JOHN KESSEL
EVERY ANGEL IS TERRIFYING
John Kessel's most recent novel is Corrupting Dr.
Nice, and his most recent
story collection is The Pure Product. other current projects o[
his include an
audio play produced by the Seeing Ear Theater (http://www. scifi,
com/set/originals),
and in serving as literary executor for the late Lawrence S.
Rudner he edited the latter's
last novel, Memory's Tailor.
A good man, Flannery O'Connor taught us, is hard to find. But
where does one
begin to look? Within...or beyond?
RAILROAD WATCHED BOBBY Lee grab the
grandmother's body under the armpits and
drag her up the other side of the ditch. "Whyn't
you help him, Hiram," he said.
Hiram took off his coat, skidded down into the ditch after
Bobby Lee, and got
hold of the old lady's legs. Together he and Bobby Lee lugged her across
the
field toward the woods. Her broken blue hat was still pinned to her head, which
lolled
against Bobby Lee's shoulder. The woman's face grinned lopsidedly all the
way into the
shadow of the trees.
Railroad carried the cat over to the Studebaker. It occurred to him
that he
didn't know the cat's name, and now that the entire family was dead he never
would.
It was a calico, gray striped with a broad white face and an orange nose.
"What's your
name, puss-pussy." he whispered, scratching it behind the ears. The
cat purred. One by one
Raftroad went round and rolled up the windows of the car.
A fracture zigzagged across the
windshield, and the front passenger's vent
window was shattered. He stuffed Hiram's coat
into the vent window hole. Then he
put the cat inside the car and shut the door. The cat
put its front paws up on
the dashboard and, watching him, gave a pantomime meow.
Railroad
pushed up his glasses and stared off toward the woodline where Bobby
Lee and Hiram had
taken the bodies. The place was hot and still, silence broken
only by birdsong from
somewhere up the embankment behind him. He squinted up
into the cloudless sky. Only a
couple of hours of sun left. He rubbed the spot
on his shoulder where the grandmother had
touched him. Somehow he had wrenched
it when he jerked away from her.
The last thing the
grandmother had said picked at him: "You're one of my own
children." The old lady had
looked familiar, but she didn't look anything like
his mother. But maybe his father had
sown some wild oats in the old days --
Railroad knew he had -- could the old lady have been
his mother, for real? It
would explain why the woman who had raised him, the sweetest of
women, could
have been saddled with a son as bad as he was.
The idea caught in his head. He
wished he'd had the sense to ask the grandmother
a few questions. The old woman might have
been sent to tell him the truth.
When Hiram and Bobby Lee came back, they found Railroad
leaning under the hood
of the car.
"What we do now, boss?" Bobby Lee asked.
"Police could be
here any minute," Hiram said. Blood was smeared on the leg of
his khaki pants. ,'Somebody
might of heard the shots."
Railroad pulled himself out from under the hood. "Onliest thing
we got to worry
about now, Hiram, is how we get this radiator to stop leaking. You find a
tire
iron and straighten out this here fan. Bobby Lee, you get the belt own the other
car."
It took longer than the half hour Hiram had estimated to get the people's
Studebaker back
on the road. By the time they did it was twilight, and the
red-dirt road was cast in the
shadows of the pinewoods. They pushed the stolen
Hudson they'd been driving off into the
trees and got into the studebaker.
Railroad gripped the wheel of the car and they bounced
down the dirt road toward
the main highway. Hat pushed back on his head, Hiram went through
the dead man's
wallet, while in the back seat Bobby Lee had the cat on his lap and was
scratching
it under the chin. "Kitty-kitty-kitty-kitty-kitty," he murmured.
"Sixty-eight dollars,"
Hiram said. "With the twenty-two from the wife's purse,
that makes ninety bucks." He turned
around and handed a wad of bills to Bobby
Lee. "Get rid of that damn eat," he said. "Want
me to hold yours for you?" he
asked Railroad.
Railroad reached over, took the bills, and
stuffed them into the pocket of the
yellow shirt with bright blue parrots that had belonged
to the husband who'd
been driving the car. Bailey Boy, the grandmother had called him.
Railroad's
shoulder twinged.
The car shuddereds the wheels had been knocked out of kilter
when it rolled. If
he tried pushing past fifty, it would shake itself right off the road.
