
|
||
freed Negro."
|
||
Maybe not, she thought, but Baby Suggs was all she had left of the "husband" she claimed. A serious, melancholy man
|
||
who taught her how to make shoes. The two of them made a pact: whichever one got a chance to run would take it;
|
||
together if possible, alone if not, and no looking back. He got his chance, and since she never heard otherwise she
|
||
believed he made it. Now how could he find or hear tell of her if she was calling herself some bill-of-sale name?
|
||
She couldn't get over the city. More people than Carolina and enough whitefolks to stop the breath. Two-story buildings
|
||
everywhere, and walkways made of perfectly cut slats of wood. Roads wide as Garner's whole house.
|
||
"This is a city of water," said Mr. Garner. "Everything travels by water and what the rivers can't carry the canals take.
|
||
A queen of a city, Jenny. Everything you ever dreamed of, they make it right here. Iron stoves, buttons, ships, shirts,
|
||
hairbrushes, paint, steam engines, books. A sewer system make your eyes bug out. Oh, this is a city, all right. If you have
|
||
to live in a city--this is it."
|
||
The Bodwins lived right in the center of a street full of houses and trees. Mr. Garner leaped out and tied his horse to a
|
||
solid iron post.
|
||
"Here we are."
|
||
Baby picked up her bundle and with great difficulty, caused by her hip and the hours of sitting in a wagon, climbed
|
||
down. Mr.
|
||
Garner was up the walk and on the porch before she touched ground, but she got a peep at a Negro girl's face at the
|
||
open door before she followed a path to the back of the house. She waited what seemed a long time before this same
|
||
girl opened the kitchen door and offered her a seat by the window.
|
||
82
|
||
"Can I get you anything to eat, ma'am?" the girl asked.
|
||
"No, darling. I'd look favorable on some water though." The girl went to the sink and pumped a cupful of water. She
|
||
placed it in Baby Suggs' hand. "I'm Janey, ma'am."
|
||
Baby, marveling at the sink, drank every drop of water although it tasted like a serious medicine. "Suggs," she said,
|
||
blotting her lips with the back of her hand. "Baby Suggs."
|
||
"Glad to meet you, Mrs. Suggs. You going to be staying here?"
|
||
"I don't know where I'll be. Mr. Garner--that's him what brought me here--he say he arrange something for me." And
|
||
then, "I'm free, you know."
|
||
Janey smiled. "Yes, ma'am."
|
||
"Your people live around here?"
|
||
"Yes, ma'am. All us live out on Bluestone."
|
||
"We scattered," said Baby Suggs, "but maybe not for long."
|
||
Great God, she thought, where do I start? Get somebody to write old Whitlow. See who took Patty and Rosa Lee.
|
||
Somebody name Dunn got Ardelia and went West, she heard. No point in trying for Tyree or John. They cut thirty years
|
||
ago and, if she searched too hard and they were hiding, finding them would do them more harm than good. Nancy
|
||
and Famous died in a ship off the Virginia coast before it set sail for Savannah. That much she knew. The overseer at
|
||
Whitlow's place brought her the news, more from a wish to have his way with her than from the kindness of his heart.
|
||
The captain waited three weeks in port, to get a full cargo before setting off. Of the slaves in the hold who didn't make
|
||
it, he said, two were Whitlow pickaninnies name of...
|
||
But she knew their names. She knew, and covered her ears with her fists to keep from hearing them come from his
|
||
mouth.
|
||
Janey heated some milk and poured it in a bowl next to a plate of cornbread. After some coaxing, Baby Suggs came to
|
||
the table and sat down. She crumbled the bread into the hot milk and discovered she was hungrier than she had ever
|
||
been in her life and that was saying something.
|
||
"They going to miss this?"
|
||
"No," said Janey. "Eat all you want; it's ours."
|
||
"Anybody else live here?"
|
||
"Just me. Mr. Woodruff, he does the outside chores. He comes by two, three days a week."
|
||
"Just you two?"
|
||
"Yes, ma'am. I do the cooking and washing."
|
||
"Maybe your people know of somebody looking for help."
|
||
"I be sure to ask, but I know they take women at the slaughterhouse."
|
||
"Doing what?"
|
||
"I don't know."
|
||
"Something men don't want to do, I reckon."
|
||
83
|
||
"My cousin say you get all the meat you want, plus twenty-five cents the hour. She make summer sausage."
|
||
Baby Suggs lifted her hand to the top of her head. Money? Money?
|
||
They would pay her money every single day? Money?
|
||
"Where is this here slaughterhouse?" she asked.
|
||
Before Janey could answer, the Bodwins came in to the kitchen with a grinning Mr. Garner behind. Undeniably brother
|
||
and sister, both dressed in gray with faces too young for their snow-white hair.
|
||
"Did you give her anything to eat, Janey?" asked the brother.
|
||
"Yes, sir."
|
||
"Keep your seat, Jenny," said the sister, and that good news got better.
|
||
When they asked what work she could do, instead of reeling off the hundreds of tasks she had performed, she asked
|
||
about the slaughterhouse.
|
||
She was too old for that, they said.
|
||
"She's the best cobbler you ever see," said Mr. Garner.
|
||
"Cobbler?" Sister Bodwin raised her black thick eyebrows. "Who taught you that?"
|
||
"Was a slave taught me," said Baby Suggs.
|
||
"New boots, or just repair?"
|
||
"New, old, anything."
|
||
"Well," said Brother Bodwin, "that'll be something, but you'll need more."
|
||
"What about taking in wash?" asked Sister Bodwin.
|
||
"Yes, ma'am."
|
||
"Two cents a pound."
|
||
"Yes, ma'am. But where's the in?"
|
||
"What?"
|
||
"You said 'take in wash.' Where is the 'in'? Where I'm going to be."
|
||
"Oh, just listen to this, Jenny," said Mr. Garner. "These two angels got a house for you. Place they own out a ways."
|
||
It had belonged to their grandparents before they moved in town.
|
||
Recently it. had been rented out to a whole parcel of Negroes, who had left the state. It was too big a house for Jenny
|
||
alone, they said (two rooms upstairs, two down), but it was the best and the only thing they could do. In return for
|
||
laundry, some seamstress work, a little canning and so on (oh shoes, too), they would permit her to stay there. Provided
|
||
she was clean. The past parcel of colored wasn't.
|
||
Baby Suggs agreed to the situation, sorry to see the money go but excited about a house with stepsnever mind she
|
||
couldn't climb them. Mr. Garner told the Bodwins that she was a right fine cook as well as a fine cobbler and showed his
|
||
belly and the sample on his feet. Everybody laughed.
|
||
84
|
||
"Anything you need, let us know," said the sister. "We don't hold with slavery, even Garner's kind."
|
||
"Tell em, Jenny. You live any better on any place before mine?"
|
||
"No, sir," she said. "No place."
|
||
"How long was you at Sweet Home?"
|
||
"Ten year, I believe."
|
||
"Ever go hungry?"
|
||
"No, sir."
|
||
"Cold?"
|
||
"No, sir."
|
||
"Anybody lay a hand on you?"
|
||
"No, sir."
|
||
"Did I let Halle buy you or not?"
|
||
"Yes, sir, you did," she said, thinking, But you got my boy and I'm all broke down. You be renting him out to pay for me
|
||
way after I'm gone to Glory.
|
||
Woodruff, they said, would carry her out there, they said, and all three disappeared through the kitchen door.
|
||
"I have to fix the supper now," said Janey.
|
||
"I'll help," said Baby Suggs. "You too short to reach the fire."
|
||
It was dark when Woodruff clicked the horse into a trot. He was a young man with a heavy beard and a burned place on
|
||
his jaw the beard did not hide.
|
||
"You born up here?" Baby Suggs asked him.
|
||
"No, ma'am. Virginia. Been here a couple years."
|
||
"I see."
|
||
"You going to a nice house. Big too. A preacher and his family was in there. Eighteen children."
|
||
"Have mercy. Where they go?"
|
||
"Took off to Illinois. Bishop Allen gave him a congregation up there. Big."
|
||
"What churches around here? I ain't set foot in one in ten years."
|
||
"How come?"
|
||
"Wasn't none. I dislike the place I was before this last one, but I did get to church every Sunday some kind of way. I bet
|
||
the Lord done forgot who I am by now."
|
||
"Go see Reverend Pike, ma'am. He'll reacquaint you."
|
||
"I won't need him for that. I can make my own acquaintance.
|
||
85
|
||
What I need him for is to reacquaint me with my children. He can read and write, I reckon?"
|
||
"Sure."
|
||
"Good, 'cause I got a lot of digging up to do." But the news they dug up was so pitiful she quit. After two years of
|
||
messages written by the preacher's hand, two years of washing, sewing, canning, cobbling, gardening, and sitting in
|
||
churches, all she found out was that the Whitlow place was gone and that you couldn't write to "a man named Dunn" if
|
||
all you knew was that he went West. The good news, however, was that Halle got married and had a baby coming.
|
||
She fixed on that and her own brand of preaching, having made up her mind about what to do with the heart that
|
||
started beating the minute she crossed the Ohio River. And it worked out, worked out just fine, until she got proud and
|
||
let herself be overwhelmed by the sight of her daughter-in-law and Halle's children--one of whom was born on the way-
|
||
-and have a celebration of blackberries that put Christmas to shame. Now she stood in the garden smelling disapproval,
|
||
feeling a dark and coming thing, and seeing high-topped shoes that she didn't like the look of at all. At all.
|
||
Chapter 16
|
||
WHEN THE four horsemen came--schoolteacher, one nephew, one slave catcher and a sheriff--the house on Bluestone
|
||
Road was so quiet they thought they were too late. Three of them dismounted, one stayed in the saddle, his rifle ready,
|
||
his eyes trained away from the house to the left and to the right, because likely as not the fugitive would make a dash
|
||
for it. Although sometimes, you could never tell, you'd find them folded up tight somewhere: beneath floorboards, in
|
||
a pantry--once in a chimney. Even then care was taken, because the quietest ones, the ones you pulled from a press, a
|
||
hayloft, or, that once, from a chimney, would go along nicely for two or three seconds.
|
||
Caught red-handed, so to speak, they would seem to recognize the futility of outsmarting a whiteman and the
|
||
hopelessness of outrunning a rifle. Smile even, like a child caught dead with his hand in the jelly jar, and when you
|
||
reached for the rope to tie him, well, even then you couldn't tell. The very nigger with his head hanging and a little jelly-
|
||
jar smile on his face could all of a sudden roar, like a bull or some such, and commence to do disbelievable things. Grab
|
||
the rifle at its mouth; throw himself at the one holding it--anything. So you had to keep back a pace, leave the tying to
|
||
another. Otherwise you ended up killing what you were paid to bring back alive. Unlike a snake or a bear, a dead nigger
|
||
could not be skinned for profit and was not worth his own dead weight in coin.
|
||
Six or seven Negroes were walking up the road toward the house: two boys from the slave catcher's left and some
|
||
women from his right. He motioned them still with his rifle and they stood where they were. The nephew came back
|
||
from peeping inside the house, and after touching his lips for silence, pointed his thumb to say that what they were
|
||
looking for was round back. The slave catcher dismounted then and joined the others. Schoolteacher and the nephew
|
||
moved to the left of the house; himself and the sheriff to the right.
|
||
A crazy old nigger was standing in the woodpile with an ax. You could tell he was crazy right off because he was
|
||
grunting--making low, cat noises like. About twelve yards beyond that nigger was another one--a woman with a flower
|
||
in her hat. Crazy too, probably, because she too was standing stock-still--but fanning her hands as though pushing
|
||
cobwebs out of her way. Both, however, were staring at the same place--a shed. Nephew walked over to the old nigger
|
||
boy and took the ax from him. Then all four started toward the shed.
|
||
Inside, two boys bled in the sawdust and dirt at the feet of a nigger woman holding a blood-soaked child to her chest
|
||
with one hand and an infant by the heels in the other. She did not look at them; she simply swung the baby toward the
|
||
wall planks, missed and tried to connect a second time, when out of nowheremin the ticking time the men spent staring
|
||
at what there was to stare the old nigger boy, still mewing, ran through the door behind them and snatched the baby
|
||
from the arch of its mother's swing.
|
||
Right off it was clear, to schoolteacher especially, that there was nothing there to claim. The three (now four--because
|
||
she'd had the one coming when she cut) pickaninnies they had hoped were alive and well enough to take back to
|
||
Kentucky, take back and raise properly to do the work Sweet Home desperately needed, were not.
|
||
86
|
||
Two were lying open-eyed in sawdust; a third pumped blood down the dress of the main one--the woman schoolteacher
|
||
bragged about, the one he said made fine ink, damn good soup, pressed his collars the way he liked besides having at
|
||
least ten breeding years left. But now she'd gone wild, due to the mishandling of the nephew who'd overbeat her and
|
||
made her cut and run. Schoolteacher had chastised that nephew, telling him to think--just think--what would his own
|
||
horse do if you beat it beyond the point of education. Or Chipper, or Samson. Suppose you beat the hounds past that
|
||
point thataway.
|
||
Never again could you trust them in the woods or anywhere else.
|
||
You'd be feeding them maybe, holding out a piece of rabbit in your hand, and the animal would revert--bite your hand
|
||
clean off. So he punished that nephew by not letting him come on the hunt. Made him stay there, feed stock, feed
|
||
himself, feed Lillian, tend crops. See how he liked it; see what happened when you overbear creatures God had given
|
||
you the responsibility of--the trouble it was, and the loss. The whole lot was lost now. Five. He could claim the baby
|
||
struggling in the arms of the mewing old man, but who'd tend her?
|
||
Because the woman--something was wrong with her. She was looking at him now, and if his other nephew could see
|
||
that look he would learn the lesson for sure: you just can't mishandle creatures and expect success.
|
||
The nephew, the one who had nursed her while his brother held her down, didn't know he was shaking. His uncle had
|
||
warned him against that kind of confusion, but the warning didn't seem to be taking. What she go and do that for? On
|
||
account of a beating? Hell, he'd been beat a million times and he was white. Once it hurt so bad and made him so mad
|
||
he'd smashed the well bucket. Another time he took it out on Samson--a few tossed rocks was all. But no beating ever
|
||
made him... I mean no way he could have... What she go and do that for? And that is what he asked the sheriff, who was
|
||
standing there, amazed like the rest of them, but not shaking. He was swallowing hard, over and over again. "What she
|
||
want to go and do that for?"
|
||
The sheriff turned, then said to the other three, "You all better go on. Look like your business is over. Mine's started
|
||
now."
|
||
Schoolteacher beat his hat against his thigh and spit before leaving the woodshed. Nephew and the catcher backed out
|
||
with him. They didn't look at the woman in the pepper plants with the flower in her hat. And they didn't look at the
|
||
seven or so faces that had edged closer in spite of the catcher's rifle warning. Enough nigger eyes for now. Little nigger-
|
||
boy eyes open in sawdust; little nigger-girl eyes staring between the wet fingers that held her face so her head wouldn't
|
||
fall off; little nigger-baby eyes crinkling up to cry in the arms of the old nigger whose own eyes were nothing but slivers
|
||
looking down at his feet. But the worst ones were those of the nigger woman who looked like she didn't have any. Since
|
||
the whites in them had disappeared and since they were as black as her skin, she looked blind.
|
||
They unhitched from schoolteacher's horse the borrowed mule that was to carry the fugitive woman back to where
|
||
she belonged, and tied it to the fence. Then, with the sun straight up over their heads, they trotted off, leaving the
|
||
sheriff behind among the damnedest bunch of coons they'd ever seen. All testimony to the results of a little so-called
|
||
freedom imposed on people who needed every care and guidance in the world to keep them from the cannibal life they
|
||
preferred.
|
||
The sheriff wanted to back out too. To stand in the sunlight outside of that place meant for housing wood, coal,
|
||
kerosene--fuel for cold Ohio winters, which he thought of now, while resisting the urge to run into the August sunlight.
|
||
Not because he was afraid. Not at all. He was just cold. And he didn't want to touch anything. The baby in the old man's
|
||
arms was crying, and the woman's eyes with no whites were gazing straight ahead. They all might have remained that
|
||
way, frozen till Thursday,
|
||
except one of the boys on the floor sighed. As if he were sunk in the pleasure of a deep sweet sleep, he sighed the sigh
|
||
that flung the sheriff into action.
|
||
"I'll have to take you in. No trouble now. You've done enough to last you. Come on now."
|
||
She did not move.
|
||
87
|
||
"You come quiet, hear, and I won't have to tie you up."
|
||
She stayed still and he had made up his mind to go near her and some kind of way bind her wet red hands when a
|
||
shadow behind him in the doorway made him turn. The nigger with the flower in her hat entered.
|
||
Baby Suggs noticed who breathed and who did not and went straight to the boys lying in the dirt. The old man moved to
|
||
the woman gazing and said, "Sethe. You take my armload and gimme yours."
|
||
She turned to him, and glancing at the baby he was holding, made a low sound in her throat as though she'd made a
|
||
mistake, left the salt out of the bread or something.
|
||
"I'm going out here and send for a wagon," the sheriff said and got into the sunlight at last.
|
||
But neither Stamp Paid nor Baby Suggs could make her put her crawling-already? girl down. Out of the shed, back in
|
||
the house, she held on. Baby Suggs had got the boys inside and was bathing their heads, rubbing their hands, lifting
|
||
their lids, whispering, "Beg your pardon, I beg your pardon," the whole time. She bound their wounds and made them
|
||
breathe camphor before turning her attention to Sethe. She took the crying baby from Stamp Paid and carried it on her
|
||
shoulder for a full two minutes, then stood in front of its mother.
|
||
"It's time to nurse your youngest," she said.
|
||
Sethe reached up for the baby without letting the dead one go.
|
||
Baby Suggs shook her head. "One at a time," she said and traded the living for the dead, which she carried into the
|
||
keeping room.
|
||
When she came back, Sethe was aiming a bloody nipple into the baby's mouth. Baby Suggs slammed her fist on the table
|
||
and shouted, "Clean up! Clean yourself up!"
|
||
They fought then. Like rivals over the heart of the loved, they fought. Each struggling for the nursing child. Baby Suggs
|
||
lost when she slipped in a red puddle and fell. So Denver took her mother's milk right along with the blood of her sister.
|
||
And that's the way they were when the sheriff returned, having commandeered a neighbor's cart, and ordered Stamp to
|
||
drive it.
|
||
Outside a throng, now, of black faces stopped murmuring. Holding the living child, Sethe walked past them in their
|
||
silence and hers.
|
||
She climbed into the cart, her profile knife-clean against a cheery blue sky. A profile that shocked them with its clarity.
|
||
Was her head a bit too high? Her back a little too straight? Probably. Otherwise the singing would have begun at once,
|
||
the moment she appeared in the doorway of the house on Bluestone Road. Some cape of sound would have quickly
|
||
been wrapped around her, like arms to hold and steady her on the way. As it was, they waited till the cart turned about,
|
||
headed west to town. And then no words. Humming. No words at all.
|
||
Baby Suggs meant to run, skip down the porch steps after the cart, screaming, No. No. Don't let her take that last one
|
||
too. She meant to. Had started to, but when she got up from the floor and reached the yard the cart was gone and a
|
||
wagon was rolling up. A red-haired boy and a yellow-haired girl jumped down and ran through the crowd toward her.
|
||
The boy had a half-eaten sweet pepper in one hand and a pair of shoes in the other.
|
||
"Mama says Wednesday." He held them together by their tongues.
|
||
"She says you got to have these fixed by Wednesday."
|
||
Baby Suggs looked at him, and then at the woman holding a twitching lead horse to the road.
|
||
"She says Wednesday, you hear? Baby? Baby?"
|
||
She took the shoes from him--high-topped and muddy--saying, "I beg your pardon. Lord, I beg your pardon. I sure do."
|
||
88
|
||
Out of sight, the cart creaked on down Bluestone Road. Nobody in it spoke. The wagon rock had put the baby to sleep.
|
||
The hot sun dried Sethe's dress, stiff, like rigor morris.
|
||
Chapter 17
|
||
THAT AIN'T her mouth.
|
||
Anybody who didn't know her, or maybe somebody who just got a glimpse of her through the peephole at the
|
||
restaurant, might think it was hers, but Paul D knew better. Oh well, a little something around the forehead--a
|
||
quietness--that kind of reminded you of her.
|
||
But there was no way you could take that for her mouth and he said so. Told Stamp Paid, who was watching him
|
||
carefully.
|
||
"I don't know, man. Don't look like it to me. I know Sethe's mouth and this ain't it." He smoothed the clipping with
|
||
his fingers and peered at it, not at all disturbed. From the solemn air with which Stamp had unfolded the paper, the
|
||
tenderness in the old man's fingers as he stroked its creases and flattened it out, first on his knees, then on the split top
|
||
of the piling, Paul D knew that it ought to mess him up. That whatever was written on it should shake him.
|
||
Pigs were crying in the chute. All day Paul D, Stamp Paid and twenty more had pushed and prodded them from canal to
|
||
shore to chute to slaughterhouse. Although, as grain farmers moved west, St.
|
||
Louis and Chicago now ate up a lot of the business, Cincinnati was still pig port in the minds of Ohioans. Its main job was
|
||
to receive, slaughter and ship up the river the hogs that Northerners did not want to live without. For a month or so in
|
||
the winter any stray man had work, if he could breathe the stench of offal and stand up for twelve hours, skills in which
|
||
Paul D was admirably trained.
|
||
A little pig shit, rinsed from every place he could touch, remained on his boots, and he was conscious of it as he stood
|
||
there with a light smile of scorn curling his lips. Usually he left his boots in the shed and put his walking shoes on along
|
||
with his day clothes in the corner before he went home. A route that took him smack dab through the middle of a
|
||
cemetery as old as sky, rife with the agitation of dead Miami no longer content to rest in the mounds that covered them.
|
||
Over their heads walked a strange people; through their earth pillows roads were cut; wells and houses nudged them
|
||
out of eternal rest. Outraged more by their folly in believing land was holy than by the disturbances of their peace, they
|
||
growled on the banks of Licking River, sighed in the trees on Catherine Street and rode the wind above the pig yards.
|
||
Paul D heard them but he stayed on because all in all it wasn't a bad job, especially in winter when Cincinnati reassumed
|
||
its status of slaughter and riverboat capital. The craving for pork was growing into a mania in every city in the country.
|
||
Pig farmers were cashing in, provided they could raise enough and get them sold farther and farther away. And the
|
||
Germans who flooded southern Ohio brought and developed swine cooking to its highest form. Pig boats jammed the
|
||
Ohio River, and their captains' hollering at one another over the grunts of the stock was as common a water sound as
|
||
that of the ducks flying over their heads. Sheep, cows and fowl too floated up and down that river, and all a Negro had
|
||
to do was show up and there was work: poking, killing, cutting, skinning, case packing and saving offal.
|
||
A hundred yards from the crying pigs, the two men stood behind a shed on Western Row and it was clear why
|
||
Stamp had been eyeing Paul D this last week of work; why he paused when the evening shift came on, to let Paul D's
|
||
movements catch up to his own. He had made up his mind to show him this piece of paper--newspaper-- with a picture
|
||
drawing of a woman who favored Sethe except that was not her mouth. Nothing like it.
|
||
Paul D slid the clipping out from under Stamp's palm. The print meant nothing to him so he didn't even glance at it.
|
||
He simply looked at the face, shaking his head no. No. At the mouth, you see. And no at whatever it was those black
|
||
scratches said, and no to whatever it was Stamp Paid wanted him to know. Because there was no way in hell a black face
|
||
89
|
||
could appear in a newspaper if the story was about something anybody wanted to hear. A whip of fear broke through
|
||
the heart chambers as soon as you saw a Negro's face in a paper, since the face was not there because the person had
|
||
a healthy baby, or outran a street mob. Nor was it there because the person had been killed, or maimed or caught or
|
||
burned or jailed or whipped or evicted or stomped or raped or cheated, since that could hardly qualify as news in a
|
||
newspaper. It would have to be something out of the ordinary--something whitepeople
|
||
would find interesting, truly different, worth a few minutes of teeth sucking if not gasps. And it must have been hard to
|
||
find news about Negroes worth the breath catch of a white citizen of Cincinnati.
|
||
So who was this woman with a mouth that was not Sethe's, but whose eyes were almost as calm as hers? Whose head
|
||
was turned on her neck in the manner he loved so well it watered his eye to see it.
|
||
And he said so. "This ain't her mouth. I know her mouth and this ain't it." Before Stamp Paid could speak he said it and
|
||
even while he spoke Paul D said it again. Oh, he heard all the old man was saying, but the more he heard, the stranger
|
||
the lips in the drawing became.
|
||
Stamp started with the party, the one Baby Suggs gave, but stopped and backed up a bit to tell about the berries--where
|
||
they were and what was in the earth that made them grow like that.
|
||
"They open to the sun, but not the birds, 'cause snakes down in there and the birds know it, so they just grow--fat and
|
||
sweet--with nobody to bother em 'cept me because don't nobody go in that piece of water but me and ain't too many
|
||
legs willing to glide down that bank to get them. Me neither. But I was willing that day. Somehow or 'nother I was
|
||
willing. And they whipped me, I'm telling you. Tore me up. But I filled two buckets anyhow. And took em over to Baby
|
||
Suggs' house. It was on from then on. Such a cooking you never see no more. We baked, fried and stewed everything
|
||
God put down here.
|
||
Everybody came. Everybody stuffed. Cooked so much there wasn't a stick of kirdlin left for the next day. I volunteered to
|
||
do it. And next morning I come over, like I promised, to do it."
|
||
"But this ain't her mouth," Paul D said. "This ain't it at all."
|
||
Stamp Paid looked at him. He was going to tell him about how restless Baby Suggs was that morning, how she had a
|
||
listening way about her; how she kept looking down past the corn to the stream so much he looked too. In between
|
||
ax swings, he watched where Baby was watching. Which is why they both missed it: they were looking the wrong
|
||
way--toward water--and all the while it was coming down the road. Four. Riding close together, bunched-up like, and
|
||
righteous. He was going to tell him that, because he thought it was important: why he and Baby Suggs both missed
|
||
it. And about the party too, because that explained why nobody ran on ahead; why nobody sent a fleet-footed son to
|
||
cut 'cross a field soon as they saw the four horses in town hitched for watering while the riders asked questions. Not
|
||
Ella, not John, not anybody ran down or to Bluestone Road, to say some new whitefolks with the Look just rode in.
|
||
The righteous Look every Negro learned to recognize along with his ma'am's tit. Like a flag hoisted, this righteousness
|
||
telegraphed and announced the faggot, the whip, the fist, the lie, long before it went public. Nobody warned them, and
|
||
he'd always believed it wasn't the exhaustion from a long day's gorging that dulled them, but some other thing--like,
|
||
well, like meanness--that let them stand aside, or not pay attention, or tell themselves somebody else was probably
|
||
bearing the news already to the house on Bluestone Road where a pretty woman had been living for almost a month.
|
||
Young and deft with four children one of which she delivered herself the day before she got there and who now had
|
||
the full benefit of Baby Suggs' bounty and her big old heart. Maybe they just wanted to know if Baby really was special,
|
||
blessed in some way they were not. He was going to tell him that, but Paul D was laughing, saying, "Uh uh. No way. A
|
||
little semblance round the forehead maybe, but this ain't her mouth."
|
||
So Stamp Paid did not tell him how she flew, snatching up her children like a hawk on the wing; how her face beaked,
|
||
how her hands worked like claws, how she collected them every which way: one on her shoulder, one under her arm,
|
||
one by the hand, the other shouted forward into the woodshed filled with just sunlight and shavings now because there
|
||
wasn't any wood. The party had used it all, which is why he was chopping some. Nothing was in that shed, he knew,
|
||
having been there early that morning. Nothing but sunlight.
|
||
90
|
||
Sunlight, shavings, a shovel. The ax he himself took out. Nothing else was in there except the shovel--and of course the
|
||
saw.
|
||
"You forgetting I knew her before," Paul D was saying. "Back in Kentucky. When she was a girl. I didn't just make her
|
||
acquaintance a few months ago. I been knowing her a long time. And I can tell you for sure: this ain't her mouth. May
|
||
look like it, but it ain't."
|
||
So Stamp Paid didn't say it all. Instead he took a breath and leaned toward the mouth that was not hers and slowly read
|
||
out the words Paul D couldn't. And when he finished, Paul D said with a vigor fresher than the first time, "I'm sorry,
|
||
Stamp. It's a mistake somewhere 'cause that ain't her mouth."
|
||
Stamp looked into Paul D's eyes and the sweet conviction in them almost made him wonder if it had happened at all,
|
||
eighteen years ago, that while he and Baby Suggs were looking the wrong way, a pretty little slavegirl had recognized a
|
||
hat, and split to the woodshed to kill her children.
|
||
Chapter 18
|
||
"SHE WAS crawling already when I got here. One week, less, and the baby who was sitting up and turning over when I
|
||
put her on the wagon was crawling already. Devil of a time keeping her off the stairs. Nowadays babies get up and walk
|
||
soon's you drop em, but twenty years ago when I was a girl, babies stayed babies longer.
|
||
Howard didn't pick up his own head till he was nine months. Baby Suggs said it was the food, you know. If you ain't got
|
||
nothing but milk to give em, well they don't do things so quick. Milk was all I ever had. I thought teeth meant they was
|
||
ready to chew. Wasn't nobody to ask. Mrs. Garner never had no children and we was the only women there."
|
||
She was spinning. Round and round the room. Past the jelly cupboard, past the window, past the front door, another
|
||
window, the sideboard, the keeping-room door, the dry sink, the stove--back to the jelly cupboard. Paul D sat at the
|
||
table watching her drift into view then disappear behind his back, turning like a slow but steady wheel. Sometimes she
|
||
crossed her hands behind her back. Other times she held her ears, covered her mouth or folded her arms across her
|
||
breasts. Once in a while she rubbed her hips as she turned, but the wheel never stopped.
