“Or one long night. Or both. I’m not sure.”
“Very well. But don’t stay long.”
“All right.”
She wet her thumbs with her tongue and smoothed his eyebrows. He was going to town.
8
Mr. Arnold and Mr. Ryan were lying in bed watching Search for Tomorrow. A curtain was drawn around the third bed. It seemed best to wait for a commercial break before putting his question. When it came, he turned down the volume and spoke fast.
“Excuse me, but this is important.”
The two men gazed at him.
“YOU fellows want a job?”
They gazed at each other.
“I have some property and I want it developed right,” he said, talking fast, so he wouldn’t interfere with Search for Tomorrow. “I want well-built log cabins, enough land for privacy, and gardens, and at a price young couples, singles, and retired couples can afford. Not two hundred and fifty dollars maybe but less than twenty-five thousand. Mr. Ryan here has the know-how about financing, subdividing, contracting, and so forth. And he has the crew. Mr. Arnold has the building technique. What I want is for Mr. Arnold to work with Mr. Ryan’s crew and teach them how to notch up a cabin, perhaps with more modern methods. I have plenty of timber, creek rocks, and flagstone. I’ll handle the legal work. I figure we can build and sell cabins on ten acres of land and come out fine at twenty-five thousand.” The commercial was almost over. “What do you say?”
The two old men looked at each other.
“Whereabouts we going to live?” asked Mr. Arnold.
“Wherever you like. Here. Or Mr. Arnold could notch up a cabin for the two of you.”
“What, me live with that old peckerwood?” said Mr. Ryan.
“Hail fire,” said Mr. Arnold.
“Look, I don’t care where you live. I’m making you a proposition. This is a good deal all around. We’ll incorporate — that’s one thing I know how to do — and share the profits. What do you say? Mr. Ryan, can you still get a crew?”
“Slick, Tex, Tomás, and Vishnu came by to see me last week. All of them said they wished they still worked for me.”
“Two of them looked like gypsies, the other two looked like women,” said Mr. Arnold.
“They may look funny,” said Mr. Ryan, “but they can outwork niggers. How am I going to get around?” He slapped the flat sheet where his leg should have been. “I’m missing two feet and one leg.”
“Any way you can. You figure it out.”
“They make cars now you can drive with your hands,” said Mr. Ryan, answering his own question.
“There you go. The corporation can afford one,” said Will Barrett. “Mr. Arnold, are you willing to teach this crew what to do?”
“All they got to do is watch me and keep out of my way. What land we talking about?”
“The Kemp property, over by the country club.”
“There’s plenty of good timber there. All you got to do is keep me in logs — and somebody to pick up on one end.”
“You willing to use cement chinking instead of river clay and hog blood?” Mr. Ryan asked the silent TV screen. Neither of the men seemed to notice that Search for Tomorrow was playing without sound.
“I chinked a house on Dog Mountain with cement. Ain’t nothing wrong with cement. You just bring your boys and keep me in straight logs. We going to need some boys to get the roof up. It takes several to mortise and peg the peaks. I can’t climb no roof but I can show them how to split shingles and put the sap sides together. You going to need a forty-five-degree angle on your roof and a halfway lap to keep out leaks.”
“Your roof? Whose roof?” asked Mr. Ryan. “I’ll show you some composition roofing that comes by the roll,” Mr. Ryan told the TV, “but it looks real good. I think you’ll like it. It saves labor. You’re talking about splitting shingles by hand, I mean Jesus Christ.”
“It sounds like tar paper but I’ll look at it.”
It was a good time to leave. He turned up the volume on Search for Tomorrow.
There was a commotion around the third bed. The curtain was pulled back. Two orderlies were trying to get an old woman onto a hospital stretcher. The woman was sitting on the edge of the bed and crying. She was no larger than a child but her ankles, clad in men’s socks, were as thick as small trees. A great vessel moved in her neck in a complex out-of-sync throbbing. Her eyes were glossy and unblinking in her round heavy face. Tears ran down her cheek and caught in the dark down of her lip.
“Oh, I’m so afraid,” she said loudly with a little smile and a shrug. She pronounced afraid afred, like ladies in Memphis and Vicksburg.
“What you scared of, honey?” asked one orderly, a giant black woman big as an old black mammy but young.
“I’m afraid I’m never going to leave the hospital. Oh, I’m so afraid.”
“You be all right, honey,” said the black woman, her eyes absentminded, and put a black-and-pink hand on the patient’s swollen leg. “You gon be fine, bless Jesus.”
Will Barrett was standing at the foot of the bed.
“Oh, hello, Will,” said the patient with the same smile and shrug. “Oh, Will, I hate to leave here!”
“Yes, I know,” he said. “I—” Oh Lord, I am supposed to know her. Was she an aunt? No, but she was one of ten or twelve ladies from Memphis or Mississippi he should have recognized. He made as if to give the orderlies a hand.
As he came close to her, he could hear her heart, which raced and rumbled so hard it shook her thick body.
He took her arm. It was not necessary. The other orderly, a sorrel-colored man who wore his mustache and short-sleeved smock like Sugar Ray Robinson, picked up the woman and in one swift gentle movement swung her onto the stretcher. He was an old-style dude who still wore a conk! He chewed gum like Sugar Ray. Where did he come from? Beale Street twenty years ago? After he centered the woman on the stretcher (ah, I know what that feels like, to be taken care of by strong quick sure hands at one’s hips) and buckled the straps, Sugar Ray leaned close to her.
“Listen, lady, I’m gerng to tell you something.” (That was the difference between them, the two orderlies, that gerng, his slightly self-conscious uptown correction of the black woman.) “The doctors know what they know, but I have noticed something too. I can tell about people and I’m gerng to tell you. We taking you to the hospital in Asheville and we coming to get you Tuesday and bringing you back here and that’s the truth, ain’t that right, Rosie?” And he smiled, a brilliant white-and-gold Sugar Ray smile, yet his eyes had not changed because they didn’t have to. The patient couldn’t see his eyes.
“Sho,” said Rosie, her eye not quite meeting Sugar Ray’s eye and not quite winking. “You gon be fine, honey.”
“Ah,” said the patient and, closing her eyes, slumped against the straps like a baby in its harness.
Then how does it add up in the economy of giving and getting, he wondered, that the two orderlies cared nothing (or did they?) for the old woman, that even in the very act of their offhand reassurances to her they were probably cooking up something between themselves, that they, the orderlies, who had no reason to give her anything at all, gave it because it was so little to give and so much for her to get? 2¢ = $5? How?
Does goodness come tricked out so as fakery and fondness and carrying on and is God himself as sly?
In the hall he stood gazing after the three of them. Young big black mammy, Sugar Ray, and the sick woman, the great machinery of her heart socking away so hard at her neck, it made her nod perceptibly as if she understood and agreed, yes, yes, yes.