Railroad
felt the warm weight of his pistol inside his belt, against his belly. Bobby Lee
hummed tunelessly in the back seat. Hiram was quiet, fidgeting, looking out at
the dark
trees. He tugged his battered coat out of the vent window, tried to
shake some of the
wrinkles out of it. "You oughtn't to use a man's coat without
saying to him," he grumbled.
Bobby Lee spoke up. "He didn't want the cat to get away."
Hiram sneezed. "Will you throw
that damn animal out the damn window?"
"She never hurt you none," Bobby Lee said.
Railroad
said nothing. He had always imagined that the world was slightly
unreal, that he was meant
to be the citizen of some other place. His mind was a
box. Outside the box was that world
of distraction, amusement, annoyance. Inside
the box his real life went on, the struggle
between what he knew and what he
didn't know. He had a way of acting-- polite, detached--
because that way he
wouldn't be bothered. When he was bothered, he got mad. When he got
mad, bad
things happened.
He had always been prey to remorse, but now he felt it more fully
than he had
since he was a boy. He hadn't paid enough attention. He'd pegged the old lady
as
a hypocrite and had gone back into his box, thinking her just another fool from
that
puppet world. But that moment of her touching him -- she'd wanted to
comfort him. And he
shot her.
What was it the old woman had said? "You could be honest if you'd only try ....
Think how wonderful it would be to settle down and live a comfortable life and
not have to
think about somebody chasing you all the time."
He knew she was only saying that to save
her life. But that didn't mean it
couldn't also be a message.
Outside the box, Hiram asked,
"What was all that yammet yammet with the
grandmother about Jesus? We doing all the killing
while you yammer yammer."
"He did shoot the old lady," Bobby Lee said.
"And made us carry
her off to the woods, when if he'd of waited she could of
walked there like the others.
We're the ones get blood on our clothes."
Railroad said quietly, "You don't like the way
things are going, Son?"
Hiram twitched against the seat like he was itchy between the
shoulder blades.
"I ain't sayin' that. I just want out of this state."
"We going to Atlanta.
In Atlanta we can get lost."
"Gonna get me a girl!" Bobby Lee said.
"They got more cops in
Atlanta than the rest of the state put together," Hiram
said. "In Florida .... "
Without
taking his eyes off the road, Railroad snapped his right hand across the
bridge of Hiram's
nose. Hiram jerked, more startled than hurt, and his hat
tumbled off into the back seat.
Bobby Lee laughed, and handed Hiram his hat.
IT WAS after 11:00 when they hit the outskirts
of Atlanta. Railroad pulled into
a diner, the Sweet Spot, red brick and an
asbestos-shingled roof, the air
smelling of cigarettes and pork barbecue. Hiram rubbed some
dirt from the lot
into the stain on his pants leg. Railroad unlocked the trunk and found
the dead
man's suitcase, full of clothes. He carried it in with them.
On the radio sitting
on the shelf behind the counter, Kitty Wells sang "It
Wasn't God Who Made Honky-Tonk
Angels." Railroad studied the menu, front and
back, and ordered biscuits and gravy. While
they ate Bobby Lee ran on about
girls, and Hiram sat sullenly smoking. Railroad could tell
Hiram was getting
ready to do something stupid. He didn't need either of them anymore. So
after
they finished eating, Railroad left the car keys on the table and took the
suitcase
into the men's room. He locked the door. He pulled his .38 out of his
waistband, put it on
the sink, and changed out of the too-tight dungarees into
some of the dead husband's baggy
trousers. He washed his face and hands. He
cleaned his glasses on the tail of the parrot
shirt, then tucked in the shirt.
He stuck the .38 into the suitcase and came out again.
Bobby Lee and Hiram were
gone, and the car was no longer in the parking lot. The bill on
the table, next
to Hiram's still smoldering cigarette, was for six dollars and eighty
cents.
Railroad sat in the booth drinking his coffee. In the window of the diner, near
the
door, a piece of cardboard had been taped up, saying, "WANTED: FRY COOK."
When he was done
with the coffee, he untaped the sign and headed to the
register. After he paid the bill he
handed the cashier the sign. "I'm your man,"
he said.
The cashier called the manager. "Mr.
Cauthron, this man says he's a cook."
