The boy again?
Link cut the end off his cigar and lit it ceremoniously. “By the way,” he asked, “how is Jerry doing at St. Simon’s?”
“You’re so subtle,” Victor said. “I don’t know how he’s doing. He hasn’t written me.”
“Ah, well. No news is good news. He’ll write when he wants money. I remember when my boy…”
“I think he’d rather starve,” Victor said.
“Yeah? Well…” Why didn’t Victor ever help a conversation? “Look, Victor. We may all be starving soon. It’s getting as bad as it can get. Fast. The government’s cut off foreign aid and cut down defense spending and cut taxes and we’re all cutting each others’ throats and damn it, Victor, what are we going to do about it?”
“Vote Democratic?”
“Don’t be an ass. You and I know political parties have nothing to do with it. The economy’s sick, sick, sick and I think advertising can come up with a real answer. Appeal to something in people. Whatever makes them spend.
“It was Downgrading, you know, that made them stop spending. First they bought things that just looked a little less obtrusive than their neighbors’ things. Then, when the idea got fashionable, they either bought things that really were cheap or they didn’t buy anything at all.”
“Downgrading was a terrific idea,” Link said staunchly. “It sold Glimmer tooth paste like mad.”
“You didn’t like the idea at first. You’ve got a good instinct, Link. You ought to have listened to it.”
“It didn’t sound like a good idea at first. But it worked.”
“It did, didn’t it,” Victor said.
“I don’t want to watch,” Llona said, crouching, for some primeval source of comfort, against the roughened walls of the interstellar vehicle.
“Don’t, then,” LLon snapped. He could see the bright sun and seven of the planets, like sparkles glittering on a royal cartilage. It was his experiment and he intended to watch it.
LLon decided, rather bitterly, that his honeymoon had been a failure—as a honeymoon, that is. Llona was narrow-minded and whiney and he knew she’d divorce him when they got back. He wondered how much she’d talk. Probably plenty. Well, he was legally safe and he’d be able to buy all the friends he needed.
Bradley pushed open the door with a shove of his shoulder. It always stuck in wet weather and he always meant to see what you could do about sticky doors, but somehow he never got around to it.
He grinned at his wife. The first grin of the day, really. “Gold bangles and satin dress and candles on the table!”
“And the children farmed out for the evening,” she said. “It… you’re hungry, aren’t you?”
Bradley nodded, answering the question she was really asking. “Still in at the semi-finals,” he said. He wished he could feel better about it. “Baldwin went this time.”
“Let’s not talk about that part just yet,” Mona said. “Sit down and I’ll get you a…”
“Have you been listening to the news today? About Russian planes over Europe? Since we had to withdraw foreign aid there’s…”
“Yes, dear. But why don’t you sit down and have your drink?”
But Bradley couldn’t sit down. “Go get the children,” he said. “There’s something about the world that’s… restless.”
Victor looked terrible. He looked old and tired and apart from things. It was grotesque to see him sitting in a pert little leatherette chair.
“I didn’t get you in here to ask for ideas.” Link said “For God’s sake, the Depression’s over and the war’s on. I got you in here to tell you to get the hell out and take a vacation. Half the staff’ll get drafted soon and there’ll be a terrific manpower shortage. I want you in good shape. And we’ve got a lull now. Why don’t you take your boy up to my lodge for a…”
“He joined the navy.”
“But he’s only a child!”
“I know. I had to sign for him.”
“And you did it!” Link was immediately sorry he’d said it.
“This way he gets to be a hero instead of a juvenile delinquent.” Victor shrugged. “I found out something ghastly. He wants me to be proud of him. What would you do?”
“Sure, Victor. The navy’s a good place for a boy. Make a man of him.”
“A dead man. Don’t you think I’ve done a swell job?”
“Come off it. It’s not your fault.”
“Isn’t it?”
“Oh, stop it Llona! It’s all over now. And after all, they didn’t suffer.”
