The Artificial Nigger--Flannery O'Conner
Mr. Head awakened to discover that the room was full of moonlight. He sat up and stared at the floor boards—the color of silver—and then at the ticking on his pillow, which might have been brocade, and after a second, he saw half of the moon five feet away in his shaving mirror, paused as if it were waiting for his permission to enter. It rolled forward and cast a dignifying light on everything. The straight chair against the wall looked stiff and attentive as if it were awaiting an order and Mr. Heads trousers, hanging to the back of it, had an almost noble air, like the garment some great man had just flung to his servant; but the face on the moon was a grave one. It gazed across the room and out the window where it floated over the horse stall and appeared to contemplate itself with the look of a young man who sees his old age before him.
Mr. Head could have said to it that age was a choice
blessing and that only with years
does a man enter into that calm
understanding of life that makes him a suitable guide for the young. This, at
least, had been his own experience.
He sat up and grasped the iron posts at the foot of his bed and raised himself until he could see the face on the alarm clock which sat on an overturned bucket beside the chair. The hour was two in the morning. The alarm on the clock did not work but he was not dependent on any mechanical means to awaken him. Sixty years had not dulled his responses; his physical reactions, like his moral ones, were guided by his will and strong character, and these could be seen plainly in his features. He had a long tube-like face with a long rounded open jaw and a long depressed nose. His eyes were alert but quiet, and in the miraculous moonlight they had a look of composure and of ancient wisdom as if they belonged to one of the great guides of men. He might have been Vergil summoned in the middle of the night to go to Dante, or better, Raphael, awakened by a blast of God’s light to fly to the side of Tobias. The only dark spot in the room was Nelson’s pallet, underneath the shadow of the window.
Nelson was hunched over on his side, his knees under his chin and his heels under his bottom.
His new suit and hat were in the boxes that they
had been sent in and these were on the floor at the foot of the pallet where he
could get his hands on them as soon as he woke up. The slop jar, out of the
shadow and made snow-white in the moonlight, appeared to stand guard over him
like a small personal angel. Mr. Head lay back down, feeling entirely confident
that he could carry out the moral
mission of the coming day. He meant to be up before Nelson and to have the
breakfast cooking by the time he awakened. The boy was always irked when Mr.
Head was the first up. They would have to leave the house at four to get to the
railroad junction by five-thirty. The train was to stop for them at five forty-five and they had to be there
on time for this train was stopping
merely to accommodate them.
This would be the boy’s first trip to the city though he claimed it would be his second because he had been born there. Mr. Head had tried to point out to him that when he was born he didn’t have the intelligence to determine his whereabouts but this had made no impression on the child at all and he continued to insist that this was to be his second trip. It would be Mr. Head’s third trip. Nelson had said, “I will’ve already been there twict and I ain’t but ten.”
Mr. Head had contradicted him.
“If you ain’t been there in fifteen years, how you know you’ll be able to find your way about?” Nelson had asked. “How you know it hasn’t changed some?”
“Have you ever,” Mr. Head had asked, “seen me lost?”
Nelson certainly had not but he was a child who was never satisfied until he had given an impudent answer and he replied, “It’s nowhere around here to get lost at.”
“The day is going to come,” Mr. Head prophesied, “when
you’ll find you ain’t as smart as you think you are.” He had been thinking
about this trip for several months but it was for the most part in moral terms that he conceived it. It was to be a lesson that the boy would never forget. He was to find out from it that he had no cause for pride merely because he had been born in a city. He was to find out that the city is not a
great place. Mr. Head meant him to see everything there is to see in a city so
that he would be content to stay at home for the rest of his life. He fell
asleep thinking how the boy would at last find out that he was not as smart as
he thought he was.
He was awakened at
three-thirty by the smell of fatback frying and he leaped off his cot. The
pallet was empty and the clothes boxes had been thrown open. He put on his
trousers and ran into the other room. The boy had a corn pone on cooking and
had fried the meat. He was sitting in the half-dark at the table, drinking cold
coffee out of a can. He had on his new suit and his new gray hat pulled low
over his eyes. It was too big for him but they had ordered it a size large
because they expected his head to grow.
He didn’t say anything but his entire figure suggested satisfaction at having
arisen before Mr. Head.
Mr. Head went to the stove and brought the meat to the
table in the skillet. “It’s no hurry,” he said. “You’ll get there soon enough
and it’s no guarantee you’ll like it when you do neither,” and he sat down across from the boy whose hat
teetered back slowly to reveal a fiercely expressionless face, very much the
same shape as the old man’s. They were grandfather and grandson but they looked
enough alike to be brothers and brothers not too far apart in age, for Mr. Head
had a youthful expression by daylight,
while the boy’s look was ancient, as if he knew everything
already and would be pleased to forget it.
Mr. Head had once had a wife and daughter and when the wife died, the daughter ran away and returned after an interval with Nelson. Then one morning, without getting out of bed, she died and left Mr. Head with sole care of the year-old child. He had made the mistake of telling Nelson that he had been born in Atlanta. If he hadn’t told him that, Nelson couldn’t have insisted that this was going to be his second trip.