Mr. Cauthron was maybe thirty-five years old. His
carrot red hair stood up in a
pompadour like a rooster's comb, and a little belly swelled
out over his belt.
"What's your name?"
"Lloyd Bailey."
"Lloyd, what experience do you have?"
"I can cook anything on this here menu," Railroad said.
The manager took him back to the
kitchen. "Stand aside, Shorty," the manager
said to the tall black man at the griddle. "Fix
me a Denver omelet," he said to
Railroad.
Railroad washed his hands, put on an apron, broke
two eggs into a bowl. He threw
handfuls of chopped onion, green pepper, and diced ham into
a skillet. When the
onions were soft, he poured the beaten eggs over the ham and
vegetables, added
salt and cayenne pepper. When he slid the finished omelet onto a plate,
the
manager bent down over it as if he were inspecting the paint job on a used car.
He
straightened up. "Pay's thirty dollars a week. Be here at six in the
morning."
Out in the
lot Railroad set down his bag and looked around. Cicadas buzzed in
the hot city night.
Around the comer from the diner he'd noticed a big Victorian
house with a sign on the
porch, "Rooms for Rent." He was about to start walking
when, out of the comer of his eye,
he caught a movement by the trash barrel next
to the chain link fence. He peered into the
gloom and saw the cat trying to leap
up to the top to get at the garbage. He went over,
held out his hand. The cat
didn't run; it sniffed him, butted its head against his hand.
He picked it up, cradled it under his arm, and carried it and the bag to the
rooming house.
Under dense oaks, it was a big tan clapboard mansion with green
shutters and hanging
baskets of begonias on the porch, and a green porch swing.
The thick oval leaded glass of
the oak door was beveled around the edge, the
brass of the handle dark with age.
The door
was unlocked. His heart jumped a bit at the opportunity it presented;
at the same time he
wanted to warn the proprietor against such foolishness. Off
to one side of the entrance was
a little table with a doily, vase and dried
flowers; on the other a sign beside a door
said, "manager."
Railroad knocked. After a moment the door opened and a woman with the face
of an
angel opened it. She was not young, perhaps forty, with very white skin and
blonde
hair. She looked at him, smiled, saw the cat under his arm. "What a sweet
animal," she
said.
"I'd like a room," he said.
"I'm sorry. We don't cater to pets," the woman said, not
unkindly.
"This here's no pet, Ma'm," Railroad said. "This here's my only friend in the
world."
The landlady's name was Mrs. Graves. The room she rented him was twelve feet by
twelve
feet, with a single bed, a cherry veneer dresser, a wooden table and
chair, a narrow
closet, lace curtains on the window, and an old pineapple quilt
on the bed. The air smelled
sweet. On the wall opposite the bed was a picture in
a dime store frame, of an empty
rowboat floating in an angry gray ocean, the sky
overcast, only a single shaft of sunlight
in the distance from a sunset that was
not in the picture.
The room cost ten dollars a week.
Despite Mrs. Graves's role against pets, like
magic she took a shine to Railroad's cat. It
was almost as if she'd rented the
room to the cat, with Railroad along for the ride. After
some consideration, he
named the cat Pleasure. She was the most affectionate animal he had
ever seen.
She wanted to be with him, even when he ignored her. She made him feel wanted;
she made him nervous. Railroad fashioned a cat door in the window of his room so
that
Pleasure could go out and in whenever she wanted, and not be confined to
the room when
Railroad was at work.
The only other residents of the boarding house were Louise Parker, a
school
teacher, and Charles Foster, a lingerie salesman. Mrs. Graves cleaned Railroad's
room
once a week, swept the floors, alternated the quilt every other week with a
second one done
in a rose pattern that he remembered from his childhood. He
worked at the diner from six in
the morning, when Maisie, the cashier, unlocked,
until Shorty took over at three in the
afternoon. The counter gift was Betsy,
and Service, a Negro boy, bussed tables and washed
dishes. Railroad told them to
call him Bailey, and didn't talk much.
When he wasn't working,
Railroad spent most of his time at the boarding house,
or evenings in a small nearby park.
Railroad would take the Bible from the
drawer in the boarding house table, buy an afternoon
newspaper, and carry them
with him. Pleasure often followed him to the park. She would
lunge after
squirrels and shy away from dogs, hissing sideways. Cats liked to kill
squirrels,
and dogs liked to kill cats. But there was no sin in it. Pleasure
would not go to hell, or
heaven. Cats had no souls.
