Part 24 (1/2)

”Whoever he be, he give a d.a.m.n about colored folks?”

”Well, I don't exactly know that, either.”

”Do Jesus!” Scipio stubbed out the b.u.t.t in the pressed-gla.s.s ashtray on the manager's desk. The deceased cigarette had plenty of company. ”He one o' dat dat kind o' buckra, we is all dead soon.” kind o' buckra, we is all dead soon.”

”I do know that,” Dover said. ”Other thing I know is, I can't do thing one about it. If they call me up . . .” He shrugged. ”I can talk to my own bosses till I'm blue in the face, but they don't have to listento me.”

Scipio sometimes had trouble remembering that Jerry Dover had had bosses. But he didn't own the Huntsman's Lodge; he just ran the place. He was good at what he did; if he hadn't been, he wouldn't have kept his job for as long as he had. As long as he stayed in Augusta, he had no place to move up from the Huntsman's Lodge. He would have to go to Atlanta, or maybe even to New Orleans, to do better. bosses. But he didn't own the Huntsman's Lodge; he just ran the place. He was good at what he did; if he hadn't been, he wouldn't have kept his job for as long as he had. As long as he stayed in Augusta, he had no place to move up from the Huntsman's Lodge. He would have to go to Atlanta, or maybe even to New Orleans, to do better.

Now he said, ”Go on. Go to work. Get your a.s.s in gear.”

Not having anything else he could do, Scipio obeyed. Despite his worries, he got through the s.h.i.+ft. When he went back to the Terry, he had no trouble pa.s.sing through the barriers around the colored part of town. Cops and stalwarts knew who he was.

Getting back to work the next day, he found his boss in a terrible temper-not because he'd been called up but because two dishwashers weren't there when they were supposed to be. That was a normal sort of restaurant crisis, and Dover handled it in the normal way: he hired the first two warm bodies off the street that he could.

Neither of them spoke much English. They were Mexicans-not Confederate citizens from Chihuahua or Sonora, but men out of the Empire of Mexico up in the CSA looking for work. Now they'd found some, and they went at it harder than anyone Scipio had seen in a long time. They wanted to keep it.

At first, thinking of the restaurant and nothing more, Scipio was pleased to see their eagerness. He didn't blame Jerry Dover for telling the black men they'd replaced not to bother coming back to work. The look on the Negroes' faces was something to see, but the color of those faces didn't win the men much extra sympathy from Scipio. If you didn't, if you couldn't, show up, you were asking for whatever happened to you. Showing up on time all the d.a.m.n time counted for more than just about anything else in the restaurant business.

That was at first. Then, coming up to the Huntsman's Lodge a couple of days later, Scipio walked past a barbershop. All the barbers in there had been Negroes; he couldn't imagine a white Confederate demeaning himself by cutting another man's hair. But now the barber at the fourth chair, though he wore a white s.h.i.+rt and black bow tie like the other three-a uniform not far removed from a bartender's-did not look like them. He had straight black hair, red-brown skin, and prominent cheekbones. He was, in short, as Mexican as the two new dishwashers.

Ice ran through Scipio, not when he noticed the new barber but when he realized what the fellow meant, which didn't happen for another half a block. ”Do Jesus!” he said, and stopped so abruptly, the white man behind him almost walked up his back.

”Watch what you're doing, Uncle,” the ofay said irritably.

”I is powerful sorry, suh,” Scipio replied. The white man walked around him. Scipio stayed right where he was, trying to tell himself he was wrong and having no luck at all. He wasn't sorry. He was afraid, and the longer he stood there the more frightened he got.

For twenty years and more, Jake Featherston had been screaming his head off about getting rid of the Negroes in the Confederate States. Scipio had had trouble taking the Freedom Party seriously, not because he didn't think it hated blacks-oh, no, not because of that!-but because he didn't see how the CSA could get along without them. Who would cut hair? Who would wash dishes? Who would do the field labor that still needed doing despite the swarm of new tractors and harvesters and combines that had poured out of Confederate factories?

Whites? Not likely! Being a white in the Confederacy meant being above such labor, and above the people who did it.

But whites felt themselves superior to Mexicans: not to the same degree as they did toward Negroes, but enough. And the work blacks did in the CSA couldn't have looked too bad to people who had no work of their own. Which meant . . .

If workers from the Empire of Mexico came north to do the jobs Negroes had been doing in the CSA, the Freedom Party and Jake Featherston might be able to have their cake and eat it, too.

Scipio wasn't at his best at work that day. He was far enough from his best to make Jerry Dover snap, ”What the h.e.l.l's the matter with you, Xerxes?”

”Jus' thinkin' 'bout Jose an' Manuel, Mistuh Dover,” he answered.

”They aren't your worry. They're mine. If they keep on like they've started, they're no worry at all, and you can take that to the bank. You just keep your mind on what you're supposed to be doing, that's all. Everything will be fine if you do.”

”Yes, suh,” Scipio said. But yes, suh yes, suh wasn't what he meant. Jose and Manuel-and that barber in the fourth chair-were the thin end of the wedge. If Jake Featherston banged the other end, what would happen? Nothing good. wasn't what he meant. Jose and Manuel-and that barber in the fourth chair-were the thin end of the wedge. If Jake Featherston banged the other end, what would happen? Nothing good.

The restaurant manager eyed him. ”You wondering if we can find some d.a.m.n greaser to do your your job? Tell you one thing: the worse you do it, the better the chances are.” job? Tell you one thing: the worse you do it, the better the chances are.”