|
||
"Remember Aunt Phyllis? From out by Minnoveville? Mr. Garner sent one a you all to get her for each and every one of
|
||
my babies.
|
||
That'd be the only time I saw her. Many's the time I wanted to get over to where she was. Just to talk. My plan was
|
||
to ask Mrs. Garner to let me off at Minnowville whilst she went to meeting. Pick me up on her way back. I believe she
|
||
would a done that if I was to ask her.
|
||
I never did, 'cause that's the only day Halle and me had with sunlight in it for the both of us to see each other by. So
|
||
there wasn't nobody.
|
||
To talk to, I mean, who'd know when it was time to chew up a little something and give it to em. Is that what make the
|
||
teeth come on out, or should you wait till the teeth came and then solid food? Well, I know now, because Baby Suggs
|
||
fed her right, and a week later, when I got here she was crawling already. No stopping her either.
|
||
She loved those steps so much we painted them so she could see her way to the top."
|
||
Sethe smiled then, at the memory of it. The smile broke in two and became a sudden suck of air, but she did not
|
||
shudder or close her eyes. She wheeled.
|
||
"I wish I'd a known more, but, like I say, there wasn't nobody to talk to. Woman, I mean. So I tried to recollect what I'd
|
||
seen back where I was before Sweet Home. How the women did there. Oh they knew all about it. How to make that
|
||
thing you use to hang the babies in the trees--so you could see them out of harm's way while you worked the fields. Was
|
||
a leaf thing too they gave em to chew on.
|
||
91
|
||
Mint, I believe, or sassafras. Comfrey, maybe. I still don't know how they constructed that basket thing, but I didn't need
|
||
it anyway, because all my work was in the barn and the house, but I forgot what the leaf was. I could have used that. I
|
||
tied Buglar when we had all that pork to smoke. Fire everywhere and he was getting into everything.
|
||
I liked to lost him so many times. Once he got up on the well, right on it. I flew. Snatched him just in time. So when I
|
||
knew we'd be rendering and smoking and I couldn't see after him, well, I got a rope and tied it round his ankle. Just long
|
||
enough to play round a little, but not long enough to reach the well or the fire. I didn't like the look of it, but I didn't
|
||
know what else to do. It's hard, you know what I mean? by yourself and no woman to help you get through.
|
||
Halle was good, but he was debt-working all over the place. And when he did get down to a little sleep, I didn't want to
|
||
be bothering him with all that. Sixo was the biggest help. I don't 'spect you rememory this, but Howard got in the milk
|
||
parlor and Red Cora I believe it was mashed his hand. Turned his thumb backwards. When I got to him, she was getting
|
||
ready to bite it. I don't know to this day how I got him out. Sixo heard him screaming and come running.
|
||
Know what he did? Turned the thumb right back and tied it cross his palm to his little finger. See, I never would have
|
||
thought of that.
|
||
Never. Taught me a lot, Sixo."
|
||
It made him dizzy. At first he thought it was her spinning. Circling him the way she was circling the subject. Round and
|
||
round, never changing direction, which might have helped his head. Then he thought, No, it's the sound of her voice;
|
||
it's too near. Each turn she made was at least three yards from where he sat, but listening to her was like having a child
|
||
whisper into your ear so close you could feel its lips form the words you couldn't make out because they were too close.
|
||
He caught only pieces of what
|
||
she said--which was fine, because she hadn't gotten to the main part--the answer to the question he had not asked
|
||
outright, but which lay in the clipping he showed her. And lay in the smile as well. Because he smiled too, when
|
||
he showed it to her, so when she burst out laughing at the joke--the mix-up of her face put where some other
|
||
coloredwoman's ought to be--well, he'd be ready to laugh right along with her. "Can you beat it?" he would ask.
|
||
And "Stamp done lost his mind," she would giggle.
|
||
"Plumb lost it."
|
||
But his smile never got a chance to grow. It hung there, small and alone, while she examined the clipping and then
|
||
handed it back.
|
||
Perhaps it was the smile, or maybe the ever-ready love she saw in his eyes--easy and upfront, the way colts, evangelists
|
||
and children look at you: with love you don't have to deserve--that made her go ahead and tell him what she had
|
||
not told Baby Suggs, the only person she felt obliged to explain anything to. Otherwise she would have said what the
|
||
newspaper said she said and no more. Sethe could recognize only seventy-five printed words (half of which appeared in
|
||
the newspaper clipping), but she knew that the words she did not understand hadn't any more power than she had to
|
||
explain. It was the smile and the upfront love that made her try.
|
||
"I don't have to tell you about Sweet Home--what it was--but maybe you don't know what it was like for me to get away
|
||
from there."
|
||
Covering the lower half of her face with her palms, she paused to consider again the size of the miracle; its flavor.
|
||
"I did it. I got us all out. Without Halle too. Up till then it was the only thing I ever did on my own. Decided. And it came
|
||
off right, like it was supposed to. We was here. Each and every one of my babies and me too. I birthed them and I got
|
||
em out and it wasn't no accident. I did that. I had help, of course, lots of that, but still it was me doing it; me saying, Go
|
||
on, and Now. Me having to look out.
|
||
Me using my own head. But it was more than that. It was a kind of selfishness I never knew nothing about before. It felt
|
||
good. Good and right. I was big, Paul D, and deep and wide and when I stretched out my arms all my children could get
|
||
92
|
||
in between. I was that wide.
|
||
Look like I loved em more after I got here. Or maybe I couldn't love em proper in Kentucky because they wasn't mine
|
||
to love. But when I got here, when I jumped down off that wagon--there wasn't nobody in the world I couldn't love if I
|
||
wanted to. You know what I mean?"
|
||
Paul D did not answer because she didn't expect or want him to, but he did know what she meant. Listening to the
|
||
doves in Alfred, Georgia, and having neither the right nor the permission to enjoy it because in that place mist, doves,
|
||
sunlight, copper dirt, moon---every thing belonged to the men who had the guns. Little men, some of them, big men too,
|
||
each one of whom he could snap like a twig if he wanted to. Men who knew their manhood lay in their guns and were
|
||
not even embarrassed by the knowledge that without gunshot fox would laugh at them. And these "men" who made
|
||
even vixen laugh could, if you let them, stop you from hearing doves or loving moonlight. So you protected yourself and
|
||
loved small. Picked the tiniest stars out of the sky to own; lay down with head twisted in order to see the loved one over
|
||
the rim of the trench before you slept.
|
||
Stole shy glances at her between the trees at chain-up. Grass blades, salamanders, spiders, woodpeckers, beetles, a
|
||
kingdom of ants. Anything bigger wouldn't do. A woman, a child, a brother--a big love like that would split you wide
|
||
open in Alfred, Georgia. He knew exactly what she meant: to get to a place where you could love anything you chose--
|
||
not to need permission for desire--well now, that was freedom.
|
||
Circling, circling, now she was gnawing something else instead of getting to the point.
|
||
"There was this piece of goods Mrs. Garner gave me. Calico.
|
||
Stripes it had with little flowers in between. 'Bout a yard--not enough for more 'n a head tie. But I been wanting to make
|
||
a shift for my girl with it. Had the prettiest colors. I don't even know what you call that color: a rose but with yellow in
|
||
it. For the longest time I been meaning to make it for her and do you know like a fool I left it behind? No more than a
|
||
yard, and I kept putting it off because I was tired or didn't have the time. So when I got here, even before they let me
|
||
get out of bed, I stitched her a little something from a piece of cloth Baby Suggs had. Well, all I'm saying is that's a selfish
|
||
pleasure I never had before. I couldn't let all that go back to where it was, and I couldn't let her nor any of em live under
|
||
schoolteacher.
|
||
That was out."
|
||
Sethe knew that the circle she was making around the room, him, the subject, would remain one. That she could never
|
||
close in, pin it down for anybody who had to ask. If they didn't get it right off-- she could never explain. Because the
|
||
truth was simple, not a long drawn-out record of flowered shifts, tree cages, selfishness, ankle ropes and wells. Simple:
|
||
she was squatting in the garden and when she saw them coming and recognized schoolteacher's hat, she heard wings.
|
||
Little hummingbirds stuck their needle beaks right through her headcloth into her hair and beat their wings. And if she
|
||
thought anything, it was No. No. Nono. Nonono. Simple. She just flew.
|
||
Collected every bit of life she had made, all the parts of her that were precious and fine and beautiful, and carried,
|
||
pushed, dragged them through the veil, out, away, over there where no one could hurt them.
|
||
Over there. Outside this place, where they would be safe. And the hummingbird wings beat on. Sethe paused in her
|
||
circle again and looked out the window. She remembered when the yard had a fence with a gate that somebody was
|
||
always latching and unlatching in the. time when 124 was busy as a way station. She did not see the whiteboys who
|
||
pulled it down, yanked up the posts and smashed the gate leaving 124 desolate and exposed at the very hour when
|
||
everybody stopped dropping by. The shoulder weeds of Bluestone Road were all that came toward the house.
|
||
When she got back from the jail house, she was glad the fence was gone. That's where they had hitched their horses--
|
||
where she saw, floating above the railing as she squatted in the garden, school-
|
||
teacher's hat. By the time she faced him, looked him dead in the eye, she had something in her arms that stopped him in
|
||
93
|
||
his tracks. He took a backward step with each jump of the baby heart until finally there were none.
|
||
"I stopped him," she said, staring at the place where the fence used to be. "I took and put my babies where they'd be
|
||
safe."
|
||
The roaring in Paul D's head did not prevent him from hearing the pat she gave to the last word, and it occurred to him
|
||
that what she wanted for her children was exactly what was missing in 124: safety. Which was the very first message
|
||
he got the day he walked through the door. He thought he had made it safe, had gotten rid of the danger; beat the shit
|
||
out of it; run it off the place and showed it and everybody else the difference between a mule and a plow. And because
|
||
she had not done it before he got there her own self, he thought it was because she could not do it. That she lived with
|
||
124 in helpless, apologetic resignation because she had no choice; that minus husband, sons, mother-in-law, she and her
|
||
slow-witted daughter had to live there all alone making do. The prickly, mean-eyed Sweet Home girl he knew as Halle's
|
||
girl was obedient (like Halle), shy (like Halle), and work-crazy (like Halle). He was wrong. This here Sethe was new. The
|
||
ghost in her house didn't bother her for the very same reason a room-and-board witch with new shoes was welcome.
|
||
This here Sethe talked about love like any other woman; talked about baby clothes like any other woman, but what she
|
||
meant could cleave the bone. This here Sethe talked about safety with a handsaw.
|
||
This here new Sethe didn't know where the world stopped and she began. Suddenly he saw what Stamp Paid wanted
|
||
him to see: more important than what Sethe had done was what she claimed. It scared him.
|
||
"Your love is too thick," he said, thinking, That bitch is looking at me; she is right over my head looking down through the
|
||
floor at me.
|
||
"Too thick?" she said, thinking of the Clearing where Baby Suggs' commands knocked the pods off horse
|
||
chestnuts. "Love is or it ain't.
|
||
Thin love ain't love at all."
|
||
"Yeah. It didn't work, did it? Did it work?" he asked.
|
||
"It worked," she said.
|
||
"How? Your boys gone you don't know where. One girl dead, the other won't leave the yard. How did it work?"
|
||
"They ain't at Sweet Home. Schoolteacher ain't got em."
|
||
"Maybe there's worse."
|
||
"It ain't my job to know what's worse. It's my job to know what is and to keep them away from what I know is terrible. I
|
||
did that."
|
||
"What you did was wrong, Sethe."
|
||
"I should have gone on back there? Taken my babies back there?"
|
||
"There could have been a way. Some other way."
|
||
"What way?"
|
||
"You got two feet, Sethe, not four," he said, and right then a forest sprang up between them; trackless and quiet.
|
||
Later he would wonder what made him say it. The calves of his youth? or the conviction that he was being observed
|
||
through the ceiling? How fast he had moved from his shame to hers. From his cold-house secret straight to her too-thick
|
||
love.
|
||
Meanwhile the forest was locking the distance between them, giving it shape and heft.
|
||
94
|
||
He did not put his hat on right away. First he fingered it, deciding how his going would be, how to make it an exit not
|
||
an escape. And it was very important not to leave without looking. He stood up, turned and looked up the white stairs.
|
||
She was there all right. Standing straight as a line with her back to him. He didn't rush to the door. He moved slowly and
|
||
when he got there he opened it before asking Sethe to put supper aside for him because he might be a little late getting
|
||
back. Only then did he put on his hat.
|
||
Sweet, she thought. He must think I can't bear to hear him say it. That after all I have told him and after telling me how
|
||
many feet I have, "goodbye" would break me to pieces. Ain't that sweet.
|
||
"So long," she murmured from the far side of the trees.
|
||
Book Two
|
||
Chapter 19
|
||
124 WAS LOUD. Stamp Paid could hear it even from the road.
|
||
He walked toward the house holding his head as high as possible so nobody looking could call him a sneak, although
|
||
his worried mind made him feel like one. Ever since he showed that newspaper clipping to Paul D and learned that he'd
|
||
moved out of 124 that very day, Stamp felt uneasy. Having wrestled with the question of whether or not to tell a man
|
||
about his woman, and having convinced
|
||
himself that he should, he then began to worry about Sethe. Had he stopped the one shot she had of the happiness a
|
||
good man could bring her?
|
||
Was she vexed by the loss, the free and unasked-for revival of gossip by the man who had helped her cross the river and
|
||
who was her friend as well as Baby Suggs'?
|
||
"I'm too old," he thought, "for clear thinking. I'm too old and I seen too much." He had insisted on privacy during the
|
||
revelation at the slaughter yard--now he wondered whom he was protecting.
|
||
Paul D was the only one in town who didn't know. How did information that had been in the newspaper become a
|
||
secret that needed to be whispered in a pig yard? A secret from whom? Sethe, that's who. He'd gone behind her back,
|
||
like a sneak. But sneaking was his job--his life; though always for a clear and holy purpose. Before the War all he did
|
||
was sneak: runaways into hidden places, secret information to public places. Underneath his legal vegetables were the
|
||
contraband humans that he ferried across the river. Even the pigs he worked in the spring served his purposes. Whole
|
||
families lived on the bones and guts he distributed to them. He wrote their letters and read to them the ones they
|
||
received. He knew who had dropsy and who needed stovewood; which children had a gift and which needed correction.
|
||
He knew the secrets of the Ohio River and its banks; empty houses and full; the best dancers, the worst speakers, those
|
||
with beautiful voices and those who could not carry a tune. There was nothing interesting between his legs, but he
|
||
remembered when there had been--when that drive drove the driven--and that was why he considered long and hard
|
||
before opening his wooden box and searching for the eighteen-year-old clipping to show Paul D as proof.
|
||
Afterward--not before--he considered Sethe's feelings in the matter.
|
||
And it was the lateness of this consideration that made him feel so bad. Maybe he should have left it alone; maybe
|
||
Sethe would have gotten around to telling him herself; maybe he was not the high minded Soldier of Christ he thought
|
||
he was, but an ordinary, plain meddler who had interrupted something going along just fine for the sake of truth and
|
||
forewarning, things he set much store by. Now 124 was back like it was before Paul D came to town--worrying Sethe and
|
||
Denver with a pack of haunts he could hear from the road.
|
||
Even if Sethe could deal with the return of the spirit, Stamp didn't believe her daughter could. Denver needed somebody
|
||
normal in her life. By luck he had been there at her very birth almost--before she knew she was alive--and it made him
|
||
partial to her. It was seeing her, alive, don't you know, and looking healthy four weeks later that pleased him so much he
|
||
95
|
||
gathered all he could carry of the best blackberries in the county and stuck two in her mouth first, before he presented
|
||
the difficult harvest to Baby Suggs. To this day he believed his berries (which sparked the feast and the wood chopping
|
||
that followed) were the reason Denver was still alive. Had he not been there, chopping firewood, Sethe would have
|
||
spread her baby brains on the planking. Maybe he should have thought of Denver, if not Sethe, before he gave Paul
|
||
D the news that ran him off, the one normal somebody in the girl's life since Baby Suggs died. And right there was the
|
||
thorn.
|
||
Deeper and more painful than his belated concern for Denver or Sethe, scorching his soul like a silver dollar in a fool's
|
||
pocket, was the memory of Baby Suggs--the mountain to his sky. It was the memory of her and the honor that was her
|
||
due that made him walk straight-necked into the yard of 124, although he heard its voices from the road.
|
||
He had stepped foot in this house only once after the Misery (which is what he called Sethe's rough response to the
|
||
Fugitive Bill) and that was to carry Baby Suggs, holy, out of it. When he picked her up in his arms, she looked to him like
|
||
a gift, and he took the pleasure she would have knowing she didn't have to grind her hipbone anymore--that at last
|
||
somebody carried bar. Had she waited just a little she would have seen the end of the War, its short, flashy results. They
|
||
could have celebrated together; gone to hear the great sermons preached on the occasion. As it was, he went alone
|
||
from house to joyous house drinking what was offered. But she hadn't waited and he attended her funeral more put out
|
||
with her than bereaved. Sethe and her daughter were dry-eyed on that occasion.
|
||
Sethe had no instructions except "Take her to the Clearing," which he tried to do, but was prevented by some rule the
|
||
whites had invented about where the dead should rest. Baby Suggs went down next to the baby with its throat cut--a
|
||
neighborliness that Stamp wasn't sure had Baby Suggs' approval.
|
||
The setting-up was held in the yard because nobody besides himself would enter 124--an injury Sethe answered with
|
||
another by refusing to attend the service Reverend Pike presided over. She went instead to the gravesite, whose silence
|
||
she competed with as she stood there not joining in the hymns the others sang with all their hearts.
|
||
That insult spawned another by the mourners: back in the yard of 124, they ate the food they brought and did not touch
|
||
Sethe's, who did not touch theirs and forbade Denver to. So Baby Suggs, holy, having devoted her freed life to harmony,
|
||
was buried amid a regular dance of pride, fear, condemnation and spite. Just about everybody in town was longing for
|
||
Sethe to come on difficult times. Her outrageous claims, her self-sufficiency seemed to demand it, and Stamp Paid, who
|
||
had not felt a trickle of meanness his whole adult life, wondered if some of the "pride goeth before a fall" expectations
|
||
of the townsfolk had rubbed off on him anyhow--which would explain why he had not considered Sethe's feelings or
|
||
Denver's needs when he showed Paul D the clipping.
|
||
He hadn't the vaguest notion of what he would do or say when and if Sethe opened the door and turned her eyes on
|
||
his. He was willing to offer her help, if she wanted any from him, or receive her anger, if she harbored any against him.
|
||
Beyond that, he trusted his instincts to right what he may have done wrong to Baby Suggs' kin, and to guide him in and
|
||
through the stepped-up haunting 124 was subject to, as evidenced by the voices he heard from the road. Other than
|
||
that, he would rely on the power of Jesus Christ to deal with things older, but not stronger, than He Himself was.
|
||
What he heard, as he moved toward the porch, he didn't understand.
|
||
Out on Bluestone Road he thought he heard a conflagration of hasty voices--loud, urgent, all speaking at once so he
|
||
could not make out what they were talking about or to whom. The speech wasn't
|
||
nonsensical, exactly, nor was it tongues. But something was wrong with the order of the words and he couldn't describe
|
||
or cipher it to save his life. All he could make out was the word mine. The rest of it stayed outside his mind's reach. Yet
|
||
he went on through.
|
||
When he got to the steps, the voices drained suddenly to less than a whisper. It gave him pause. They had become
|
||
an occasional mutter-- like the interior sounds a woman makes when she believes she is alone and unobserved at her
|
||
work: a sth when she misses the needle's eye; a soft moan when she sees another chip in her one good platter; the low,
|
||
friendly argument with which she greets the hens. Nothing fierce or startling. Just that eternal, private conversation that
|
||
takes place between women and their tasks.
|
||
96
|
||
Stamp Paid raised his fist to knock on the door he had never knocked on (because it was always open to or for him) and
|
||
could not do it. Dispensing with that formality was all the pay he expected from Negroes in his debt. Once Stamp Paid
|
||
brought you a coat, got the message to you, saved your life, or fixed the cistern he took the liberty of walking in your
|
||
door as though it were his own. Since all his visits were beneficial, his step or holler through a doorway got a bright
|
||
welcome. Rather than forfeit the one privilege he claimed for himself, he lowered his hand and left the porch.
|
||
Over and over again he tried it: made up his mind to visit Sethe; broke through the loud hasty voices to the mumbling
|
||
beyond it and stopped, trying to figure out what to do at the door. Six times in as many days he abandoned his normal
|
||
route and tried to knock at 124. But the coldness of the gesture--its sign that he was indeed a stranger at the gate--
|
||
overwhelmed him. Retracing his steps in the snow, he sighed. Spirit willing; flesh weak.
|
||
While Stamp Paid was making up his mind to visit 124 for Baby Suggs' sake, Sethe was trying to take her advice: to lay
|
||
it all down, sword and shield. Not just to acknowledge the advice Baby Suggs gave her, but actually to take it. Four
|
||
days after Paul D reminded her of how many feet she had, Sethe rummaged among the shoes of strangers to find the
|
||
ice skates she was sure were there. Digging in the heap she despised herself for having been so trusting, so quick to
|
||
surrender at the stove while Paul D kissed her back. She should have known that he would behave like everybody else
|
||
in town once he knew. The twenty-eight days of having women friends, a mother in-law, and all her children together;
|
||
of being part of a neighborhood; of, in fact, having neighbors at all to call her own--all that was long gone and would
|
||
never come back. No more dancing in the Clearing or happy feeds. No more discussions, stormy or quiet, about the true
|
||
meaning of the Fugitive Bill, the Settlement Fee, God's Ways and Negro pews; antislavery, manumission, skin voting,
|
||
Republicans, Dred Scott, book learning, Sojourner's high-wheeled buggy, the Colored Ladies of Delaware, Ohio, and
|
||
the other weighty issues that held them in chairs, scraping the floorboards or pacing them in agony or exhilaration. No
|
||
anxious wait for the North Star or news of a beat-off. No sighing at a new betrayal or handclapping at a small victory.
|
||
Those twenty-eight happy days were followed by eighteen years of disapproval and a solitary life. Then a few months
|
||
of the sun splashed life that the shadows holding hands on the road promised her; tentative greetings from other
|
||
coloredpeople in Paul D's company; a bed life for herself. Except for
|
||
Denver's friend, every bit of it had disappeared. Was that the pattern? she wondered. Every eighteen or twenty years
|
||
her unlivable life would be interrupted by a short-lived glory?
|
||
Well, if that's the way it was--that's the way it was.
|
||
She had been on her knees, scrubbing the floor, Denver trailing her with the drying rags, when Beloved appeared
|
||
saying, "What these do?" On her knees, scrub brush in hand, she looked at the girl and the skates she held up. Sethe
|
||
couldn't skate a lick but then and there she decided to take Baby Suggs' advice: lay it all down. She left the bucket where
|
||
it was. Told Denver to get out the shawls and started searching for the other skates she was certain were in that heap
|
||
somewhere. Anybody feeling sorry for her, anybody wandering by to peep in and see how she was getting on (including
|
||
Paul D) would discover that the woman junkheaped for the third time because she loved her children--that woman was
|
||
sailing happily on a frozen creek.
|
||
Hurriedly, carelessly she threw the shoes about. She found one blade--a man's.
|
||
"Well," she said. "We'll take turns. Two skates on one; one skate on one; and shoe slide for the other."
|
||
Nobody saw them falling.
|
||
Holding hands, bracing each other, they swirled over the ice.
|
||
Beloved wore the pair; Denver wore one, step-gliding over the treacherous ice. Sethe thought her two shoes would hold
|
||
and anchor her.
|
||
She was wrong. Two paces onto the creek, she lost her balance and landed on her behind. The girls, screaming with
|
||
laughter, joined her on the ice. Sethe struggled to stand and discovered not only that she could do a split, but that it
|
||
hurt. Her bones surfaced in unexpected places and so did laughter. Making a circle or a line, the three of them could not
|
||
97
|
||
stay upright for one whole minute, but nobody saw them falling.
|
||
Each seemed to be helping the other two stay upright, yet every tumble doubled their delight. The live oak and soughing
|
||
pine on the banks enclosed them and absorbed their laughter while they fought gravity for each other's hands. Their
|
||
skirts flew like wings and their skin turned pewter in the cold and dying light.
|
||
Nobody saw them falling.
|
||
Exhausted finally they lay down on their backs to recover breath.
|
||
The sky above them was another country. Winter stars, close enough to lick, had come out before sunset. For a
|
||
moment, looking up, Sethe entered the perfect peace they offered. Then Denver stood up and tried for a long,
|
||
independent glide. The tip of her single skate hit an ice bump, and as she fell, the flapping of her arms was so wild and
|
||
hopeless that all three--Sethe, Beloved and Denver herself--laughed till they coughed. Sethe rose to her hands and
|
||
knees, laughter still shaking her chest, making
|
||
her eyes wet. She stayed that way for a while, on all fours. But when her laughter died, the tears did not and it was some
|
||
time before Beloved or Denver knew the difference. When they did they touched her lightly on the shoulders.
|
||
Walking back through the woods, Sethe put an arm around each girl at her side. Both of them had an arm around her
|
||
waist. Making their way over hard snow, they stumbled and had to hold on tight, but nobody saw them fall.
|
||
Inside the house they found out they were cold. They took off their shoes, wet stockings, and put on dry woolen
|
||
ones. Denver fed the fire. Sethe warmed a pan of milk and stirred cane syrup and vanilla into it. Wrapped in quilts and
|
||
blankets before the cooking stove, they drank, wiped their noses, and drank again.
|
||
"We could roast some taters," said Denver.
|
||
"Tomorrow," said Sethe. "Time to sleep."
|
||
She poured them each a bit more of the hot sweet milk. The stovefire roared.
|
||
"You finished with your eyes?" asked Beloved.
|
||
Sethe smiled. "Yes, I'm finished with my eyes. Drink up. Time for bed."
|
||
But none of them wanted to leave the warmth of the blankets, the fire and the cups for the chill of an unheated bed.
|
||
They went on sipping and watching the fire.
|
||
When the click came Sethe didn't know what it was. Afterward it was clear as daylight that the click came at the very
|
||
beginning-- a beat, almost, before it started; before she heard three notes; before the melody was even clear. Leaning
|
||
forward a little, Beloved was humming softly.
|
||
It was then, when Beloved finished humming, that Sethe recalled the click--the settling of pieces into places designed
|
||
and made especially for them. No milk spilled from her cup because her hand was not shaking. She simply turned her
|
||
head and looked at Beloved's profile: the chin, mouth, nose, forehead, copied and exaggerated in the huge shadow the
|
||
fire threw on the wall behind her. Her hair, which Denver had braided into twenty or thirty plaits, curved toward her
|
||
shoulders like arms. From where she sat Sethe could not examine it, not the hairline, nor the eyebrows, the lips, nor...
|
||
"All I remember," Baby Suggs had said, "is how she loved the burned bottom of bread. Her little hands I wouldn't know
|
||
em if they slapped me."
|
||
.. the birthmark, nor the color of the gums, the shape of her ears, nor...
|
||
"Here. Look here. This is your ma'am. If you can't tell me by my face, look here."
|
||
.. the fingers, nor their nails, nor even...
|
||
98
|
||
But there would be time. The click had clicked; things were where they ought to be or poised and ready to glide in.
|
||
"I made that song up," said Sethe. "I made it up and sang it to my children. Nobody knows that song but me and my
|
||
children."
|
||
Beloved turned to look at Sethe. "I know it," she said.
|
||
A hobnail casket of jewels found in a tree hollow should be fondled before it is opened. Its lock may have rusted or
|
||
broken away from the clasp. Still you should touch the nail heads, and test its weight. No smashing with an ax head
|
||
before it is decently exhumed from the grave that has hidden it all this time. No gasp at a miracle that is truly miraculous
|
||
because the magic lies in the fact that you knew it was there for you all along.
|
||
Sethe wiped the white satin coat from the inside of the pan, brought pillows from the keeping room for the girls' heads.
|
||
There was no tremor in her voice as she instructed them to keep the fire--- if not, come on upstairs.
|
||
With that, she gathered her blanket around her elbows and asc. ended the lily-white stairs like a bride. Outside, snow
|
||
solidified itself into graceful forms. The peace of winter stars seemed permanent.
|
||
Fingering a ribbon and smelling skin, Stamp Paid approached 12 4 again.
|
||
"My marrow is tired," he thought. "I been tired all my days, bone-tired, but now it's in the marrow. Must be what Baby
|
||
Suggs felt when she lay down and thought about color for the rest of her life." When she told him what her aim was, he
|
||
thought she was ashamed and too shamed to say so. Her authority in the pulpit, her dance in the Clearing, her powerful
|
||
Call (she didn't deliver sermons or preach--insisting she was too ignorant for that--she called and the hearing heard)-
|
||
-all that had been mocked and rebuked by the bloodspill in her backyard. God puzzled her and she was too ashamed
|
||
of Him to say so. Instead she told Stamp she was going to bed to think about the colors of things. He tried to dissuade
|
||
her. Sethe was in jail with her nursing baby, the one he had saved. Her sons were holding hands in the yard, terrified of
|
||
letting go. Strangers and familiars were stopping by to hear how it went one more time, and suddenly Baby declared
|
||
peace. She just up and quit. By the time Sethe was released she had exhausted blue and was well on her way to yellow.