The world was full of stupid people like Bobby Lee and Hiram,
who lied to
themselves and killed without knowing why. Life was a prison. Turn to the
right,
it was a wall. Turn to the left, it was a wall. Look up it was a ceiling, look
down
it was a floor. And Railroad had taken out his imprisonment on others; he
was not deceived
in his own behavior.
Railroad did not believe in sin, but somehow he felt it. Still, he was
not a dog
or a cat, he was a man. You're one of my own children. There was no reason why
he had to kill people. He only wished he'd never have to deal with any Hirams
and Bobby
Lees anymore. He gazed across the park at the Ipana toothpaste sign
painted on the wall of
the Piggly Wiggly. Whiter than white. Pleasure crouched
at the end of the bench, her
haunches twitching as she watched a finch hop
across the sidewalk.
Railroad picked her up,
rubbed his cheek against her whiskers. "Pleasure, I'll
tell you what," he whispered. "Let's
make us a deal. You save me from Bobby Lee
and Hiram, and I'll never kill anybody again."
The cat looked at him with its clear yellow eyes.
Railroad sighed. He put the cat down. He
leaned back on the bench and opened the
newspaper. Beneath the fold on the front page he
read,
ESCAPED CONVICTS KILLED IN WRECK
VALDOSTA -- Two escaped convicts and an unidentified
female passenger were
killed Tuesday when the late model stolen automobile they were
driving struck a
bridge abutment while being pursued by State Police.
The deceased convicts,
Hiram Leroy Burgert, 31, and Bobby Lee Ross, 21, escaped
June 23 while being transported to
the State Hospital for the Criminally Insane
for psychological evaluation. A third escapee,
Ronald Reuel Pickens, 47, is
still at large.
THE LUNCH RUSH was petering out. There were two
people at the counter and four
booths were occupied, and Railroad had set a BLT and an
order of fried chicken
with collards up on the shelf when Maisie came back into the kitchen
and called
the manager. "Police wants to talk to you, Mr. C."
Railroad peeked out from
behind the row of hanging order slips. A man in a suit
sat at the counter, sipping sweet
tea. Cauthron went out to talk to him.
"Two castaways on a raft," Betsy called to Railroad.
The man spoke with Cauthron for a few minutes, showed him a photograph. Cauthron
shook his
head, nodded, shook his head again. They laughed. Railroad eyed the
back door of the diner,
but turned back to the grill. By the time he had the
toast up and the eggs fried, the man
was gone. Cauthron stepped back to his
office without saying anything.
At the end of the
shift he pulled Railroad aside. "Lloyd," he said. "I need to
speak with you."
Railroad
followed him into the cubbyhole he called his office. Cauthron sat
behind the cluttered
metal desk and picked up a letter from the top layer of
trash. "I just got this here note
from Social Security saying that number you
gave is not valid." He looked up at Railroad,
his china blue eyes unreadable.
Railroad took off his glasses and rubbed the bridge of his
nose with his thumb
and forefinger. He didn't say anything.
"I suppose it's just some
mixup," Cauthron said. "Same as that business with the
detective this afternoon. Don't you
worry about it."
"Thank you, Mr. Cauthron."
"One other thing, before you go, Lloyd. Did I
say your salary was thirty a week?
I meant twenty-five. That okay with you?"
"Whatever you
say, Mr. Cauthron."
"And I think, in order to encourage trade, we'll start opening at five.
I'd like
you to pick up the extra hour. Starting Monday.
"Railroad nodded. "Is that all?"
"That's it, Lloyd." Cauthron seemed suddenly to enjoy calling Railroad "Lloyd,"
rolling the
name over his tongue and watching for his reaction. "Thanks for
being such a Christian
employee."
Railroad went back to his room in the rooming house. Pleasure mewed for him, and
when he sat on the bed, hopped into his lap. But Railroad just stared at the
picture of the
rowboat on the opposite wall. After a while the cat hopped onto
the window sill and out
through her door onto the roof.
Only a crazy person would use the knowledge that a man was
a murderer in order
to cheat that man out of his pay. How could he know that Railroad
wouldn't kill
him, or run away, or do both?