“You may not like it a bit,” Mr. Head continued. “It’ll be full of niggers.” The boy made a face as if he could handle a nigger.
“All right,” Mr. Head said. “You ain’t ever seen a nigger.”
“You wasn’t up very early,” Nelson said.
“You ain’t
ever seen a nigger,” Mr. Head repeated. “There hasn’t been a nigger in this
county since we run that one out twelve years ago and that was before you were
born.” He looked at the boy as if he were daring him to say he had ever seen a
Negro.
“How you know I never saw a nigger when I lived there before?”
Nelson asked. “I probably saw a lot of niggers.”
“If you seen one you didn’t
know what he was,” Mr. Head said,
completely exasperated. “A six-
month-old child don’t know a nigger from anybody else.”
“I reckon I’ll know a nigger if I see one,” the boy said and got up and straightened his slick sharply creased gray hat and went outside to the privy.
They reached the junction some
time before the train was due to arrive and stood about two feet from the first
set of tracks. Mr. Head carried a paper sack with some biscuits and a can of
sardines in it for their lunch. A
coarse-looking orange-colored sun coming up behind the east range of mountains was making the sky a
dull red behind them, but in front of them it was still gray and they faced a
gray transparent moon, hardly stronger than a thumbprint and completely without
light. A small tin switch box and a black fuel tank were all there was to mark
the place as a junction; the tracks were double and did not converge again
until they were hidden behind the bends at either end of the clearing. Trains
passing appeared to emerge from a tunnel of trees and, hit for a second by the
cold sky, vanish terrified into the woods again. Mr. Head had had to make
special arrangements with the ticket agent to have this train stop and he was
secretly afraid it would not, in which case he knew Nelson would say, “I never
thought no train was going to stop for you.” Under the useless morning moon the
tracks looked white and fragile. Both the old man and the child stared ahead as
if they were awaiting an apparition.
Then suddenly, before Mr. Head
could make up his mind to turn back, there was a deep warning bleat and the train appeared, gliding very
slowly, almost silently around the
bend of trees about two hundred yards down the track, with one yellow front
light shining. Mr. Head was still not certain it would stop and he felt it would make an even bigger idiot of him if
it went by slowly.
Both he and Nelson,
however, were prepared
to ignore the train if it passed them.
The engine charged by, filling their noses with the smell
of hot metal and then the second coach came to a stop exactly where they were
standing. A conductor with the face of an ancient bloated bulldog was on the
step as if he expected them, though he did not look as if it mattered one way
or the other to him if they got on or not. “To the right,” he said.
Their entry took only a fraction of
a second and the train was already speeding on as they entered the quiet car. Most of the
travelers were still sleeping, some with their heads hanging off the chair arms, some stretched across two
seats, and some sprawled out with their feet in the aisle. Mr. Head saw two unoccupied seats and pushed Nelson
toward them. “Get in there by the winder,” he said in his normal voice which
was very loud at this hour of the morning. “Nobody cares if you sit there
because it’s nobody in it. Sit right there.”
“I heard you,” the boy muttered. “It’s no use in you yelling,” and
he sat down and turned his head to the glass. There he saw a pale
ghost-like face scowling at him beneath the brim of a pale ghost-like hat. His
grandfather, looking quickly too, saw a different ghost, pale but grinning,
under a black hat.
Mr. Head sat down and settled
himself and took out his ticket and started reading aloud everything that was printed on it. People began to stir.
Several woke up and stared at him. “Take off your hat,” he said to Nelson and took off his own and put it
on his knee. He had a small amount of white hair that had turned
tobacco-colored over the years and this lay flat across the back of his head.
The front of his head was bald and creased. Nelson took off his hat and put it
on his knee and they waited for the conductor to come ask for their tickets.
The man across the aisle from them
was spread out over two seats, his feet propped on the window and his head
jutting into the aisle. He had on a light blue suit and a yellow shirt
unbuttoned at the neck. His eyes had just opened and Mr. Head was ready to
introduce himself when the conductor came up from behind and growled,
“Tickets.”
When the conductor had gone, Mr. Head gave Nelson the return half of his ticket and said, “Now put that in your pocket and don’t lose it or you’ll have to stay in the city.”
“Maybe I will,” Nelson said as if this were a reasonable suggestion.
Mr. Head ignored him. “First time this boy has ever been on a train,” he explained to the man across the aisle, who was sitting up now on the edge of his seat with both feet on the floor.
Nelson jerked his hat on again and turned angrily to the window.
“He’s never seen anything
before,” Mr. Head continued. “Ignorant as the day he was born, but I mean for
him to get his fill once and for all.”
The boy leaned forward, across
his grandfather and toward the stranger. “I was born in the city,” he said. “I
was born there. This is my second trip.” He said it in a high positive voice
but the man across the aisle didn’t look
as if he understood. There were heavy purple circles under his eyes.