|
||
At first he would see her in the yard occasionally, or delivering food to the jail, or shoes in town. Then less and less. He
|
||
believed then that shame put her in the bed. Now, eight years after her contentious funeral and eighteen years after
|
||
the Misery, he changed his mind. Her marrow was tired and it was a testimony to the heart that fed it that it took eight
|
||
years to meet finally the color she was hankering after. The onslaught of her fatigue, like his, was sudden, but lasted for
|
||
years. After sixty years of losing children to the people who chewed up her life and spit it out like a fish bone; after five
|
||
years of freedom given to her by her last child, who bought her future with his, exchanged it, so to speak, so she could
|
||
have one whether he did or not--to lose him too; to acquire a daughter and grandchildren and see that daughter slay the
|
||
children (or try to); to belong to a community of other free Negroes--to love and
|
||
be loved by them, to counsel and be counseled, protect and be protected, feed and be fed--and then to have that
|
||
community step back and hold itself at a distance---well, it could wear out even a Baby Suggs, holy.
|
||
"Listen here, girl," he told her, "you can't quit the Word. It's given to you to speak. You can't quit the Word, I don't care
|
||
what all happen to you."
|
||
They were standing in Richmond Street, ankle deep in leaves.
|
||
Lamps lit the downstairs windows of spacious houses and made the early evening look darker than it was. The odor
|
||
of burning leaves was brilliant. Quite by chance, as he pocketed a penny tip for a delivery, he had glanced across the
|
||
street and recognized the skipping woman as his old friend. He had not seen her in weeks. Quickly he crossed the street,
|
||
scuffing red leaves as he went. When he stopped her with a greeting, she returned it with a face knocked clean of
|
||
interest. She could have been a plate. A carpetbag full of shoes in her hand, she waited for him to begin, lead or share a
|
||
conversation.
|
||
If there had been sadness in her eyes he would have understood it; but indifference lodged where sadness should have
|
||
99
|
||
been.
|
||
"You missed the Clearing three Saturdays running," he told her.
|
||
She turned her head away and scanned the houses along the street.
|
||
"Folks came," he said.
|
||
"Folks come; folks go," she answered.
|
||
"Here, let me carry that." He tried to take her bag from her but she wouldn't let him.
|
||
"I got a delivery someplace long in here," she said. "Name of Tucker."
|
||
"Yonder," he said. "Twin chestnuts in the yard. Sick, too."
|
||
They walked a bit, his pace slowed to accommodate her skip.
|
||
"Well?"
|
||
"Well, what?"
|
||
"Saturday coming. You going to Call or what?"
|
||
"If I call them and they come, what on earth I'm going to say?"
|
||
"Say the Word!" He checked his shout too late. Two whitemen burning leaves turned their heads in his direction.
|
||
Bending low he whispered into her ear, "The Word. The Word."
|
||
"That's one other thing took away from me," she said, and that was when he exhorted her, pleaded with her not to quit,
|
||
no matter what. The Word had been given to her and she had to speak it.
|
||
Had to.
|
||
They had reached the twin chestnuts and the white house that stood behind them.
|
||
"See what I mean?" he said. "Big trees like that, both of em together ain't got the leaves of a young birch."
|
||
"I see what you mean," she said, but she peered instead at the white house.
|
||
"You got to do it," he said. "You got to. Can't nobody Call like you. You have to be there."
|
||
"What I have to do is get in my bed and lay down. I want to fix on something harmless in this world."
|
||
"What world you talking about? Ain't nothing harmless down here."
|
||
"Yes it is. Blue. That don't hurt nobody. Yellow neither."
|
||
"You getting in the bed to think about yellow?"
|
||
"I likes yellow."
|
||
"Then what? When you get through with blue and yellow, then what?"
|
||
"Can't say. It's something can't be planned."
|
||
"You blaming God," he said. "That's what you doing."
|
||
"No, Stamp. I ain't."
|
||
100
|
||
"You saying the whitefolks won? That what you saying?"
|
||
"I'm saying they came in my yard."
|
||
"You saying nothing counts."
|
||
"I'm saying they came in my yard."
|
||
"Sethe's the one did it."
|
||
"And if she hadn't?"
|
||
"You saying God give up? Nothing left for us but pour out our own blood?"
|
||
"I'm saying they came in my yard."
|
||
"You punishing Him, ain't you."
|
||
"Not like He punish me."
|
||
"You can't do that, Baby. It ain't right."
|
||
"Was a time I knew what that was."
|
||
"You still know."
|
||
"What I know is what I see: a nigger woman hauling shoes."
|
||
"Aw, Baby." He licked his lips searching with his tongue for the words that would turn her around, lighten her load. "We
|
||
have to be steady. 'These things too will pass.' What you looking for? A miracle?"
|
||
"No," she said. "I'm looking for what I was put here to look for: the back door," and skipped right to it. They didn't let her
|
||
in.
|
||
They took the shoes from her as she stood on the steps and she rested her hip on the railing while the whitewoman
|
||
went looking for the dime.
|
||
Stamp Paid rearranged his way. Too angry to walk her home and listen to more, he watched her for a moment and
|
||
turned to go before the alert white face at the window next door had come to any conclusion.
|
||
Trying to get to 124 for the second time now, he regretted that conversation: the high tone he took; his refusal to see
|
||
the effect of marrow weariness in a woman he believed was a mountain. Now, too late, he understood her. The heart
|
||
that pumped out love, the mouth that spoke the Word, didn't count. They came in her yard anyway and she could not
|
||
approve or condemn Sethe's rough choice.
|
||
One or the other might have saved her, but beaten up by the claims of both, she went to bed. The whitefolks had tired
|
||
her out at last.
|
||
And him. Eighteen seventy-four and whitefolks were still on the loose. Whole towns wiped clean of Negroes; eighty-
|
||
seven lynchings in one year alone in Kentucky; four colored schools burned to the ground; grown men whipped like
|
||
children; children whipped like adults; black women raped by the crew; property taken, necks broken.
|
||
He smelled skin, skin and hot blood. The skin was one thing, but human blood cooked in a lynch fire was a whole other
|
||
thing.
|
||
The stench stank. Stank up off the pages of the North Star, out of the mouths of witnesses, etched in crooked
|
||
handwriting in letters delivered by hand. Detailed in documents and petitions full of whereas and presented to any
|
||
legal body who'd read it, it stank. But none of that had worn out his marrow. None of that. It was the ribbon. Tying his
|
||
101
|
||
flatbed up on the bank of the Licking River, securing it the best he could, he caught sight of something red on its bottom.
|
||
Reaching for it, he thought it was a cardinal feather stuck to his boat. He tugged and what came loose in his hand was a
|
||
red ribbon knotted around a curl of wet woolly hair, clinging still to its bit of scalp. He untied the ribbon and put it in his
|
||
pocket, dropped the curl in the weeds. On the way home, he stopped, short of breath and dizzy. He
|
||
waited until the spell passed before continuing on his way. A moment later, his breath left him again. This time he sat
|
||
down by a fence.
|
||
Rested, he got to his feet, but before he took a step he turned to look back down the road he was traveling and said, to
|
||
its frozen mud and the river beyond, "What are these people? You tell me, Jesus. What are they?"
|
||
When he got to his house he was too tired to eat the food his sister and nephews had prepared. He sat on the porch in
|
||
the cold till way past dark and went to his bed only because his sister's voice calling him was getting nervous. He kept
|
||
the ribbon; the skin smell nagged him, and his weakened marrow made him dwell on Baby Suggs' wish to consider what
|
||
in the world was harmless. He hoped she stuck to blue, yellow, maybe green, and never fixed on red.
|
||
Mistaking her, upbraiding her, owing her, now he needed to let her know he knew, and to get right with her and her kin.
|
||
So, in spite of his exhausted marrow, he kept on through the voices and tried once more to knock at the door of 124.
|
||
This time, although he couldn't cipher but one word, he believed he knew who spoke them.
|
||
The people of the broken necks, of fire-cooked blood and black girls who had lost their ribbons.
|
||
What a roaring.
|
||
Sethe had gone to bed smiling, eager to lie down and unravel the proof for the conclusion she had already leapt to.
|
||
Fondle the day and circumstances of Beloved's arrival and the meaning of that kiss in the Clearing. She slept instead
|
||
and woke, still smiling, to a snow bright morning, cold enough to see her breath. She lingered a moment to collect the
|
||
courage to throw off the blankets and hit a chilly floor.
|
||
For the first time, she was going to be late for work.
|
||
Downstairs she saw the girls sleeping where she'd left them, but back to back now, each wrapped tight in blankets,
|
||
breathing into their pillows. The pair and a half of skates were lying by the front door, the stockings hung on a nail
|
||
behind the cooking stove to dry had not.
|
||
Sethe looked at Beloved's face and smiled.
|
||
Quietly, carefully she stepped around her to wake the fire. First a bit of paper, then a little kindlin--not too much--just a
|
||
taste until it was strong enough for more. She fed its dance until it was wild and fast. When she went outside to collect
|
||
more wood from the shed, she did not notice the man's frozen footprints. She crunched around to the back, to the cord
|
||
piled high with snow. After scraping it clean, she filled her arms with as much dry wood as she could. She even looked
|
||
straight at the shed, smiling, smiling at the things she would not have to remember now. Thinking, "She ain't even mad
|
||
with me.
|
||
Not a bit."
|
||
Obviously the hand-holding shadows she had seen on the road were not Paul D, Denver and herself, but "us three."
|
||
The three holding on to each other skating the night before; the three sipping flavored milk. And since that was so--
|
||
if her daughter could come back home from the timeless place--certainly her sons could, and would, come back from
|
||
wherever they had gone to.
|
||
Sethe covered her front teeth with her tongue against the cold.
|
||
Hunched forward by the burden in her arms, she walked back around the house to the porch--not once noticing the
|
||
frozen tracks she stepped in.
|
||
102
|
||
Inside, the girls were still sleeping, although they had changed positions while she was gone, both drawn to the fire.
|
||
Dumping the armload into the woodbox made them stir but not wake. Sethe started the cooking stove as quietly as she
|
||
could, reluctant to wake the sisters, happy to have them asleep at her feet while she made breakfast. Too bad she would
|
||
be late for work---too, too bad. Once in sixteen years?
|
||
That's just too bad.
|
||
She had beaten two eggs into yesterday's hominy, formed it into patties and fried them with some ham pieces before
|
||
Denver woke completely and groaned.
|
||
"Back stiff?"
|
||
"Ooh yeah."
|
||
"Sleeping on the floor's supposed to be good for you."
|
||
"Hurts like the devil," said Denver.
|
||
"Could be that fall you took."
|
||
Denver smiled. "That was fun." She turned to look down at
|
||
Beloved snoring lightly. "Should I wake her?"
|
||
"No, let her rest."
|
||
"She likes to see you off in the morning."
|
||
I'll make sure she does," said Sethe, and thought, Be nice to think first, before I talk to her, let her know I know. Think
|
||
about all I ain't got to remember no more. Do like Baby said: Think on it then lay it down--for good. Paul D convinced me
|
||
there was a world out there and that I could live in it. Should have known better. Did know better. Whatever is going on
|
||
outside my door ain't for me.
|
||
The world is in this room. This here's all there is and all there needs to be.
|
||
They ate like men, ravenous and intent. Saying little, content with the company of the other and the opportunity to look
|
||
in her eyes.
|
||
When Sethe wrapped her head and bundled up to go to town, it was already midmorning. And when she left the house
|
||
she neither saw the prints nor heard the voices that ringed 124 like a noose.
|
||
Trudging in the ruts left earlier by wheels, Sethe was excited to giddiness by the things she no longer had to remember.
|
||
I don't have to remember nothing. I don't even have to explain.
|
||
She understands it all. I can forget how Baby Suggs' heart collapsed; how we agreed it was consumption without a sign
|
||
of it in the world.
|
||
Her eyes when she brought my food, I can forget that, and how she told me that Howard and Buglar were all right
|
||
but wouldn't let go each other's hands. Played that way: stayed that way especially in their sleep. She handed me
|
||
the food from a basket; things wrapped small enough to get through the bars, whispering news: Mr. Bodwin going
|
||
to see the judge--in chambers, she kept on saying, in chambers, like I knew what it meant or she did. The Colored
|
||
Ladies of Delaware, Ohio, had drawn up a petition to keep me from being hanged. That two white preachers had come
|
||
round and wanted to talk to me, pray for me. That a newspaperman came too. She told me the news and I told her I
|
||
needed something for the rats. She wanted Denver out and slapped her palms when I wouldn't let her go. "Where your
|
||
earrings?" she said. I'll hold em for you." I told her the jailer took them, to protect me from myself. He thought I could
|
||
do some harm with the wire. Baby Suggs covered her mouth with her hand. "Schoolteacher left town," she said. "Filed a
|
||
103
|
||
claim and rode on off. They going to let you out for the burial," she said, "not the funeral, just the burial," and they did.
|
||
The sheriff came with me and looked away when I fed Denver in the wagon. Neither Howard nor Buglar would let me
|
||
near them, not even to touch their hair. I believe a lot of folks were there, but I just saw the box. Reverend Pike spoke
|
||
in a real loud voice, but I didn't catch a word---except the first two, and three months later when Denver was ready for
|
||
solid food and they let me out for good, I went and got you a gravestone, but I didn't have money enough for the carving
|
||
so I exchanged (bartered, you might say) what I did have and I'm sorry to this day I never thought to ask him for the
|
||
whole thing: all I heard of what Reverend Pike said.
|
||
Dearly Beloved, which is what you are to me and I don't have to be sorry about getting only one word, and I don't
|
||
have to remember the slaughterhouse and the Saturday girls who worked its yard. I can forget that what I did changed
|
||
Baby Suggs' life. No Clearing, no company. Just laundry and shoes. I can forget it all now because as soon as I got the
|
||
gravestone in place you made your presence known in the house and worried us all to distraction. I didn't understand it
|
||
then. I thought you were mad with me. And now I know that if you was, you ain't now because you came back here to
|
||
me and I was right all along: there is no world outside my door. I only need to know one thing. How bad is the scar?
|
||
As Sethe walked to work, late for the first time in sixteen years and wrapped in a timeless present, Stamp Paid fought
|
||
fatigue and the habit of a lifetime. Baby Suggs refused to go to the Clearing because she believed they had won; he
|
||
refused to acknowledge any such victory. Baby had no back door; so he braved the cold and a wall of talk to knock on
|
||
the one she did have. He clutched the red ribbon in his pocket for strength. Softly at first, then harder. At the last he
|
||
banged furiously-disbelieving it could happen. That the door of a house with coloredpeople in it did not fly open in his
|
||
presence.
|
||
He went to the window and wanted to cry. Sure enough, there they were, not a one of them heading for the door.
|
||
Worrying his scrap of ribbon to shreds, the old man turned and went down the steps.
|
||
Now curiosity joined his shame and his debt. Two backs curled away from him as he looked in the window. One had
|
||
a head he recognized; the other troubled him. He didn't know her and didn't know anybody it could be. Nobody, but
|
||
nobody visited that house.
|
||
After a disagreeable breakfast he went to see Ella and John to find out what they knew. Perhaps there he could find
|
||
out if, after all these years of clarity, he had misnamed himself and there was yet another debt he owed. Born Joshua,
|
||
he renamed himself when he handed over his wife to his master's son. Handed her over in the sense that he did not
|
||
kill anybody, thereby himself, because his wife demanded he stay alive. Otherwise, she reasoned, where and to whom
|
||
could she return when the boy was through? With that gift, he decided that he didn't owe anybody anything. Whatever
|
||
his obligations were, that act paid them off. He thought it would make him rambunctious, renegade--a drunkard even,
|
||
the debtlessness, and in a way it did.
|
||
But there was nothing to do with it. Work well; work poorly. Work a little; work not at all. Make sense; make none.
|
||
Sleep, wake up; like somebody, dislike others. It didn't seem much of a way to live and it brought him no satisfaction. So
|
||
he extended this debtlessness to other people by helping them pay out and off whatever they owed in misery. Beaten
|
||
runaways? He ferried them and rendered them paid for; gave them their own bill of sale, so to speak. "You paid it; now
|
||
life owes you." And the receipt, as it were, was a welcome door that he never had to knock on, like John and Ella's in
|
||
front of which he stood and said, "Who in there?" only once and she was pulling on the hinge.
|
||
"where you been keeping yourself? I told John must be cold if Stamp stay inside."
|
||
"Oh, I been out." He took off his cap and massaged his scalp.
|
||
"Out where? Not by here." Ella hung two suits of underwear on a line behind the stove.
|
||
"Was over to Baby Suggs' this morning."
|
||
"What you want in there?" asked Ella. "Somebody invite you in?"
|
||
"That's Baby's kin. I don't need no invite to look after her people."
|
||
104
|
||
"Sth." Ella was unmoved. She had been Baby Suggs' friend and Sethe's too till the rough time. Except for a nod at the
|
||
carnival, she hadn't given Sethe the time of day.
|
||
"Somebody new in there. A woman. Thought you might know who is she."
|
||
"Ain't no new Negroes in this town I don't know about," she said. "what she look like? You sure that wasn't Denver?"
|
||
"I know Denver. This girl's narrow."
|
||
"You sure?"
|
||
"I know what I see."
|
||
"Might see anything at all at 124."
|
||
"True."
|
||
"Better ask Paul D," she said.
|
||
"Can't locate him," said Stamp, which was the truth although his efforts to find Paul D had been feeble. He wasn't ready
|
||
to confront the man whose life he had altered with his graveyard information.
|
||
"He's sleeping in the church," said Ella.
|
||
"The church!" Stamp was shocked and very hurt.
|
||
"Yeah. Asked Reverend Pike if he could stay in the cellar."
|
||
"It's cold as charity in there!"
|
||
"I expect he knows that."
|
||
"What he do that for?"
|
||
"Hes a touch proud, seem like."
|
||
"He don't have to do that! Any number'll take him in."
|
||
Ella turned around to look at Stamp Paid. "Can't nobody read minds long distance. All he have to do is ask somebody."
|
||
"Why? Why he have to ask? Can't nobody offer? What's going on? Since when a blackman come to town have to sleep
|
||
in a cellar like a dog?"
|
||
"Unrile yourself, Stamp."
|
||
"Not me. I'm going to stay riled till somebody gets some sense and leastway act like a Christian."
|
||
"It's only a few days he been there."
|
||
"Shouldn't be no days! You know all about it and don't give him a hand? That don't sound like you, Ella. Me and you
|
||
been pulling coloredfolk out the water more'n twenty years. Now you tell me you can't offer a man a bed? A working
|
||
man, too! A man what can pay his own way."
|
||
"He ask, I give him anything."
|
||
"Why's that necessary all of a sudden?"
|
||
"I don't know him all that well."
|
||
105
|
||
"You know he's colored!"
|
||
"Stamp, don't tear me up this morning. I don't feel like it."
|
||
"It's her, ain't it?"
|
||
"Her who?"
|
||
"Sethe. He took up with her and stayed in there and you don't want nothing to--"
|
||
"Hold on. Don't jump if you can't see bottom."
|
||
"Girl, give it up. We been friends too long to act like this."
|
||
"Well, who can tell what all went on in there? Look here, I don't know who Sethe is or none of her people."
|
||
"What?!"
|
||
"All I know is she married Baby Suggs' boy and I ain't sure I know that. Where is he, huh? Baby never laid eyes on her till
|
||
John carried her to the door with a baby I strapped on her chest."
|
||
"I strapped that baby! And you way off the track with that wagon.
|
||
Her children know who she was even if you don't."
|
||
"So what? I ain't saying she wasn't their ma'ammy, but who's to say they was Baby Suggs' grandchildren? How she get
|
||
on board and her husband didn't? And tell me this, how she have that baby in the woods by herself? Said a whitewoman
|
||
come out the trees and helped her. Shoot. You believe that? A whitewoman? Well, I know what kind of white that was."
|
||
"Aw, no, Ella."
|
||
"Anything white floating around in the woods---if it ain't got a shotgun, it's something I don't want no part of!"
|
||
"You all was friends."
|
||
"Yeah, till she showed herself."
|
||
"Ella."
|
||
"I ain't got no friends take a handsaw to their own children."
|
||
"You in deep water, girl."
|
||
"Uh uh. I'm on dry land and I'm going to stay there. You the one wet."
|
||
"What's any of what you talking got to do with Paul D?"
|
||
"What run him off? Tell me that."
|
||
"I run him off."
|
||
"You?"
|
||
"I told him about--I showed him the newspaper, about the-- what Sethe did. Read it to him. He left that very day."
|
||
"You didn't tell me that. I thought he knew."
|
||
"He didn't know nothing. Except her, from when they was at that place Baby Suggs was at."
|
||
106
|
||
"He knew Baby Suggs?"
|
||
"Sure he knew her. Her boy Halle too."
|
||
"And left when he found out what Sethe did?"
|
||
"Look like he might have a place to stay after all."
|
||
"What you say casts a different light. I thought--"
|
||
But Stamp Paid knew what she thought.
|
||
"You didn't come here asking about him," Ela said. "You came about some new girl."
|
||
"That's so."
|
||
"Well, Paul D must know who she is. Or what she is."
|
||
"Your mind is loaded with spirits. Everywhere you look you see one."
|
||
"You know as well as I do that people who die bad don't stay in the ground."
|
||
He couldn't deny it. Jesus Christ Himself didn't, so Stamp ate a piece of Ella's head cheese to show there were no bad
|
||
feelings and set out to find Paul D. He found him on the steps of Holy Redeemer, holding his wrists between his knees
|
||
and looking red-eyed.
|
||
Sawyer shouted at her when she entered the kitchen, but she just turned her back and reached for her apron. There was
|
||
no entry now.
|
||
No crack or crevice available. She had taken pains to keep them out, but knew full well that at any moment they could
|
||
rock her, rip her from her moorings, send the birds twittering back into her hair. Drain her mother's milk, they had
|
||
already done. Divided her back into plant life--that too. Driven her fat-bellied into the woods--they had done that. All
|
||
news of them was rot. They buttered Halle's face; gave Paul D iron to eat; crisped Sixo; hanged her own mother. She
|
||
didn't want any more news about
|
||
whitefolks; didn't want to know what Ella knew and John and Stamp Paid, about the world done up the way whitefolks
|
||
loved it. All news of them should have stopped with the birds in her hair.
|
||
Once, long ago, she was soft, trusting. She trusted Mrs. Garner and her husband too. She knotted the earrings into her
|
||
underskirt to take along, not so much to wear but to hold. Earrings that made her believe she could discriminate among
|
||
them. That for every schoolteacher there would be an Amy; that for every pupil there was a Garner, or Bodwin, or even
|
||
a sheriff, whose touch at her elbow was gentle and who looked away when she nursed. But she had come to believe
|
||
every one of Baby Suggs' last words and buried all recollection of them and luck. Paul D dug it up, gave her back her
|
||
body, kissed her divided back, stirred her rememory and brought her more news: of clabber, of iron, of roosters' smiling,
|
||
but when he heard her news, he counted her feet and didn't even say goodbye.
|
||
"Don't talk to me, Mr. Sawyer. Don't say nothing to me this morning."
|
||
"What? What? What? You talking back to me?"
|
||
"I'm telling you don't say nothing to me."
|
||
"You better get them pies made."
|
||
Sethe touched the fruit and picked up the paring knife.
|
||
When pie juice hit the bottom of the oven and hissed, Sethe was well into the potato salad. Sawyer came in and
|
||
107
|
||
said, "Not too sweet.
|
||
You make it too sweet they don't eat it."
|
||
"Make it the way I always did."
|
||
"Yeah. Too sweet."
|
||
None of the sausages came back. The cook had a way with them and Sawyer's Restaurant never had leftover sausage. If
|
||
Sethe wanted any, she put them aside soon as they were ready. But there was some passable stew. Problem was, all her
|
||
pies were sold too. Only rice pudding left and half a pan of gingerbread that didn't come out right.
|
||
Had she been paying attention instead of daydreaming all morning, she wouldn't be picking around looking for her
|
||
dinner like a crab.
|
||
She couldn't read clock time very well, but she knew when the hands were closed in prayer at the top of the face she
|
||
was through for the day. She got a metal-top jar, filled it with stew and wrapped the gingerbread in butcher paper.
|
||
These she dropped in her outer skirt pockets and began washing up. None of it was anything like what the cook and
|
||
the two waiters walked off with. Mr. Sawyer included midday dinner in the terms of the job--along with $3 .4o a week-
|
||
- and she made him understand from the beginning she would take her dinner home. But matches, sometimes a bit of
|
||
kerosene, a little salt, butter too--these things she took also, once in a while, and felt ashamed because she could afford
|
||
to
|
||
buy them; she just didn't want the embarrassment of waiting out back of Phelps store with the others till every white in
|
||
Ohio was served before the keeper turned to the cluster of Negro faces looking through a hole in his back door. She was
|
||
ashamed, too, because it was stealing and Sixo's argument on the subject amused her but didn't change the way she
|
||
felt; just as it didn't change schoolteacher's mind.
|
||
"Did you steal that shoat? You stole that shoat." Schoolteacher was quiet but firm, like he was just going through the
|
||
motions--not expecting an answer that mattered. Sixo sat there, not even getting up to plead or deny. He just sat
|
||
there, the streak-of-lean in his hand, the gristle clustered in the tin plate like gemstones---rough, unpolished, but loot
|
||
nevertheless.
|
||
"You stole that shoat, didn't you?"
|
||
"No. Sir." said Sixo, but he had the decency, to keep his eyes on the meat.
|
||
"You telling me you didn't steal it, and I'm looking right at you?"
|
||
"No, sir. I didn't steal it."
|
||
Schoolteacher smiled. "Did you kill it?"
|
||
"Yes, sir. I killed it."
|
||
"Did you butcher it?"
|
||
"Yes, sir."
|
||
"Did you cook it?"
|
||
"Yes, sir."
|
||
"Well, then. Did you eat it?"
|
||
"Yes, sir. I sure did."
|
||
108
|
||
"And you telling me that's not stealing?"
|
||
"No, sir. It ain't."
|
||
"What is it then?"
|
||
"Improving your property, sir."
|
||
"What?"
|
||
"Sixo plant rye to give the high piece a better chance. Sixo take and feed the soil, give you more crop. Sixo take and feed
|
||
Sixo give you more work."
|
||
Clever, but schoolteacher beat him anyway to show him that definitions belonged to the definers--not the defined. After
|
||
Mr. Garner died with a hole in his ear that Mrs. Garner said was an
|
||
exploded ear drum brought on by stroke and Sixo said was gunpowder, everything they touched was looked on as
|
||
stealing. Not just a rifle of corn, or two yard eggs the hen herself didn't even remember, everything.
|
||
Schoolteacher took away the guns from the Sweet Home men and, deprived of game to round out their diet of bread,
|
||
beans, hominy, vegetables and a little extra at slaughter time, they began to pilfer in earnest, and it became not only
|
||
their right but their obligation.
|
||
Sethe understood it then, but now with a paying job and an employer who was kind enough to hire an ex-convict, she
|
||
despised herself for the pride that made pilfering better than standing in line at the window of the general store with
|
||
all the other Negroes. She didn't want to jostle them or be jostled by them. Feel their judgment or their pity, especially
|
||
now. She touched her forehead with the back of her wrist and blotted the perspiration. The workday had come to a
|
||
close and already she was feeling the excitement. Not since that other escape had she felt so alive. Slopping the alley
|
||
dogs, watching their frenzy, she pressed her lips. Today would be a day she would accept a lift, if anybody on a wagon
|
||
offered it. No one would, and for sixteen years her pride had not let her ask. But today. Oh, today.
|
||
Now she wanted speed, to skip over the long walk home and be there.
|
||
When Sawyer warned her about being late again, she barely heard him. He used to be a sweet man. Patient, tender in
|
||
his dealings with his help. But each year, following the death of his son in the War, he grew more and more crotchety. As
|
||
though Sethe's dark face was to blame.
|
||
"Un huh," she said, wondering how she could hurry tine along and get to the no-time waiting for her.
|
||
She needn't have worried. Wrapped tight, hunched forward, as she started home her mind was busy with the things she
|
||
could forget.
|
||
Thank God I don't have to rememory or say a thing because you know it. All. You know I never would a left you. Never. It
|
||
was all I could think of to do. When the train came I had to be ready.
|
||
Schoolteacher was teaching us things we couldn't learn. I didn't care nothing about the measuring string. We all laughed
|
||
about that-- except Sixo. He didn't laugh at nothing. But I didn't care. Schoolteacher'd wrap that string all over my
|
||
head, 'cross my nose, around my behind. Number my teeth. I thought he was a fool. And the questions he asked was the
|
||
biggest foolishness of all.
|
||
Then me and your brothers come up from the second patch. The first one was close to the house where the quick things
|
||
grew: beans, onions, sweet peas. The other one was further down for long-lasting things, potatoes, pumpkin, okra, pork
|
||
salad. Not much was up yet down there. It was early still. Some young salad maybe, but that was all. We pulled weeds
|
||
and hoed a little to give everything a good start.
|
||
After that we hit out for the house. The ground raised up from the second patch. Not a hill exactly but kind of. Enough
|
||
109
|
||
for Buglar and Howard to run up and roll down, run up and roll down. That's
|
||
the way I used to see them in my dreams, laughing, their short fat legs running up the hill. Now all I see is their backs
|
||
walking down the railroad tracks. Away from me. Always away from me. But that day they was happy, running up and
|
||
rolling down. It was early still-- the growing season had took hold but not much was up. I remember the peas still had
|
||
flowers. The grass was long though, full of white buds and those tall red blossoms people call Diane and something there
|
||
with the leastest little bit of blue---light, like a cornflower but pale, pale. Real pale. I maybe should have hurried because
|
||
I left you back at the house in a basket in the yard. Away from where the chickens scratched but you never know.