Lucky for Cauthron that Railroad had made his
deal with Pleasure. But now he
didn't know what to do. If the old lady's message was from
God, then maybe this
was his first test. Nobody said being good was supposed to be easy.
Nobody said,
just because Railroad was turning to good, everybody he met forever after
would
be good. Railroad had asked Pleasure to save him from Bobby Lee and Hiram, not
Mr.
Cauthron.
He needed guidance. He slid open the drawer of the table. Beside the Bible was
his .38. He flipped open the cylinder, checked to see that all the chambers were
loaded,
then put it back into the drawer. He took out the Bible and opened it at
random.
The first
verse his eyes fell on was from Deuteronomy: "These you may eat of all
that are in the
waters: you may eat all that have fins and scales. And whatever
does not have fins and
scales you shall not eat."
There was a knock at the door. Railroad looked up. "Yes?"
"Mr.
Bailey?" It was Mrs. Graves. "I thought you might like some tea."
Keeping his finger in the
Bible to mark his page, Railroad got up and opened the
door. Mrs. Graves stood there with a
couple of tall glasses, beaded with sweat,
on a tray.
"That's mighty kind of you, Miz
Graves. Would you like to come in?"
"Thank you, Mr. Bailey." She set the tray down on the
table, gave him a glass.
It was like nectar. "Is it sweet enough?"
"It's perfect, ma'm."
She
wore a yellow print dress with little flowers on it. Her every movement
showed a calm he
had not seen in a woman before, and her gray eyes exuded
compassion, as if to say, I know
who you are but that doesn't matter.
They sat down, he on the bed, she on the chair. She
saw the Bible in his hand.
"I find many words of comfort in the Bible."
"I can't say as I
find much comfort in it, ma'm. Too many bloody deeds."
"But many acts of goodness."
"You
said a true word."
"Sometimes I wish I could live in the world of goodness." She smiled.
"But this
world is good enough."
Did she really think that? "Since Eve ate the apple, ma'm,
it's a world of good
and evil. How can goodness make up for the bad? That's a mystery to
me."
She sipped her tea. "Of course it's a mystery. That's the point."
"The point is,
something's always after you, deserve it or not."
"What a sad thought, Mr. Bailey."
"Yes'm.
From minute to minute, we fade away. Only way to get to heaven is to
die."
AFTER MRS. GRAVES
left he sat thinking about her beautiful face. Like an angel.
Nice titties, too.
He would
marry her. He would settle down, like the grandmother said. But he
would have to get an
engagement ring. If he'd been thinking, he could have taken
the grandmother's ring-- but
how was he supposed to know when he'd killed her
that he was going to fall in love so soon?
He opened the dresser, felt among the dead man's clothes until he found the
sock, pulled
out his savings. It was only forty-three dollars.
The only help for it was to ask Pleasure.
Railroad paced the room. It was a long
time, and Railroad began to worry, before the cat
came back. The cat slipped
silently through her door, lay down on the table, simple as you
please, in the
wedge of sunlight coming in the window. Railroad got down on his knees, his
face
level with the table top. The cat went "Mrrph?" and raised its head. Railroad
gazed
into her steady eyes.
"Pleasure," he said. "I need to get an engagement ring, and I don't
have enough
money. Get one for me."
The cat watched him.
He waited for some sign. Nothing
happened.
Then, like a dam bursting, a flood of confidence flowed into him. He knew what
he would do.
The next morning he walked down to the Sweet Spot whistling. He spent much of
his shift imagining when and how he would ask Mrs. Graves for her hand. Maybe on
the porch
swing, on Saturday night? Or at breakfast some morning? He could leave
the ring next to his
plate and she would find it, with his note, when clearing
the table. Or he could come down
to her room in the middle of the night, and
he'd ram himself into her in the darkness, make
her whimper, then lay the
perfect diamond on her breast.
At the end of the shift he took a
beefsteak from the diner's refrigerator as an
offering to Pleasure. But when he entered his
room the cat was not there. He
left the meat wrapped in butcher paper in the kitchen
downstairs, then went back
up and changed into Bailey Boy's baggy suit. At the corner he
took the bus
downtown and walked into the first jewelry store he saw. He made the woman
show
him several diamond engagement rings. Then the phone rang, and when the woman
went to
answer it he pocketed a ring and walked out. No clerk in her right mind
should be so
careless, but it went exactly as he had imagined it. As easy as
breathing.