Mr. Head reached across the aisle and tapped him on the
arm. “The thing to do with a boy,” he said sagely, “is to show him all it is to
show. Don’t hold nothing back.”
“Yeah,” the man said. He gazed down at his swollen feet
and lifted the left one about ten inches from the floor. After a minute he put
it down and lifted the other. All through the car people began to get up and
move about and yawn and stretch. Separate voices could be heard here and there
and then a general hum. Suddenly Mr. Head’s serene
expression changed. His mouth
almost closed and a light, fierce
and cautious both, came into his eyes. He was looking down the length of the car. Without turning, he caught Nelson by
the arm and pulled him forward. “Look,” he said.
A huge coffee-colored man was coming slowly forward. He had on a light suit and
a yellow satin tie with a ruby pin in it. One of his hands rested on his stomach
which rode majestically under his buttoned coat, and
in the other he held the head of a black walking stick that he picked
up and set down with a deliberate
outward motion each time he took a step. He was proceeding very slowly, his large brown eyes gazing
over the heads of the passengers. He had a small white mustache and white
crinkly hair. Behind him there were two young women, both coffee-colored, one
in a yellow dress and one in a
green. Their progress was kept at the rate of his and they chatted in low
throaty voices as they followed him.
Mr. Head’s grip was tightening
insistently on Nelson’s arm. As the procession passed them, the light from a
sapphire ring on the brown hand that picked up the cane reflected in Mr. Head’s
eye, but he did not look up nor did the tremendous man look at him. The group
proceeded up the rest of the aisle and out of the car. Mr. Head’s grip on Nelson’s arm loosened. “What was that?” he
asked.
“A man,” the boy said and gave him an indignant look as if he were tired of having his intelligence insulted.
“What kind of a man?” Mr. Head persisted, his voice expressionless.
“A fat man,” Nelson said. He was beginning to feel that he had better be cautious.
“You don’t know what kind?” Mr. Head said in a final tone.
“An old man,” the boy said and had a sudden foreboding that he was not going to enjoy the day.
“That was a nigger,” Mr. Head said and sat back.
Nelson jumped up on the seat and stood looking backward to
the end of the car but the Negro had gone.
“I’d of thought you’d know a nigger since you seen so many when you was in the city on
your first visit,” Mr. Head
continued. “That’s his first
nigger,” he said to the man across the
aisle.
The boy slid down into the seat. “You said they were
black,” he said in an angry voice. “You never
said they were tan. How do you expect me to know anything when you don’t tell me right?”
“You’re just ignorant is all,” Mr. Head said and he got up
and moved over in the vacant seat by the man across the aisle.
Nelson turned backward again and looked where the Negro
had disappeared. He felt that the Negro had deliberately walked down the aisle
in order to make a fool of him and he hated him with a fierce raw fresh hate; and also, he understood now why
his grandfather disliked them. He looked toward the window and the face there seemed to suggest that he
might be inadequate to the day’s exactions. He wondered if he would even recognize the city when they came
to it.
After he had
told several stories, Mr. Head
realized that the man he was talking
to was asleep and he got up and suggested to Nelson that they walk over the
train and see the parts of it. He particularly wanted the boy to see the toilet
so they went first to the men’s room and examined the plumbing. Mr. Head demonstrated
the icewater cooler as if he had invented it and showed Nelson the bowl with
the single spigot where the travelers brushed their teeth. They went through
several cars and came to the diner.
This was the most elegant car in the train. It was painted
a rich egg-yellow and had a wine- colored carpet on the floor. There were wide
windows over the tables and great spaces of the rolling view were caught in
miniature in the sides of the coffee pots and in the glasses. Three very black
Negroes in white suits and aprons were running up and down the aisle, swinging
trays and bowing and bending over the travelers eating breakfast. One of them
rushed up to Mr. Head and Nelson and said, holding up two fingers, “Space for
two!” but Mr. Head replied in a loud voice, “We eaten before we left!”
The waiter wore large brown spectacles that increased the size of his eye whites. “Stan’ aside then please,” he said with an airy wave of the arm as if he were brushing aside flies.
Neither Nelson nor Mr. Head moved a fraction of an inch. “Look,” Mr. Head said.
The near corner of the diner, containing two tables, was
set off from the rest by a saffron- colored curtain. One table was set but empty
but at the other, facing them, his back to the drape, sat the
tremendous Negro. He was speaking in a soft voice to the two women while he
buttered a muffin. He had a heavy sad face and his neck bulged over his white
collar on either side. “They rope them off,” Mr. Head explained. Then he said,
“Let’s go see the kitchen,” and they walked the length of the diner but the black
waiter was coming fast behind them.
“Passengers are not allowed in the kitchen!” he said in a
haughty voice. “Passengers are NOT allowed in the kitchen!”
Mr. Head stopped where he was and turned. “And there’s
good reason for that,” he shouted into the Negro’s chest, “because the
cockroaches would run the passengers out!”
