Fairbairn, Ann
Page 80
"He won't take it if he thinks we need him."
"I know. I'll take care of it."
After Brad hung up, David sat, yogi-fashion, so long, so without motion, that the black-and-white cat gave up its bid for attention and settled on the rug in front of the door, eyes slitted in an alert doze, opening, round and yellow, at the sound of a voice from the bed.
"They shot a good man," the voice said. "A trooper's gun. It had to be a .45. You know what a .45 slug through the liver would do, Chop-bone? Through the lungs? Through the heart? That's what's under your rib cage, pal; your liver and your lights and your heart and some of your guts." The cat closed its eyes; there was nothing of interest to him in the words. "Death," said the voice.
The inner shakes had quieted, and David was glad to see that his hand was not shaking when he poured another cup of coffee. If Brad had been hit by a truck, died in a plane crash, succumbed to disease, there would have been grief, but it would have been clean grief. But if Brad had been ripped open by a slug from a red-neck trooper's gun— The thought of the nearness of that death, of the fraction of an inch of skin and bone that had stood between Brad and that shattering, gut-tearing impact brought the inner weakness back, turned the tremors loose again. "It didn't happen. God damn it, David Champlin, pull yourself together. It didn't happen. It's not the first narrow escape. It won't be the last. You're getting mental." He stretched out in bed, trying to gather his forces, to get his mind and body working as a unit again, understanding the alcoholic who, in fear and dread, starts his day with liquor to assure forgetfulness of nameless unknown things yet to happen.
CHAPTER 66
If he lay there a little longer, stretching, forcing himself to relax, he knew he'd eventually overcome the dread of what a new day would bring. It was not fear of the events of the day that brought that urge to bury himself somewhere where no one could find him; it was a new fear of his own reactions, a doubting of the wisdom of his own judgments. Once he had been able to assess a situation, judge its potentials, and act. He acknowledged that he hadn't always acted wisely, but there had been no such indecision as occasionally had plagued him lately. And that was sheer fatigue.
He and Luke had established a private routine. Each time one of them was released from jail he stayed in bed an extra hour the next morning. "Pampering ourselves," growled David. Luke said: "It ain't that, boss. When you stay in bed an extra hour you just lie there and worry and think up more trouble. Me, I sleep."
Luke had been right. Damned if he didn't feel guilty now if he wasn't worrying. There were a number of things to worry about this morning. Klein's two-months-old letter, still unanswered, received before he was jailed, outlining ALEC's financial troubles now that they had embarked on a program of demonstrations and fines were becoming a major problem; the knowledge that he must go to Washington soon and talk to officials there and the frustrated feeling that always gave him; the disorganized chaos in a number of communities and the realization that there must be others in the same situation, and the further realization that leadership had to be provided or gains would become losses overnight.
There was even, he reflected ruefully, a damned suspicious knock in the motor of the car that had once been Chuck's. It was entitled to a knock after the beating it had taken for two and a half years. He'd get rid of the car before he went north. That was a nice, comfortable worry, not calculated to bring on stomach cramps or knots in his belly. Maybe if he concentrated on that small worry he could manage to doze off again.
Or perhaps if he concentrated on the fact that there was one worry, unconcerned with his work, that he had not known for two and a half years—the worry over Brad and his difficulties with Peg's drinking. He was convinced, even more than Brad was, that Peg had at last found the key —rather, that the key had been handed to her when Brad made his decision and came to New Orleans. She had gone over the edge into alcoholism long ago, but David now had met too many alcoholics who could look back on a decade or more of sobriety not to believe that Peg would make it.
"I've got to be a little scared," Brad had said. "But I'm growing less so with time."
"I'm telling you, Chief, she'll make it. All the way. Wait and see. She's got something to be proud of. Like you."
"Yes. I was damned shortsighted for a long time. I suppose that's it."
David doubted that Brad could have carried the double burden of his work in the South, and the worry over the woman who had been Peg Willis for so many years. Now a few days at home and his nervous tension melted away and he came back refreshed and clearheaded. He was, reflected David, a lucky guy—after a hell of a long and patient wait. And Mike Shea, bless his Irishness, was probably calling it faith. And Mike Shea could just be right.