That night he had
a dream. He was alone with Mrs. Graves, and she was making
love to him. But as he moved
against her, he felt the skin of her full breast
deflate and wrinkle beneath his hand, and
he found he was making love to the
dead grandmother, her face grinning the same vacant grin
it had when Hiram and
Bobby Lee hauled her into the woods.
Railroad woke in terror. Pleasure
was sitting on his chest, her face an inch
from his, purring loud as a diesel. He snatched
the cat up in both hands and
hurled her across the room. She hit the wall with a thump,
then fell to the
floor, claws skittering on the hardwood. She scuttled for the window,
through
the door onto the porch roof.
It took him ten minutes for his heart to slow down,
and then he could not sleep.
Someone is always after you. That day in the diner, when
Railroad was taking a
break, sitting on a stool in front of the window fan sipping some ice
water,
Cauthron came out of the office and put his hand on his shoulder, the one that
still
hurt occasionally. "Hot work, ain't it boy?"
"Yessir." Railroad was ten or twelve years
older than Cauthron.
"What is this world coming to?" Maisie said to nobody in particular.
She had the
newspaper open on the counter and was scanning the headlines. "You read what it
says here about some man robbing a diamond ring right out from under the nose of
the clerk
at Merriam's Jewelry."
"I saw that already," Mr. Cauthron said. And after a moment, "White
fellow,
wasn't it?"
"It was," sighed Maisie. "Must be some trash from the backwoods. Some of
those
poor people have not had the benefit of a Christian upbringing."
"They'll catch him.
Men like that always get caught." Cauthron leaned in the
doorway of his office, arms
crossed above his belly. "Maisie," Cauthron said.
"Did I tell you Lloyd here is the best
short order cook we've had in here since
1947 The best white short order cook."
"I heard you
say that."
"I mean, makes you wonder where he was before he came here. Was he short order
cooking all round Atlanta? Seems like we would of heard, don't it? Come to
think, Lloyd
never told me much about where he was before he showed up that day.
He ever say much to
you, Maisie?"
"Can't say as I recall."
"You can't recall because he hasn't. What you say,
Lloyd? Why is that ?"
"No time for conversation, Mr. Cauthron."
"No time for conversation?
You carrying some resentment, Lloyd? We ain't paying
you enough?"
"I didn't say that."
"Because,
if you don't like it here, I'd be unhappy to lose the best white short
order cook I had
since 1947."
Railroad put down his empty glass and slipped on his paper hat. "I can't
afford
to lose this job. And, you don't mind my saying, Mr. Cauthron, you'd come to
regret
it if I was forced to leave."
"Weren't you listening, Lloyd? Isn't that what I just said?"
"Yes, you did. Now maybe we ought to quit bothering Maisie with our talk and get
back to
work."
"I like a man that enjoys his job," Cauthron said, slapping Railroad on the
shoulder
again. "I'd have to be suicidal to make a good worker like you leave.
Do I look suicidal,
Lloyd?"
"No, you don't look suicidal, Mr. Cauthron."
"I see Pleasure all the time going down
the block to pick at the trash by the
Sweet Spot," Mrs. Graves told him as they sat on the
front porch swing that
evening. "That cat could get hurt if you let it out so much. That is
a busy
street."
Foster had gone to a ball game, and Louise Parker was visiting her sister in
Chattanooga, so they were alone. It was the opportunity Railroad had been
waiting for.
"I
don't want to keep her a prisoner," he said. The chain of the swing creaked
as they rocked
slowly back and forth. He could smell her lilac perfume. The
curve of her thigh beneath her
print dress caught the light from the front room
coming through the window.
"You're a man
who has spent much time alone, aren't you," she said. "So
mysterious."
He had his hand in
his pocket, the ring in his fingers. He hesitated. A couple
walking down the sidewalk
nodded at them. He couldn't do it out here, where the
world might see. "Mrs. Graves, would
you come up to my room? I have something I
need to show you."
She did not hesitate. "I hope
there's nothing wrong."
"No, ma'm. Just something I'd like to rearrange."