All the travelers laughed and Mr. Head and Nelson walked
out, grinning. Mr. Head was known at home for his quick wit and Nelson felt a
sudden keen pride in him. He realized the old man would be his only support in
the strange place they were approaching. He would be entirely alone in the
world if he were ever lost from his grandfather. A terrible excitement shook
him and he wanted to take hold of Mr. Head’s coat and hold on like a child.
As they went back to their seats they could see through the passing windows that the countryside was becoming speckled with small houses and shacks and that a highway ran alongside the train. Cars sped by on it, very small and fast. Nelson felt that there was less breath in the air than there had been thirty minutes ago. The man across the aisle had left and there was no one near for Mr. Head to hold a conversation with so he looked out the window, through his own reflection, and read aloud the names of the buildings they were passing. “The Dixie Chemical Corp!” he announced. “Southern Maid Flour! Dixie Doors! Southern Belle Cotton Products! Patty's Peanut Butter! Southern Mammy Cane Syrup!”
“Hush up!” Nelson hissed.
All over the car people were beginning to get up and take
their luggage off the overhead racks. Women were putting on their coats and
hats. The conductor stuck his head in the car and snarled, “Firstopppppmry,”
and Nelson lunged out of his sitting position, trembling. Mr. Head pushed him
down by the shoulder.
“Keep your seat,” he said in dignified tones. “The first
stop is on the edge of town. The second stop is at the main railroad station.”
He had come by this knowledge on his first trip when he had got off at the
first stop and had had to pay a man fifteen cents to take him into the heart of
town. Nelson sat back down, very pale. For the first time in his life, he
understood that his grandfather was indispensable to him.
The train stopped and let off
a few passengers and glided on as if it had never ceased moving. Outside,
behind rows of brown rickety houses, a line of
blue buildings stood up, and
beyond them a pale rose-gray sky
faded away to nothing. The train moved into the railroad yard. Looking down,
Nelson saw lines and lines of silver tracks multiplying and criss-crossing.
Then before he could start counting
them, the face in the window started out at him, gray but distinct, and he
looked the other way. The train was in the station. Both he and Mr. Head jumped
up and ran to the door.
Neither noticed that they had left the paper sack with
the lunch in it on the seat.
They walked stiffly through the small station and came out of a heavy door into the squall of traffic. Crowds were hurrying to work. Nelson didn’t know where to look. Mr. Head leaned against the side of the building and glared in front of him.
Finally Nelson said, “Well, how do you see what all it is to see?”
Mr. Head didn’t answer. Then
as if the sight of people passing had given him the clue, he said, “You walk,”
and started off down the street.
Nelson followed, steadying his hat. So many sights and sounds were flooding in on him that for the first block he
hardly knew what he was seeing. At the second corner, Mr. Head turned and
looked behind him at the station they had left, a putty- colored terminal with
a concrete dome on top. He thought that if he could keep the dome always in
sight, he would be able to get back in the afternoon to catch the train again.
As they walked along, Nelson began to distinguish details
and take note of the store windows, jammed with every kind of
equipment—hardware, drygoods, chicken feed, liquor. They passed one that Mr.
Head called his particular attention to, where you walked in and sat on a chair
with your feet upon two rests and let a Negro polish your shoes. They walked
slowly and stopped and stood at the entrances so he could see what went on in
each place but they did not go into any of them. Mr. Head was determined not to
go into any city store because, on his first trip here, he had got lost in a
large one and had found his way out only after many people had insulted him.
They came in the middle of the next block to a store that
had a weighing machine in front of it and they both in turn stepped up on it
and put in a penny and received a ticket. Mr. Head’s ticket said, “You weigh
120 pounds. You are upright and brave and all your friends admire you.” He put
the ticket in his pocket, surprised that the machine should have got his
character correct but his weight wrong, for he had weighed on a grain scale not
long before and knew he weighed 110.
Nelson’s ticket
said, “You weigh 98 pounds. You have a great destiny ahead of you but beware of
dark women.” Nelson did not know any women and he weighed only 68 pounds but
Mr. Head pointed out that the machine had probably printed the number
upsidedown, meaning the 9 for a 6.
They walked
on and at the end of five blocks the dome of the terminal sank out of sight and
Mr. Head turned to the left. Nelson could have stood in front of every store
window for an hour if there had not been another more interesting one next to it. Suddenly he said, “I was born
here!” Mr.
Head turned and looked at him with horror. There was a sweaty brightness
about his face. “This is where I come from!” he said.
Mr. Head was appalled. He saw the moment had come for drastic action.
“Lemme show you one thing you ain’t
seen yet,” he said and took him to the corner where there was a sewer entrance.