His immediate worry about Brad was the reference made to the man named Garnett. Whatever Brad was working on, he might run into trouble if Garnett was around. He was pretty certain Brad's instinct about people, his skill in handling them, would help him out if the woman named Sue-Ellen Moore was also around. Brad had a genius for slowing down and instilling forethought and reason into the minds of the overly impulsive. David did not have as much confidence in the older man's ability to spot at first glance, as he usually could, one of his people whose own neck was of greater importance than the collective neck of the Negroes.
Even without Isaiah Watkins's prior warning David would have recognized in Garnett an opportunist whose loyalty was bounded on all sides by his own interests. That Sue-Ellen Moore trusted him wasn't strange. For all her bitterness and apparent disillusionment she was, like many others of that temperament, inclined to judge quickly, on face values.
He had met Garnett before he met Sue-Ellen. It was early morning when he entered the office-lobby of the small motel on the outskirts of a medium-sized southern city, grateful for these oases that were springing up in the desert of the South, offering shelter to traveling Negroes who otherwise might drive hundreds of miles before finding a place to sleep. This one was modern, well appointed, and with a restaurant-coffee shop. He was in the city for a series of conferences and to lay the groundwork for a later ALEC campaign—classes, demonstrations, a probable boycott. The morning of his arrival he was alone, Luke following with a group of ALEC volunteers from New Orleans.
Garnett had been turning away from the desk in the motel office, a battered Gladstone in one hand, a room key in the other. Instead of leaving the lobby, he lingered in the background while David registered, a short, tubby figure, bald and managing to look to David somehow damp, although the morning was dry and cool. The clerk behind the desk, in contrast, was tall and bony and, even at five o'clock in the morning, quick. He raised his eyebrows at David's signature and held out his hand. "Proud to meet you, Mr. Champlin. Been hearing 'bout you. Lemme bring you some coffee after you get to your room—"
"I'd sure appreciate it. Thanks. Say, has a young fellow named Willis checked in yet?"
"Ain't seen him."
"When he comes put him in another room and put it on my bill. O.K.?"
"Sure thing. You get along down there now. I'll be along with the coffee."
The motel parking lot was at the front of the building, and David had brought his suitcase in with him. His vague distaste for the chubby man became more positive as Garnett hurried across the lobby and held out his hand. David took the hand reluctantly, and, when the other man spoke, could not stop himself from drawing away. The accent was a mixture of urban North and cotton-field Deep South, as phony as a red-neck smile.
"Y'all David Champlin? Reckon all of us been hearin' 'bout you. Lemme make myse'f acquainted. Garnett's the name. Alonzo Garnett. Y'all jes fergit about the Alonzo. I tries to. Here, man, let me he'p you with that suitcase. I'll tote it—"
David had never been able to overcome an unreasonable irritation whenever he ran into anyone insensitive enough to offer to carry something for him because of his lameness. He knew he was overreacting but he couldn't help it. "I carry my own bags," he said.
<
br /> Later the clerk who had been at the desk brought coffee and a warmed fried pie he'd "scrounged 'round for," and said, "You-all never met that fella was in the lobby? That fella Garnett?"
"No. Just call me lucky."
"He's with this here Young People's Committee for Freedom. Travels round most of the time with a woman named Moore. Sue-Ellen Moore. She's here now; he just j'ined up with her. They been all around these parts, organizing children and young folks for demonstrations. I ain't made up my mind 'bout that. Comes to kids I ain't so sure. Don't make no difference to the whites if it's jes a chile causin' trouble, if he's black. Got a few young uns myself."
"There are a couple of ways of looking at it."
David finished the last crumb of the fried pie, the last drop of coffee, and got into bed. He remembered most of what Isaiah Watkins had said to him about Sue-Ellen Moore, one day a few months before in Isaiah's office.