|
||
Anyway I took my time getting back but your brothers didn't have patience with me staring at flowers and sky every
|
||
two or three steps. They ran on ahead and I let em. Something sweet lives in the air that time of year, and if the breeze
|
||
is right, it's hard to stay indoors. When I got back I could hear Howard and Buglar laughing down by the quarters. I put
|
||
my hoe down and cut across the side yard to get to you. The shade moved so by the time I got back the sun was shining
|
||
right on you.
|
||
Right in your face, but you wasn't woke at all. Still asleep. I wanted to pick you up in my arms and I wanted to look at you
|
||
sleeping too.
|
||
Didn't know which; you had the sweetest face. Yonder, not far, was a grape arbor Mr. Garner made. Always full of big
|
||
plans, he wanted to make his own wine to get drunk off. Never did get more than a kettle of jelly from it. I don't think
|
||
the soil was right for grapes. Your daddy believed it was the rain, not the soil. Sixo said it was bugs.
|
||
The grapes so little and tight. Sour as vinegar too. But there was a little table in there. So I picked up your basket and
|
||
carried you over to the grape arbor. Cool in there and shady. I set you down on the little table and figured if I got a piece
|
||
of muslin the bugs and things wouldn't get to you. And if Mrs. Garner didn't need me right there in the kitchen, I could
|
||
get a chair and you and me could set out there while I did the vegetables. I headed for the back door to get the clean
|
||
muslin we kept in the kitchen press. The grass felt good on my feet.
|
||
I got near the door and I heard voices. Schoolteacher made his pupils sit and learn books for a spell every afternoon. If it
|
||
was nice enough weather, they'd sit on the side porch. All three of em. He'd talk and they'd write. Or he would read and
|
||
they would write down what he said. I never told nobody this. Not your pap, not nobody. I almost told Mrs. Garner, but
|
||
she was so weak then and getting weaker. This is the first time I'm telling it and I'm telling it to you because it might help
|
||
explain something to you although I know you don't need me to do it. To tell it or even think over it. You don't have to
|
||
listen either, if you don't want to. But I couldn't help listening to what I heard that day. He was talking to his pupils and I
|
||
heard him say, "Which one are you doing?" And one of the boys said, "Sethe."
|
||
That's when I stopped because I heard my name, and then I took a few steps to where I could see what they was doing.
|
||
Schoolteacher was standing over one of them with one hand behind his back. He licked a forefinger a couple of times
|
||
and turned a few pages. Slow.
|
||
I was about to turn around and keep on my way to where the muslin was, when I heard him say, "No, no. That's not the
|
||
way. I told you to put her human characteristics on the left; her animal ones on
|
||
the right. And don't forget to line them up." I commenced to walk backward, didn't even look behind me to find out
|
||
where I was headed.
|
||
I just kept lifting my feet and pushing back. When I bumped up against a tree my scalp was prickly. One of the dogs was
|
||
licking out a pan in the yard. I got to the grape arbor fast enough, but I didn't have the muslin. Flies settled all over your
|
||
face, rubbing their hands.
|
||
My head itched like the devil. Like somebody was sticking fine needles in my scalp. I never told Halle or nobody. But that
|
||
very day I asked Mrs. Garner a part of it. She was low then. Not as low as she ended up, but failing. A kind of bag grew
|
||
under her jaw. It didn't seem to hurt her, but it made her weak. First she'd be up and spry in the morning and by the
|
||
second milking she couldn't stand up. Next she took to sleeping late. The day I went up there she was in bed the whole
|
||
day, and I thought to carry her some bean soup and ask her then. When I opened the bedroom door she looked at me
|
||
from underneath her nightcap. Already it was hard to catch life in her eyes. Her shoes and stockings were on the floor so
|
||
110
|
||
I knew she had tried to get dressed.
|
||
"I brung you some bean soup," I said.
|
||
She said, "I don't think I can swallow that."
|
||
"Try a bit," I told her.
|
||
"Too thick. I'm sure it's too thick."
|
||
"Want me to loosen it up with a little water?"
|
||
"No. Take it away. Bring me some cool water, that's all."
|
||
"Yes, ma'am. Ma'am? Could I ask you something?"
|
||
"What is it, Sethe?"
|
||
"What do characteristics mean?"
|
||
"What?"
|
||
"A word. Characteristics."
|
||
"Oh." She moved her head around on the pillow. "Features. Who taught you that?"
|
||
"I heard the schoolteacher say it."
|
||
"Change the water, Sethe. This is warm."
|
||
"Yes, ma'am. Features?"
|
||
"Water, Sethe. Cool water."
|
||
I put the pitcher on the tray with the white bean soup and went downstairs. When I got back with the fresh water I held
|
||
her head while she drank. It took her a while because that lump made it hard to swallow. She laid back and wiped her
|
||
mouth. The drinking seemed to satisfy her but she frowned and said, "I don't seem able to wake up, Sethe. All I seem to
|
||
want is sleep."
|
||
"Then do it," I told her. "I'm take care of things."
|
||
Then she went on: what about this? what about that? Said she knew Halle was no trouble, but she wanted to know if
|
||
schoolteacher was handling the Pauls all right and Sixo.
|
||
"Yes, ma'am," I said. "Look like it."
|
||
"Do they do what he tells them?"
|
||
"They don't need telling."
|
||
"Good. That's a mercy. I should be back downstairs in a day or two. I just need more rest. Doctor's due back. Tomorrow,
|
||
is it?"
|
||
"You said features, ma'am?"
|
||
"What?"
|
||
"Features?"
|
||
111
|
||
"Umm. Like, a feature of summer is heat. A characteristic is a feature. A thing that's natural to a thing."
|
||
"Can you have more than one?"
|
||
"You can have quite a few. You know. Say a baby sucks its thumb. That's one, but it has others too. Keep Billy away
|
||
from Red Corn. Mr. Garner never let her calve every other year. Sethe, you hear me? Come away from that window and
|
||
listen."
|
||
"Yes, ma'am."
|
||
"Ask my brother-in-law to come up after supper."
|
||
"Yes, ma'am."
|
||
"If you'd wash your hair you could get rid of that lice."
|
||
"Ain't no lice in my head, ma'am."
|
||
"Whatever it is, a good scrubbing is what it needs, not scratching.
|
||
Don't tell me we're out of soap."
|
||
"No, ma'am."
|
||
"All right now. I'm through. Talking makes me tired."
|
||
"Yes, ma'am."
|
||
"And thank you, Sethe."
|
||
"Yes, ma'am."
|
||
You was too little to remember the quarters. Your brothers slept under the window. Me, you and your daddy slept by
|
||
the wall. The night after I heard why schoolteacher measured me, I had trouble sleeping. When Halle came in I asked
|
||
him what he thought about schoolteacher. He said there wasn't nothing to think about. Said, He's white, ain't he? I said,
|
||
But I mean is he like Mr. Garner?
|
||
"What you want to know, Sethe?"
|
||
"Him and her," I said, "they ain't like the whites I seen before.
|
||
The ones in the big place I was before I came here."
|
||
"How these different?" he asked me.
|
||
"Well," I said, "they talk soft for one thing."
|
||
"It don't matter, Sethe. What they say is the same. Loud or soft."
|
||
"Mr. Garner let you buy out your mother," I said.
|
||
"Yep. He did."
|
||
"Well?"
|
||
"If he hadn't of, she would of dropped in his cooking stove."
|
||
"Still, he did it. Let you work it off."
|
||
112
|
||
"Uh huh."
|
||
"Wake up, Halle."
|
||
"I said, Uh huh."
|
||
"He could of said no. He didn't tell you no."
|
||
"No, he didn't tell me no. She worked here for ten years. If she worked another ten you think she would've made it out?
|
||
I pay him for her last years and in return he got you, me and three more coming up. I got one more year of debt work;
|
||
one more. Schoolteacher in there told me to quit it. Said the reason for doing it don't hold. I should do the extra but
|
||
here at Sweet Home."
|
||
"Is he going to pay you for the extra?"
|
||
"Nope."
|
||
"Then how you going to pay it off? How much is it?"
|
||
"$123 .7o."
|
||
"Don't he want it back?"
|
||
"He want something."
|
||
"What?"
|
||
"I don't know. Something, But he don't want me off Sweet Home no more. Say it don't pay to have my labor somewhere
|
||
else while the boys is small."
|
||
"What about the money you owe?"
|
||
"He must have another way of getting it."
|
||
"What way?"
|
||
"I don't know, Sethe."
|
||
"Then the only question is how? How he going get it?"
|
||
"No. That's one question. There's one more."
|
||
"What's that?"
|
||
He leaned up and turned over, touching my cheek with his knuckles.
|
||
"The question now is, Who's going buy you out? Or me? Or her?" He pointed over to where you was laying.
|
||
"What?"
|
||
"If all my labor is Sweet Home, including the extra, what I got left to sell?"
|
||
He turned over then and went back to sleep and I thought I wouldn't but I did too for a while. Something he said, maybe,
|
||
or something he didn't say woke me. I sat up like somebody hit me, and you woke up too and commenced to cry. I
|
||
rocked you some, but there wasn't much room, so I stepped outside the door to walk you. Up and down I went. Up and
|
||
down. Everything dark but lamplight in the top window of the house. She must've been up still. I couldn't get out of my
|
||
head the thing that woke me up: "While the boys is small." That's what he said and it snapped me awake. They tagged
|
||
after me the whole day weeding, milking, getting firewood.
|
||
113
|
||
For now. For now.
|
||
That's when we should have begun to plan. But we didn't. I don't know what we thought--but getting away was a money
|
||
thing to us.
|
||
Buy out. Running was nowhere on our minds. All of us? Some?
|
||
Where to? How to go? It was Sixo who brought it up, finally, after Paul F. Mrs. Garner sold him, trying to keep things
|
||
up. Already she lived two years off his price. But it ran out, I guess, so she wrote schoolteacher to come take over. Four
|
||
Sweet Home men and she still believed she needed her brother-in-law and two boys 'cause people said she shouldn't be
|
||
alone out there with nothing but Negroes. So he came with a big hat and spectacles and a coach box full of paper.
|
||
Talking soft and watching hard. He beat Paul A. Not hard and not long, but it was the first time anyone had, because Mr.
|
||
Garner disallowed it. Next time I saw him he had company in the prettiest trees you ever saw. Sixo started watching the
|
||
sky. He was the only one who crept at night and Halle said that's how he learned about the train.
|
||
"That way." Halle was pointing over the stable. "Where he took my ma'am. Sixo say freedom is that way. A whole train is
|
||
going and if we can get there, don't need to be no buyout."
|
||
"Train? What's that?" I asked him.
|
||
They stopped talking in front of me then. Even Halle. But they whispered among themselves and Sixo watched the sky.
|
||
Not the high part, the low part where it touched the trees. You could tell his mind was gone from Sweet Home.
|
||
The plan was a good one, but when it came time, I was big with Denver. So we changed it a little. A little. Just enough to
|
||
butter Halle's face, so Paul D tells me, and make Sixo laugh at last.
|
||
But I got you out, baby. And the boys too. When the signal for the train come, you all was the only ones ready. I couldn't
|
||
find Halle or nobody. I didn't know Sixo was burned up and Paul D dressed in a collar you wouldn't believe. Not till
|
||
later. So I sent you all to the wagon with the woman who waited in the corn. Ha ha. No notebook for my babies and
|
||
no measuring string neither. What I had to get through later I got through because of you. Passed right by those boys
|
||
hanging in the trees. One had Paul A's shirt on but not his feet or his head. I walked right on by because only me had
|
||
your milk, and God do what He would, I was going to get it to you. You remember that, don't you; that I did? That when I
|
||
got here I had milk enough for all?
|
||
One more curve in the road, and Sethe could see her chimney; it wasn't lonely-looking anymore. The ribbon of smoke
|
||
was from a fire that warmed a body returned to her--just like it never went away, never needed a headstone. And the
|
||
heart that beat inside it had not for a single moment stopped in her hands.
|
||
She opened the door, walked in and locked it tight behind her.
|
||
The day Stamp Paid saw the two backs through the window and then hurried down the steps, he believed the
|
||
undecipherable language clamoring around the house was the mumbling of the black and angry dead. Very few had died
|
||
in bed, like Baby Suggs, and none that he knew of, including Baby, had lived a livable life. Even the educated colored: the
|
||
long-school people, the doctors, the teachers, the paper-writers and businessmen had a hard row to hoe. In addition to
|
||
having to use their heads to get ahead, they had the weight of the whole race sitting there. You needed two heads for
|
||
that. Whitepeople believed that whatever the manners, under every dark skin was a jungle. Swift unnavigable waters,
|
||
swinging screaming baboons, sleeping snakes, red gums ready for their sweet white blood. In a way, he thought, they
|
||
were right. The more coloredpeople spent their strength trying to convince them how gentle they were, how clever and
|
||
loving, how human, the more they used themselves up to persuade whites of something Negroes believed could not be
|
||
questioned, the deeper and more tangled the jungle grew inside. But it wasn't the jungle blacks brought with them to
|
||
this place from the other (livable) place.
|
||
It was the jungle whitefolks planted in them. And it grew. It spread.
|
||
In, through and after life, it spread, until it invaded the whites who had made it. Touched them every one. Changed and
|
||
114
|
||
altered them.
|
||
Made them bloody, silly, worse than even they wanted to be, so scared were they of the jungle they had made. The
|
||
screaming baboon lived under their own white skin; the red gums were their own.
|
||
Meantime, the secret spread of this new kind of whitefolks' jungle was hidden, silent, except once in a while when you
|
||
could hear its mumbling in places like 124.
|
||
Stamp Paid abandoned his efforts to see about Sethe, after the pain of knocking and not gaining entrance, and when he
|
||
did, 124 was left to its own devices. When Sethe locked the door, the women inside were free at last to be what they
|
||
liked, see whatever they saw and say whatever was on their minds.
|
||
Almost. Mixed in with the voices surrounding the house, recognizable but undecipherable to Stamp Paid, were the
|
||
thoughts of the women of 124, unspeakable thoughts, unspoken.
|
||
Chapter 20
|
||
BELOVED, she my daughtyer. She mine. See. She come back to me of her own free will and I don't have to explain a
|
||
thing. I didn't have time to explain before because it had to be done quick. Quick. She had to be safe and I put her where
|
||
she would be. But my love was tough and she back now. I knew she would be. Paul D ran her off so she had no choice
|
||
but to come back to me in the flesh. I bet you Baby Suggs, on the other side, helped. I won't never let her go. I'll explain
|
||
to her, even though I don't have to. Why I did it. How if I hadn't killed her she would have died and that is something I
|
||
could not bear to happen to her. When I explain it she'll understand, because she understands everything already. I'll
|
||
tend her as no mother ever tended a child, a daughter. Nobody will ever get my milk no more except my own children.
|
||
I never had to give it to nobody else-- and the one time I did it was took from me--they held me down and took it.
|
||
Milk that belonged to my baby. Nan had to nurse whitebabies and me too because Ma'am was in the rice. The little
|
||
whitebabies got it first and I got what was left. Or none. There was no nursing milk to call my own. I know what it is to
|
||
be without the milk that belongs to you; to have to fight and holler for it, and to have so little left. i'll tell Beloved about
|
||
that; she'll
|
||
understand. She my daughter. The one I managed to have milk for and to get it to her even after they stole it; after they
|
||
handled me like I was the cow, no, the goat, back behind the stable because it was too nasty to stay in with the horses.
|
||
But I wasn't too nasty to cook their food or take care of Mrs. Garner. I tended her like I would have tended my own
|
||
mother if she needed me. If they had let her out the rice field, because I was the one she didn't throw away. I couldn't
|
||
have done more for that woman than I would my own ma'am if she was to take sick and need me and I'd have stayed
|
||
with her till she got well or died.
|
||
And I would have stayed after that except Nan snatched me back.
|
||
Before I could check for the sign. It was her all right, but for a long time I didn't believe it. I looked everywhere for that
|
||
hat. Stuttered after that. Didn't stop it till I saw Halle. Oh, but that's all over now.
|
||
I'm here. I lasted. And my girl come home. Now I can look at things again because she's here to see them too. After the
|
||
shed, I stopped.
|
||
Now, in the morning, when I light the fire I mean to look out the window to see what the sun is doing to the day. Does
|
||
it hit the pump handle first or the spigot? See if the grass is gray-green or brown or what. Now I know why Baby Suggs
|
||
pondered color her last years.
|
||
She never had time to see, let alone enjoy it before. Took her a long time to finish with blue, then yellow, then green.
|
||
She was well into pink when she died. I don't believe she wanted to get to red and I understand why because me and
|
||
Beloved outdid ourselves with it.
|
||
Matter of fact, that and her pinkish headstone was the last color I recall. Now I'll be on the lookout. Think what spring
|
||
will he for us!
|
||
115
|
||
I'll plant carrots just so she can see them, and turnips. Have you ever seen one, baby? A prettier thing God never made.
|
||
White and purple with a tender tail and a hard head. Feels good when you hold it in your hand and smells like the creek
|
||
when it floods, bitter but happy.
|
||
We'll smell them together, Beloved. Beloved. Because you mine and I have to show you these things, and teach you
|
||
what a mother should.
|
||
Funny how you lose sight of some things and memory others. I never will forget that whitegirl's hands. Amy. But I forget
|
||
the color of all that hair on her head. Eyes must have been gray, though. Seem like I do rememory that. Mrs. Garner's
|
||
was light brown--while she was well. Got dark when she took sick. A strong woman, used to be.
|
||
And when she talked off her head, she'd say it. "I used to be strong as a mule, Jenny." Called me "Jenny" when she was
|
||
babbling, and I can bear witness to that. Tall and strong. The two of us on a cord of wood was as good as two men.
|
||
Hurt her like the devil not to be able to raise her head off the pillow. Still can't figure why she thought she needed
|
||
schoolteacher, though. I wonder if she lasted, like I did.
|
||
Last time I saw her she couldn't do nothing but cry, and I couldn't do a thing for her but wipe her face when I told her
|
||
what they done to me. Somebody had to know it. Hear it. Somebody. Maybe she lasted. Schoolteacher wouldn't treat
|
||
her the way he treated me. First beating I took was the last. Nobody going to keep me from my children. Hadn't been for
|
||
me taking care of her maybe I would have known what happened. Maybe Halle was trying to get to me. I stood by her
|
||
bed waiting for her to finish with the slop jar. Then I got her back in the bed she said she was cold. Hot as blazes and she
|
||
wanted quilts. Said to shut the window. I told her no. She needed the cover; I needed the breeze. Long as those yellow
|
||
curtains flapped, I was all right. Should have heeded her. Maybe what sounded like shots really was. Maybe I would have
|
||
seen somebody or something.
|
||
Maybe. Anyhow I took my babies to the corn, Halle or no. Jesus. then I heard that woman's rattle. She said, Any more? I
|
||
told her I didn't know. She said, I been here all night. Can't wait. I tried to make her. She said, Can't do it. Come on. Hoo!
|
||
Not a man around.
|
||
Boys scared. You asleep on my back. Denver sleep in my stomach.
|
||
Felt like I was split in two. I told her to take you all; I had to go back. In case. She just looked at me. Said, Woman? Bit a
|
||
piece of my tongue off when they opened my back. It was hanging by a shred.
|
||
I didn't mean to. Clamped down on it, it come right off. I thought, Good God, I'm going to eat myself up. They dug a hole
|
||
for my stomach so as not to hurt the baby. Denver don't like for me to talk about it. She hates anything about Sweet
|
||
Home except how she was born. But you was there and even if you too young to memory it, I can tell it to you. The
|
||
grape arbor. You memory that? I ran so fast.
|
||
Flies beat me to you. I would have known right away who you was when the sun blotted out your face the way it did
|
||
when I took you to the grape arbor. I would have known at once when my water broke. The minute I saw you sitting
|
||
on the stump, it broke. And when I did see your face it had more than a hint of what you would look like after all
|
||
these years. I would have known who you were right away because the cup after cup of water you drank proved and
|
||
connected to the fact that you dribbled clear spit on my face the day I got to 124. I would have known right off, but Paul
|
||
D distracted me. Otherwise I would have seen my fingernail prints right there on your forehead for all the world to see.
|
||
From when I held your head up, out in the shed. And later on, when you asked me about the earrings I used to dangle
|
||
for you to play with, I would have recognized you right off, except for Paul D. Seems to me he wanted you out from the
|
||
beginning, but I wouldn't let him. What you think? And look how he ran when he found out about me and you in the
|
||
shed.
|
||
Too rough for him to listen to. Too thick, he said. My love was too thick. What he know about it? Who in the world is he
|
||
willing to die for? Would he give his privates to a stranger in return for a carving?
|
||
Some other way, he said. There must have been some other way. Let schoolteacher haul us away, I guess, to measure
|
||
your behind before he tore it up? I have felt what it felt like and nobody walking or stretched out is going to make
|
||
116
|
||
you feel it too. Not you, not none of mine, and when I tell you you mine, I also mean I'm yours I wouldn't draw breath
|
||
without my children. I told Baby Suggs that and
|
||
she got down on her knees to beg God's pardon for me. Still, it's so. My plan was to take us all to the other side where
|
||
my own ma'am is.
|
||
They stopped me from getting us there, but they didn't stop you from getting here. Ha ha. You came right on back like
|
||
a good girl, like a daughter which is what I wanted to be and would have been if my ma'am had been able to get out of
|
||
the rice long enough before they hanged her and let me be one. You know what? She'd had the bit so many times she
|
||
smiled. When she wasn't smiling she smiled, and I never saw her own smile. I wonder what they was doing when they
|
||
was caught. Running, you think? No. Not that. Because she was my ma'am and nobody's ma'am would run off and leave
|
||
her daughter, would she? Would she, now? Leave her in the yard with a one-armed woman? Even if she hadn't been
|
||
able to suckle the daughter for more than a week or two and had to turn her over to another woman's tit that never had
|
||
enough for all. They said it was the bit that made her smile when she didn't want to. Like the Saturday girls working the
|
||
slaughterhouse yard. When I came out of jail I saw them plain.
|
||
They came when the shift changed on Saturday when the men got paid and worked behind the fences, back of the
|
||
outhouse. Some worked standing up, leaning on the toolhouse door. They gave some of their nickels and dimes to the
|
||
foreman as they left but by then their smiles was over. Some of them drank liquor to keep from feeling what they felt.
|
||
Some didn't drink a drop--just beat it on over to Phelps to pay for what their children needed, or their ma'ammies.
|
||
Working a pig yard. That has got to be something for a woman to do, and I got close to it myself when I got out of jail
|
||
and bought, so to speak, your name. But the Bodwins got me the cooking job at Sawyer's and left me able to smile on
|
||
my own like now when I think about you.
|
||
But you know all that because you smart like everybody said because when I got here you was crawling already.
|
||
Trying to get up the stairs. Baby Suggs had them painted white so you could see your way to the top in the dark where
|
||
lamplight didn't reach. Lord, you loved the stairsteps.
|
||
I got close. I got close. To being a Saturday girl. I had already worked a stone mason's shop. A step to the slaughterhouse
|
||
would have been a short one. When I put that headstone up I wanted to lay in there with you, put your head on my
|
||
shoulder and keep you warm, and I would have if Buglar and Howard and Denver didn't need me, because my mind was
|
||
homeless then. I couldn't lay down with you then. No matter how much I wanted to. I couldn't lay down nowhere in
|
||
peace, back then. Now I can. I can sleep like the drowned, have mercy. She come back to me, my daughter, and she is
|
||
mine.
|
||
Chapter 21
|
||
BELOVED is my sister. I swallowed her blood right along with my mother's milk. The first thing I heard after not hearing
|
||
anything was the sound of her crawling up the stairs. She was my secret company until Paul D came. He threw her out.
|
||
Ever since I was little she was my company and she helped me wait for my daddy. Me and her waited for him. I love my
|
||
mother but I know she killed one of her own daughters, and tender as she is with me, I'm scared of her because of it.
|
||
She missed killing my brothers and they knew it. They told me die-witch! stories to show me the way to do it, if ever I
|
||
needed to.
|
||
Maybe it was getting that close to dying made them want to fight the War. That's what they told me they were going
|
||
to do. I guess they rather be around killing men than killing women, and there sure is something in her that makes it all
|
||
right to kill her own. All the time, I'm afraid the thing that happened
|
||
that made it all right for my mother to kill my sister could happen again. I don't know what it is, I don't know who it is,
|
||
but maybe there is something else terrible enough to make her do it again. I need to know what that thing might be, but
|
||
I don't want to. Whatever it is, it comes from outside this house, outside the yard, and it can come right on in the yard if
|
||
it wants to. So I never leave this house and I watch over the yard, so it can't happen again and my mother won't have to
|
||
kill me too.
|
||
117
|
||
Not since Miss Lady Jones' house have I left 124 by myself. Never.
|
||
The only other times--two times in all--I was with my mother. Once to see Grandma Baby put down next to Beloved,
|
||
she's my sister. The other time Paul D went too and when we came back I thought the house would still be empty from
|
||
when he threw my sister's ghost out. But no. When I came back to 124, there she was. Beloved.
|
||
Waiting for me. Tired from her long journey back. Ready to be taken care of; ready for me to protect her. This time I
|
||
have to keep my mother away from her. That's hard, but I have to. It's all on me.
|
||
I've seen my mother in a dark place, with scratching noises. A smell coming from her dress. I have been with her where
|
||
something little watched us from the corners. And touched. Sometimes they touched.
|
||
I didn't remember it for a long time until Nelson Lord made me. I asked her if it was true but couldn't hear what she said
|
||
and there was no point in going back to Lady Jones if you couldn't hear what anybody said. So quiet. Made me have to
|
||
read faces and learn how to figure out what people were thinking, so I didn't need to hear what they said. That's how
|
||
come me and Beloved could play together.
|
||
Not talking. On the porch. By the creek. In the secret house. It's all on me, now, but she can count on me. I thought she
|
||
was trying to kill her that day in the Clearing. Kill her back. But then she kissed her neck and I have to warn her about
|
||
that. Don't love her too much.
|
||
Don't. Maybe it's still in her the thing that makes it all right to kill her children. I have to tell her. I have to protect her.
|
||
She cut my head off every night. Buglar and Howard told me she would and she did. Her pretty eyes looking at me like I
|
||
was a stranger.
|
||
Not mean or anything, but like I was somebody she found and felt sorry for. Like she didn't want to do it but she had
|
||
to and it wasn't going to hurt. That it was just a thing grown-up people do--like pull a splinter out your hand; touch the
|
||
corner of a towel in your eye if you get a cinder in it. She looks over at Buglar and Howard--see if they all right. Then she
|
||
comes over to my side. I know she'll be good at it, careful. That when she cuts it off it'll be done right; it won't hurt. After
|
||
she does it I lie there for a minute with just my head.
|
||
Then she carries it downstairs to braid my hair. I try not to cry but it hurts so much to comb it. When she finishes the
|
||
combing and starts the braiding, I get sleepy. I want to go to sleep but I know if I do I won't wake up. So I have to stay
|
||
awake while she finishes my hair, then I can sleep. The scary part is
|
||
waiting for her to come in and do it. Not when she does it, but when I wait for her to. Only place she can't get to me in
|
||
the night is Grandma Baby's room. The room we sleep in upstairs used to be where the help slept when whitepeople
|
||
lived here. They had a kitchen outside, too. But Grandma Baby turned it into a woodshed and toolroom when she
|
||
moved in.
|
||
And she boarded up the back door that led to it because she said she didn't want to make that journey no more. She
|
||
built around it to make a storeroom, so if you want to get in 124 you have to come by her. Said she didn't care what
|
||
folks said about her fixing a two story house up like a cabin where you cook inside. She said they told her visitors with
|
||
nice dresses don't want to sit in the same room with the cook stove and the peelings and the grease and the smoke.
|
||
She wouldn't pay them no mind, she said. I was safe at night in there with her. All I could hear was me breathing but
|
||
sometimes in the day I couldn't tell whether it was me breathing or somebody next to me. I used to watch Here Boy's
|
||
stomach go in and out, in and out, to see if it matched mine, holding my breath to get off his rhythm, releasing it to
|
||
get on. Just to see whose it was--that sound like when you blow soft in a bottle only regular, regular. Am I making that
|
||
sound? Is Howard? Who is? That was when everybody was quiet and I couldn't hear anything they said. I didn't care
|
||
either because the quiet let me dream my daddy better. I always knew he was coming. Something was holding him
|
||
up. He had a problem with the horse. The river flooded; the boat sank and he had to make a new one. Sometimes it
|
||
was a lynch mob or a windstorm. He was coming and it was a secret. I spent all of my outside self loving Ma'am so she
|
||
wouldn't kill me, loving her even when she braided my head at night. I never let her know my daddy was coming for me.
|
||
Grandma Baby thought he was coming, too. For a while she thought so, then she stopped. I never did. Even when Buglar
|
||
118
|
||
and Howard ran away.
|
||
Then Paul D came in here. I heard his voice downstairs, and Ma'am laughing, so I thought it was him, my daddy. Nobody
|
||
comes to this house anymore. But when I got downstairs it was Paul D and he didn't come for me; he wanted my
|
||
mother. At first. Then he wanted my sister, too, but she got him out of here and I'm so glad he's gone.
|
||
Now it's just us and I can protect her till my daddy gets here to help me watch out for Ma'am and anything come in the
|
||
yard.
|
||
My daddy do anything for runny fried eggs. Dip his bread in it.
|
||
Grandma used to tell me his things. She said anytime she could make him a plate of soft fried eggs was Christmas, made
|
||
him so happy.
|
||
She said she was always a little scared of my daddy. He was too good, she said. From the beginning, she said, he was too
|
||
good for the world. Scared her. She thought, He'll never make it through nothing. Whitepeople must have thought so
|
||
too, because they never got split up. So she got the chance to know him, look after him, and he scared her the way he
|
||
loved things. Animals and tools and crops and the alphabet. He could count on paper. The boss taught him.