That came unpleasantly close to what Scipio was was thinking. Say what you would about Dover, he was n.o.body's fool. ”Ain't jus' me I is worried about,” Scipio muttered. thinking. Say what you would about Dover, he was n.o.body's fool. ”Ain't jus' me I is worried about,” Scipio muttered.

”What's that supposed to mean?” Dover asked.

”More Mexicans they is, mo' trouble fo' n.i.g.g.e.rs,” Scipio answered.

”Oh.” Dover thought about it for a little while, then shrugged. ”I can't do anything about that, you know. The only thing I care about is keeping this place going, and I'll handle that till they stick a uniform on me and drag me out of here.”

He'd done everything a decent man could-more than most decent men would have. Scipio had to remind himself of that. ”Yes, suh,” the black man said dully.

”Hang in there,” Dover said. ”That's all you can do right this minute. That's all anybody can do right this minute.”

”Yes, suh,” Scipio said again, even more dully than before. But then, in spite of himself, his fear and rage overflowed. He let them all out in one sarcastic word: ”Freedom!”

Jerry Dover's eyes got very wide. He looked around to see if anyone else could have heard the rallying cry that, here, was anything but. Evidently satisfied no one else had, he wagged a finger at Scipio, for all the world like a mother scolding a little boy who had just shouted a dirty word without even knowing what it meant. ”You've got to watch your mouth there, Xerxes.”

”Yes, suh. I knows dat.” Scipio was genuinely contrite. He knew what kind of danger he'd put himself in.

Dover went on as if he hadn't spoken: ”You've got a nice family. I saw them. You want to leave them without their pa?”

”No, suh.” Again, Scipio meant it. Still clucking, the restaurant manager let it go and let him alone. He'd told the truth, all right. Here, though, how much did the truth matter? His family, like any black family, was all too likely to be torn to bits regardless of what he wanted.

Chester Martin couldn't have been more bored if the Confederates had shot him. As a matter of fact, they had had shot him, or rather, ripped up his leg with a sh.e.l.l fragment. Everybody kept a.s.suring him he would get better. He believed it. He did feel better than he had right after he was wounded. Thanks to sulfa powder and pills and shots, the wound didn't get badly infected. A little redness, a little soreness on top of the normal pain from getting torn open, and that was it. shot him, or rather, ripped up his leg with a sh.e.l.l fragment. Everybody kept a.s.suring him he would get better. He believed it. He did feel better than he had right after he was wounded. Thanks to sulfa powder and pills and shots, the wound didn't get badly infected. A little redness, a little soreness on top of the normal pain from getting torn open, and that was it.

Everybody kept telling him he'd get back to duty pretty soon, too. He also believed that. People kept saying it as if it were good news. For the life of him, he couldn't understand why. Hey, Chester! The Confederates'll get another chance to maim you or kill you before too long. Ain't that great? Hey, Chester! The Confederates'll get another chance to maim you or kill you before too long. Ain't that great? Maybe he was prejudiced, but it didn't seem great to him. Maybe he was prejudiced, but it didn't seem great to him.

Meanwhile, he lay on a cot with the iron frame painted Army green-gray. Once a day, he got exercise and physical therapy. The rest of the time, he just lay there. The Army gave him better rations in the hospital than it had while he was in the field. That struck him as fundamentally unfair, but then, so did a lot of other things about the Army.

He also got his pay here. Money in his pocket let him sit in on a poker game whenever he felt like it. The only trouble was, he didn't feel like it very often. Sometimes he sat in even when he didn't much feel like it. It was something to do, a way to make time go by.

Because he didn't much care whether he won or lost, he had a terrific poker face. ”n.o.body can tell what you're thinking,” one of the other guys in the game grumbled.

”Me? I gave up thinking for Lent,” Chester said. Everybody sitting around the table laughed. And he had been joking . . . up to a point.

He'd just come back from his exercise one day when a ward orderly stuck his head into the room and said, ”You've got a visitor, Martin.”

”Yeah, now tell me another one,” Chester said. ”I'm not bad enough off to need the padre for last rites or anything, and who else is gonna want to have anything to do with me?”

The orderly didn't answer. He just ducked back out of sight. Rita walked into the room. ”You idiot,” she told him, and burst into tears.

Chester gaped at his wife. ”What are you doing here?” he squeaked.

She pulled a tiny linen handkerchief out of her purse and dabbed at her eyes. ”When I found out you got wounded, I asked the War Department where you were,” she answered. ”They told me, and so I got on a train-got on a bunch of trains, really-and here I am. Carl's with Sue and Otis till I get back.”

”All right,” Chester said dazedly. His sister and brother-in-law would do fine with his son. ”Jesus, sweetie, it's good to see you.”

Rita gave him a look laced with vitriol. ”If you like seeing me, why did you go put that stupid uniform on again? You could have stayed in L.A. and seen me every day.”

He sighed. ”It seemed like a good idea when I did it.” How many follies got perpetrated because they seemed a good idea at the time? Was there any way to count them? Chester didn't think so.

By the way Rita drummed her fingers against the painted iron of the bedstead, she didn't, either. ”They told me you weren't hurt bad enough for them to discharge you from the Army,” she said. ”That means the Confederates will have to shoot you at least one more time before I get you back, doesn't it?”

”I . . . hadn't thought of it like that,” Chester said, which was true.