SAVE YOUR CONFEDERATE MONEY, BOYS
IT WAS not, of course, the sort of thing that happens to the ordinary person.
But then Grandfather Mayberry was not the ordinary person, even to begin with. When Walter—I don’t think it’s respectful to refer to your grandfather as Walter, either, but we were never allowed to call him anything else. He was frequently referred to in the family as Yankee Walter, but no one ever said it to his face. It happened that his mother, great-grandfather’s first wife, was from Massachusetts and because of this everyone always thought of Walter as being a little bit different. I think maybe this might account for a lot of Walter’s peculiarities. I mean when people expect you to be a little peculiar all the time—well, as Walter’s descendant I can understand how he felt. Whenever anyone mentions something like Protointegrationist somebody looks a little guiltily over at me as though I caused the second secession and whoever mentions it in front of me is being tactless.
I was only a child then.
And I remember thinking it was awful to secede and not have anybody care. I mean to have big industry just move away and to get poorer and poorer and have to pick the cotton yourself.
And wrap it in tissue paper and sell it to the tourists for ten cents a boll—Confederate money.
But look at it this way. Your Confederate money’s worth something now. And why?
Well, when Walter announced, back in 1990, that he had no intention of dying, I was immensely relieved. If Walter said he wasn’t going to die that winter, he wasn’t going to. So I had Mama spray on the tightest corset I could stand and took off for my year of Precollege with a light heart and a twenty-inch waist.
I didn’t really expect to be able to pass the college boards, even with Precollege. And if I did, I wouldn’t have been able to go to college. It was all the family could do to send the boys. But Mama didn’t want anyone to say her girls weren’t educated, so we all went to Precollege and gracefully flunked the college boards.
It was that summer—after my two semesters of Precollege—that I brought the Price boy back with me, Jerry Price. I ended up not marrying him, of course. He really wouldn’t have done at all, but boy, could he court!
Well, I was all watery-eyed and pink-skinned over Jerry then and I knew the family would just love him and I sort of hoped he’d stay more than just two or three days. I mean if he could find a summer job maybe he could stay until September 15, which was the date for the college boards. The thing was, would Jerry like the family?
“The one I really want you to meet,” I told him, feeling a little uneasy about it, “is my grandfather. Walter.”
“You call him Walter?”
“Yes. Er… he’s a real character. You know… The thing is, though, he’s almost bedridden.”
“Bedridden! You mean rocking chair ridden.”
“No. Bedridden. I know it sounds unusual, but my grandfather Mayberry refused to take his cholesterol pills. Or anticholesterol pills, or whatever it is. He said they weren’t Natural. And now it’s too late. He’s ruined his arteries.”
“It takes a real character to do something like that.”
I didn’t like Jerry’s tone of voice, but I couldn’t help but agree with it. Maybe Walter wasn’t a character. Maybe he was just stupid.
“The thing is,” I said, because the postbellum buggy was almost there, “that the extra cot is in his room and you’ll have to sleep
there. I mean I’m sure you’ll find Walter an interesting character.”
“Sure,” Jerry said.
Surely, I thought, Jerry will not disapprove of the bottle under Walter’s pillow or his swearing or his insulting—but then even Walter wouldn’t be able to find anything insulting to say about Jerry.
The house looked silent and empty when we drove up. Cousin Dickie helped me out of the buggy and held out his hand. I didn’t put anything in it so he drove off in a huff and left a whirlwind of dust for us to track into the house.
I swang open the screen door and yelled, “Yoo-hoo!” But I could hear it echo way to the kitchen without striking anything soft.
“Must be out showing the end of the season tourists around,” I said. “The trains are all local here and they never run on time so nobody knew just when we’d be in. I mean, if they’d known, they’d certainly all be here to welcome you.”
“Sure,” Jerry said.
Really, I thought, they could have left somebody. It all seemed such an anticlimax.