|
||
Offered to teach the other boys but only my daddy wanted it. She said the other boys said no. One of them with a
|
||
number for a name said it would change his mind--make him forget things he
|
||
shouldn't and memorize things he shouldn't and he didn't want his mind messed up. But my daddy said, If you can't
|
||
count they can cheat you. If you can't read they can beat you. They thought that was funny. Grandma said she didn't
|
||
know, but it was because my daddy could count on paper and figure that he bought her away from there. And she said
|
||
she always wished she could read the Bible like real preachers. So it was good for me to learn how, and I did until it got
|
||
quiet and all I could hear was my own breathing and one other who knocked over the milk jug while it was sitting on the
|
||
table. Nobody near it. Ma'am whipped Buglar but he didn't touch it. Then it messed up all the ironed clothes and put its
|
||
hands in the cake. Look like I was the only one who knew right away who it was. Just like when she came back I knew
|
||
who she was too. Not right away, but soon as she spelled her name--not her given name, but the one Ma'am paid the
|
||
stonecutter for--I knew. And when she wondered about Ma'am's earrings--something I didn't know about--well, that just
|
||
made the cheese more binding: my sister come to help me wait for my daddy.
|
||
My daddy was an angel man. He could look at you and tell where you hurt and he could fix it too. He made a hanging
|
||
thing for Grandma Baby, so she could pull herself up from the floor when she woke up in the morning, and he made a
|
||
step so when she stood up she was level. Grandma said she was always afraid a whiteman would knock her down in
|
||
front of her children. She behaved and did everything right in front of her children because she didn't want them to see
|
||
her knocked down. She said it made children crazy to see that.
|
||
At Sweet Home nobody did or said they would, so my daddy never saw it there and never went crazy and even now I
|
||
bet he's trying to get here. If Paul D could do it my daddy could too. Angel man. We should all be together. Me, him and
|
||
Beloved. Ma'am could stay or go off with Paul D if she wanted to. Unless Daddy wanted her himself, but I don't think he
|
||
would now, since she let Paul D in her bed.
|
||
Grandma Baby said people look down on her because she had eight children with different men. Coloredpeople and
|
||
whitepeople both look down on her for that. Slaves not supposed to have pleasurable feelings on their own; their bodies
|
||
not supposed to be like that, but they have to have as many children as they can to please whoever owned them. Still,
|
||
they were not supposed to have pleasure deep down. She said for me not to listen to all that. That I should always listen
|
||
to my body and love it.
|
||
The secret house. When she died I went there. Ma'am wouldn't let me go outside in the yard and eat with the others.
|
||
We stayed inside. That hurt. I know Grandma Baby would have liked the party and the people who came to it, because
|
||
she got low not seeing anybody or going anywhere--just grieving and thinking about colors and how she made a mistake.
|
||
That what she thought about what the heart and the body could do was wrong. The whitepeople came anyway. In her
|
||
yard. She had done everything right and they came in her yard anyway. And she didn't know what to think. All she had
|
||
119
|
||
left was her heart and they busted it so even the War couldn't rouse her.
|
||
She told me all my daddy's things. How hard he worked to buy her. After the cake was ruined and the ironed clothes all
|
||
messed up, and after I heard my sister crawling up the stairs to get back to her bed, she told me my things too. That I
|
||
was charmed. My birth was and I got saved all the time. And that I
|
||
shouldn't be afraid of the ghost. It wouldn't harm me because I tasted its blood when Ma'am nursed me. She said the
|
||
ghost was after Ma'am and her too for not doing anything to stop it. But it would never hurt me. I just had to watch out
|
||
for it because it was a greedy ghost and needed a lot of love, which was only natural, considering. And I do. Love her. I
|
||
do.
|
||
She played with me and always came to be with me whenever I needed her. She's mine, Beloved. She's mine.
|
||
Chapter 22
|
||
I am Beloved and she is mine. I see her take flowers away from leaves she puts them in a round basket the leaves are not
|
||
for her she fills the basket she opens the grass I would help her but the clouds are in the way how can I say things that
|
||
are pictures I am not separate from her there is no place where I stop her face is my own and I want to be there in the
|
||
place where her face is and to be looking at it too a hot thing All of it is now it is always now there will never be a time
|
||
when I am not crouching and watching others who are crouching too I am always crouching the man on my face is dead
|
||
his face is not mine his mouth smells sweet but his eyes are locked some who eat nasty themselves I do not eat the men
|
||
without skin bring us their morning water to drink we have none at night I cannot see the dead man on my face daylight
|
||
comes through the cracks and I can see his locked eyes I am not big small rats do not wait for us to sleep someone is
|
||
thrashing but there is no room to do it in if we had more to drink we could make tears we cannot make sweat or
|
||
morning water so the men without skin bring us theirs one time they bring us sweet rocks to suck we are all trying to
|
||
leave our bodies behind the man on my face has done it it is hard to make yourself die forever you sleep short and then
|
||
return in the beginning we could vomit now we do not now we cannot his teeth are pretty white points someone is
|
||
trembling I can feel it over here he is fighting hard to leave his body which is a small bird trembling there is no room to
|
||
tremble so he is not able to die my own dead man is pulled away from my face I miss his pretty white points We are not
|
||
crouching now we are standing but my legs are like my dead man's eyes I cannot fall because there is no room to the
|
||
men without skin are making loud noises I am not dead the bread is sea-colored I am too hungry to eat it the sun closes
|
||
my eyes those able to die are in a pile I cannot find my man the one whose teeth I have loved a hot thing the little hill of
|
||
dead people a hot thing the men without skin push them through with poles the woman is there with the face I want the
|
||
face that is mine they fall into the sea which is the color of the bread she has nothing in her ears if I had the teeth of the
|
||
man who died on my face I would bite the circle around her neck bite it away I know she does not like it now there is
|
||
room to crouch and to watch the crouching others it is the crouching that is now always now inside the woman with my
|
||
face is in the sea a hot thing In the beginning I could see her I could not help her because the clouds were in the way in
|
||
the beginning I could see her the shining in her ears she does not like the circle around her neck I know this I look hard at
|
||
her so she will know that the clouds are in the way I am sure she saw me I am looking at her see me she empties out her
|
||
eyes I am there in the place where her face is and telling her the noisy clouds were in my way she wants her earrings she
|
||
wants her round basket I want her face a hot thing in the beginning the women are away from the men and the men are
|
||
away from the women storms rock us and mix the men into the women and the women into the men that is when I
|
||
begin to be on the back of the man for a long time I see only his neck and his wide shoulders above me I am small I love
|
||
him because he has a song when he turned around to die I see the teeth he sang through his singing was soft his singing
|
||
is of the place where a woman takes flowers away from their leaves and puts them in a round basket before the clouds
|
||
she is crouching near us but I do not see her until he locks his eyes and dies on my face we are that way there is no
|
||
breath
|
||
coming from his mouth and the place where breath should be is sweet-smelling the others do not know he is dead I
|
||
know his song is gone now I love his pretty little teeth instead I cannot lose her again my dead man was in the way like
|
||
the noisy clouds when he dies on my face I can see hers she is going to smile at me she is going to her sharp earrings are
|
||
120
|
||
gone the men without skin are making loud noises they push my own man through they do not push the woman with
|
||
my face through she goes in they do not push her she goes in the little hill is gone she was going to smile at me she was
|
||
going to a hot thing They are not crouching now we are they are floating on the water they break up the little hill and
|
||
push it through I cannot find my pretty teeth I see the dark face that is going to smile at me it is my dark face that is
|
||
going to smile at me the iron circle is around our neck she does not have sharp earrings in her ears or a round basket she
|
||
goes in the water with my face I am standing in the rain falling the others are taken I am not taken I am falling like the
|
||
rain is I watch him eat inside I am crouching to keep from falling with the rain I am going to be in pieces he hurts where I
|
||
sleep he puts his finger there I drop the food and break into pieces she took my face away there is no one to want me to
|
||
say me my name I wait on the bridge because she is under it there is night and there is day again again night day night
|
||
day I am waiting no iron circle is around my neck no boats go on this water no men without skin my dead man is not
|
||
floating here his teeth are down there where the blue is and the grass so is the face I want the face that is going to smile
|
||
at me it is going to in the day diamonds are in the water where she is and turtles in the night I hear chewing and
|
||
swallowing and laughter it belongs to me she is the laugh I am the laugher I see her face which is mine it is the face that
|
||
was going to smile at me in the place where we crouched now she is going to her face comes through the water a hot
|
||
thing her face is mine she is not smiling she is chewing and swallowing I have to have my face I go in the grass opens she
|
||
opens it I am in the water and she is coming there is no round basket no iron circle around her neck she goes up where
|
||
the diamonds are I follow her we are in the diamonds which are her earrings now my face is coming I have to have it I
|
||
am looking for the join I am loving my face so much my dark face is close to me I want to join she whispers to me she
|
||
whispers I reach for her chewing and swallowing she touches me she knows I want to join she chews and swallows me I
|
||
am gone now I am her face my own face has left me I see me swim away a hot thing I see the bottoms of my feet I am
|
||
alone I want to be the two of us I want the join I come out of blue water after the bottoms of my feet swim away from
|
||
me I come up I need to find a place to be the air is heavy I am not dead I am not there is a house there is what she
|
||
whispered to me I am where she told me I am not dead I sit the sun closes my eyes when I open them I see the face I lost
|
||
Sethe's is the face that lef me Sethe sees me see her and I see the smile her smiling face is the place for me it is the face I
|
||
lost she is my face smiling at me doing it at last a hot thing now we can join a hot thing
|
||
Chapter 23
|
||
I AM BELOVED and she is mine. Sethe is the one that picked flowers, yellow flowers in the place before the crouching.
|
||
Took them away from their green leaves. They are on the quilt now where we sleep.
|
||
She was about to smile at me when the men without skin came and took us up into the sunlight with the dead and
|
||
shoved them into the sea. Sethe went into the sea. She went there. They did not push her.
|
||
She went there. She was getting ready to smile at me and when she saw the dead people pushed into the sea she went
|
||
also and left me there with no face or hers. Sethe is the face I found and lost in the water under the bridge. When I went
|
||
in, I saw her face coming to me and it was my face too. I
|
||
wanted to join. I tried to join, but she went up into the pieces of light at the top of the water. I lost her again, but I found
|
||
the house she whispered to me and there she was, smiling at last. It's good, but I cannot lose her again. All I want to
|
||
know is why did she go in the water in the place where we crouched?
|
||
Why did she do that when she was just about to smile at me? I wanted to join her in the sea but I could not move; I
|
||
wanted to help her when she was picking the flowers, but the clouds of gunsmoke blinded me and I lost her. Three
|
||
times I lost her: once with the flowers because of the noisy clouds of smoke; once when she went into the sea instead
|
||
of smiling at me; once under the bridge when I went in to j oin her and she came toward me but did not smile. She
|
||
whispered to me, chewed me, and swam away. Now I have found her in this house. She smiles at me and it is my own
|
||
face smiling. I will not lose her again. She is mine.
|
||
Tell me the truth. Didn't you come from the other side?
|
||
121
|
||
Yes. I was on the other side.
|
||
You came back because of me?
|
||
Yes.
|
||
You rememory me?
|
||
Yes. I remember you.
|
||
You never forgot me?
|
||
Your face is mine.
|
||
Do you forgive me? Will you stay? You safe here now.
|
||
Where are the men without skin?
|
||
Out there. Way off.
|
||
Can they get in here?
|
||
No. They tried that once, but I stopped them. They won't ever come back.
|
||
One of them was in the house I was in. He hurt me.
|
||
They can't hurt us no more.
|
||
Where are your earrings?
|
||
They took them from me.
|
||
The men without skin took them?
|
||
Yes.
|
||
I was going to help you but the clouds got in the way.
|
||
There're no clouds here.
|
||
If they put an iron circle around your neck I will bite it away.
|
||
Beloved.
|
||
I will make you a round basket.
|
||
You're back. You're back.
|
||
Will we smile at me?
|
||
Can't you see I'm smiling?
|
||
I love your face.
|
||
We played by the creek.
|
||
I was there in the water.
|
||
In the quiet time, we played.
|
||
122
|
||
The clouds were noisy and in the way.
|
||
When I needed you, you came to be with me.
|
||
I needed her face to smile.
|
||
I could only hear breathing.
|
||
The breathing is gone; only the teeth are left.
|
||
She said you wouldn't hurt me.
|
||
She hurt me.
|
||
I will protect you.
|
||
I want her face.
|
||
Don't love her too much.
|
||
I am loving her too much.
|
||
Watch out for her; she can give you dreams.
|
||
She chews and swallows.
|
||
Don't fall asleep when she braids your hair.
|
||
She is the laugh; I am the laughter.
|
||
I watch the house; I watch the yard.
|
||
She left me.
|
||
Daddy is coming for us.
|
||
A hot thing.
|
||
Beloved
|
||
You are my sister
|
||
You are my daughter
|
||
You are my face; you are me
|
||
I have found you again; you have come back to me
|
||
You are my Beloved
|
||
You are mine
|
||
You are mine
|
||
You are mine
|
||
I have your milk
|
||
I have your smile
|
||
123
|
||
I will take care of you
|
||
You are my face; I am you. Why did you leave me who am you?
|
||
I will never leave you again
|
||
Don't ever leave me again
|
||
You will never leave me again
|
||
You went in the water
|
||
I drank your blood
|
||
I brought your milk
|
||
You forgot to smile
|
||
I loved you
|
||
You hurt me
|
||
You came back to me
|
||
You left me
|
||
I waited for you
|
||
You are mine
|
||
You are mine
|
||
You are mine
|
||
Chapter 24
|
||
IT WAS a tiny church no bigger than a rich man's parlor. The pews had no backs, and since the congregation was also the
|
||
choir, it didn't need a stall. Certain members had been assigned the construction of a platform to raise the preacher a
|
||
few inches above his congregation, but it was a less than urgent task, since the major elevation, a white oak cross, had
|
||
already taken place. Before it was the Church of the Holy Redeemer, it was a dry-goods shop that had no use for side
|
||
windows, just front ones for display. These were papered over while members considered whether to paint or curtain
|
||
them--how to have privacy without losing the little light that might want to shine on them. In the summer the doors
|
||
were left open for ventilation. In winter an iron stove in the aisle did what it could. At the front of the church was a
|
||
sturdy porch where customers used to sit, and children laughed at the boy who got his head stuck between the railings.
|
||
On a sunny and windless day in January it was actually warmer out there than inside, if the iron stove was cold. The
|
||
damp cellar was fairly warm, but there was no light lighting the pallet or the washbasin or the nail from which a man's
|
||
clothes could be hung.
|
||
And a oil lamp in a cellar was sad, so Paul D sat on the porch steps and got additional warmth from a bottle of liquor
|
||
jammed in his coat pocket. Warmth and red eyes. He held his wrist between his knees, not to keep his hands still but
|
||
because he had nothing else to hold on to. His tobacco tin, blown open, spilled contents that floated freely and made
|
||
him their play and prey.
|
||
He couldn't figure out why it took so long. He may as well have jumped in the fire with Sixo and they both could have
|
||
had a good laugh. Surrender was bound to come anyway, why not meet it with a laugh, shouting Seven-O! Why not?
|
||
Why the delay? He had already seen his brother wave goodbye from the back of a dray, fried chicken in his pocket, tears
|
||
124
|
||
in his eyes. Mother. Father. Didn't remember the one. Never saw the other. He was the youngest of three half-brothers
|
||
(same mother--different fathers) sold to Garner and kept there, forbidden to leave the farm, for twenty years. Once, in
|
||
Maryland, he met four families of slaves who had all been together for a hundred years: great-grands, grands, mothers,
|
||
fathers, aunts, uncles, cousins, children. Half white, part white, all black, mixed with Indian. He watched them with awe
|
||
and envy, and each time he discovered large families of black people he made them identify over and over who each
|
||
was, what relation, who, in fact, belonged to who.
|
||
"That there's my auntie. This here's her boy. Yonder is my pap's cousin. My ma'am was married twice--this my half-sister
|
||
and these her two children. Now, my wife..."
|
||
Nothing like that had ever been his and growing up at Sweet Home he didn't miss it. He had his brothers, two friends,
|
||
Baby Suggs in the kitchen, a boss who showed them how to shoot and listened to what they had to say. A mistress who
|
||
made their soap and never raised her voice. For twenty years they had all lived in that cradle, until Baby left, Sethe
|
||
came, and Halle took her. He made a family with her, and Sixo was hell-bent to make one with the Thirty-Mile Woman.
|
||
When Paul D waved goodbye to his oldest brother, the boss was dead, the mistress nervous and the cradle already split.
|
||
Sixo said the doctor made Mrs. Garner sick. Said he was giving her to drink what stallions got when they broke a leg
|
||
and no gunpowder could be spared, and had it not been for schoolteacher's new rules, he would have told her so. They
|
||
laughed at him. Sixo had a knowing tale about everything. Including Mr. Garner's stroke, which he said was a shot in his
|
||
ear put there by a jealous neighbor.
|
||
"where's the blood?" they asked him.
|
||
There was no blood. Mr. Garner came home bent over his mare's neck, sweating and blue-white. Not a drop of blood.
|
||
Sixo grunted, the only one of them not sorry to see him go. Later, however, he was mighty sorry; they all were.
|
||
"Why she call on him?" Paul D asked. "Why she need the schoolteacher?"
|
||
"She need somebody can figure," said Halle.
|
||
"You can do figures."
|
||
"Not like that."
|
||
"No, man," said Sixo. "She need another white on the place."
|
||
"What for?"
|
||
"What you think? What you think?"
|
||
Well, that's the way it was. Nobody counted on Garner dying.
|
||
Nobody thought he could. How 'bout that? Everything rested on Garner being alive. Without his life each of theirs fell to
|
||
pieces. Now ain't that slavery or what is it? At the peak of his strength, taller than tall men, and stronger than most, they
|
||
clipped him, Paul D.
|
||
First his shotgun, then his thoughts, for schoolteacher didn't take advice from Negroes. The information they offered
|
||
he called backtalk and developed a variety of corrections (which he recorded in his notebook) to reeducate them. He
|
||
complained they ate too much, rested too much, talked too much, which was certainly true compared to him, because
|
||
schoolteacher ate little, spoke less and rested not at all. Once he saw them playing--a pitching game--and his look
|
||
of deeply felt hurt was enough to make Paul D blink. He was as hard on his pupils as he was on them--except for the
|
||
corrections.
|
||
For years Paul D believed schoolteacher broke into children what Garner had raised into men. And it was that that
|
||
made them run off. Now, plagued by the contents of his tobacco tin, he wondered how much difference there really
|
||
was between before schoolteacher and after. Garner called and announced them men--but only on Sweet Home, and
|
||
by his leave. Was he naming what he saw or creating what he did not? That was the wonder of Sixo, and even Halle; it
|
||
125
|
||
was always clear to Paul D that those two were men whether Garner said so or not. It troubled him that, concerning his
|
||
own manhood, he could not satisfy himself on that point. Oh, he did manly things, but was that Garner's gift or his own
|
||
will? What would he have been anyway--before Sweet Home--without Garner? In Sixo's country, or his mother's? Or,
|
||
God help him, on the boat? Did a whiteman saying it make it so? Suppose Garner woke up one morning and changed
|
||
his mind? Took the word away. Would they have run then? And if he didn't, would the Pauls have stayed there all their
|
||
lives? Why did the brothers need the one whole night to decide? To discuss whether they would join Sixo and Halle.
|
||
Because they had been isolated in a wonderful lie, dismissing Halle's and Baby Suggs' life before Sweet Home as bad
|
||
luck. Ignorant of or amused by Sixo's dark stories. Protected and convinced they were special.
|
||
Never suspecting the problem of Alfred, Georgia; being so in love with the look of the world, putting up with anything
|
||
and everything, just to stay alive in a place where a moon he had no right to was nevertheless there. Loving small and in
|
||
secret. His little love was a tree, of course, but not like Brother--old, wide and beckoning.
|
||
In Alfred, Georgia, there was an aspen too young to call sapling.
|
||
Just a shoot no taller than his waist. The kind of thing a man would cut to whip his horse. Song-murder and the aspen.
|
||
He stayed alive to sing songs that murdered life, and watched an aspen that confirmed it, and never for a minute did he
|
||
believe he could escape. Until it rained. Afterward, after the Cherokee pointed and sent him running toward blossoms,
|
||
he wanted simply to move, go, pick up one day and be somewhere else the next. Resigned to life without aunts, cousins,
|
||
children. Even a woman, until Sethe.
|
||
And then she moved him. Just when doubt, regret and every single unasked question was packed away, long after he
|
||
believed he had willed himself into being, at the very time and place he wanted to take root--she moved him. From
|
||
room to room. Like a rag doll.
|
||
Sitting on the porch of a dry-goods church, a little bit drunk and nothing much to do, he could have these thoughts.
|
||
Slow, what-if thoughts that cut deep but struck nothing solid a man could hold on to. So he held his wrists. Passing by
|
||
that woman's life, getting in it and letting it get in him had set him up for this fall. Wanting to live out his life with a
|
||
whole woman was new, and losing the feeling of it made him want to cry and think deep thoughts that struck nothing
|
||
solid. When he was drifting, thinking only about the next meal and night's sleep, when everything was packed tight in his
|
||
chest, he had no sense of failure, of things not working out. Anything that worked at all worked out. Now he wondered
|
||
what-all went wrong, and starting with the Plan, everything had. It was a good plan, too.
|
||
Worked out in detail with every possibility of error eliminated.
|
||
Sixo, hitching up the horses, is speaking English again and tells Halle what his Thirty-Mile Woman told him. That seven
|
||
Negroes on her place were joining two others going North. That the two others had done it before and knew the way.
|
||
That one of the two, a woman, would wait for them in the corn when it was high--one night and half of the next day she
|
||
would wait, and if they came she would take them to the caravan, where the others would be hidden.
|
||
That she would rattle, and that would be the sign. Sixo was going, his woman was going, and Halle was taking his whole
|
||
family. The two Pauls say they need time to think about it. Time to wonder where they will end up; how they will live.
|
||
What work; who will take them in; should they try to get to Paul F, whose owner, they remember, lived in something
|
||
called the "trace"? It takes them one evening's conversation to decide.
|
||
Now all they have to do is wait through the spring, till the corn is as high as it ever got and the moon as fat.
|
||
And plan. Is it better to leave in the dark to get a better start, or go at daybreak to be able to see the way better? Sixo
|
||
spits at the suggestion. Night gives them more time and the protection of color.
|
||
He does not ask them if they are afraid. He manages some dry runs to the corn at night, burying blankets and two knives
|
||
near the creek.
|
||
Will Sethe be able to swim the creek? they ask him. It will be dry, he says, when the corn is tall. There is no food to put
|
||
by, but Sethe says she will get a jug of cane syrup or molasses, and some bread when it is near the time to go. She only
|
||
126
|
||
wants to be sure the blankets are where they should be, for they will need them to tie her baby on her back and to cover
|
||
them during the journey. There are no clothes other than what they wear. And of course no shoes. The knives will help
|
||
them eat, but they bury rope and a pot as well. A good plan.
|
||
They watch and memorize the comings and goings of schoolteacher and his pupils: what is wanted when and where;
|
||
how long it takes. Mrs. Garner, restless at night, is sunk in sleep all morning.
|
||
Some days the pupils and their teacher do lessons until breakfast.
|
||
One day a week they skip breakfast completely and travel ten miles to church, expecting a large dinner upon their
|
||
return. Schoolteacher writes in his notebook after supper; the pupils clean, mend or sharpen tools. Sethe's work is the
|
||
most uncertain because she is on call for Mrs. Garner anytime, including nighttime when the pain or the weakness or
|
||
the downright loneliness is too much for her. So: Sixo and the Pauls will go after supper and wait in the creek for the
|
||
Thirty Mile Woman. Halle will bring Sethe and the three children before dawn--before the sun, before the chickens and
|
||
the milking cow need attention, so by the time smoke should be coming from the cooking stove, they will be in or near
|
||
the creek with the others. That way, if Mrs. Garner needs Sethe in the night and calls her, Sethe will be there to answer.
|
||
They only have to wait through the spring.
|
||
But. Sethe was pregnant in the spring and by August is so heavy with child she may not be able to keep up with the men,
|
||
who can carry the children but not her.
|
||
But. Neighbors discouraged by Garner when he was alive now feel free to visit Sweet Home and might appear in the
|
||
right place at the wrong time.
|
||
But. Sethe's children cannot play in the kitchen anymore, so she is dashing back and forth between house and quarters-
|
||
fidgety and frustrated trying to watch over them. They are too young for men's work and the baby girl is nine months
|
||
old. Without Mrs. Garner's help her work increases as do schoolteacher's demands.
|
||
But. After the conversation about the shoat, Sixo is tied up with the stock at night, and locks are put on bins, pens,
|
||
sheds, coops, the tackroom and the barn door. There is no place to dart into or congregate.
|
||
Sixo keeps a nail in his mouth now, to help him undo the rope when he has to.
|
||
But. Halle is told to work his extra on Sweet Home and has no call to be anywhere other than where schoolteacher tells
|
||
him. Only Sixo, who has been stealing away to see his woman, and Halle, who has been hired away for years, know what
|
||
lies outside Sweet Home and how to get there.
|
||
It is a good plan. It can be done right under the watchful pupils and their teacher.
|
||
But. They had to alter it--just a little. First they change the leaving.
|
||
They memorize the directions Halle gives them. Sixo, needing time to untie himself, break open the door and not disturb
|
||
the horses, will leave later, joining them at the creek with the Thirty-Mile Woman.
|
||
All four will go straight to the corn. Halle, who also needs more time now, because of Sethe, decides to bring her and
|
||
the children at night; not wait till first light. They will go straight to the corn and not assemble at the creek. The corn
|
||
stretches to their shoulders--it will never be higher. The moon is swelling. They can hardly harvest, or chop, or clear,
|
||
or pick, or haul for listening for a rattle that is not bird or snake. Then one midmorning, they hear it. Or Halle does and
|
||
begins to sing it to the others:
|
||
"Hush, hush. Somebody's calling my name. Hush, hush. Somebody's calling my name. O my Lord, O my Lord, what shall I
|
||
do?"
|
||
On his dinner break he leaves the field. He has to. He has to tell Sethe that he has heard the sign. For two successive
|
||
nights she has been with Mrs. Garner and he can't chance it that she will not know that this night she cannot be. The
|
||
Pauls see him go. From underneath Brother's shade where they are chewing corn cake, they see him, swinging along.
|
||
127
|
||
The bread tastes good. They lick sweat from their lips to give it a saltier flavor. Schoolteacher and his pupils are already
|
||
at the house eating dinner. Halle swings along. He is not singing now.
|
||
Nobody knows what happened. Except for the churn, that was the last anybody ever saw of Halle. What Paul D knew
|
||
was that Halle disappeared, never told Sethe anything, and was next seen squatting in butter. Maybe when he got to
|
||
the gate and asked to see Sethe, schoolteacher heard a tint of anxiety in his voice--the tint that would make him pick
|
||
up his ever-ready shotgun. Maybe Halle made the mistake of saying "my wife" in some way that would put a light in
|
||
schoolteacher's eye. Sethe says now that she heard shots, but did not look out the window of Mrs. Garner's bedroom.
|
||
But Halle was not killed or wounded that day because Paul D saw him later, after she had run off with no one's help;
|
||
after Sixo laughed and his brother disappeared. Saw him greased and flat-eyed as a fish. Maybe schoolteacher shot after
|
||
him, shot at his feet, to remind him of the trespass.
|
||
Maybe Halle got in the barn, hid there and got locked in with the rest of schoolteacher's stock. Maybe anything. He
|
||
disappeared and everybody was on his own.
|
||
Paul A goes back to moving timber after dinner. They are to meet at quarters for supper. He never shows up. Paul D
|
||
leaves for the creek on time, believing, hoping, Paul A has gone on ahead; certain schoolteacher has learned something.
|
||
Paul D gets to the creek and it is as dry as Sixo promised. He waits there with the Thirty-Mile Woman for Sixo and Paul A.
|
||
Only Sixo shows up, his wrists bleeding, his tongue licking his lips like a flame.
|
||
"You see Paul A?"
|
||
"No."
|
||
"Halle?"
|
||
"No."
|
||
"No sign of them?"
|
||
"No sign. Nobody in quarters but the children."
|
||
"Sethe?"
|
||
"Her children sleep. She must be there still."
|
||
"I can't leave without Paul A."
|
||
"I can't help you."
|
||
"Should I go back and look for them?"
|
||
"I can't help you."
|
||
"What you think?"
|
||
"I think they go straight to the corn."
|
||
Sixo turns, then, to the woman and they clutch each other and whisper. She is lit now with some glowing, some shining
|
||
that comes from inside her. Before when she knelt on creek pebbles with Paul D, she was nothing, a shape in the dark
|
||
breathing lightly.
|
||
Sixo is about to crawl out to look for the knives he buried. He hears something. He hears nothing. Forget the knives.
|
||
Now. The three of them climb up the bank and schoolteacher, his pupils and four other whitemen move toward them.
|
||
With lamps. Sixo pushes the Thirty-Mile Woman and she runs further on in the creekbed.
|
||
Paul D and Sixo run the other way toward the woods. Both are surrounded and tied.
|
||
128
|
||
The air gets sweet then. Perfumed by the things honeybees love.
|
||
Tied like a mule, Paul D feels how dewy and inviting the grass is.
|
||
He is thinking about that and where Paul A might be when Sixo turns and grabs the mouth of the nearest pointing rifle.