"She means well. Sure does. But she don't use what anyone could call good judgment. She ain't got what a lot of folks down here has got—mother wit. Down here we has to think ahead of ourselves. She ain't a patient woman and she don't know what the score is once she gets into the South. But she's in there pitchin,' just the same. Heads up that new Young People's Committee for Freedom. Biggest trouble with her is she goes off half cocked a lot of the time, louses the other guy's plans up. 'Course, sometimes she don't louse 'em up— she helps 'em out, them as were dragging their asses and needed someone to come along and give 'em a kick in the pants. But she ain't got much use—ain't got much respeck—for the older folks down here. Lot of the northern colored feels like that. She comes from San Francisco. Helluva fine-looking woman, I'll say that."
"I remember the name now. Luke was around in one city when she was staging some demonstrations. Said she had those kids really trained."
"Lawd! She does. Be better if a lot more of that was done. She's a nut on physical fitness. Trains them kids in classes like she was a Army drill sergeant. They loves it. But she don't seem to realize you can't lead the South to the Kingdom with just kids. The older folks down here been round a long time. Gonna be round a long time. The kids? Who knows. Most of them'll be cutting out. Besides, going to be a heap of time before some of them kids can vote, even when we gets the vote—"
When David was leaving the office, Isaiah had said, "Speaking of Sue-Ellen. There's a fellow hooked up with her group that'd bear watching. Name of Garnett. We had him in ALEC for a while 'fore you come down here; eased him out. Beats me why he's in the movement at all. My guess is he likes fame and thinks he's going to get fortune."
"I'll watch out—"
***
He slept until ten thirty, then showered and shaved and headed for the motel office to see if the coffee shop off the lobby was still open for breakfast. He didn't like to go too long without eating because when he did his stomach began cramping with pain. On every trip now he carried milk and sandwiches in the car. He'd noticed, though, that in spite of these in-between meal snacks he was having difficulty with clothes that were gradually becoming too big for him—coats hanging baggily from thinner shoulders, shorts too big around the waist, belts he sometimes had to put another notch in. When he came within two pounds of Luke, who was two inches shorter and naturally slender, he stopped weighing himself. If his trips North lasted more than a couple of days, he always started putting weight back on again.
He stopped at the desk to see if Luke had checked in, was told he'd arrived a half hour before. He delayed a moment to light a cigarette, glancing toward the glass doors of the coffee shop as he did so. What he saw made him purse his lips in a silent whistle. A young woman was standing in the doorway, evidently waiting for someone still inside. She wore tight-fitting blue Capri pants and a white silk blouse. What had Isaiah said—"Helluva fine-looking woman"? He'd understated it. He stood quietly, watching her. "Handsome" wasn't the word —she hadn't the height to carry "handsome." Neither was "beautiful" fitting, although "pretty" was unthinkable, and he was damned if he'd fall back on the shopworn "glamorous." Isaiah's word—"fine"—covered it nicely, and so did an expression of Tom Evans's that he remembered. Tom would have designated her as an "omigodder."
It wasn't her figure. His eye was as good as the next for figures, and hers lacked the curves necessary to call forth superlatives. Yet it was good; better than most: flat-stomached, long-legged, straight, whip-thin and supple, with small breasts that she disdained to augment artificially, and skin—what the hell was it like? Coffee-colored whipped cream? She wore her hair sleek and close on top, brushed up at the ends, so that it circled her head like a gleaming black half-halo.
She moved forward impatiently, letting the door close sharply behind her, tired of waiting, and turned toward the desk. Seen directly and not from an angle, her face was that of an Egyptian statue, full-lidded eyes and full lips of such perfection a sculptor would go out of his mind with delight in them. The planes of her face sloped sharply from high, well-defined cheekbones, and David wanted to tell her to band her hair back, draw it away from those bones, from a face that needed no embellishment.
She started toward him, and when she drew close, she smiled and her hand was outstretched. "I know you," she said. "You're David Champlin. I heard that you were here." Her grip was quick, firm.
"And you're Sue-Ellen Moore."
"Come now! You couldn't know. After all, I've seen pictures of you."
"I have friends with good powers of description."
"I hope they said pretty things—"
"What else could they say?"