“Well,” I said, “there’s still Walter. You’ll want to bring your bags up, anyway.”
Halfway up the stairs I stopped. I could hear water splashing and a quavery voice singing, “Don’t Sit Under the Apple Tree.”
Oh, Lord, I thought. He’s gone and gotten drunk in the bath tub again and there’s no one to get him out.
Jerry looked at me with raised eyebrows.
“Grandfather Mayberry,” I explained, “remembers all the old World War songs. He likes to just splash in the bathtub and just sing and sing. Isn’t it wonderful!” I finished up as enthusiastically as I could.
“Sure,” Jerry said. “My grandfather,” he added, “makes a hobby of taking school kids out on hikes. You know.”
“Sure,” I said. I decided then and there I’d rather let Walter drown than send Jerry in there to get him out of the tub.
Just then the screen door slammed and Mama said, “Yoo-hoo! Annabelle! Is your young man with you?”
“Yes!” I called, hissing on the s. Mama’s phraseology is always so irritating. I wasn’t at all sure Jerry wanted to be referred to as “my young man.”
“Be right down!” I added. “Jerry,” I said, “you just put your things in there and come on down when you’re ready.”
What I wanted was a moment alone with Mama and I got it.
“Someone has got to do something about Walter,” I whispered. “He’s there in the bath tub again and singing and you know he’s dr…”
“Don’t you dare,” Mama cried, “say that. Your grandfather Mayberry is perfectly all right and he’ll get out of the tub when he’s ready.”
“Mama, at a time like this you cannot close your eyes to ugly reality. You know Walter can’t get out of the tub by himself and none of the men are here and pretty soon he’ll start yelling and then Jerry will have to go hoist him out. Call up cousin Jefferson. Please!”
“Now, dear,” Mama began soothingly, “I haven’t written you about it, but Walter has had the most amazing…”
There was a hoarse screech and Jerry came barrelling down the steps with his cuff ruffles untaped and one boot off.
He grabbed Mama with one hand and me with the other. “Get out of the house!” he cried. “Well lock it in and get it when the rest of the men get back.”
Mama removed his hand firmly.
“Your grandfather Mayberry,” she told me, “is out of the bath.”
“There is an alligator up there!” Jerry cried, still trying to herd us out.
“Is this your young man?” Mama asked in a tone which she never used with the tourist trade.
“Yes,” I answered. “Mama, if Jerry sees an alligator…”
“Please make yourself at home, Mr. Price,” Mama said with a severe look, at his hanging cuffs. “Since we no longer have servants you’ll have to excuse me while I get supper started.”
We hadn’t had servants for as far back as I could remember.
“Look, Annabelle,” Jerry began, whispering nervously and looking like he’d gotten off on the wrong floor of a hospital. “I don’t want to insult your…”
It was at that moment that I found out what the word galumphing means, because Walter came galumphing down the stairs.
In all justice to my grandfather Mayberry, he didn’t really look like an alligator.
But in all justice to Jerry, I could see how a mistake might have been made.
“Hello, Annabelle,” Walter said, as though he’d just seen me last this morning. “Your boyfriend’s got no guts.”
“And you,” I said furiously, “have no manners. Walter, how can you come out in front of company looking like this?”
“Can’t look any other way, chick,” he said. “Hormones.”
“I’m going to be a freshman in pre-med next year,” Jerry said, “and I’ve never heard of a hormone with those kinds of side effects.”
“Cap,” Walter said, “you’ve got an awful lot of ignorance to lose.”
“Annabelle!” It was time for me to see to the biscuits and set the table.
“Make yourself at home, Jerry,” I said, feeling sure this was not the way things were at his home.
The kitchen was unnaturally cool. Furthermore, it didn’t smell like anything at all.
The air was clear.
“Mama!” I cried. “We’ve got an atomic stove!”
It was built into the side wall. The old wood stove was still there, of course, for the tourists. But the tin chimney was gone and the lids were clean and the cracked one had been replaced.