“Squat down,” he said, “and stick you head in there,” and he held the back of
the boy’s coat while he got down and
put his head in the sewer. He drew it back quickly, hearing a gurgling in the
depths under the sidewalk. Then Mr. Head explained the sewer system, how the
entire city was underlined with it, how it
contained all the drainage and was full of rats and how a man could slide into it and be sucked along down endless
pitchblack tunnels. At any minute any man in the city might be sucked into the
sewer and never heard from again. He described it so well that Nelson for some
seconds shaken. He connected the sewer passages
with the entrance to hell and
understood for the first time how
the world was put together in its lower parts. He drew away from the
curb.
Then he said, “Yes, but you can stay away from the holes,”
and his face took on that stubborn look that was so exasperating to his
grandfather. “This is where I come from!” he said.
Mr. Head was dismayed but he only muttered, “You’ll get your fill,” and they walked on. At the end of two more blocks he turned to the left, feeling that he was circling the dome; and he was correct for in a half-hour they passed in front of the railroad station again. At first Nelson did not notice that he was seeing the same stores twice but when they passed the one where you put your feet on the rests while the Negro polished your shoes, he perceived that they were walking in a circle.
“We done been here!” he shouted. “I don’t believe you know where you’re at!”
“The direction just slipped my mind for a minute,” Mr.
Head said and they turned down a different street.
He still did not intend to let the dome get too
far away and after two blocks in their new direction, he turned to the left. This street
contained two- and three-story wooden dwellings. Anyone passing on the sidewalk
could see into the rooms and Mr. Head, glancing through one window, saw a woman lying on an iron bed, looking
out, with a sheet pulled over her. Her knowing expression shook him. A fierce-looking
boy on a bicycle came driving down out of nowhere and he had to jump to the
side to keep from being hit. “It’s nothing to them if they knock you down,” he
said. “You better keep closer to me.”
They walked on for some time on streets like this before
he remembered to turn again. The houses they were passing now were all unpainted and the wood in them
looked rotten; the street between was narrower. Nelson saw a colored man. Then another. Then
another. “Niggers live in these houses,” he observed.
“Well come on and we’ll go somewheres else,” Mr. Head said. “We didn’t come to look at niggers,” and they turned down another street but they continued to see Negroes everywhere. Nelson’s skin began to prickle and they stepped along at a faster pace in order to leave the neighborhood as soon as possible. There were colored men in their undershirts standing in the doors and colored women rocking on the sagging porches. Colored children played in the gutters and stopped what they were doing to look at them. Before long they began to pass rows of stores with colored customers in them but they didn’t pause at the entrances of these. Black eyes in black faces were watching them from every direction.
“Yes,” Mr. Head said, “this is where you were born—right here with all these niggers.”
Nelson scowled. “I think you done got us lost,” he said.
Mr. Head swung around sharply and looked for the dome. It was nowhere in sight. “I ain’t got us lost either,” he said. “You’re just tired of walking.”
“I ain’t tired, I’m hungry,” Nelson said. “Give me a biscuit.” They discovered then that they had lost the lunch.
“You were the one holding the sack,” Nelson said. “I would have kepaholt of it.”
“If you want to direct this trip, I’ll go on by myself and leave you right here,”
Mr. Head said and was pleased to see the boy turn white. However, he realized
they were lost and drifting farther every
minute from the station. He was hungry himself and beginning to be thirsty and
since they had been in the colored neighborhood, they had both begun to sweat.
Nelson had on his shoes and he was unaccustomed to them. The concrete sidewalks
were very hard. They both wanted to find a place to sit down but this was
impossible and they kept on walking, the boy muttering under his breath, “First
you lost the sack and then you lost the way,” and Mr. Head growling from time
to time, “Anybody wants to be from this nigger heaven can be from it!”
By now the sun was well forward in the sky. The odor of dinners cooking drifted out to them. The Negroes were all at their doors to see them pass. “Whyn’t you ast one of these niggers the way?” Nelson said. “You got us lost.”
“This is where you were born,” Mr. Head said. “You can ast one yourself if you want to.”
Nelson was afraid of the colored men and he didn’t want to
be laughed at by the colored children. Up ahead he saw a large colored woman
leaning in a doorway that opened onto the sidewalk. Her hair stood straight out
from her head for about four inches all around and she was resting on bare
brown feet that turned pink at the sides. She had on a pink dress that showed
her exact shape. As they came abreast of her, she lazily lifted one hand to her
head and her fingers disappeared into her hair.
Nelson stopped. He felt his
breath drawn up by the woman’s dark eyes. “How
do you get back to town?” he said in a voice that did not sound like his
own.
After a minute she said, “You in town now,” in a rich low tone that made Nelson feel as if a cool spray had been turned on him.
“How do you get back to the train?” he said in the same reedlike voice. “You can catch you a car,” she said.
He understood she was making
fun of him but he was too paralyzed even to scowl. He stood drinking in every
detail of her. His eyes traveled up from her great knees to her forehead and
then made a triangular path from the glistening sweat on her neck down and
across her tremendous bosom and over her bare arm back to where her fingers lay
hidden in her hair. He suddenly wanted her to reach down and pick him up and
draw him against her and then he wanted to feel her breath on his face. He
wanted to look down and down into her eyes while she held him tighter and
tighter. He had never had such a feeling before. He felt as if he were reeling
down through a pitchblack tunnel.
