MUTE MILTON
With ponderous smoothness the big Greyhound bus braked to a stop at the platform and the door swung open.
“Springville,” the driver called out. “Last stop!”
The passengers stirred in the aisle and climbed down the steps into the glare of the sun. Sam Morrison sat patiently, alone, on the wide rear seat, waiting until the last passengers were at the door before he put the cigar box under his arm, rose, and followed them. The glare of the sunlight blinded him after the tinted-glass dimness of the bus, and the moist air held the breathless heat of Mississippi summer. Sam went carefully down the steps one-at-a-time, watching his feet, and wasn’t aware of the man waiting there until something hard pushed at his stomach.
“What business yuh got in Springville, boy?”
Sam blinked through his steel-rimmed glasses at the big man in the gray uniform who stood before him, prodding him with a short, thick nightstick. He was fat as well as big, and the smooth melon of his stomach bulged out over his belt, worn low about his hips.
“Just passing through, sir,” Sam Morrison said and took his hat off with his free hand, disclosing his cut-short grizzled hair.
He let his glance slide across the flushed reddened face and the gold badge on the shirt before him, then lowered his eyes.
“An just where yuh goin’ to boy? Don’t keep no secrets from me …” the voice rasped again.
“Carteret, sir, my bus leaves in an hour.”
The only answer was an uncommunicative grunt. The leadweighted stick tapped on the cigar box under Sam’s arm. “What yuh got in there — a gun?”
“No, sir, I wouldn’t carry a gun.”
Sam opened the cigar box and held it out: it contained a lump of metal, a number of small electronic components and a two-inch speaker, all neatly wired and soldered together. “It’s a … a radio, sir.”
“Turn it on.”
Sam threw a switch and made one or two careful adjustments. The little speaker rattled and there was the squeak of tinny music barely audible above the rumble of bus motors. The red-faced man laughed.
“Now that’s what Ah call a real nigger radio … piece uh trash.”
His voice hardened again. “See that you’re on that bus, hear?”
“Yes, sir,” Sam said to the receding, sweat-stained back of the shirt, then carefully closed the box. He started toward the colored waiting room but when he passed the window and looked in he saw that it was empty. And there were no dark faces visible anywhere on the street. Without changing pace Sam passed the waiting room and threaded his way between the buses in the cinder parking lot and out of the rear gate. He had lived all of his sixty-seven years in the State of Mississippi so he knew at once that there was trouble in the air — and the only thing to do about trouble was to stay away from it. The streets became narrower and dirtier and he trod their familiar sidewalks until he saw a field-worker in patched overalls turn in to a doorway ahead under the weathered BAR sign. Sam went in after him; he would wait here until a few minutes before the bus was due.
“Bottle of Jax, please.”
He spread his coins on the damp, scratched bar and picked up the cold bottle. There was no glass. The bartender said nothing. After ringing up the sale he retired to a chair at the far end of the bar with his head next to the murmuring radio and remained there, dark and impenetrable. The only light came from the street outside, and the high-backed booths in the rear looked cool and inviting. There were only a few other customers here, each of them sitting separately with a bottle of beer on the table before him. Sam threaded his way through the close-spaced tables and had already started to slide into the booth near the rear door when he noticed that someone was already there, seated on the other side of the table.
“I’m sorry, I didn’t see you,” he said and started to get up, but the man waved him back onto the bench and took an airline bag with “TWA” on it from the table and put it down beside him.
“Plenty of room for both,” he said and raised his bottle of beer. “Here’s looking at you.”
Sam took a sip from his own bottle, but the other man kept drinking until he had drained half of his before he lowered it with a relaxed sigh. “That’s what I call foul beer,” he said.
“You seem to be enjoying it,” Sam told him, but his slight smile took the edge from his words.
“Just because it’s cold and wet — but I’d trade a case of it for a bottle of Bud or a Ballentine.”
“Then you’re from the North, I imagine?”
Sam had thought so from the way he talked, sharp and clipped. Now that his eyes were getting used to the dimness he could see that the other was a young man in his twenties with medium-dark skin, wearing a white shirt with rolled up sleeves. His face was taut and the frown wrinkles on his forehead seemed etched there.
“You are damned right, I’m from the North and I’m going back.:” He broke off suddenly and took another swig of beer. When he spoke again his voice was cautious. “Are you from these parts?”
“I was born not far from here, but right now I live in Carteret, just stopping off here between buses.”
“Carteret — that’s where the college is, isn’t it?”
“That is correct. I teach there.”
The younger man smiled for the first time. “That sort of puts us in the same boat. I go to NYU, majoring in economics.”
He put his hand out. “Charles Wright — everyone but my mother calls me Charlie.”
“Very pleased to meet you,” Sam said in his slow old fashioned way. “I am Sam Morrison, and it is Sam on my birth certificate too.”
“I’m interested in your college. I meant to stop in there but …”
Charles broke off suddenly at the sound of a car’s engine in the street outside and leaned forward so that he could see out the front door, remaining there until the car ground into gear and moved away. When Charles dropped back onto the seat Sam could see that there were fine beads of sweat in the lines of his forehead. He took a quick drink from his bottle.
“When you were at the bus station you didn’t happen to see a big cop with a big gut, red face all the time?”
“Yes, I met him, he talked to me when I got off the bus.”
“The bastard!”
“Don’t get worked up, Charles; he is just a policeman doing his job.”
“Just a…!”
The young man spat a short, filthy word. “That’s Brinkley, you must have heard of him, toughest man south of Bombingham. He’s going to be elected sheriff next fall and he’s already a Grand Knight of the Klan, a real pillar of the community.”
“Talking like that’s not going to do you any good,” Sam said mildly.
“That’s what Uncle Tom said — and as I remember he was still a slave when he died. Someone has got to speak up, you can’t remain quiet forever.”
“You talk like one of those Freedom Riders.” Sam tried to look stern, but he had never been very good at it.
“Well, I am one, if you want to know the truth of it, but the ride ends right here. I’m going home. I’m scared and I’m not afraid to admit it. You people live in a jungle down here; I never realize how bad it could be until I came down. I’ve been working on the voter’s committee and Brinkley got word of it and swore he was going to kill me or put me in jail for life. And you know what? I believe it. I’m leaving today, just waiting for the car to pick me up. I’m going back North where I belong.”
“I understand that you have your problems up there, too ….”
“Problems!” Charlie finished his beer and stood up. “I wouldn’t even call them problems after what I’ve seen down here. It’s no paradise in New York — but you stand a chance of living a bit longer. Where I grew up in South Jamaica we had it, rough, but we had our own house in a good neighborhood and — you take another beer?”