Mama smiled and pressed a button. The wall panel slid back and inside were eight dinners, neatly set on plates and plain raw.
“All I have to do,” Mama said, “is press a button and the food is cooked and the plates come out just warm.”
“You had a good crop of tourists?”
“No. Your grandfather Mayberry provided this for us.”
“You know Walter can’t even provide himself with cigars.”
Mama bit at her upper lip with her lower teeth, a sign that I will never learn to be tactful. “Walter has built up quite a little business. At first we thought of it as just a hobby but now it’s growing into—well, it looks as though we may find ourselves carrying on the tourist trade as a sort of hobby.”
“Whatever kind of business can Walter have got into?” A horrible thought struck me. “Not Yankee wines?”
“Dear… It’s a… um… mail order business.”
“There’s something you’re trying not to tell me. But if you don’t, Walter will. And he’ll make it sound even worse than it is.”
“Dear, your grandfather Mayberry is handling the distribution of Swamp Water Youth Restorative for the entire Confederacy.”
“Sw…!” I simply collapsed into hysterics. It was such an absurd thing and Mama said it so primly.
“Oh, Mama!” I finally managed. “That’s plain disgraceful. We didn’t need an atomic stove that bad. And oh, he’ll tell Jerry! I’d better go get him right now.”
“It is not disgraceful. Swamp Water Youth Restorative actually does restore youth.”
“Is that those hormones Walter was talking about? Is that what makes him look so peculiar?”
“I don’t know that he looks peculiar. It is simply the next stage after old age. People look different at different stages. You should have seen yourself when you were one day old.”
“Oh, all right. I don’t know why you have to remember these things about time and bring them up all the time. Let’s put it this way. Walter has changed since I was home for the Christmas holidays.”
“Yes, and I just explained it. The Youth Restorative contains hormones which, as I understand it, cause changes in the basic structure of the cells of the human body. DNA or RNA or something like that. Women are not expected to understand these things, Annabelle.”
“That’s your excuse for things you don’t want to understand. But I’ve seen Walter so I
know this Youth Restorative does something. Where on earth did he get this stuff? Surely it isn’t plain old water from the swamps.”
“No. It’s from—dear, didn’t you all hear any rumors over at Precollege?”
“We hear all kinds of rumors.”
“Well, this thing is big. It involves the whole Confederacy and there’s more to it than just Walter’s mail order business. Is that the men coming in?”
It was either them or a herd of elephants. Every time Brother walks in the house the chandeliers sway. And there would be Uncle Gary and…
“Set the table, Annabelle!”
I got out the good silver, because of Jerry, but not the crystal, which makes me nervous.
Everyone was a little stiff during dinner. I think this was partly due to the fact that while the rest of us had chicken and mashed potatoes, Walter had a string of raw fish. And the more everyone tried not to notice it, the more he chuckled.
I could have just died.
After dinner we cleared the dishes and I found out we had a dishwasher-stacker-disposal unit that even ground up the bones and sloshed the leavings in a bucket for the hogs.
Mama and I left the men to smoke in the dining room while we went out to smoke on the gallery. There’s nothing sillier than this segregated after dinner smoking, particularly as this is the time when all the interesting things get said. I know, because once when I was ten I hid in the china cabinet, and boy, what I didn’t hear!
The stars were flung all over the sky and just blazing away and I had to sit there through two cigarettes fending off Mama’s questions about Jerry. Finally she said, “I do wish your father were alive,” which meant she gave up.
“Now where did Walter get this Youth Restorative?” I asked.
“Ah, that,” she said with a sigh. “You know, Annabelle, you couldn’t have picked a worse time to bring a guest home. Particularly one we know almost nothing about. I’ve written Ada Sue in Jackson to find out what the Prices are like, but I haven’t heard from her yet and Jerry’s in there listening to all that talk and I’m not sure that Walter will remember to be discreet.”
A Handful of Time Page 10