Authors: Charles Johnson
They held him for a long time, first at the station, then at an institution in Elgin, because when the police knocked on his door, discovered it open, then stepped inside, they found Juanita's three boys strangled in their beds and pieces of their mother distributed here and there throughout the apartment. When they told him, Smith wept in his cell. He swore he knew nothing about it. Twice he passed a polygraph test. They could not convict him of the crime, but they did send him to Elgin, where he worked sometimes in the kitchen, sometimes with other patients cleaning up the grounds around the hospital, and met with doctors who spent two years helping him patch together the broken pieces of his personality. When he was released, there was nowhere for him to go except to Vera Thomas, who gave him back his old room and accepted the little he could offer her from what he made doing odd jobs, here and there, on the South Side.
After a silence, Smith and King drew breath at the same instant. The minister let Smith speak first.
“Like I said, Reverend, I been tryin' like hell to get back on my feet, to do somethin' worthwhile with my life.”
“If we can achieve our goals for equality here, I think things will be better for you.”
“What if you don't?”
“Excuse me?” The minister scratched his cheek.
“I guess you think the Lord puts us all here with a definite purpose, don't you?”
“That's right. Everyone is equal in His eyes.”
“I don't see that.”
King was silent, perhaps uncertain of what to say, or so challenged by the sharpness of Smith's voice that his own thoughts were stilled.
“Sir, I
need
work. That's all I'm asking for. Right now I can't rub two dimes together. Problem is, there ain't too many places that'll hire me. But I figure there is maybe one thing I
can
do, if you're willin', and I been praying night and day you will be.”
“What is that?”
“I read that when you was in Montgomery you got over forty death threats a dayâis that so?”
“Yes,” the minister said, nodding, “and I still get them.”
“That woman who stabbed you? Weren't you signing books when that happened? The knife come within an inch of your heart, didn't it?”
“Yes.”
“I coulda been there instead of you,” said Smith.
“What?”
“When you go somewhere or leave a place, I could be there too, and if somebody's tryin' to hurt you, they won't know whichaway to turn. That's all I'm askin', that you let me do somethin'âmaybe the only thing in this worldâI
can
do.”
“No.” The minister stood up so suddenly the back of his legs sent his chair skidding a foot behind him. “Absolutely not. I could never agree to anything like that.”
Smith smiled bitterly. “Thought you might say that. You ain't the first person to turn me away. Or to take a shot at me 'cause I favor you so much.”
“What did you say?”
“I said I been catching hell since you come to Chicago.
Last week a couple of boys pushed me off the El platform.” Smith measured five inches between his forefinger and thumb. “I was 'bout
that
far from landin' on the third rail. Lots of people know where you're stayin' in town, but some don't. They see me and come to
my
place. Some of 'em tore up my room. Scared my landlady so much she's askin' me to leave. But where am I gonna go? Hell, I can't walk down the street or go to the store without somebody stoppin' me. Some of 'em spit in my face. That's colored as well as white. That's why I come here. I figure if I'm catchin' hell 'cause of you, I might's well catch it
for
you instead.”
“You've no place to stay?”
“Not after tomorrow.”
The minister made a sharp intake of breath. He rubbed the back of his neck, then paced back and forth in the kitchen, perhaps thinkingâas I had been all eveningâof that ancient Christian story of the couple who found a bedraggled old man at their door, invited him inside, fed and comforted him, and only after their guest left discovered he was the Nazarene. Finally King took his seat. “Would you all come here with me at the table? Mr. Smith has suffered much. I'd like to say a prayer for him.”
Amy and I sat down; she was to my left, the minister to my right, and Smith directly in front of me. We joined hands and closed our eyes. Looking back, I cannot recall the whole content of King's prayer, but it was appropriate, an affirmation that all, regardless of circumstance, were loved by the Lord. And I would not have opened my eyes before he'd finished, but I felt pressure beneath the table on my left foot, a gentle tapping like a lover's signal. Thinking this was Amy, hoping it was so, I let my lids blink open, and saw that Smith had never closed his eyes. He was staring at usâlike a fugitive peering at a comfortable bourgeois family through their window as they eat dinner, oblivious to his presenceâand on
his face was that unsettling smile as he critically scrutinized King, then Amy, who gripped his hand tightly (heaven knows what she was thinking). And then, tilting his head, tapping my foot again, he winked.