“You can go a block down yonder
and catch you a car take you to the railroad station, Sugarpie,” she said.
Nelson would have collapsed at
her feet if Mr. Head had not pulled him roughly away. “You act like you don’t
have any sense!” the old man growled.
They hurried down the street and Nelson did not look back
at the woman. He pushed his hat sharply forward over his face which was already
burning with shame. The sneering ghost he had seen in the train window and all the foreboding feelings he had on
the way returned to him and he remembered that his ticket from the scale had
said to beware of dark women and that his grandfathers had said he was upright
and brave. He took hold of the old mans hand, a sign of dependence that he
seldom showed.
They headed down the street
toward the car tracks where a long yellow rattling trolley was coming. Mr. Head
had never boarded a streetcar and he let that one pass. Nelson was silent. From
time to time his mouth trembled slightly but his grandfather, occupied with his
own problems, paid him no attention.
They stood on the corner and neither looked at the Negroes who were passing,
going about their business just as if they had been white, except that most of
them stopped and eyed Mr. Head and Nelson. It occurred to Mr. Head that since
the streetcar ran on tracks, they could simply follow the tracks. He gave
Nelson a slight push and explained that they would follow the tracks on into
the railroad station, walking, and they set off.
Presently to their great
relief they began to see white people again and Nelson sat down on the sidewalk
against the wall of a building. “I got to rest myself some,” he said. “You lost
the sack and the direction. You can just wait on me to rest myself.”
“There’s the tracks in front of us,” Mr. Head said. “All we got to do is keep them in sight and you could have remembered the sack as good as me. This is where you were born. This is your old home town. This is your second trip. You ought to know how to do,” and he squatted down and continued in this vein but the boy, easing his burning feet out of his shoes, did not answer.
“And standing there grinning like a chim-pan-zee while a nigger woman gives you directions. Great Gawd!” Mr. Head said.
“I never said I was nothing but born here,” the boy said in a shaky voice. “I never said I would or wouldn’t like it. I never said I wanted to come. I only said I was born here and I never had nothing to do with that. I want to go home. I never wanted to come in the first place. It was all your big idea. How you know you ain’t following the tracks in the wrong direction?”
This last had occurred to Mr. Head too. “All these people are white,” he said.
“We ain’t passed here before,”
Nelson said. This was a neighborhood of brick buildings that might have been
lived in or might not. A few empty automobiles were parked along the curb and
there was an occasional passerby.
The heat of the pavement came up through Nelson’s thin suit. His
eyelids began to droop, and after a few minutes his head tilted forward. His
shoulders twitched once or twice and then he fell over on his side and lay sprawled in an exhausted fit of sleep.
Mr. Head watched him silently. He was very tired himself but they could not both sleep at the same time and he could not have slept anyway because he did not know where he was. In a few minutes Nelson would wake up, refreshed by his sleep and very cocky, and would begin complaining that he had lost the sack and the way. You’d have a mighty sorry time if I wasn’t here, Mr. Head thought; and then another idea occurred to him. He looked at the sprawled figure for several minutes; presently he stood up. He justified what he was going to do on the grounds that it is sometimes necessary to teach a child a lesson he won’t forget, particularly when the child is always reasserting his position with some new impudence. He walked without a sound to the corner about twenty feet away and sat down on a covered garbage can in the alley where he could look out and watch Nelson wake up alone.
The boy was dozing fitfully, half conscious of vague noises and black forms moving up from some dark part of him into the light. His face worked in his sleep and he had pulled his knees up under his chin. The sun shed a dull dry light on the narrow street; everything looked like exactly what it was. After a while Mr. Head, hunched like an old monkey on the garbage can lid, decided that if Nelson didn’t wake up soon, he would make a loud noise by bamming his foot against the can. He looked at his watch and discovered that it was two o’clock. Their train left at six and the possibility of missing it was too awful for him to think of. He kicked his foot backwards on the can and a hollow boom reverberated in the alley.
Nelson shot up onto his feet with a shout. He looked where his grandfather should have been and stared. He seemed to whirl several times and then, picking up his feet and throwing his head back, he dashed down the street like a wild maddened pony. Mr. Head jumped off the can and galloped after but the child was almost out of sight. He saw a streak of gray disappearing diagonally a block ahead. He ran as fast as he could, looking both ways down every intersection, but without sight of him again. Then as he passed the third intersection, completely winded, he saw about half a block down the street a scene that stopped him altogether. He crouched behind a trash box to watch and get his bearings.
Nelson was sitting with both legs spread out and by his side lay an elderly woman, screaming.
Groceries were scattered about the sidewalk. A crowd of women had already gathered to see justice done and Mr. Head distinctly heard
the old woman on the pavement shout, “You’ve broken my ankle and your daddy’ll
pay for it! Every nickel! Police! Police!” Several of the women were plucking
at Nelson’s shoulder but the boy seemed too dazed to get up.