He opened the door
for her and followed her up the stairs. The clock in the hall
ticked loudly. He opened the
door to his room and ushered her in, closed the
door behind them. When she turned to face
him he fell to his knees.
He held up the ring in both hands, his offering. "Miz Graves, I
want you to
marry me."
She looked at him kindly, her expression calm. The silence stretched.
She
reached out; he thought she was going to take the ring, but instead she touched
his
wrist. "I can't marry you, Mr. Bailey."
"Why not?"
"Why, I hardly know you."
Railroad felt
dizzy. "You could some time."
"I'll never marry again, Mr. Bailey. It's not you."
Not him.
It was never him, had never been him. His knees hurt from the hardwood
floor. He looked at
the ring, lowered his hands, clasped it in his fist. She
moved her hand from his wrist to
his shoulder, squeezed it. A knife of pain ran
down his arm. Without standing, he punched
Mrs. Graves in the stomach.
She gasped and fell back onto the bed. He was on her in a
second, one hand over
her mouth while he ripped her dress open from the neck. She
struggled, and he
pulled the pistol out from behind his back and held it to her head. She
lay
still.
"Don't you stop me, now," he muttered. He tugged his pants down and did what he
wanted.
How ladylike it was of her to keep so silent.
Much later, lying on the bed, eyes
dreamily focused on the light fixture in the
center of the ceiling, it came to him what had
bothered him about the
grandmother. She had ignored the fact that she was going to die.
"She would of
been a good woman, if it had been somebody there to shoot her every minute of
her life," he'd told Bobby Lee. And that was true. But then, for that last
moment, she
became a good woman. The reason was that, once Railroad convinced
her she was going to die,
she could forget about it. In the end, when she
reached out to him, there was no thought in
her mind about death, about the fact
that he had killed her son and daughter-in-law and
grandchildren and was soon
going to kill her. All she wanted was to comfort him. She didn't
even care if he
couldn't be comforted. She was living in that exact instant, with no memory
of
the past or regard for the future, out of the instinct of her soul and nothing
else.
Like
the cat. Pleasure lived that way all the time. The cat didn't know about
Jesus' sacrifice,
about angels and devils. That cat looked at him and saw what
was there.
He raised himself on
his elbows. Mrs. Graves lay very still beside him, her
blond hair spread across the
pineapple quilt. He felt her neck for a pulse.
It was dark night now: the whine of insects
in the oaks outside the window, the
rush of traffic on the cross street, drifted in on the
hot air. Quietly,
Railroad slipped out into the hall and down to Foster's room. He put his
ear to
the door and heard no sound. He came back to his own room, wrapped Mrs. Graves
in the
quilt and, as silently as he could, dragged her into his closet. He
closed the door.
Railroad
heard purring, and saw Pleasure sitting on the table, watching. "God
damn you. God damn you
to hell," he said to the cat, but before he could grab
her, the calico had darted out the
window.
HE FIGURED IT OUT. The idea of marrying Mrs. Graves had been only a stage in the
subtle revenge being taken on him by the dead grandmother, through the cat. The
wishes
Pleasure had granted were the bait, the nightmare had been a warning. But
he hadn't
listened.
He rubbed his sore shoulder. The old lady's gesture, like a mustardseed, had
grown
to be a great crow-filled tree in Railroad's heart.
A good trick the devil had played on
him. Now, no matter how he reformed
himself, he could not get rid of what he had done.
It
was hot and still, not a breath of air, as if the world were being smothered
in a fever
blanket. A milk-white sky. The kitchen of the Sweet Spot was hot as
the furnace of Hell;
beneath his shirt Railroad's sweat ran down to slick the
warm pistol slid into his belt.
Railroad was fixing a stack of buttermilk
pancakes when the detective walked in.
The
detective walked over to the counter and sat down on one of the stools.
Maisie was not at
the counter; she was probably in the ladies' room. The
detective took a look around, then
plucked a menu from behind the napkin holder
in front of him and started reading. On the
radio Hank Williams was singing "I'm
So Lonesome I Could Cry."
Quietly, Railroad untied his
apron and slipped out of the back door. In the
alley near the trash barrels he looked out
over the lot. He was about to hop the
chain link fence when he saw Cauthron's car stopped
at the light on the corner.