I felt my face stretch. I squeezed shut my eyes, but his afterimage burned in the space behind my lids long after the prayer was done.
King turned to Smith and said, “Could you step outside?”
After Smith left, the minister rubbed his forehead. “I swear to God, I don't know how to help this man, but I feel we should do something for him. What he proposes ⦠it's just too dangerous!”
“Sir,” I said, “it sounds like he's already a target. You might say his resemblance to you has marked him.”
“Yes, yes.” He kneaded his lower lip. “Amy, when your grandmother was here, did Mama Pearl say she grew up downstate?”
“Yes,” said Amy. “Her old house is there. It's empty. No one is living there now.”
“Could he stay there?”
“I guess so.”
“I'd like you and Matthew to stay with him, at least until the disturbance is over and we're finished here in Chicago. I want you to work with him. Get him back on his feet. Help him understand what the Movement's aboutâand have him sign the Commitment Blank.”
“What about you?” Amy asked. “Won't you need us here?”
“I think we'll be all right. We'll find somebody to replace you.” He stepped toward the kitchen door. Turning, he added, “I'll see that you're both compensated for this, of course,” and then he started toward the bedroom and stopped. “One other thing.”
“Yes, sir?”
“You keep that man away from my wife, you hear?”
I assured him we would not let Smith, who was still waiting outside, anywhere near his family. I walked down the hallway, opened the front door, and found our visitor sitting on the top step, smoking. Keeping a few feet between us, I said, “Chaym, it's okay. Doc's going to find something for you to do.” Cautiously, I smiled. “He thinks you might be able to help.”
“Yeah, and maybe I can do something special for you too. You interest me, Bishop. You've got promise.”
“For what?”
The only answer Smith gave was his mocking, mordant grin.
I swallowed with difficulty. When I spoke, my voice splintered, and he seemed to enjoy that. “I'll call you tomorrow with more details. Is that all right? I really do hope he gives you a job.”
“A job?” Now Smith was descending the first few steps into the shadows, his profile lighted in such a way that I could see only fragments of his face, like pieces of an unfinished puzzle, or a mask. “I don't want just a job, Bishop. Uh-uh. I want a li'l of what the good doctor in there has got in such great abundance.”
“What is that?”
Now I could see his face not at all, though I heard his shoes striking the lower stair treads, and from below, on the lightless levels where he stood, like a voice rising up beneath the ground, I thought I heard him say,
Immortality
.
Hours after his visitor left, he tried again to rest, knowing he should, not for himself but for the others who depended upon him being at his best. Lying awake, tossing and turning, he looked back on his life and saw only a gauntlet of work, ever more difficult exercises in giving. In the corner a dented fan clacked as its blades turned. He'd kicked his bedcovers onto the floor and sprawled on his back in teal-blue pajamas with gold piping on the placket and around the neck, hoping if he was motionless sleep might come. But his mind churned on. He squinted at the ceiling where he saw, in broken plaster, the face of the strange man who had shaken his certainty that all were equal in the eyes of the Lord. The words still echoed in the deepest coils of his ears. Words Smith had almost hissed, hurling them at him like stones and with such hurt that he, about to open his mouth in a parable, offering one of his standard
apothegms for suffering, stopped as if he'd been slapped. All his explanations were suspended, bracketed, and shimmering in their place was the ineluctable presence of this man who could have been his brother were it not for the fact that he appeared to be damned. Or fallen.
Yes, he could admit it now: their physical likeness frightened him. What were the chances of encountering a double for oneself? Yet there he'd been, as if his own father had spit them out one, two. Like that. And what had he wanted? A job as his decoy? My God, didn't he have enough trouble already? How strange it always was: someone standing before him, wanting something, and even more incredible than their desire was the belief that he could actually do something for them. (Things had reached a point where he even had to be careful how he complimented others in his letters because some would excerpt his praise, without his permission, in letters of reference.) In the apartment's close air, in the narrow hallway, in the kitchen, Smith's scent and vestigial spirit lingered, as if he'd subtly altered the flatânothing felt the same after his appearance. He'd retreated to the bedroom after the man left.