Something forced Mr. Head from behind the trash box and
forward, but only at a creeping pace. He had never in his life been accosted by
a policeman. The women were milling around Nelson as if they might suddenly
all dive on him at once
and tear him to pieces, and the old woman continued to scream that her ankle
was broken and to call for an officer. Mr. Head came on so slowly that he could
have been taking a backward step after each forward one, but when he was about
ten feet away, Nelson saw him and sprang. The child caught him around the hips
and clung panting against him.
The women all turned on Mr. Head. The injured one sat up
and shouted, “You sir! You’ll pay every penny of my doctor’s bill that your boy
has caused. He’s a juvenile delinquent! Where is an officer? Somebody take this
man’s name and address!”
Mr. Head was trying to detach Nelson’s fingers from the flesh in the back of his legs. The old man’s head had lowered itself into his collar like a turtle’s; his eyes were glazed with fear and caution.
“Your boy has broken my ankle!” the old woman shouted. “Police!”
Mr. Head sensed the approach of the policeman from behind. He stared straight ahead at the women who were massed in their fury like a solid wall to block his escape. “This is not my boy,” he said. “I never seen him before.”
He felt Nelson’s fingers fall out of his flesh.
The women dropped back, staring at him with horror, as if
they were so repulsed by a man who would deny his own image and likeness that
they could not bear to lay hands on him. Mr. Head walked on, through a space
they silently cleared, and left Nelson behind. Ahead of him he saw nothing but
a hollow tunnel that had once been the street.
The boy remained standing where he
was, his neck craned forward and his hands hanging by his sides. His hat was
jammed on his head so that there were no longer any creases in it. The injured
woman got up and shook her fist at him and the others gave him pitying looks,
but he didn’t notice any of them. There was no policeman in sight.
In a minute he began to move mechanically, making no
effort to catch up with his grandfather but merely following at about twenty
paces. They walked on for five blocks in this way. Mr.
Head’s
shoulders were sagging and his neck hung forward at such an angle that it was
not visible from behind. He was afraid to turn his head. Finally he cut a short
hopeful glance over his shoulder. Twenty feet behind him, he saw two small eyes
piercing into his back like pitchfork prongs.
The boy was not of a forgiving nature but this was the first time he had ever had anything to forgive. Mr. Head had never disgraced himself before. After two more blocks, he turned and called over his shoulder in a high desperately gay voice, “Let’s us go get us a Co’ Cola somewheres!”
Nelson, with a dignity he had never shown before, turned and stood with his back to his grandfather.
Mr. Head began to feel the depth of his denial. His face
as they walked on became all hollows and bare ridges. He saw nothing they were
passing but he perceived that they had lost the car tracks. There was no dome
to be seen anywhere and the afternoon was advancing. He knew that if dark overtook them in the city,
they would be beaten and robbed. The speed of God’s justice was only what he
expected for himself, but he could not stand to think that his sins would be
visited upon Nelson and that even now, he was leading the boy to his doom.
They continued to walk on block after block through an
endless section of small brick houses until Mr. Head almost fell over a water
spigot sticking up about six inches off the edge of a grass plot. He had not
had a drink of water since early morning but he felt he did not deserve it now.
Then he
thought that Nelson would be thirsty and they would both drink and be brought
together. He squatted down and put his mouth to the nozzle and turned a cold
stream of water into his throat. Then he called out in the high desperate
voice, “Come on and getcher some water!”
This time the child stared through him for nearly sixty
seconds. Mr. Head got up and walked on as if he had drunk poison. Nelson,
though he had not had water since some he had drunk out of a paper cup on the
train, passed by the spigot, disdaining to drink where his grandfather had.
When Mr. Head realized this, he lost all hope. His face in the waning afternoon
light looked ravaged and abandoned. He could feel the boy’s steady hate,
traveling at an even pace behind him and he knew that (if by some miracle they
escaped being murdered in the city) it would continue just that way for the
rest of his life. He knew that now he was wandering into a black strange place
where nothing was like it had ever been before, along old age without respect
and an end that would be welcome because it would be the end.
As for Nelson, his mind had frozen around his
grandfather’s treachery as if he were trying to preserve it intact to present
at the final judgment. He walked without looking to one side or the other, but every now and then his mouth would twitch and this was when
he felt, from some remote place
inside himself, a black mysterious form reach up as if it would melt his frozen
vision in one hot grasp.
The sun dropped down behind a row of houses and hardly
noticing, they passed into an elegant suburban section where mansions were set
back from the road by lawns with birdbaths on them. Here everything was
entirely deserted. For blocks they didn’t pass even a dog. The big white houses
were like partially submerged icebergs in the distance. There were no
sidewalks, only drives, and these wound around and around in endless ridiculous
circles. Nelson made no move to come nearer to Mr. Head. The old man felt that
if he saw a sewer entrance he would drop down into it and let himself be
carried away; and he could imagine the boy standing by, watching with only a
slight interest, while he disappeared.