He was conscious now that someone had come up behind her from the coffee shop, and saw Garnett standing a few feet away. She turned her head and said, "What kept you?" then turned back without waiting for an answer. She said to David, "I hope we'll meet again." She was as straightforward as a man, without apparent coquetry.
"I hope so. I'd hate to think we wouldn't."
She walked away then, toward the main door and he went into the coffee shop and picked a table by the window. Before the coffee came Luke strode into the room, grinning. He sat down opposite David, rubbing his palms together briskly. "Hi, boss! Man, what I just saw!"
"I think I know. Quit twitching."
"Who could help it!"
"Lay off, Luke," he said, then was annoyed at himself for being self-righteous and preachy again with the kid. He'd been riding the boy with a pretty tight rein.
"Yeah, I know. Man, you been telling me for two years— two years, man—if I hadda have a woman to pick a chick outside the movement. Don't mess with workers, white or black, you said. And that ain't been easy. But I made out, man, I made out. But if I'd of known we'd run into something like what I just saw I might of come up with what you maybe could call a case of galloping insubordination."
David grinned across the table. He had reason to suspect Luke wasn't being entirely truthful about never having anything to do with his female fellow workers. Still, considering his youth and temperament, Luke had been everything David could ask for, and maybe a bit more. His own biological urges had been more quiescent than at any time since adolescence. He supposed this could be attributed partly to physical fatigue, partly to unhealed emotional wounds, and partly to his ability to use horse sense and run like hell from a potential involvement. Only when he had been sure that no such involvement threatened had he slipped out from under the unrelenting drive and pressure he had imposed upon himself. And couldn't remember being particularly happy about it afterward.
"You know who she is?" asked Luke now.
"Yes. Her name's Sue-Ellen Moore. I thought you said you'd run across her. You said you were around once when she was heading up a demonstration."
"I didn't get to see her personally. Cop got in the way. Jeez, I thought she'd be an old battle-ax—or a young battle-ax, maybe. You know, all muscles and might. Who's the little fat character trails around after her?"
"Man named Garnett. Isaiah warned me to watch out for him. She s
eems to treat him like an errand boy. Can't say I spotted any evidence of any close relationship."
"Hell, that guy couldn't do a woman like her any good." Luke was smiling broadly. "Whyn't you make a try for it, boss?" When David returned the smile and shook his head, Luke said: "I dunno. Sometimes I get real worried about you, boss. I think mebbe if you were getting more you'd get rid of them cramps in your stomach."
David laughed. "Worry about your own self. I'll worry about me. And take it easy. It's only sex."
"Man, that's not enough?"
***
The next evening he met her again in the lobby, and suggested that they have dinner together. In the back of his mind was the thought that ALEC's own momentum could benefit by the help and cooperation of Sue-Ellen's committee, with its tie-ins with youth groups. There were several places he could think of where the local leadership troubled him by its lack of any dynamic drive. A Sue-Ellen might bring it to life.
Conversation at dinner was general. He had met no one with a more comprehensive or detailed knowledge of the activities of every civil rights group, South or North. He even learned things about his own organization he had not known. She could have been without sex as far as her general attitude was concerned. There were no meaningful glances or provocative gestures, no double entendres. She didn't need them, he thought, and she was one of those rare women with sense enough to know it.
She was objective—and abrasive—in her appraisal of civil rights activities in the South. But her criticisms, in David's opinion, were not valid because they were not based on any real understanding of the psychological factors involved. Isaiah had been' right. She had no patience with the fears and misgivings of an older generation, one that had borne the burden of a lifetime in the white South and who at last were being shown some hope of the lightening of that burden—yet who remained unable to march with banners because of a very real and ever-present fear of a terrorism from which they had never been free. He tried to have for her the understanding she denied others, led her to talk about herself and her own background. She had been born and grown up in California, gone to college in Berkeley, and never been closer to the South than Arizona until she was past twenty. By that time, David realized, her bitterness against the white rule in both North and South was all-pervading. That bitterness became a searing hatred when she talked of white men, and she spoke with the frankness of a man about their inadequacies, mental, moral, emotional—and physical.