|
||
He begins to sing. Two others shove Paul D and tie him to a tree. Schoolteacher is saying, "Alive. Alive. I want him alive."
|
||
Sixo swings and cracks the ribs of one, but with bound hands cannot get the weapon in position to use it in any other
|
||
way. All the whitemen have to do is wait. For his song, perhaps, to end? Five guns are trained on him while they listen.
|
||
Paul D cannot see them when they step away from lamplight. Finally one of them hits Sixo in the head with his rifle, and
|
||
when he comes to, a hickory fire is in front of him and he is tied at the waist to a tree. Schoolteacher has changed his
|
||
mind: "This one will never be suitable." The song must have convinced him.
|
||
The fire keeps failing and the whitemen are put out with themselves at not being prepared for this emergency. They
|
||
came to capture, not kill. What they can manage is only enough for cooking hominy.
|
||
Dry faggots are scarce and the grass is slick with dew.
|
||
By the light of the hominy fire Sixo straightens. He is through with his song. He laughs. A rippling sound like Sethe's sons
|
||
make when they tumble in hay or splash in rainwater. His feet are cooking; the cloth of his trousers smokes. He laughs.
|
||
Something is funny. Paul D guesses what it is when Sixo interrupts his laughter to call out, "Seven-O! Seven-O!"
|
||
Smoky, stubborn fire. They shoot him to shut him up. Have to.
|
||
Shackled, walking through the perfumed things honeybees love, Paul D hears the men talking and for the first time
|
||
learns his worth.
|
||
He has always known, or believed he did, his value--as a hand, a laborer who could make profit on a farm--but now he
|
||
discovers his worth, which is to say he learns his price. The dollar value of his weight, his strength, his heart, his brain, his
|
||
penis, and his future.
|
||
As soon as the whitemen get to where they have tied their horses and mount them, they are calmer, talking among
|
||
themselves about the difficulty they face. The problems. Voices remind schoolteacher about the spoiling these particular
|
||
slaves have had at Garner's hands.
|
||
There's laws against what he done: letting niggers hire out their own time to buy themselves. He even let em have
|
||
guns! And you think he mated them niggers to get him some more? Hell no! He planned for them to marry! if that don't
|
||
beat all! Schoolteacher sighs, and says doesn't he know it? He had come to put the place aright. Now it faced greater
|
||
ruin than what Garner left for it, because of the loss of two niggers, at the least, and maybe three because he is not
|
||
sure they will find the one called Halle. The sister-in-law is too weak to help out and doggone if now there ain't a full-
|
||
scale stampede on his hands. He would have to trade this here one for $900 if he could get it, and set out to secure the
|
||
breeding one, her foal and the other one, if he found him. With the money from "this here one" he could get two young
|
||
ones, twelve or fifteen years old. And maybe with the breeding one, her three pickaninnies and whatever the foal might
|
||
be, he and his nephews would have seven niggers and Sweet Home would be worth the trouble it was causing him.
|
||
"Look to you like Lillian gonna make it?"
|
||
"Touch and go. Touch and go."
|
||
"You was married to her sister-in-law, wasn't you?"
|
||
"I was."
|
||
"She frail too?"
|
||
"A bit. Fever took her."
|
||
129
|
||
"Well, you don't need to stay no widower in these parts."
|
||
"My cogitation right now is Sweet Home."
|
||
"Can't say as I blame you. That's some spread."
|
||
They put a three-spoke collar on him so he can't lie down and they chain his ankles together. The number he heard with
|
||
his ear is now in his head. Two. Two? Two niggers lost? Paul D thinks his heart is jumping. They are going to look for
|
||
Halle, not Paul A. They must have found Paul A and if a whiteman finds you it means you are surely lost.
|
||
Schoolteacher looks at him for a long time before he closes the door of the cabin. Carefully, he looks. Paul D does not
|
||
look back.
|
||
It is sprinkling now. A teasing August rain that raises expectations it cannot fill. He thinks he should have sung along.
|
||
Loud something loud and rolling to go with Sixo's tune, but the words put him off-- he didn't understand the words.
|
||
Although it shouldn't have mattered because he understood the sound: hatred so loose it was juba.
|
||
The warm sprinkle comes and goes, comes and goes. He thinks he hears sobbing that seems to come from Mrs. Garner's
|
||
window, but it could be anything, anyone, even a she-cat making her yearning known. Tired of holding his head up, he
|
||
lets his chin rest on the collar and speculates on how he can hobble over to the grate, boil a little water and throw in a
|
||
handful of meal. That's what he is doing when Sethe comes in, rain-wet and big-bellied, saying she is going to cut. She
|
||
has just come back from taking her children to the corn.
|
||
The whites were not around. She couldn't find Halle. Who was caught? Did Sixo get away? Paul A?
|
||
He tells her what he knows: Sixo is dead; the Thirty-Mile Woman ran, and he doesn't know what happened to Paul A or
|
||
Halle. "Where could he be?" she asks.
|
||
Paul D shrugs because he can't shake his head.
|
||
"You saw Sixo die? You sure?"
|
||
"I'm sure."
|
||
"Was he woke when it happened? Did he see it coming?"
|
||
"He was woke. Woke and laughing."
|
||
"Sixo laughed?"
|
||
"You should have heard him, Sethe."
|
||
Sethe's dress steams before the little fire over which he is boiling water. It is hard to move about with shackled ankles
|
||
and the neck jewelry embarrasses him. In his shame he avoids her eyes, but when he doesn't he sees only black in them-
|
||
-no whites. She says she is going, and he thinks she will never make it to the gate, but he doesn't dissuade her. He knows
|
||
he will never see her again, and right then and there his heart stopped.
|
||
The pupils must have taken her to the barn for sport right afterward, and when she told Mrs. Garner, they took down
|
||
the cowhide.
|
||
Who in hell or on this earth would have thought that she would cut anyway? They must have believed, what with her
|
||
belly and her back, that she wasn't going anywhere. He wasn't surprised to learn
|
||
that they had tracked her down in Cincinnati, because, when he thought about it now, her price was greater than his;
|
||
property that reproduced itself without cost.
|
||
Remembering his own price, down to the cent, that schoolteacher was able to get for him, he wondered what Sethe's
|
||
130
|
||
would have been.
|
||
What had Baby Suggs' been? How much did Halle owe, still, besides his labor? What did Mrs. Garner get for Paul F?
|
||
More than nine hundred dollars? How much more? Ten dollars? Twenty? Schoolteacher would know. He knew the
|
||
worth of everything. It accounted for the real sorrow in his voice when he pronounced Sixo unsuitable.
|
||
Who could be fooled into buying a singing nigger with a gun? Shouting Seven-O! Seven-O! because his Thirty-Mile
|
||
Woman got away with his blossoming seed. What a laugh. So rippling and full of glee it put out the fire. And it was Sixo's
|
||
laughter that was on his mind, not the bit in his mouth, when they hitched him to the buckboard.
|
||
Then he saw Halle, then the rooster, smiling as if to say, You ain't seen nothing yet. How could a rooster know about
|
||
Alfred, Georgia?
|
||
Chapter 25
|
||
"HOWDY."
|
||
Stamp Paid was still fingering the ribbon and it made a little motion in his pants pocket.
|
||
Paul D looked up, noticed the side pocket agitation and snorted.
|
||
"I can't read. You got any more newspaper for me, just a waste of time."
|
||
Stamp withdrew the ribbon and sat down on the steps.
|
||
"No. This here's something else." He stroked the red cloth between forefinger and thumb. "Something else."
|
||
Paul D didn't say anything so the two men sat in silence for a few moments.
|
||
"This is hard for me," said Stamp. "But I got to do it. Two things I got to say to you. I'm a take the easy one first."
|
||
Paul D chuckled. "If it's hard for you, might kill me dead."
|
||
"No, no. Nothing like that. I come looking for you to ask your pardon. Apologize."
|
||
"For what?" Paul D reached in his coat pocket for his bottle.
|
||
"You pick any house, any house where colored live. In all of Cincinnati. Pick any one and you welcome to stay there. I'm
|
||
apologizing because they didn't offer or tell you. But you welcome anywhere you want to be. My house is your house
|
||
too. John and Ella, Miss Lady, Able Woodruff, Willie Pike--
|
||
anybody. You choose. You ain't got to sleep in no cellar, and I apologize for each and every night you did. I don't know
|
||
how that preacher let you do it. I knowed him since he was a boy."
|
||
"Whoa, Stamp. He offered."
|
||
"Did? Well?"
|
||
"Well. I wanted, I didn't want to, I just wanted to be off by myself a spell. He offered. Every time I see him he offers
|
||
again."
|
||
"That's a load off. I thought everybody gone crazy."
|
||
Paul D shook his head. "Just me."
|
||
"You planning to do anything about it?"
|
||
131
|
||
"Oh, yeah. I got big plans." He swallowed twice from the bottle.
|
||
Any planning in a bottle is short, thought Stamp, but he knew from personal experience the pointlessness of telling a
|
||
drinking man not to. He cleared his sinuses and began to think how to get to the second thing he had come to say. Very
|
||
few people were out today.
|
||
The canal was frozen so that traffic too had stopped. They heard the dop of a horse approaching. Its rider sat a high
|
||
Eastern saddle but everything else about him was Ohio Valley. As he rode by he looked at them and suddenly reined his
|
||
horse, and came up to the path leading to the church. He leaned forward.
|
||
"Hey," he said.
|
||
Stamp put his ribbon in his pocket. "Yes, sir?"
|
||
"I'm looking for a gal name of Judy. Works over by the slaughterhouse."
|
||
"Don't believe I know her. No, sir."
|
||
"Said she lived on Plank Road."
|
||
"Plank Road. Yes, sir. That's up a ways. Mile, maybe."
|
||
"You don't know her? Judy. Works in the slaughterhouse."
|
||
"No, sir, but I know Plank Road. 'Bout a mile up thataway."
|
||
Paul D lifted his bottle and swallowed. The rider looked at him and then back at Stamp Paid. Loosening the right rein, he
|
||
turned his horse toward the road, then changed his mind and came back.
|
||
"Look here," he said to Paul D. "There's a cross up there, so I guess this here's a church or used to be. Seems to me like
|
||
you ought to show it some respect, you follow me?"
|
||
"Yes, sir," said Stamp. "You right about that. That's just what I come over to talk to him about. Just that."
|
||
The rider clicked his tongue and trotted off. Stamp made small circles in the palm of his left hand with two fingers of his
|
||
right. "You got to choose," he said. "Choose anyone. They let you be if you want em to. My house. Ella. Willie Pike. None
|
||
of us got much, but all of us got room for one more. Pay a little something when you can, don't when you can't. Think
|
||
about it. You grown. I can't make you do what you won't, but think about it."
|
||
Paul D said nothing.
|
||
"If I did you harm, I'm here to rectify it."
|
||
"No need for that. No need at all."
|
||
A woman with four children walked by on the other side of the road. She waved, smiling. "Hoo-oo. I can't stop. See you
|
||
at meeting."
|
||
"I be there," Stamp returned her greeting. "There's another one," he said to Paul D. "Scripture Woodruff, Able's sister.
|
||
Works at the brush and tallow factory. You'll see. Stay around here long enough, you'll see ain't a sweeter bunch
|
||
of colored anywhere than what's right here. Pride, well, that bothers em a bit. They can get messy when they think
|
||
somebody's too proud, but when it comes right down to it, they good people and anyone will take you in."
|
||
"What about Judy? She take me in?"
|
||
"Depends. What you got in mind?"
|
||
"You know Judy?"
|
||
132
|
||
"Judith. I know everybody."
|
||
"Out on Plank Road?"
|
||
"Everybody."
|
||
"Well? She take me in?"
|
||
Stamp leaned down and untied his shoe. Twelve black buttonhooks, six on each side at the bottom, led to four pairs
|
||
of eyes at the top. He loosened the laces all the way down, adjusted the tongue carefully and wound them back again.
|
||
When he got to the eyes he rolled the lace tips with his fingers before inserting them.
|
||
"Let me tell you how I got my name." The knot was tight and so was the bow. "They called me Joshua," he said. "I
|
||
renamed myself," he said, "and I'm going to tell you why I did it," and he told him about Vashti. "I never touched her all
|
||
that time. Not once.
|
||
Almost a year. We was planting when it started and picking when it stopped. Seemed longer. I should have killed him.
|
||
She said no, but I should have. I didn't have the patience I got now, but I figured maybe somebody else didn't have much
|
||
patience either--his own wife. Took it in my head to see if she was taking it any better than I was. Vashti and me was
|
||
in the fields together in the day and every now and then she be gone all night. I never touched her and damn me if I
|
||
spoke three words to her a day. I took any chance I had to get near the great house to see her, the young master's wife.
|
||
Nothing but a boy. Seventeen, twenty maybe. I caught sight of her finally, standing in the backyard by the fence with a
|
||
glass of water. She was drinking out of it and just gazing out over the yard. I went over.
|
||
Stood back a ways and took off my hat. I said, 'Scuse me, miss. Scuse me?' She turned to look. I'm smiling. 'Scuse me.
|
||
You seen Vashti?
|
||
My wife Vashti?' A little bitty thing, she was. Black hair. Face no bigger than my hand. She said, "What? Vashti?' I
|
||
say, 'Yes'm, Vashti.
|
||
My wife. She say she owe you all some eggs. You know if she brung em? You know her if you see her. Wear a black
|
||
ribbon on her neck.'
|
||
She got rosy then and I knowed she knowed. He give Vashti that to wear. A cameo on a black ribbon. She used to put it
|
||
on every time she went to him. I put my hat back on. 'You see her tell her I need her. Thank you. Thank you, ma'am.' I
|
||
backed off before she could say something. I didn't dare look back till I got behind some trees.
|
||
She was standing just as I left her, looking in her water glass. I thought it would give me more satisfaction than it did. I
|
||
also thought she might stop it, but it went right on. Till one morning Vashti came in and sat by the window. A Sunday.
|
||
We worked our own patches on Sunday. She sat by the window looking out of it. 'I'm back,' she said.
|
||
'I'm back, Josh.' I looked at the back of her neck. She had a real small neck. I decided to break it. You know, like a twig--
|
||
just snap it. I been low but that was as low as I ever got."
|
||
"Did you? Snap it?"
|
||
"Uh uh. I changed my name."
|
||
"How you get out of there? How you get up here?"
|
||
"Boat. On up the Mississippi to Memphis. Walked from Memphis to Cumberland."
|
||
"Vashti too?"
|
||
"No. She died."
|
||
"Aw, man. Tie your other shoe!"
|
||
133
|
||
"What?"
|
||
"Tie your goddamn shoe! It's sitting right in front of you!
|
||
Tie it!"
|
||
"That make you feel better?"
|
||
"No." Paul D tossed the bottle on the ground and stared at the golden chariot on its label. No horses. Just a golden coach
|
||
draped in blue cloth.
|
||
"I said I had two things to say to you. I only told you one. I have to tell you the other."
|
||
"I don't want to know it. I don't want to know nothing. Just if Judy will take me in or won't she."
|
||
"I was there, Paul D."
|
||
"You was where?"
|
||
"There in the yard. When she did it."
|
||
"Judy?"
|
||
"Sethe."
|
||
"Jesus."
|
||
"It ain't what you think."
|
||
"You don't know what I think."
|
||
"She ain't crazy. She love those children. She was trying to out hurt the hurter."
|
||
"Leave off."
|
||
"And spread it."
|
||
"Stamp, let me off. I knew her when she was a girl. She scares me and I knew her when she was a girl."
|
||
"You ain't scared of Sethe. I don't believe you."
|
||
"Sethe scares me. I scare me. And that girl in her house scares me the most."
|
||
"Who is that girl? Where she come from?"
|
||
"I don't know. Just shot up one day sitting on a stump."
|
||
"Huh. Look like you and me the only ones outside 124 lay eyes on her."
|
||
"She don't go nowhere. Where'd you see her?"
|
||
"Sleeping on the kitchen floor. I peeped in."
|
||
"First minute I saw her I didn't want to be nowhere around her.
|
||
Something funny about her. Talks funny. Acts funny." Paul D dug his fingers underneath his cap and rubbed the scalp
|
||
over his temple.
|
||
"She reminds me of something. Something, look like, I'm supposed to remember."
|
||
134
|
||
"She never say where she was from? Where's her people?"
|
||
"She don't know, or says she don't. All I ever heard her say was something about stealing her clothes and living on a
|
||
bridge."
|
||
"What kind of bridge?"
|
||
"Who you asking?"
|
||
"No bridges around here I don't know about. But don't nobody live on em. Under em neither. How long she been over
|
||
there with Sethe?"
|
||
"Last August. Day of the carnival."
|
||
"That's a bad sign. Was she at the carnival?"
|
||
"No. When we got back, there she was--'sleep on a stump. Silk dress. Brand-new shoes. Black as oil."
|
||
"You don't say? Huh. Was a girl locked up in the house with a whiteman over by Deer Creek. Found him dead last
|
||
summer and the girl gone. Maybe that's her. Folks say he had her in there since she was a pup."
|
||
"Well, now she's a bitch."
|
||
"Is she what run you off? Not what I told you 'bout Sethe?"
|
||
A shudder ran through Paul D. A bone-cold spasm that made him clutch his knees. He didn't know if it was bad whiskey,
|
||
nights in the cellar, pig fever, iron bits, smiling roosters, fired feet, laughing dead men, hissing grass, rain, apple
|
||
blossoms, neck jewelry, Judy in the slaughterhouse, Halle in the butter, ghost-white stairs, chokecherry trees, cameo
|
||
pins, aspens, Paul A's face, sausage or the loss of a red, red heart.
|
||
"Tell me something, Stamp." Paul D's eyes were rheumy. "Tell me this one thing. How much is a nigger supposed to
|
||
take? Tell me.
|
||
How much?"
|
||
"All he can," said Stamp Paid. "All he can."
|
||
"why? Why? Why? Why? Why?"
|
||
Book Three
|
||
Chapter 26
|
||
124 WAS QUIET. Denver, who thought she knew all about silence, was surprised to learn hunger could do that: quiet
|
||
you down and wear you out. Neither Sethe nor Beloved knew or cared about it one way or another. They were too busy
|
||
rationing their strength to fight each other. So it was she who had to step off the edge of the world and die because if
|
||
she didn't, they all would. The flesh between her mother's forefinger and thumb was thin as china silk and there wasn't
|
||
a piece of clothing in the house that didn't sag on her. Beloved held her head up with the palms of her hands, slept
|
||
wherever she happened to be, and whined for sweets although she was getting bigger, plumper by the day. Everything
|
||
was gone except two laying hens, and somebody would soon have to decide whether an egg every now and then was
|
||
135
|
||
worth more than two fried chickens. The hungrier they got, the weaker; the weaker they got, the quieter they were--
|
||
which was better than the furious arguments, the poker slammed up against the wall, all the shouting and crying that
|
||
followed that one happy January when they played. Denver had joined in the play, holding back a bit out of habit, even
|
||
though it was the most fun she had ever known.
|
||
But once Sethe had seen the scar, the tip of which Denver had been looking at whenever Beloved undressed--the little
|
||
curved shadow of a smile in the kootchy-kootchy-coo place under her chin--once Sethe saw it, fingered it and closed
|
||
her eyes for a long time, the two of them cut Denver out of the games. The cooking games, the sewing games, the hair
|
||
and dressing-up games. Games her mother loved so well she took to going to work later and later each day until the
|
||
predictable happened: Sawyer told her not to come back. And instead of looking for another job, Sethe played all the
|
||
harder with Beloved, who never got enough of anything: lullabies, new stitches, the bottom of the cake bowl, the top
|
||
of the milk. If the hen had only two eggs, she got both. It was as though her mother had lost her mind, like Grandma
|
||
Baby calling for pink and not doing the things she used to. But different because, unlike Baby Suggs, she cut Denver out
|
||
completely. Even the song that she used to sing to Denver she sang for Beloved alone: "High Johnny, wide Johnny, don't
|
||
you leave my side, Johnny."
|
||
At first they played together. A whole month and Denver loved it. From the night they ice-skated under a star-loaded
|
||
sky and drank sweet milk by the stove, to the string puzzles Sethe did for them in afternoon light, and shadow pictures
|
||
in the gloaming. In the very teeth of winter and Sethe, her eyes fever bright, was plotting a garden of vegetables and
|
||
flowers--talking, talking about what colors it would have. She played with Beloved's hair, braiding, puffing, tying, oiling it
|
||
until it made Denver nervous to watch her They changed beds and exchanged clothes. Walked arm in arm and smiled all
|
||
the time.
|
||
When the weather broke, they were on their knees in the backyard designing a garden in dirt too hard to chop. The
|
||
thirty-eight dollars of life savings went to feed themselves with fancy food and decorate themselves with ribbon and
|
||
dress goods, which Sethe cut and sewed like they were going somewhere in a hurry. Bright clothes--with blue stripes
|
||
and sassy prints. She walked the four miles to John Shillito's to buy yellow ribbon, shiny buttons and bits of black lace.
|
||
By the end of March the three of them looked like carnival women with nothing to do. When it became clear that they
|
||
were only interested in each other, Denver began to drift from the play, but she watched it, alert for any sign that
|
||
Beloved was in danger. Finally convinced there was none, and seeing her mother that happy, that smiling--how could it
|
||
go wrong?--she let down her guard and it did. Her problem at first was trying to find out who was to blame. Her eye was
|
||
on her mother, for a signal that the thing that was in her was out, and she would kill again. But it was Beloved who made
|
||
demands.
|
||
Anything she wanted she got, and when Sethe ran out of things to give her, Beloved invented desire. She wanted
|
||
Sethe's company for hours to watch the layer of brown leaves waving at them from the bottom of the creek, in the same
|
||
place where, as a little girl, Denver played in the silence with her. Now the players were altered. As soon as the thaw
|
||
was complete Beloved gazed at her gazing face, rippling, folding, spreading, disappearing into the leaves below. She
|
||
flattened herself on the ground, dirtying her bold stripes, and touched the rocking faces with her own. She filled basket
|
||
after basket with the first things warmer weather let loose in the ground--dandelions, violets, forsythia--presenting
|
||
them to Sethe, who arranged them, stuck them, wound them all over the house. Dressed in Sethe's dresses, she stroked
|
||
her skin with the palm of her hand. She imitated Sethe, talked the way she did, laughed her laugh and used her body
|
||
the same way down to the walk, the way Sethe moved her hands, sighed through her nose, held her head. Sometimes
|
||
coming upon them making men and women cookies or tacking scraps of cloth on Baby Suggs' old quilt, it was difficult for
|
||
Denver to tell who was who.
|
||
Then the mood changed and the arguments began. Slowly at first.
|
||
A complaint from Beloved, an apology from Sethe. A reduction of pleasure at some special effort the older woman
|
||
made. Wasn't it too cold to stay outside? Beloved gave a look that said, So what? Was it past bedtime, the light no good
|
||
for sewing? Beloved didn't move; said, "Do it," and Sethe complied. She took the best of everything--first. The best chair,
|
||
the biggest piece, the prettiest plate, the brightest ribbon for her hair, and the more she took, the more Sethe began
|
||
to talk, explain, describe how much she had suffered, been through, for her children, waving away flies in grape arbors,
|
||
crawling on her knees to a lean-to. None of which made the impression it was supposed to. Beloved accused her of
|
||
136
|
||
leaving her behind. Of not being nice to her, not smiling at her. She said they were the same, had the same face, how
|
||
could she have left her? And Sethe cried, saying she never did, or meant to---that she had to get them out, away, that
|
||
she had the milk all the time and had the money too for the stone but not enough. That her plan was always that they
|
||
would all be together on the other side, forever. Beloved wasn't interested. She said when she cried there was no one.
|
||
That dead men lay on top of her. That she had nothing to eat. Ghosts without skin stuck their fingers in her and said
|
||
beloved in the dark and bitch in the light. Sethe pleaded for forgiveness, counting, listing again and again her reasons:
|
||
that Beloved was more important, meant more to her than her own life.
|
||
That she would trade places any day. Give up her life, every minute and hour of it, to take back just one of Beloved's
|
||
tears. Did she know it hurt her when mosquitoes bit her baby? That to leave her on the ground to run into the big house
|
||
drove her crazy? That before leaving Sweet Home Beloved slept every night on her chest or curled on her back? Beloved
|
||
denied it. Sethe never came to her, never said a word to her, never smiled and worst of all never waved goodbye or
|
||
even looked her way before running away from her.
|
||
When once or twice Sethe tried to assert herself--be the unquestioned mother whose word was law and who knew
|
||
what was best--Beloved slammed things, wiped the table clean of plates, threw salt on the floor, broke a windowpane.
|
||
She was not like them. She was wild game, and nobody said, Get on out of here, girl, and come back when you get some
|
||
sense. Nobody said, You raise your hand to me and I will knock you into the middle of next week. Ax the trunk, the limb
|
||
will die. Honor thy mother and father that thy days may be long upon the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee. I will
|
||
wrap you round that doorknob, don't nobody work for you and God don't love ugly ways.
|
||
No, no. They mended the plates, swept the salt, and little by little it dawned on Denver that if Sethe didn't wake up
|
||
one morning and pick up a knife, Beloved might. Frightened as she was by the thing in Sethe that could come out, it
|
||
shamed her to see her mother serving a girl not much older than herself. When she saw her carrying out Beloved's night
|
||
bucket, Denver raced to relieve her of it. But the pain was unbearable when they ran low on food, and Denver watched
|
||
her mother go without--pick-eating around the edges of the table and stove: the hominy that stuck on the bottom; the
|
||
crusts and rinds and peelings of things. Once she saw her run her longest finger deep in an empty jam jar before rinsing
|
||
and putting it away.
|
||
They grew tired, and even Beloved, who was getting bigger, seemed nevertheless as exhausted as they were. In any case
|
||
she substituted a snarl or a tooth-suck for waving a poker around and 124 was quiet.
|
||
Listless and sleepy with hunger Denver saw the flesh between her mother's forefinger and thumb fade. Saw Sethe's eyes
|
||
bright but dead, alert but vacant, paying attention to everything about Beloved--her lineless palms, her forehead, the
|
||
smile under her jaw, crooked and much too long--everything except her basket-fat stomach. She also saw the sleeves
|
||
of her own carnival shirtwaist cover her fingers; hems that once showed her ankles now swept the floor. She saw
|
||
themselves beribboned, decked-out, limp and starving but locked in a love that wore everybody out. Then Sethe spit up
|
||
something she had not eaten and it rocked Denver like gunshot. The job she started out with, protecting Beloved from
|
||
Sethe, changed to protecting her mother from Beloved. Now it was obvious that her mother could die and leave them
|
||
both and what would Beloved do then? Whatever was happening, it only worked with three--not two--and since neither
|
||
Beloved nor Sethe seemed to care what the next day might bring (Sethe happy when Beloved was; Beloved lapping
|
||
devotion like cream), Denver knew it was on her. She would have to leave the yard; step off the edge of the world, leave
|
||
the two behind and go ask somebody for help.
|
||
Who would it be? Who could she stand in front of who wouldn't shame her on learning that her mother sat around like a
|
||
rag doll, broke down, finally, from trying to take care of and make up for.
|
||
Denver knew about several people, from hearing her mother and grandmother talk. But she knew, personally, only two:
|
||
an old man with white hair called Stamp and Lady Jones. Well, Paul D, of course.
|
||
And that boy who told her about Sethe. But they wouldn't do at all.
|
||
Her heart kicked and an itchy burning in her throat made her swallow all her saliva away. She didn't even know which
|
||
way to go. When Sethe used to work at the restaurant and when she still had money to shop, she turned right. Back
|
||
137
|
||
when Denver went to Lady Jones' school, it was left.
|
||
The weather was warm; the day beautiful. It was April and everything alive was tentative. Denver wrapped her hair and
|
||
her shoulders.
|
||
In the brightest of the carnival dresses and wearing a stranger's shoes, she stood on the porch of 124 ready to be
|
||
swallowed up in the world beyond the edge of the porch. Out there where small things scratched and sometimes
|
||
touched. Where words could be spoken that would close your ears shut. Where, if you were alone, feeling could
|
||
overtake you and stick to you like a shadow. Out there where there were places in which things so bad had happened
|
||
that when you went near them it would happen again. Like Sweet Home where time didn't pass and where, like her
|
||
mother said, the bad was waiting for her as well. How would she know these places? What was more--much more-
|
||
--out there were whitepeople and how could you tell about them? Sethe said the mouth and sometimes the hands.
|
||
Grandma Baby said there was no defense--they could prowl at will, change from one mind to another, and even when
|
||
they thought they were behaving, it was a far cry from what real humans did.
|
||
"They got me out of jail," Sethe once told Baby Suggs.
|
||
"They also put you in it," she answered.
|
||
"They drove you 'cross the river."
|
||
"On my son's back."
|
||
"They gave you this house."
|
||
"Nobody gave me nothing."
|
||
"I got a job from them."
|
||
"He got a cook from them, girl."
|
||
"Oh, some of them do all right by us."
|
||
"And every time it's a surprise, ain't it?"
|
||
"You didn't used to talk this way."
|
||
"Don't box with me. There's more of us they drowned than there is all of them ever lived from the start of time. Lay
|
||
down your sword.
|
||
This ain't a battle; it's a rout."
|
||
Remembering those conversations and her grandmother's last and final words, Denver stood on the porch in the sun
|
||
and couldn't leave it. Her throat itched; her heart kicked--and then Baby Suggs laughed, clear as anything. "You mean I
|
||
never told you nothing about Carolina?
|
||
About your daddy? You don't remember nothing about how come I walk the way I do and about your mother's feet, not
|
||
to speak of her back? I never told you all that? Is that why you can't walk down the steps? My Jesus my."
|
||
But you said there was no defense.
|
||
"There ain't."
|
||
Then what do I do?