A loud bark jarred him to
attention and he looked up to see a fat man approaching with two bulldogs. He
waved both arms like someone shipwrecked on a desert island. “I’m lost!” he
called. “I’m lost and can’t
find my way and me and this boy have got to catch this train and I can’t
find the station. Oh Gawd I’m lost! Oh hep me Gawd I’m lost!”
The man,
who was bald-headed and had on golf knickers, asked him what train he was
trying to catch and Mr. Head began to get out his tickets, trembling so
violently he could hardly hold them. Nelson had come up to within fifteen feet
and stood watching.
“Well,” the fat man said, giving him back the tickets,
“you won’t have time to get back to town to make this but you can catch it at
the suburb stop. That’s three blocks from here,” and he began explaining how to
get there.
Mr. Head stared as if he
were slowly returning from the dead
and when the man had finished and
gone off with the dogs jumping at his heels, he turned to Nelson and said
breathlessly, “We’re going to get home!”
The child was standing about
ten feet away, his face bloodless under the gray hat. His eyes were
triumphantly cold. There was no light
in them, no feeling, no interest. He was merely there, a small figure, waiting. Home was nothing to him.
Mr. Head turned slowly. He felt
he knew now what time would be like without seasons and what heat would be
like without light
and what man would be like without salvation. He didn’t care if he never made the train and if it had
not been for what suddenly caught his attention, like a cry out of the
gathering dusk, he might have forgotten there was a station to go to.
He had not walked five hundred
yards down the road when he saw, within reach of him, the plaster figure of a
Negro sitting bent over on a low yellow brick fence that curved around a wide
lawn. The Negro was about Nelson’s size and he was pitched forward at an
unsteady angle because the putty that held him to the wall had cracked. One of
his eyes was entirely white and he held a piece of brown watermelon.
Mr. Head stood looking at him silently until Nelson
stopped at a little distance. Then as the two of them stood there, Mr. Head
breathed, “An artificial nigger!”
It was not possible to tell if the artificial Negro were meant to be young or old; he looked too miserable to be either. He was meant to look happy because his mouth was stretched up at the corners but the chipped eye and the angle he was cocked at gave him a wild look of misery instead.
“An artificial nigger!” Nelson repeated in Mr. Head’s exact tone.
The two of them stood there
with their necks forward at almost the same angle and their shoulders curved in
almost exactly the same way and their hands trembling identically in their
pockets. Mr. Head looked like an ancient child and Nelson like a miniature old
man. They stood gazing at the artificial Negro as if they were faced with some
great mystery, some monument to another’s victory that brought them together in
their common defeat. They could both feel it dissolving their differences like
an action of mercy. Mr. Head had never known before what mercy felt like because he had been too good to
deserve any, but he felt he knew now. He looked at Nelson and
understood that he must say
something to the child to show that he was still wise and in the look the boy returned he saw a
hungry need for that assurance. Nelson’s eyes seemed to implore him to explain
once and for all the mystery of existence.
Mr. Head opened his lips to make
a lofty statement and heard himself say, “They ain’t got enough real ones here.
They got to have an artificial one.”
After a second, the boy nodded with a strange shivering
about his mouth, and said, “Let’s go home before we get ourselves lost again.”
Their train glided into the suburb stop just as they
reached the station and they boarded it together, and ten minutes before it was
due to arrive at the junction, they went to the door and stood ready to jump off if it did not stop; but it did, just as
the moon, restored to its full splendor, sprang from a cloud and flooded the
clearing with light. As they stepped off, the sage grass was shivering gently
in shades of silver and the clinkers under their feet glittered with a fresh
black light. The treetops, fencing the junction like the protecting walls of a
garden, were darker than the sky which was hung with gigantic white clouds
illuminated like lanterns.
Mr. Head stood very still
and felt the action of mercy
touch him again but this time he knew that there were no
words in the world that could name it. He understood that it grew out of agony which is not denied to any
man and which is given in strange ways to children. He understood it was all a man could carry into death to
give his Maker and he suddenly burned with shame that he had so little of it to
take with him. He stood appalled, judging himself with the thoroughness of God, while the action of mercy covered his
pride like a flame and consumed it. He had never thought himself a great sinner
before but he saw now that his true depravity had been hidden from him lest it
cause him despair. He realized that he was forgiven for sins from the beginning
of time, when he had conceived in his own heart the sin of Adam, until the
present, when he had denied poor
Nelson. He saw that no sin was too monstrous for him to claim as his own, and
since God loved in proportion as He forgave, he felt ready at that instant to
enter Paradise.
Nelson, composing his
expression under the shadow of his hat brim, watched him with a mixture of
fatigue and suspicion, but as the train glided past them and disappeared like a
frightened serpent into the woods, even his face lightened and he muttered, “I’m
glad I’ve went once, but I’ll never go back again!”
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