But it was not this feeling of displacement that now kept him awake, endlessly readjusting the lumpy pillow beneath his head. It was what Smith had said. The acuity, the clarity with which he'd dismissed “equality” and all that hallowed word implied. There in the predawn shadows, in the unveiling parenthesis into which Smith's coming placed his most cherished beliefs, he wondered if perhaps it was no more than a word, an abstraction, empty sound signifying nothing. A chimera at the Movement's core, in fact, the very centerpiece of Jefferson's magnificent declaration,
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.
Across America, from one platform and podium to the next, he'd sung that sacred principleâequalityâas his strongest, last best hope for
proclaiming that Americans could not live up to their bedrock ideals if Negroes were disenfranchised. Even his critics tipped lightly around this metaphysical trump card. Still a few tried, albeit timidly (so as not to seem like bigots), the casuists eager to point out that no two things in Nature were equal. Believing so, they said, was simply formulating sincerity (and sentimentality) into dogma. All right, he'd replied. Fine. On the face of things, Nature was unjust. Who could deny that? But in the realm of the spirit invoked by the Founders, in God, there were no defensible social distinctions, for all creatures great and small, black and white, were isomers of the divine Person. It was a shamelessly Platonic argument, he knew that, yet of its veracity he'd been so sure.
At least until now
.
He rolled to the side of the bed, the springs in his mattress squeaking; his fingers fumbled on the nightstand, then found his watch and cigarettes. The glowing, beryline numbers read 4:30. In an hour it would be daybreak. He knew that as soon as sunlight knifed through the windows he wouldn't sleep. After taking off his pajama top, moist and clammy and clinging to his body, he padded barefoot and barechested along the buckled, pewter-gray linoleum to the bathroom, sweat like a sprinkling of silver along his shoulders and chest. When he pulled the light bulb's chain, a cataract of black and brown cockroaches in the porcelain sink, on the walls, and in the tiny claw-footed bathtub scrambled away from the light. They fled behind the cabinet and into the cracks where floor and walls joined, some dragging translucent lunular eggs behind them. Instantly he felt ill. Since he'd moved into the flat they were in his food, his clothing, his luggage. One had crawled out of his suitcoat when he was in a meeting, dropping obscenely onto the papers spread before him at the conference table. Filthy things! he thought. A constant companion of the poor. When he was eight, his mother told him that where you
saw one, you could bet there were hundreds more hidden. All at once he was tempted to quash them into pulp with his fingers. But no. He pulled back, willing himself away from violence, remembering the holy men he'd seen one night in Kerala, the twig-broom-carrying Jain priests who killed nothing, ever, and swept in front of themselves as they walked so as not to harm creatures too small to see. They walked in these words:
Whatever it is, it is you.
No, as much as he might want to, he could not harm even these loathsome things without harming himself. The exercise of reining in his revulsion would do him good, he thought, maybe even make him thankful to something he hated for giving him the opportunity to work through his disgust. So he waited, taking long breaths to steady himself, watching them flee and wondering, until the last one disappeared, if Chaym awoke every day to a crawling bathroom like this.
He ran warm water (it seldom got cold) into his cupped hands, splashed it onto his face, and, looking up, peered at himself in the tiny cabinet mirror above the sink, experimentally touching his cheeks, his chin (he realized he needed to shave), and tracing two fingers across the length of his mustache. My face, he thought. And Chaym's. But in no other way than the somatic were they equal. In fact, they were like negatives of each other. He laughed, humorlessly. The idea of justice in his life and Chaym's was a joke. Not only was the distribution of wealth in society grossly uneven, he thought, but so was God-given talent. Beauty. Imagination. Luck. And the blessing of loving parents. They were the products of the arbitrariness of fortune. You could not say they were deserved.