|
||
"Know it, and go on out the yard. Go on."
|
||
* * *
|
||
138
|
||
It came back. A dozen years had passed and the way came back.
|
||
Four houses on the right, sitting close together in a line like wrens.
|
||
The first house had two steps and a rocking chair on the porch; the second had three steps, a broom propped on the
|
||
porch beam, two broken chairs and a clump of forsythia at the side. No window at the front. A little boy sat on the
|
||
ground chewing a stick. The third house had yellow shutters on its two front windows and pot after pot of green leaves
|
||
with white hearts or red. Denver could hear chickens and the knock of a badly hinged gate. At the fourth house the
|
||
buds of a sycamore tree had rained down on the roof and made the yard look as though grass grew there. A woman,
|
||
standing at the open door, lifted her hand halfway in greeting, then froze it near her shoulder as she leaned forward to
|
||
see whom she waved to. Denver lowered her head. Next was a tiny fenced plot with a cow in it. She remembered the
|
||
plot but not the cow. Under her headcloth her scalp was wet with tension. Beyond her, voices, male voices, floated,
|
||
coming closer with each step she took. Denver kept her eyes on the road in case they were whitemen; in case she was
|
||
walking where they wanted to; in case they said something and she would have to answer them. Suppose they flung out
|
||
at her, grabbed her, tied her. They were getting closer. Maybe she should cross the road--now. Was the woman who half
|
||
waved at her still there in the open door? Would she come to her rescue, or, angry at Denver for not waving back, would
|
||
she
|
||
withhold her help? Maybe she should turn around, get closer to the waving woman's house. Before she could make up
|
||
her mind, it was too late--they were right in front of her. Two men, Negro. Denver breathed. Both men touched their
|
||
caps and murmured, "Morning. Morning." Denver believed her eyes spoke gratitude but she never got her mouth open
|
||
in time to reply. They moved left of her and passed on.
|
||
Braced and heartened by that easy encounter, she picked up speed and began to look deliberately at the neighborhood
|
||
surrounding her.
|
||
She was shocked to see how small the big things were: the boulder by the edge of the road she once couldn't see over
|
||
was a sitting-on rock. Paths leading to houses weren't miles long. Dogs didn't even reach her knees. Letters cut into
|
||
beeches and oaks by giants were eye level now.
|
||
She would have known it anywhere. The post and scrap-lumber fence was gray now, not white, but she would have
|
||
known it anywhere.
|
||
The stone porch sitting in a skirt of ivy, pale yellow curtains at the windows; the laid brick path to the front door and
|
||
wood planks leading around to the back, passing under the windows where she had stood on tiptoe to see above the sill.
|
||
Denver was about to do it again, when she realized how silly it would be to be found once more staring into the parlor
|
||
of Mrs. Lady Jones. The pleasure she felt at having found the house dissolved, suddenly, in doubt. Suppose she didn't
|
||
live there anymore? Or remember her former student after all this time? What would she say? Denver shivered inside,
|
||
wiped the perspiration from her forehead and knocked.
|
||
Lady Jones went to the door expecting raisins. A child, probably, from the softness of the knock, sent by its mother with
|
||
the raisins she needed if her contribution to the supper was to be worth the trouble. There would be any number of
|
||
plain cakes, potato pies. She had reluctantly volunteered her own special creation, but said she didn't have raisins, so
|
||
raisins is what the president said would be provided--early enough so there would be no excuses. Mrs. Jones, dreading
|
||
the fatigue of beating batter, had been hoping she had forgotten. Her bake oven had been cold all week--getting
|
||
it to the right temperature would be awful. Since her husband died and her eyes grew dim, she had let up-to-snuff
|
||
housekeeping fall away. She was of two minds about baking something for the church. On the one hand, she wanted to
|
||
remind everybody of what she was able to do in the cooking line; on the other, she didn't want to have to.
|
||
When she heard the tapping at the door, she sighed and went to it hoping the raisins had at least been cleaned.
|
||
She was older, of course, and dressed like a chippy, but the girl was immediately recognizable to Lady Jones. Everybody's
|
||
child was in that face: the nickel-round eyes, bold yet mistrustful; the large powerful teeth between dark sculptured lips
|
||
that did not cover them.
|
||
139
|
||
Some vulnerability lay across the bridge of the nose, above the cheeks.
|
||
And then the skin. Flawless, economical--just enough of it to cover the bone and not a bit more. She must be eighteen or
|
||
nineteen by now, thought Lady Jones, looking at the face young enough to be twelve. Heavy eyebrows, thick baby lashes
|
||
and the unmistakable love call that shimmered around children until they learned better.
|
||
"Why, Denver," she said. "Look at you."
|
||
Lady Jones had to take her by the hand and pull her in, because the smile seemed all the girl could manage. Other
|
||
people said this child was simple, but Lady Jones never believed it. Having taught her, watched her eat up a page, a rule,
|
||
a figure, she knew better.
|
||
When suddenly she had stopped coming, Lady Jones thought it was the nickel. She approached the ignorant
|
||
grandmother one day on the road, a woods preacher who mended shoes, to tell her it was all right if the money was
|
||
owed. The woman said that wasn't it; the child was deaf, and deaf Lady Jones thought she still was until she offered her
|
||
a seat and Denver heard that.
|
||
"It's nice of you to come see me. What brings you?"
|
||
Denver didn't answer.
|
||
"Well, nobody needs a reason to visit. Let me make us some tea."
|
||
Lady Jones was mixed. Gray eyes and yellow woolly hair, every strand of which she hated--though whether it was the
|
||
color or the texture even she didn't know. She had married the blackest man she could find, had five rainbow-colored
|
||
children and sent them all to Wilberforce, after teaching them all she knew right along with the others who sat in her
|
||
parlor. Her light skin got her picked for a coloredgirls', normal school in Pennsylvania and she paid it back by teaching
|
||
the unpicked. The children who played in dirt until they were old enough for chores, these she taught. The colored
|
||
population of Cincinnati had two graveyards and six churches, but since no school or hospital was obliged to serve them,
|
||
they learned and died at home. She believed in her heart that, except for her husband, the whole world (including her
|
||
children) despised her and her hair. She had been listening to "all that yellow gone to waste" and "white nigger" since
|
||
she was a girl in a houseful of silt-black children, so she disliked everybody a little bit because she believed they hated
|
||
her hair as much as she did. With that education pat and firmly set, she dispensed with rancor, was indiscriminately
|
||
polite, saving her real affection for the unpicked children of Cincinnati, one of whom sat before her in a dress so loud it
|
||
embarrassed the needlepoint chair seat.
|
||
"Sugar?"
|
||
"Yes. Thank you." Denver drank it all down.
|
||
"More?"
|
||
"No, ma'am."
|
||
"Here. Go ahead."
|
||
"Yes, ma'am."
|
||
"How's your family, honey?"
|
||
Denver stopped in the middle of a swallow. There was no way to tell her how her family was, so she said what was at the
|
||
top of her mind.
|
||
"I want work, Miss Lady."
|
||
"Work?"
|
||
140
|
||
"Yes, ma'am. Anything."
|
||
Lady Jones smiled. "What can you do?"
|
||
"I can't do anything, but I would learn it for you if you have a little extra."
|
||
"Extra?"
|
||
"Food. My ma'am, she doesn't feel good."
|
||
"Oh, baby," said Mrs. Jones. "Oh, baby."
|
||
Denver looked up at her. She did not know it then, but it was the word "baby," said softly and with such kindness,
|
||
that inaugurated her life in the world as a woman. The trail she followed to get to that sweet thorny place was made
|
||
up of paper scraps containing the handwritten names of others. Lady Jones gave her some rice, four eggs and some
|
||
tea. Denver said she couldn't be away from home long because of her mother's condition. Could she do chores in the
|
||
morning? Lady Jones told her that no one, not herself, not anyone she knew, could pay anybody anything for work they
|
||
did themselves.
|
||
"But if you all need to eat until your mother is well, all you have to do is say so." She mentioned her church's committee
|
||
invented so nobody had to go hungry. That agitated her guest who said, "No, no," as though asking for help from
|
||
strangers was worse than hunger.
|
||
Lady Jones said goodbye to her and asked her to come back anytime.
|
||
"Anytime at all."
|
||
Two days later Denver stood on the porch and noticed something lying on the tree stump at the edge of the yard. She
|
||
went to look and found a sack of white beans. Another time a plate of cold rabbit meat. One morning a basket of eggs
|
||
sat there. As she lifted it, a slip of paper fluttered down. She picked it up and looked at it.
|
||
"M. Lucille Williams" was written in big crooked letters. On the back was a blob of flour-water paste. So Denver paid a
|
||
second visit to the world outside the porch, although all she said when she returned the basket was "Thank you."
|
||
"Welcome," said M. Lucille Williams.
|
||
Every now and then, all through the spring, names appeared near or in gifts of food. Obviously for the return of the pan
|
||
or plate or basket; but also to let the girl know, if she cared to, who the donor was, because some of the parcels were
|
||
wrapped in paper, and though there was nothing to return, the name was nevertheless there. Many had X's with designs
|
||
about them, and Lady Jones tried to identify the plate or pan or the covering towel. When she could only guess, Denver
|
||
followed her directions and went to say thank you anywaym whether she had the right benefactor or not. When she was
|
||
wrong, when the person said, "No, darling. That's not my bowl. Mine's got a blue ring on it," a small conversation took
|
||
place. All of them knew her grandmother and some had even danced with her in the Clearing.
|
||
Others remembered the days when 124 was a way station, the place they assembled to catch news, taste oxtail soup,
|
||
leave their children, cut out a skirt. One remembered the tonic mixed there that cured a relative. One showed her the
|
||
border of a pillowslip, the stamens of its pale blue flowers French-knotted in Baby Suggs' kitchen by the light of an oil
|
||
lamp while arguing the Settlement Fee. They remembered the party with twelve turkeys and tubs of strawberry smash.
|
||
One said she wrapped Denver when she was a single day old and cut shoes to fit her mother's blasted feet. Maybe they
|
||
were sorry for her. Or for Sethe. Maybe they were sorry for the years of their own disdain. Maybe they were simply
|
||
nice people who could hold meanness toward each other for just so long and when trouble rode bareback among them,
|
||
quickly, easily they did what they could to trip him up. In any case, the personal pride, the arrogant claim staked out
|
||
at 124 seemed to them to have run its course. They whispered, naturally, wondered, shook their heads. Some even
|
||
laughed outright at Denver's clothes of a hussy, but it didn't stop them caring whether she ate and it didn't stop the
|
||
pleasure they took in her soft "Thank you."
|
||
141
|
||
At least once a week, she visited Lady Jones, who perked up enough to do a raisin loaf especially for her, since Denver
|
||
was set on sweet things. She gave her a book of Bible verse and listened while she mumbled words or fairly shouted
|
||
them. By June Denver had read and memorized all fifty-two pages--one for each week of the year.
|
||
As Denver's outside life improved, her home life deteriorated. If the whitepeople of Cincinnati had allowed Negroes into
|
||
their lunatic asylum they could have found candidates in 124. Strengthened by the gifts of food, the source of which
|
||
neither Sethe nor Beloved questioned, the women had arrived at a doomsday truce designed by the devil. Beloved sat
|
||
around, ate, went from bed to bed. Sometimes she screamed, "Rain! Rain!" and clawed her throat until rubies of blood
|
||
opened there, made brighter by her midnight skin. Then Sethe shouted, "No!" and knocked over chairs to get to her and
|
||
wipe the jewels away. Other times Beloved curled up on the floor, her wrists between her knees, and stayed there for
|
||
hours. Or she would go to the creek, stick her feet in the water and whoosh it up her legs.
|
||
Afrerward she would go to Sethe, run her fingers over the woman's teeth while tears slid from her wide black eyes. Then
|
||
it seemed to Denver the thing was done: Beloved bending over Sethe looked the mother, Sethe the teething child, for
|
||
other than those times when Beloved needed her, Sethe confined herself to a corner chair. The bigger Beloved got, the
|
||
smaller Sethe became; the brighter
|
||
Beloved's eyes, the more those eyes that used never to look away became slits of sleeplessness. Sethe no longer
|
||
combed her hair or splashed her face with water. She sat in the chair licking her lips like a chastised child while Beloved
|
||
ate up her life, took it, swelled up with it, grew taller on it. And the older woman yielded it up without a murmur.
|
||
Denver served them both. Washing, cooking, forcing, cajoling her mother to eat a little now and then, providing sweet
|
||
things for Beloved as often as she could to calm her down. It was hard to know what she would do from minute to
|
||
minute. When the heat got hot, she might walk around the house naked or wrapped in a sheet, her belly protruding like
|
||
a winning watermelon.
|
||
Denver thought she understood the connection between her mother and Beloved: Sethe was trying to make up for
|
||
the handsaw; Beloved was making her pay for it. But there would never be an end to that, and seeing her mother
|
||
diminished shamed and infuriated her. Yet she knew Sethe's greatest fear was the same one Denver had in the
|
||
beginning--that Beloved might leave. That before Sethe could make her understand what it meant--what it took to drag
|
||
the teeth of that saw under the little chin; to feel the baby blood pump like oil in her hands; to hold her face so her head
|
||
would stay on; to squeeze her so she could absorb, still, the death spasms that shot through that adored body, plump
|
||
and sweet with life--Beloved might leave. Leave before Sethe could make her realize that worse than that--far worse-
|
||
- was what Baby Suggs died of, what Ella knew, what Stamp saw and what made Paul D tremble. That anybody white
|
||
could take your whole self for anything that came to mind. Not just work, kill, or maim you, but dirty you. Dirty you so
|
||
bad you couldn't like yourself anymore. Dirty you so bad you forgot who you were and couldn't think it up. And though
|
||
she and others lived through and got over it, she could never let it happen to her own. The best thing she was, was her
|
||
children. Whites might dirty bet all right, but not her best thing, her beautiful, magical best thing--the part of her that
|
||
was cl ean. No undreamable dreams about whether the headless, feetless torso hanging in the tree with a sign on it was
|
||
her husband or Paul A; whether the bubbling-hot girls in the colored-school fire set by patriots included her daughter;
|
||
whether a gang of whites invaded her daughter's private parts, soiled her daughter's thighs and threw her daughter out
|
||
of the wagon. She might have to work the slaughterhouse yard, but not her daughter.
|
||
And no one, nobody on this earth, would list her daughter's characteristics on the animal side of the paper. No. Oh no.
|
||
Maybe Baby Suggs could worry about it, live with the likelihood of it; Sethe had refused--and refused still.
|
||
This and much more Denver heard her say from her corner chair, trying to persuade Beloved, the one and only person
|
||
she felt she had to convince, that what she had done was right because it came from true love.
|
||
Beloved, her fat new feet propped on the seat of a chair in front of the one she sat in, her unlined hands resting on
|
||
her stomach, looked at her. Uncomprehending everything except that Sethe was the woman who took her face away,
|
||
leaving her crouching in a dark, dark place, forgetting to smile.
|
||
Her father's daughter after all, Denver decided to do the necessary.
|
||
142
|
||
Decided to stop relying on kindness to leave something on the stump. She would hire herself out somewhere, and
|
||
although she was afraid to leave Sethe and Beloved alone all day not knowing what calamity either one of them would
|
||
create, she came to realize that her presence in that house had no influence on what either woman did. She kept them
|
||
alive and they ignored her. Growled when they chose; sulked, explained, demanded, strutted, cowered, cried and
|
||
provoked each other to the edge of violence, then over. She had begun to notice that even when Beloved was quiet,
|
||
dreamy, minding her own business, Sethe got her going again. Whispering, muttering some justification, some bit of
|
||
clarifying information to Beloved to explain what it had been like, and why, and how come. It was as though Sethe didn't
|
||
really want forgiveness given; she wanted it refused. And Beloved helped her out.
|
||
Somebody had to be saved, but unless Denver got work, there would be no one to save, no one to come home to, and
|
||
no Denver either. It was a new thought, having a self to look out for and preserve.
|
||
And it might not have occurred to her if she hadn't met Nelson Lord leaving his grandmother's house as Denver entered
|
||
it to pay a thank you for half a pie. All he did was smile and say, "Take care of yourself, Denver," but she heard it as
|
||
though it were what language was made for. The last time he spoke to her his words blocked up her ears.
|
||
Now they opened her mind. Weeding the garden, pulling vegetables, cooking, washing, she plotted what to do and how.
|
||
The Bodwins were most likely to help since they had done it twice. Once for Baby Suggs and once for her mother. Why
|
||
not the third generation as well?
|
||
She got lost so many times in the streets of Cincinnati it was noon before she arrived, though she started out at sunrise.
|
||
The house sat back from the sidewalk with large windows looking out on a noisy, busy street. The Negro woman who
|
||
answered the front door said, "Yes?"
|
||
"May I come in?"
|
||
"What you want?"
|
||
"I want to see Mr. and Mrs. Bodwin."
|
||
"Miss Bodwin. They brother and sister."
|
||
"Oh."
|
||
"What you want em for?"
|
||
"I'm looking for work. I was thinking they might know of some."
|
||
"You Baby Suggs' kin, ain't you?"
|
||
"Yes, ma'am."
|
||
"Come on in. You letting in flies." She led Denver toward the kitchen, saying, "First thing you have to know is what door
|
||
to knock on." But Denver only half heard her because she was stepping on something soft and blue. All around her was
|
||
thick, soft and blue.
|
||
Glass cases crammed full of glistening things. Books on tables and shelves. Pearl-white lamps with shiny metal bottoms.
|
||
And a smell like the cologne she poured in the emerald house, only better.
|
||
"Sit down," the woman said. "You know my name?"
|
||
"No, ma'am."
|
||
"Janey. Janey Wagon."
|
||
"How do you do?"
|
||
143
|
||
"Fairly. I heard your mother took sick, that so?"
|
||
"Yes, ma'am."
|
||
"Who's looking after her?"
|
||
"I am. But I have to find work."
|
||
Janey laughed. "You know what? I've been here since I was fourteen, and I remember like yesterday when Baby Suggs,
|
||
holy, came here and sat right there where you are. Whiteman brought her. That's how she got that house you all live in.
|
||
Other things, too."
|
||
"Yes, ma'am."
|
||
"What's the trouble with Sethe?" Janey leaned against an indoor sink and folded her arms.
|
||
It was a little thing to pay, but it seemed big to Denver. Nobody was going to help her unless she told it--told all of it. It
|
||
was clear Janey wouldn't and wouldn't let her see the Bodwins otherwise. So Denver told this stranger what she hadn't
|
||
told Lady Jones, in return for which Janey admitted the Bodwins needed help, although they didn't know it. She was
|
||
alone there, and now that her employers were getting older, she couldn't take care of them like she used to.
|
||
More and more she was required to sleep the night there. Maybe she could talk them into letting Denver do the night
|
||
shift, come right after supper, say, maybe get the breakfast. That way Denver could care for Sethe in the day and earn a
|
||
little something at night, how's that?
|
||
Denver had explained the girl in her house who plagued her mother as a cousin come to visit, who got sick too and
|
||
bothered them both. Janey seemed more interested in Sethe's condition, and from what Denver told her it seemed the
|
||
woman had lost her mind.
|
||
That wasn't the Sethe she remembered. This Sethe had lost her wits, finally, as Janey knew she would--trying to do it
|
||
all alone with her nose in the air. Denver squirmed under the criticism of her mother, shifting in the chair and keeping
|
||
her eyes on the inside sink. Janey Wagon went on about pride until she got to Baby Suggs, for whom she had nothing
|
||
but sweet words. "I never went to those woodland services she had, but she was always nice to me. Always. Never be
|
||
another like her."
|
||
"I miss her too," said Denver.
|
||
"Bet you do. Everybody miss her. That was a good woman."
|
||
Denver didn't say anything else and Janey looked at her face for a while. "Neither one of your brothers ever come back
|
||
to see how you all was?"
|
||
"No, ma'am."
|
||
"Ever hear from them?"
|
||
"No, ma'am. Nothing."
|
||
"Guess they had a rough time in that house. Tell me, this here woman in your house. The cousin. She got any lines in her
|
||
hands?"
|
||
"No," said Denver.
|
||
"Well," said Janey. "I guess there's a God after all."
|
||
The interview ended with Janey telling her to come back in a few days. She needed time to convince her employers what
|
||
they needed: night help because Janey's own family needed her. "I don't want to quit these people, but they can't have
|
||
144
|
||
all my days and nights too."
|
||
What did Denver have to do at night?
|
||
"Be here. In case."
|
||
In case what?
|
||
Janey shrugged. "In case the house burn down." She smiled then.
|
||
"Or bad weather slop the roads so bad I can't get here early enough for them. Case late guests need serving or cleaning
|
||
up after. Anything.
|
||
Don't ask me what whitefolks need at night."
|
||
"They used to be good whitefolks."
|
||
"Oh, yeah. They good. Can't say they ain't good. I wouldn't trade them for another pair, tell you that."
|
||
With those assurances, Denver left, but not before she had seen, sitting on a shelf by the back door, a blackboy's mouth
|
||
full of money.
|
||
His head was thrown back farther than a head could go, his hands were shoved in his pockets. Bulging like moons, two
|
||
eyes were all the face he had above the gaping red mouth. His hair was a cluster of raised, widely spaced dots made of
|
||
nail heads. And he was on his knees. His mouth, wide as a cup,
|
||
held the coins needed to pay for a delivery or some other small service, but could just as well have held buttons, pins or
|
||
crab-apple jelly. Painted across the pedestal he knelt on were the words "At Yo Service."
|
||
The news that Janey got hold of she spread among the other coloredwomen. Sethe's dead daughter, the one whose
|
||
throat she cut, had come back to fix her. Sethe was worn down, speckled, dying, spinning, changing shapes and
|
||
generally bedeviled. That this daughter beat her, tied her to the bed and pulled out all her hair. It took them days to
|
||
get the story properly blown up and themselves agitated and then to calm down and assess the situation. They fell into
|
||
three groups: those that believed the worst; those that believed none of it; and those, like Ella, who thought it through.
|
||
"Ella. What's all this I'm hearing about Sethe?"
|
||
"Tell me it's in there with her. That's all I know."
|
||
"The daughter? The killed one?"
|
||
"That's what they tell me."
|
||
"How they know that's her?"
|
||
"It's sitting there. Sleeps, eats and raises hell. Whipping Sethe every day."
|
||
"I'll be. A baby?"
|
||
"No. Grown. The age it would have been had it lived."
|
||
"You talking about flesh?"
|
||
"I'm talking about flesh."
|
||
"whipping her?"
|
||
"Like she was batter."
|
||
145
|
||
"Guess she had it coming."
|
||
"Nobody got that coming."
|
||
"But, Ella--"
|
||
"But nothing. What's fair ain't necessarily right."
|
||
"You can't just up and kill your children."
|
||
"No, and the children can't just up and kill the mama."
|
||
It was Ella more than anyone who convinced the others that rescue was in order. She was a practical woman who
|
||
believed there was a root either to chew or avoid for every ailment. Cogitation, as she called it, clouded things and
|
||
prevented action. Nobody loved her and she wouldn't have liked it if
|
||
they had, for she considered love a serious disability. Her puberty was spent in a house where she was shared by father
|
||
and son, whom she called "the lowest yet." It was "the lowest yet" who gave her a disgust for sex and against whom
|
||
she measured all atrocities. A killing, a kidnap, a rape--whatever, she listened and nodded. Nothing compared to "the
|
||
lowest yet." She understood Sethe's rage in the shed twenty years ago, but not her reaction to it, which Ella thought was
|
||
prideful, misdirected, and Sethe herself too complicated. When she got out of jail and made no gesture toward anybody,
|
||
and lived as though she were alone, Ella junked her and wouldn't give her the time of day.
|
||
The daughter, however, appeared to have some sense after all.
|
||
At least she had stepped out the door, asked or the help she needed and wanted work. When Ella heard 124 was
|
||
occupied by something or-other beating up on Sethe, it infuriated her and gave her another opportunity to measure
|
||
what could very well be the devil himself against "the lowest yet." There was also something very personal in her fury.
|
||
Whatever Sethe had done, Ella didn't like the idea of past errors taking possession of the present. Sethe's crime was
|
||
staggering and her pride outstripped even that; but she could not countenance the possibility of sin moving on in the
|
||
house, unleashed and sassy.
|
||
Daily life took as much as she had. The future was sunset; the past something to leave behind. And if it didn't stay
|
||
behind, well, you might have to stomp it out. Slave life; freed life--every day was a test and a trial. Nothing could be
|
||
counted on in a world where even when you were a solution you were a problem. "Sufficient unto the day is the evil
|
||
thereof," and nobody needed more; nobody needed a grown-up evil sitting at the table with a grudge. As long as the
|
||
ghost showed out from its ghostly place--shaking stuff, crying, smashing and such--Ella respected it. But if it took flesh
|
||
and came in her world, well, the shoe was on the other foot. She didn't mind a little communication between the two
|
||
worlds, but this was an invasion.
|
||
"Shall we pray?" asked the women.
|
||
"Uh huh," said Ella. "First. Then we got to get down to business."
|
||
The day Denver was to spend her first night at the Bodwins', Mr.
|
||
Bodwin had some business on the edge of the city and told Janey he would pick the new girl up before supper. Denver
|
||
sat on the porch steps with a bundle in her lap, her carnival dress sun-faded to a quieter rainbow. She was looking to the
|
||
right, in the direction Mr.
|
||
Bodwin would be coming from. She did not see the women approaching, accumulating slowly in groups of twos
|
||
and threes from the left. Denver was looking to the right. She was a little anxious about whether she would prove
|
||
satisfactory to the Bodwins, and uneasy too because she woke up crying from a dream about a running pair of shoes.
|
||
The sadness of the dream she hadn't been able to shake, and the heat oppressed her as she went about the chores. Far
|
||
too early she wrapped a nightdress and hairbrush into a bundle. Nervous, she fidgeted the knot and looked to the right.
|
||
146
|
||
Some brought what they could and what they believed would work. Stuffed in apron pockets, strung around their necks,
|
||
lying in the space between their breasts. Others brought Christian faith--as shield and sword. Most brought a little of
|
||
both. They had no idea what they would do once they got there. They just started out, walked down Bluestone Road and
|
||
came together at the agreed-upon time.
|
||
The heat kept a few women who promised to go at home. Others who believed the story didn't want any part of the
|
||
confrontation and wouldn't have come no matter what the weather. And there were those like Lady Jones who didn't
|
||
believe the story and hated the ignorance of those who did. So thirty women made up that company and walked slowly,
|
||
slowly toward 124.
|
||
It was three in the afternoon on a Friday so wet and hot Cincinnati's stench had traveled to the country: from the canal,
|
||
from hanging meat and things rotting in jars; from small animals dead in the fields, town sewers and factories. The
|
||
stench, the heat, the moisture--- trust the devil to make his presence known. Otherwise it looked almost like a regular
|
||
workday. They could have been going to do the laundry at the orphanage or the insane asylum; corn shucking at the
|
||
mill; or to dean fish, rinse offal, cradle whitebabies, sweep stores, scrape hog skin, press lard, case-pack sausage or hide
|
||
in tavern kitchens so whitepeople didn't have to see them handle their food. But not today.
|
||
When they caught up with each other, all thirty, and arrived at 12 4, the first thing they saw was not Denver sitting on
|
||
the steps, but themselves. Younger, stronger, even as little girls lying in the grass asleep. Catfish was popping grease in
|
||
the pan and they saw themselves scoop German potato salad onto the plate. Cobbler oozing purple syrup colored their
|
||
teeth. They sat on the porch, ran down to the creek, teased the men, hoisted children on their hips or, if they were the
|
||
children, straddled the ankles of old men who held their little hands while giving them a horsey ride. Baby Suggs laughed
|
||
and skipped among them, urging more. Mothers, dead now, moved their shoulders to mouth harps. The fence they had
|
||
leaned on and climbed over was gone. The stump of the butternut had split like a fan. But there they were, young and
|
||
happy, playing in Baby Suggs' yard, not feeling the envy that surfaced the next day.
|
||
Denver heard mumbling and looked to the left. She stood when she saw them. They grouped, murmuring and
|
||
whispering, but did not step foot in the yard. Denver waved. A few waved back but came no closer. Denver sat back
|
||
down wondering what was going on. A woman dropped to her knees. Half of the others did likewise. Denver saw
|
||
lowered heads, but could not hear the lead prayer--only the earnest syllables of agreement that backed it: Yes, yes, yes,
|
||
oh yes.
|
||
Hear me. Hear me. Do it, Maker, do it. Yes. Among those not on their knees, who stood holding 124 in a fixed glare, was
|
||
Ella, trying to see through the walls, behind the door, to what was really in there.
|
||
Was it true the dead daughter come back? Or a pretend? Was it whipping Sethe? Ella had been beaten every way but
|
||
down. She remembered the bottom teeth she had lost to the brake and the scars from the bell were thick as rope
|
||
around her waist. She had delivered, but would not nurse, a hairy white thing, fathered by "the lowest yet." It lived
|
||
five days never making a sound. The idea of that pup coming back to whip her too set her jaw working, and then Ella
|
||
hollered.
|
||
Instantly the kneelers and the standers joined her. They stopped praying and took a step back to the beginning. In the
|
||
beginning there were no words. In the beginning was the sound, and they all knew what that sound sounded like.
|
||
Edward Bodwin drove a cart down Bluestone Road. It displeased him a bit because he preferred his figure astride
|
||
Princess. Curved over his own hands, holding the reins made him look the age he was.
|
||
But he had promised his sister a detour to pick up a new girl. He didn't have to think about the way--he was headed for
|
||
the house he was born in. Perhaps it was his destination that turned his thoughts to time--the way it dripped or ran.
|
||
He had not seen the house for thirty years. Not the butternut in front, the stream at the rear nor the block house in
|
||
between. Not even the meadow across the road.