Railroad pulled out his pistol, crouched behind a barrel and
aimed at the space
in the lot where Cauthron usually parked. He felt something bump against
his
leg.
It was Pleasure. "Don't you cross me now," Railroad whispered, pushing the
animal
away.
The cat came back, put her front paws up on his thigh, purring.
"Damn you! You owe me,
you little demon!" he hissed. He let the gun drop, looked
down at the cat.
Pleasure looked
up at him. "Miaow?"
"What do you want! You want me to stop, do you? Then make it go away.
Make it so
I never killed nobody."
Nothing happened. It was just a fucking animal. In a
rage, he dropped the gun
and seized the cat in both hands. She twisted in his grasp,
hissing.
"You know what it's like to hurt in your heart?." Railroad tore open his shirt
and
pressed Pleasure against his chest. "Feel it! Feel it beating there!"
Pleasure squirmed and
clawed, hatching his chest with a web of scratches. "You
owe me! You owe me!" Railroad was
shouting now. "Make it go away!"
Pleasure finally twisted out of his grasp. The cat fell,
rolled, and scurried
away, running right under Cauthron's car as it pulled into the lot.
With a
little bump, the cat's left front tire ran over her.
Cauthron jerked the car to a
halt. Pleasure howled, still alive, writhing,
trying to drag herself away on her front
paws. Her back was broken. Railroad
looked at the fence, looked back.
He ran over to
Pleasure and knelt down. Cauthron got out of the car. Railroad
tried to pick up the cat,
but she hissed and bit him. Her sides fluttered with
rapid breathing. Her eyes clouded. She
rested her head on the gravel.
Railroad had trouble breathing. He looked up from his crouch
to see that Maisie
and some customers had come out of the diner. Among them was the
detective.
"I didn't mean to do that, Lloyd," Cauthron said. "It just ran out in front of
me." He paused a moment. "Jesus Christ, Lloyd, what happened to your chest ?"
Railroad
picked up the cat in his bloody hands. "Nobody ever gets away with
nothing," he said. "I'm
ready to go now."
"Go where?"
"Back to prison."
"What are you talking about ?"
"Me and Hiram
and Bobby Lee killed all those folks in the woods and took their
car. This was their cat."
"What people?"
"Bailey Boy and his mother and his wife and his kids and his baby."
The
detective pushed back his hat and scratched his head. "You all best come in
here and we'll
talk this thing over."
They went into the diner. Railroad would not let them take Pleasure
from him
until they gave him a corrugated cardboard box to put the body in. Maisie
brought
him a towel to wipe his hands, and Railroad told the detective, whose
name was Vernon Scott
Shaw, all about the State Hospital for the Criminally
Insane, and the hearse-like Hudson,
and the family they'd murdered in the
backwoods. Mostly he talked about the grandmother and
the cat. Shaw sat there
and listened soberly. At the end he folded up his notebook and
said, "That's
quite a story, Mr. Bailey. But we caught the people who did that killing, and
it
ain't you."
"What do you mean? I know what I done."
"Another thing, you don't think I'd
know if there was some murderer loose from
the penitentiary? There isn't anyone escaped."
"What were you doing in here last week, asking questions?"
"I was having myself some
pancakes and coffee."
"I didn't make this up."
"So you say. But seems to me, Mr. Bailey, you
been standing over a hot stove too
long."
Railroad didn't say anything. He felt as if his
heart was about to break.
Mr. Cauthron told him he might just as well take the morning off
and get some
rest. He would man the griddle himself. Railroad got unsteadily to his feet,
took the box containing Pleasure's body, and tucked it under his arm. He walked
out of the
diner.
He went back to the boarding house. He climbed the steps. Mr. Foster was in the
front
room reading the newspaper. "Morning, Bailey," he said. "What you got
there?"
"My cat got
killed."
"No! Sorry to hear that."
"You seen Miz Graves this morning?" he asked.
"Not yet."
Railroad climbed the stairs, walked slowly down the hall to his room. He
entered. Dust
motes danced in the sunlight coming through the window. The ocean
rowboat was no darker
than it had been the day before. He set the dead cat down
next to the Bible on the table.
The pineapple quilt was no longer on the bed;
now it was the rose. He reached into his
pocket and felt the engagement ring.
The closet door was closed. He went to it, put his
hand on the doorknob. He
turned it and opened the door.