|
||
Very few of the interior details did he remember because he was three years old when his family moved into town.
|
||
But he did remember that the cooking was done behind the house, the well was forbidden to play near, and that
|
||
women died there: his mother, grandmother, an aunt and an older sister before he was born. The men (his father and
|
||
147
|
||
grandfather) moved with himself and his baby sister to Court Street sixty-seven years ago. The land, of course, eighty
|
||
acres of it on both sides of Bluestone, was the central thing, but he felt something sweeter and deeper about the house
|
||
which is why he rented it for a little something if he could get it, but it didn't trouble him to get no rent at all since the
|
||
tenants at least kept it from the disrepair total abandonment would permit.
|
||
There was a time when he buried things there. Precious things he wanted to protect. As a child every item he owned
|
||
was available and accountable to his family. Privacy was an adult indulgence, but when he got to be one, he seemed not
|
||
to need it.
|
||
The horse trotted along and Edward Bodwin cooled his beautiful mustache with his breath. It was generally agreed
|
||
upon by the women in the Society that, except for his hands, it was the most attractive feature he had. Dark, velvety, its
|
||
beauty was enhanced by his strong clean-shaven chin. But his hair was white, like his sister's--and had been since he was
|
||
a young man. It made him the most visible and memorable person at every gathering, and cartoonists had fastened onto
|
||
the theatricality of his white hair and big black mustache whenever they depicted local political antagonism. Twenty
|
||
years ago when the Society was at its height in opposing slavery, it was as though his coloring was itself the heart of the
|
||
matter. The "bleached nigger" was what his enemies called him, and on a trip to Arkansas, some Mississippi rivermen,
|
||
enraged by the Negro boatmen they competed with, had caught him and shoe-blackened his face and his hair. Those
|
||
heady days were gone now; what remained was the sludge of ill will; dashed hopes and difficulties beyond repair. A
|
||
tranquil Republic?
|
||
Well, not in his lifetime.
|
||
Even the weather was getting to be too much for him. He was either too hot or freezing, and this day was a blister. He
|
||
pressed his hat down to keep the sun from his neck, where heatstroke was a real possibility. Such thoughts of mortality
|
||
were not new to him (he was over seventy now), but they still had the power to annoy. As he drew closer to the old
|
||
homestead, the place that continued to surface in
|
||
his dreams, he was even more aware of the way time moved. Measured by the wars he had lived through but not fought
|
||
in (against the Miami, the Spaniards, the Secessionists), it was slow. But measured by the burial of his private things it
|
||
was the blink of an eye.
|
||
Where, exactly, was the box of tin soldiers? The watch chain with no watch? And who was he hiding them from? His
|
||
father, probably, a deeply religious man who knew what God knew and told everybody what it was. Edward Bodwin
|
||
thought him an odd man, in so many ways, yet he had one clear directive: human life is holy, all of it. And that his son
|
||
still believed, although he had less and less reason to.
|
||
Nothing since was as stimulating as the old days of letters, petitions, meetings, debates, recruitment, quarrels, rescue
|
||
and downright sedition.
|
||
Yet it had worked, more or less, and when it had not, he and his sister made themselves available to circumvent
|
||
obstacles. As they had when a runaway slavewoman lived in his homestead with her mother-in-law and got herself into
|
||
a world of trouble. The Society managed to turn infanticide and the cry of savagery around, and build a further case for
|
||
abolishing slavery. Good years, they were, full of spit and conviction. Now he just wanted to know where his soldiers
|
||
were and his watchless chain. That would be enough for this day of unbearable heat: bring back the new girl and recall
|
||
exactly where his treasure lay. Then home, supper, and God willing, the sun would drop once more to give him the
|
||
blessing of a good night's sleep.
|
||
The road curved like an elbow, and as he approached it he heard the singers before he saw them.
|
||
When the women assembled outside 124, Sethe was breaking a lump of ice into chunks. She dropped the ice pick into
|
||
her apron pocket to scoop the pieces into a basin of water. When the music entered the window she was wringing a cool
|
||
cloth to put on Beloved's forehead. Beloved, sweating profusely, was sprawled on the bed in the keeping room, a salt
|
||
rock in her hand. Both women heard it at the same time and both lifted their heads. As the voices grew louder, Beloved
|
||
sat up, licked the salt and went into the bigger room. Sethe and she exchanged glances and started toward the window.
|
||
They saw Denver sitting on the steps and beyond her, where the yard met the road, they saw the rapt faces of thirty
|
||
148
|
||
neighborhood women.
|
||
Some had their eyes closed; others looked at the hot, cloudless sky.
|
||
Sethe opened the door and reached for Beloved's hand. Together they stood in the doorway. For Sethe it was as though
|
||
the Clearing had come to her with all its heat and simmering leaves, where the voices of women searched for the right
|
||
combination, the key, the code, the sound that broke the back of words. Building voice upon voice until they found it,
|
||
and when they did it was a wave of sound wide enough to sound deep water and knock the pods off chestnut trees. It
|
||
broke over Sethe and she trembled like the baptized in its wash.
|
||
The singing women recognized Sethe at once and surprised themselves by their absence of fear when they saw what
|
||
stood next to her. The devil-child was clever, they thought. And beautiful. It had taken the shape of a pregnant woman,
|
||
naked and smiling in the heat of the afternoon sun. Thunderblack and glistening, she stood on long straight legs, her
|
||
belly big and tight. Vines of hair twisted all over her head. Jesus. Her smile was dazzling.
|
||
Sethe feels her eyes burn and it may have been to keep them clear that she looks up. The sky is blue and clear. Not one
|
||
touch of death in the definite green of the leaves. It is when she lowers her eyes to look again at the loving faces before
|
||
her that she sees him. Guiding the mare, slowing down, his black hat wide-brimmed enough to hide his face but not
|
||
his purpose. He is coming into her yard and he is coming for her best thing. She hears wings. Little hummingbirds stick
|
||
needle beaks right through her headcloth into her hair and beat their wings. And if she thinks anything, it is no. No no.
|
||
Nonono. She flies.
|
||
The ice pick is not in her hand; it is her hand.
|
||
Standing alone on the porch, Beloved is smiling. But now her hand is empty. Sethe is running away from her, running,
|
||
and she feels the emptiness in the hand Sethe has been holding. Now she is running into the faces of the people out
|
||
there, joining them and leaving Beloved behind. Alone. Again. Then Denver, running too.
|
||
Away from her to the pile of people out there. They make a hill. A hill of black people, falling. And above them all, rising
|
||
from his place with a whip in his hand, the man without skin, looking. He is looking at her.
|
||
Chapter 27
|
||
Bare feet and chamomile sap.
|
||
Took off my shoes; took off my hat.
|
||
Bare feet and chamomile sap
|
||
Gimme back my shoes; gimme back my hat.
|
||
Lay my head on a potato sack,
|
||
Devil sneak up behind my back.
|
||
Steam engine got a lonesome whine;
|
||
Love that woman till you go stone blind.
|
||
Stone blind; stone blind.
|
||
Sweet Home gal make you lose your mind.
|
||
HIS COMING is the reverse route of his going. First the cold house, the storeroom, then the kitchen before he tackles
|
||
149
|
||
the beds. Here Boy, feeble and shedding his coat in patches, is asleep by the pump, so Paul D knows Beloved is truly
|
||
gone. Disappeared, some say, exploded right before their eyes. Ella is not so sure. "Maybe," she says, "maybe not. Could
|
||
be hiding in the trees waiting for another chance." But when Paul D sees the ancient dog, eighteen years if a day, he is
|
||
certain 124 is clear of her. But he opens the door to the cold house halfway expecting to hear her. "Touch me. Touch
|
||
me. On the inside part and call me my name."
|
||
There is the pallet spread with old newspapers gnawed at the edges by mice. The lard can. The potato sacks too, but
|
||
empty now, they lie on the dirt floor in heaps. In daylight he can't imagine it in darkness with moonlight seeping through
|
||
the cracks. Nor the desire that drowned him there and forced him to struggle up, up into that girl like she was the clear
|
||
air at the top of the sea. Coupling with her wasn't even fun. It was more like a brainless urge to stay alive.
|
||
Each time she came, pulled up her skirts, a life hunger overwhelmed him and he had no more control over it than over
|
||
his lungs. And afterward, beached and gobbling air, in the midst of repulsion and personal shame, he was thankful too
|
||
for having been escorted to some ocean-deep place he once belonged to.
|
||
Sifting daylight dissolves the memory, turns it into dust motes floating in light. Paul D shuts the door. He looks toward
|
||
the house and, surprisingly, it does not look back at him. Unloaded, 124 is just another weathered house needing repair.
|
||
Quiet, just as Stamp Paid said.
|
||
"Used to be voices all round that place. Quiet, now," Stamp said.
|
||
"I been past it a few times and I can't hear a thing. Chastened, I reckon, 'cause Mr. Bodwin say he selling it soon's he
|
||
can."
|
||
"That the name of the one she tried to stab? That one?"
|
||
"Yep. His sister say it's full of trouble. Told Janey she was going to get rid of it."
|
||
"And him?" asked Paul D.
|
||
"Janey say he against it but won't stop it."
|
||
"Who they think want a house out there? Anybody got the money don't want to live out there."
|
||
"Beats me," Stamp answered. "It'll be a spell, I guess, before it get took off his hands."
|
||
"He don't plan on taking her to the law?"
|
||
"Don't seem like it. Janey say all he wants to know is who was the naked blackwoman standing on the porch. He was
|
||
looking at her so hard he didn't notice what Sethe was up to. All he saw was some coloredwomen fighting. He thought
|
||
Sethe was after one of them, Janey say."
|
||
"Janey tell him any different?"
|
||
"No. She say she so glad her boss ain't dead. If Ella hadn't clipped her, she say she would have. Scared her to death have
|
||
that woman kill her boss. She and Denver be looking for a job."
|
||
"Who Janey tell him the naked woman was?"
|
||
"Told him she didn't see none."
|
||
"You believe they saw it?"
|
||
"Well, they saw something. I trust Ella anyway, and she say she looked it in the eye. It was standing right next to Sethe.
|
||
But from the way they describe it, don't seem like it was the girl I saw in there.
|
||
The girl I saw was narrow. This one was big. She say they was holding hands and Sethe looked like a little girl beside it."
|
||
150
|
||
"Little girl with a ice pick. How close she get to him?"
|
||
"Right up on him, they say. Before Denver and them grabbed her and Ella put her fist in her jaw."
|
||
"He got to know Sethe was after him. He got to."
|
||
"Maybe. I don't know. If he did think it, I reckon he decided not to. That be just like him, too. He's somebody never
|
||
turned us down.
|
||
Steady as a rock. I tell you something, if she had got to him, it'd be the worst thing in the world for us. You know, don't
|
||
you, he's the main one kept Sethe from the gallows in the first place."
|
||
"Yeah. Damn. That woman is crazy. Crazy."
|
||
"Yeah, well, ain't we all?"
|
||
They laughed then. A rusty chuckle at first and then more, louder and louder until Stamp took out his pocket
|
||
handkerchief and wiped his eyes while Paul D pressed the heel of his hand in his own. As the scene neither one had
|
||
witnessed took shape before them, its seriousness and its embarrassment made them shake with laughter.
|
||
"Every time a whiteman come to the door she got to kill somebody?"
|
||
"For all she know, the man could be coming for the rent."
|
||
"Good thing they don't deliver mail out that way."
|
||
"Wouldn't nobody get no letter."
|
||
"Except the postman."
|
||
"Be a mighty hard message."
|
||
"And his last."
|
||
When their laughter was spent, they took deep breaths and shook their heads.
|
||
"And he still going to let Denver spend the night in his house?
|
||
Ha!"
|
||
"Aw no. Hey. Lay off Denver, Paul D. That's my heart. I'm proud of that girl. She was the first one wrestle her mother
|
||
down. Before anybody knew what the devil was going on."
|
||
"She saved his life then, you could say."
|
||
"You could. You could," said Stamp, thinking suddenly of the leap, the wide swing and snatch of his arm as he rescued
|
||
the little curly-headed baby from within inches of a split skull. "I'm proud of her. She turning out fine. Fine."
|
||
It was true. Paul D saw her the next morning when he was on his way to work and she was leaving hers. Thinner, steady
|
||
in the eyes, she looked more like Halle than ever.
|
||
She was the first to smile. "Good morning, Mr. D."
|
||
"Well, it is now." Her smile, no longer the sneer he remembered, had welcome in it and strong traces of Sethe's mouth.
|
||
Paul D touched his cap. "How you getting along?"
|
||
"Don't pay to complain."
|
||
151
|
||
"You on your way home?"
|
||
She said no. She had heard about an afternoon job at the shirt factory. She hoped that with her night work at the
|
||
Bodwins' and another one, she could put away something and help her mother too.
|
||
When he asked her if they treated her all right over there, she said more than all right. Miss Bodwin taught her stuff. He
|
||
asked her what stuff and she laughed and said book stuff. "She says I might go to Oberlin. She's experimenting on me."
|
||
And he didn't say, "Watch out. Watch out. Nothing in the world more dangerous than a white schoolteacher." Instead
|
||
he nodded and asked the question he wanted to.
|
||
"Your mother all right?"
|
||
"No," said Denver. "No. No, not a bit all right."
|
||
"You think I should stop by? Would she welcome it?"
|
||
"I don't know," said Denver. "I think I've lost my mother, Paul D."
|
||
They were both silent for a moment and then he said, "Uh, that girl. You know. Beloved?"
|
||
"Yes?"
|
||
"You think she sure 'nough your sister?"
|
||
Denver looked at her shoes. "At times. At times I think she was-- more." She fiddled with her shirtwaist, rubbing a spot
|
||
of something.
|
||
Suddenly she leveled her eyes at his. "But who would know that better than you, Paul D? I mean, you sure 'nough knew
|
||
her."
|
||
He licked his lips. "Well, if you want my opinion--"
|
||
"I don't," she said. "I have my own."
|
||
"You grown," he said.
|
||
"Yes, sir."
|
||
"Well. Well, good luck with the job."
|
||
"Thank you. And, Paul D, you don't have to stay 'way, but be careful how you talk to my ma'am, hear?"
|
||
"Don't worry," he said and left her then, or rather she left him because a young man was running toward her,
|
||
saying, "Hey, Miss Denver. Wait up."
|
||
She turned to him, her face looking like someone had turned up the gas jet.
|
||
He left her unwillingly because he wanted to talk more, make sense out of the stories he had been hearing: whiteman
|
||
came to take Denver to work and Sethe cut him. Baby ghost came back evil and sent Sethe out to get the man who kept
|
||
her from hanging. One point of agreement is: first they saw it and then they didn't. When they got Sethe down on the
|
||
ground and the ice pick out of her hands and looked back to the house, it was gone. Later, a little boy put it out how he
|
||
had been looking for bait back of 124, down by the stream, and saw, cutting through the woods, a naked woman with
|
||
fish for hair.
|
||
As a matter of fact, Paul D doesn't care how It went or even why. He cares about how he left and why. Then he looks at
|
||
himself through Garner's eyes, he sees one thing. Through Sixo's, another.
|
||
One makes him feel righteous. One makes him feel ashamed. Like the time he worked both sides of the War. Running
|
||
152
|
||
away from the Northpoint Bank and Railway to join the 44th Colored Regiment in Tennessee, he thought he had made
|
||
it, only to discover he had arrived at another colored regiment forming under a commander in New Jersey. He stayed
|
||
there four weeks. The regiment fell apart before it got started on the question of whether the soldiers should have
|
||
weapons or not. Not, it was decided, and the white commander had to figure out what to command them to do instead
|
||
of kill other white men. Some of the ten thousand stayed there to clean, haul and build things; others drifted away to
|
||
another regiment; most were abandoned, left to their own devices with bitterness for pay. He was trying to make up
|
||
his mind what to do when an agent from Northpoint Bank caught up with him and took him back to Delaware, where
|
||
he slave-worked a year. Then Northpoint took $300 in exchange for his services in Alabama, where he worked for the
|
||
Rebellers, first sorting the dead and then smelting iron. When he and his group combed the battlefields, their job was
|
||
to pull the Confederate wounded away from the Confederate dead. Care, they told them. Take good care. Coloredmen
|
||
and white, their faces wrapped to their eyes, picked their way through the meadows with lamps, listening in the dark for
|
||
groans of life in the indifferent silence of the dead. Mostly young men, some children, and it shamed him a little to feel
|
||
pity for what he imagined were the sons of the guards in Alfred, Georgia.
|
||
In five tries he had not had one permanent success. Every one of his escapes (from Sweet Home, from Brandywine,
|
||
from Alfred, Georgia, from Wilmington, from Northpoint) had been frustrated. Alone, undisguised, with visible skin,
|
||
memorable hair and no whiteman to protect him, he never stayed uncaught. The longest had been when he ran with
|
||
the convicts, stayed with the Cherokee, followed their advice and lived in hiding with the weaver woman in Wilmington,
|
||
Delaware: three years. And in all those escapes he could not help being astonished by the beauty of this land that was
|
||
not his. He hid in its breast, fingered its earth for food, clung to its banks to lap water and tried not to love it. On nights
|
||
when the sky was personal, weak with the weight of its own stars, he made himself not love it. Its graveyards and low-
|
||
lying rivers. Or just a house---solitary under a chinaberry tree; maybe a mule tethered and the light hitting its hide just
|
||
so. Anything could stir him and he tried hard not to love it.
|
||
After a few months on the battlefields of Alabama, he was impressed to a foundry in Selma along with three hundred
|
||
captured, lent or taken coloredmen. That's where the War's end found him, and leaving Alabama when he had been
|
||
declared free should have been a snap. He should have been able to walk from the foundry in Selma straight to
|
||
Philadelphia, taking the main roads, a train if he wanted to, or passage on a boat. But it wasn't like that. When he and
|
||
two colored soldiers (who had been captured from the 44th he had looked for) walked from Selma to Mobile, they saw
|
||
twelve dead blacks in the first eighteen miles. Two were women, four were little boys. He thought this, for sure, would
|
||
be the walk of his life.
|
||
The Yankees in control left the Rebels out of control. They got to the outskirts of Mobile, where blacks were putting
|
||
down tracks for the Union that, earlier, they had torn up for the Rebels. One of the men with him, a private called
|
||
Keane, had been with the Massachusetts 54th. He told Paul D they had been paid less than white soldiers. It was a sore
|
||
point with him that, as a group, they had refused the offer Massachusetts made to make up the difference in pay. Paul D
|
||
was so impressed by the idea of being paid money to fight he looked at the private with wonder and envy.
|
||
Keane and his friend, a Sergeant Rossiter, confiscated a skiff and the three of them floated in Mobile Bay. There the
|
||
private hailed a Union gunboat, which took all three aboard. Keane and Rossiter disembarked at Memphis to look for
|
||
their commanders. The captain of the gunboat let Paul D stay aboard all the way to Wheeling, West Virginia. He made
|
||
his own way to New Jersey.
|
||
By the time he got to Mobile, he had seen more dead people than living ones, but when he got to Trenton the crowds
|
||
of alive people, neither hunting nor hunted, gave him a measure of free life so tasty he never forgot it. Moving down
|
||
a busy street full of whitepeople who needed no explanation for his presence, the glances he got had to do with his
|
||
disgusting clothes and unforgivable hair. Still, nobody raised an alarm. Then came the miracle. Standing in a street in
|
||
front of a row of brick houses, he heard a whiteman call him ("Say there!
|
||
Yo!") to help unload two trunks from a coach cab. Afterward the whiteman gave him a coin. Paul D walked around with
|
||
it for hours-- not sure what it could buy (a suit? a meal? a horse?) and if anybody would sell him anything. Finally he saw
|
||
a greengrocer selling vegetables from a wagon. Paul D pointed to a bunch of turnips. The grocer handed them to him,
|
||
took his one coin and gave him several more. Stunned, he backed away. Looking around, he saw that nobody seemed
|
||
interested in the "mistake" or him, so he walked along, happily chewing turnips. Only a few women looked vaguely
|
||
153
|
||
repelled as they passed. His first earned purchase made him glow, never mind the turnips were withered dry. That was
|
||
when he decided that to eat, walk and sleep anywhere was life as good as it got. And he did it for seven years till he
|
||
found himself in southern Ohio, where an old woman and a girl he used to know had gone.
|
||
Now his coming is the reverse of his going. First he stands in the back, near the cold house, amazed by the riot of
|
||
late-summer flowers where vegetables should be growing. Sweet william, morning glory, chrysanthemums. The odd
|
||
placement of cans jammed with the rotting stems of things, the blossoms shriveled like sores. Dead ivy twines around
|
||
bean poles and door handles. Faded newspaper pictures are nailed to the outhouse and on trees. A rope too short for
|
||
anything but skip-jumping lies discarded near the washtub; and jars and jars of dead lightning bugs. Like a child's house;
|
||
the house of a very tall child.
|
||
He walks to the front door and opens it. It is stone quiet. In the place where once a shaft of sad red light had bathed
|
||
him, locking him where he stood, is nothing. A bleak and minus nothing. More like absence, but an absence he had
|
||
to get through with the same determination he had when he trusted Sethe and stepped through the pulsing light. He
|
||
glances quickly at the lightning-white stairs. The entire railing is wound with ribbons, bows, bouquets. Paul D steps
|
||
inside. The outdoor breeze he brings with him stirs the ribbons.
|
||
Carefully, not quite in a hurry but losing no time, he climbs the luminous stairs. He enters Sethe's room. She isn't there
|
||
and the bed looks so small he wonders how the two of them had lain there. It has no sheets, and because the roof
|
||
windows do not open the room is stifling. Brightly colored clothes lie on the floor. Hanging from a wall peg is the dress
|
||
Beloved wore when he first saw her. A pair of ice skates nestles in a basket in the corner. He turns his eyes back to the
|
||
bed and keeps looking at it. It seems to him a place he is not.
|
||
With an effort that makes him sweat he forces a picture of himself lying there, and when he sees it, it lifts his spirit. He
|
||
goes to the other bedroom. Denver's is as neat as the other is messy. But still no Sethe.
|
||
Maybe she has gone back to work, gotten better in the days since he talked to Denver. He goes back down the stairs,
|
||
leaving the image of himself firmly in place on the narrow bed. At the kitchen table he sits down. Something is missing
|
||
from 124. Something larger than the people who lived there. Something more than Beloved or the red light. He can't put
|
||
his finger on it, but it seems, for a moment, that just beyond his knowing is the glare of an outside thing that embraces
|
||
while it accuses.
|
||
To the right of him, where the door to the keeping room is ajar, he hears humming. Someone is humming a tune.
|
||
Something soft and sweet, like a lullaby. Then a few words. Sounds like "high Johnny, wide Johnny. Sweet William bend
|
||
down low." Of course, he thinks.
|
||
That's where she is--and she is. Lying under a quilt of merry colors.
|
||
Her hair, like the dark delicate roots of good plants, spreads and curves on the pillow. Her eyes, fixed on the window, are
|
||
so expressionless he is not sure she will know who he is. There is too much light here in this room. Things look sold.
|
||
"Jackweed raise up high," she sings. "Lambswool over my shoulder, buttercup and clover fly." She is fingering a long
|
||
clump of her hair.
|
||
Paul D clears his throat to interrupt her. "Sethe?"
|
||
She turns her head. "Paul D."
|
||
"Aw, Sethe."
|
||
"I made the ink, Paul D. He couldn't have done it if I hadn't made the ink."
|
||
"What ink? Who?"
|
||
"You shaved."
|
||
154
|
||
"Yeah. Look bad?"
|
||
"No. You looking good."
|
||
"Devil's confusion. What's this I hear about you not getting out of bed?"
|
||
She smiles, lets it fade and turns her eyes back to the window.
|
||
"I need to talk to you," he tells her.
|
||
She doesn't answer.
|
||
"I saw Denver. She tell you?"
|
||
"She comes in the daytime. Denver. She's still with me, my Denver."
|
||
"You got to get up from here, girl." He is nervous. This reminds him of something.
|
||
"I'm tired, Paul D. So tired. I have to rest a while."
|
||
Now he knows what he is reminded of and he shouts at her, "Don't you die on me! This is Baby Suggs' bed! Is that what
|
||
you planning?" He is so angry he could kill her. He checks himself, remembering Denver's warning, and whispers, "What
|
||
you planning, Sethe?"
|
||
"Oh, I don't have no plans. No plans at all."
|
||
"Look," he says, "Denver be here in the day. I be here in the night. I'm a take care of you, you hear? Starting now. First
|
||
off, you don't smell right. Stay there. Don't move. Let me heat up some water." He stops. "Is it all right, Sethe, if I heat up
|
||
some water?"
|
||
"And count my feet?" she asks him.
|
||
He steps closer. "Rub your feet."
|
||
Sethe closes her eyes and presses her lips together. She is thinking: No. This little place by a window is what I want. And
|
||
rest. There's nothing to rub now and no reason to. Nothing left to bathe, assuming he even knows how. Will he do it in
|
||
sections? First her face, then her hands, her thighs, her feet, her back? Ending with her exhausted breasts? And if he
|
||
bathes her in sections, will the parts hold? She opens her eyes, knowing the danger of looking at him. She looks at him.
|
||
The peachstone skin, the crease between his ready, waiting eyes and sees it--the thing in him, the blessedness, that has
|
||
made him the kind of man who can walk in a house and make the women cry.
|
||
Because with him, in his presence, they could. Cry and tell him things they only told each other: that time didn't stay put;
|
||
that she called, but Howard and Buglar walked on down the railroad track and couldn't hear her; that Amy was scared
|
||
to stay with her because her feet were ugly and her back looked so bad; that her ma'am had hurt her feelings and she
|
||
couldn't find her hat anywhere and "Paul D?"
|
||
"What, baby?"
|
||
"She left me."
|
||
"Aw, girl. Don't cry."
|
||
"She was my best thing."
|
||
Paul D sits down in the rocking chair and examines the quilt patched in carnival colors. His hands are limp between his
|
||
knees.
|
||
There are too many things to feel about this woman. His head hurts.
|
||
155
|
||
Suddenly he remembers Sixo trying to describe what he felt about the Thirty-Mile Woman. "She is a friend of my mind.
|
||
She gather me, man. The pieces I am, she gather them and give them back to me in all the right order. It's good, you
|
||
know, when you got a woman who is a friend of your mind."
|
||
He is staring at the quilt but he is thinking about her wrought iron back; the delicious mouth still puffy at the corner from
|
||
Ella's fist. The mean black eyes. The wet dress steaming before the fire.
|
||
Her tenderness about his neck jewelry--its three wands, like attentive baby rattlers, curving two feet into the air. How
|
||
she never mentioned or looked at it, so he did not have to feel the shame of being collared like a beast. Only this woman
|
||
Sethe could have left him his manhood like that. He wants to put his story next to hers.
|
||
"Sethe," he says, "me and you, we got more yesterday than anybody.
|
||
We need some kind of tomorrow."
|
||
He leans over and takes her hand. With the other he touches her face. "You your best thing, Sethe. You are." His holding
|
||
fingers are holding hers.
|
||
"Me? Me?"
|
||
Chapter 28
|
||
THERE IS a loneliness that can be rocked. Arms crossed, knees drawn up; holding, holding on, this motion, unlike a ship's,
|
||
smooths and contains the rocker. It's an inside kind--wrapped tight like skin.
|
||
Then there is a loneliness that roams. No rocking can hold it down.
|
||
It is alive, on its own. A dry and spreading thing that makes the sound of one's own feet going seem to come from a far-
|
||
off place.
|
||
Everybody knew what she was called, but nobody anywhere knew her name. Disremembered and unaccounted for, she
|
||
cannot be lost because no one is looking for her, and even if they were, how can they call her if they don't know her
|
||
name? Although she has claim, she is not claimed. In the place where long grass opens, the girl who waited to be loved
|
||
and cry shame erupts into her separate parts, to make it easy for the chewing laughter to swallow her all away.
|
||
It was not a story to pass on.
|
||
They forgot her like a bad dream. After they made up their tales, shaped and decorated them, those that saw her that
|
||
day on the porch quickly and deliberately forgot her. It took longer for those who had spoken to her, lived with her,
|
||
fallen in love with her, to forget, until they realized they couldn't remember or repeat a single thing she said, and began
|
||
to believe that, other than what they themselves
|
||
were thinking, she hadn't said anything at all. So, in the end, they forgot her too. Remembering seemed unwise. They
|
||
never knew where or why she crouched, or whose was the underwater face she needed like that. Where the memory of
|
||
the smile under her chin might have been and was not, a latch latched and lichen attached its apple-green bloom to the
|
||
metal. What made her think her fingernails could open locks the rain rained on?
|
||
It was not a story to pass on.
|
||
So they forgot her. Like an unpleasant dream during a troubling sleep. Occasionally, however, the rustle of a skirt hushes
|
||
when they wake, and the knuckles brushing a cheek in sleep seem to belong to the sleeper. Sometimes the photograph
|
||
of a close friend or relative--looked at too long--shifts, and something more familiar than the dear face itself moves
|
||
there. They can touch it if they like, but don't, because they know things will never be the same if they do.
|
||
This is not a story to pass on.
|
||
156
|
||
Down by the stream in back of 124 her footprints come and go, come and go. They are so familiar. Should a child, an
|
||
adult place his feet in them, they will fit. Take them out and they disappear again as though nobody ever walked there.
|
||
By and by all trace is gone, and what is forgotten is not only the footprints but the water too and what it is down there.
|
||
The rest is weather. Not the breath of the disremembered and unaccounted for, but wind in the eaves, or spring ice
|
||
thawing too quickly. Just weather.
|
||
Certainly no clamor for a kiss.
|
||
Beloved.
|
||
THE END |