The Morning and the Evening

The Morning and the Evening

A Novel

Joan Williams

For My husband, EZRA BOWEN, and to BERTON ROUECHE, without whose help this book could not have been written.

Chapter One

The owner-manager was also the ticket seller and ticket taker and would have been his own projectionist, too, if labor regulations had not forced him to hire a licensed one. He did not take his first customer for a loony and tried to charge him full admission.

The man next in line said quietly, “He don't usually pay but half fare.”

The owner looked at his customer warily then; he did not look like a loony, was tall, thin, stoop-shouldered, with a weather-beaten face that seemed to know all about struggle and with eyes that looked as if he were thinking, even as if he were looking for something; they weren't empty, like the eyes of most loonies. The eyes were what fooled him.

He was hesitant: they might be trying to pull some kind of deal. You couldn't ever tell. He'd been taking his movie around in the back country for three years and didn't understand these people yet. Why'd they live in country like this, bother with the little they eked out of it?

Then the loony tried to say something, opened his mouth, and nothing came out except saliva. It drooled on his pink, hanging lip a minute, then ran down his chin and dropped onto his shirt when he moaned.

The owner followed the loony's eyes, and finally he took the thin sweaty dime out of his uncurled hand.

The loony hoisted up his overalls strap and went toward the tent. The owner looked after him, still wary: he'd had trouble with too many loonies after they got into the show. “How long's he been that way?” he said.

The man next in line looked at his wife. “Reckon 'bout forty years?” he said.

“Reckon so,” she said; “long's however old he is.”

The man turned back. “Reckon 'bout forty years,” he said.

The owner tore off two tickets, took the man's forty cents. “Think he's liable to cause any trouble?” he asked cautiously.

The man turned to his wife. “Don't reckon so, do you?” he said.

“No,” she said, still standing where she was. “Might just moan a little.”

“Naw, might jist moan a little,” said the man, going on toward the tent, his wife going along behind.

When he had filled all the campstools in the tent, lined the kids up around the sides, the owner told the rest to come back tomorrow night and went inside. Christ, it was stuffy and smelled. He walked along the little aisle left in the sawdust, feeling their eyes in the dark watching him expectantly. When he got to the small white screen set up in front, he turned. “Joe, a light,” he said.

The projection man at the back of the tent threw the spotlight on him, and a chorus of oh's rose from the crowd. The light came from behind a piece of cardboard with holes covered over by red and green and blue cellophane, so that it played across the owner's face like a rainbow. “Ain't that the berries,” he said, smiling out.

He could see only those sitting along the aisle where the light came; he noted where the loony sat—second aisle seat on the right. “Now, don't worry,” the owner said. “I'm not going to make a speech.” He paused and everybody laughed. “I just want to tell you how glad I am to be back here,” he went on, still smiling. “All the places I go, I tell that the finest folks I ever met are in Marigold, Mississippi, and from one summer till the next I look toward getting back here. So I just had to say these few words. Thank you all for coming, and I hope you like the show. Let 'er go, Joe,” he said, and went to sit down.

But the light didn't go off, it just kept on playing where his face had been, only now against the white, silent screen. Everybody waited. “Joe,” the owner said, wiping his forehead.

Finally somebody in the rear said, “He's outside smoking.”

“Well, couldn't you tell him to come in?” the owner said.

“Reckon so,” the voice said. The tent flap was lifted, and everybody looked at the thin blue line of twilight showing, commented on how no air came in. “The man says for you to come on in and get the picture started.”

A red glow showed against the blue, then Joe flipped away his cigarette and closed the flap. He cut off the spotlight, started the little black box whirring, and threw the movie beam where the spotlight beam had been. Only, he threw it too high. Black and white words slid across the tent top upside down, while thin jumpy music began to play. Everybody sat quietly; no one would laugh, except the owner himself. He jumped up from his seat toward the side, where he could keep an eye on things, laughing nervously. “Just a minute, folks, everything'll get straightened out,” he said, waving them back down as if someone had thought of leaving. It was quiet while the projection man clicked off the whirring, then started it again. The light beam came like sundust down the aisle, and the title and the thin music came from the screen this time. There was a rustle while everybody got settled (no one would move much after the picture started) and a steady drone of voices, reading off what the titles said to those who didn't know.

The owner went back and sat down. He leaned back into the dark and had himself a good quiet laugh. “Oh, my God,” he said to himself when he had finished and had taken out his handkerchief and was wiping his forehead. He'd seen the loony leaning way down off his campstool, almost on his head, watching the movie on the tent top.

Jake straightened up when the writing disappeared. He didn't know where it or the music had gone. No one else moved, so he sat quietly and folded his hands. He remembered the man who didn't want to take his dime, and saw him looking at him and laughing. So he grinned back. But the man's face went back into the dark. Then he heard the sound again, a whirring as a snake made when he tried to pick it up, and he looked for it on the tent top.

“There,” the thin little girl next to him whispered, and she put her hand on his face and pulled it down, pointed it frontward.

The unexpected touch of the hand coming out of the dark sent him bolt upright. He stared straight ahead at the words, without seeing them. Then he sat back, let himself feel again how the hand had felt: soft.

Softness he understood.

The dark, the movie, the people around were lost to him now while he was remembering softness. One thing at a time he could know.

Some things he had learned: repeated things. And some things he knew instinctively, animal-like: tones, touches, whether they were kind, or not.

The child's hand had touched him as his mother's did whenever he put his head in her lap and she held his face close. It touched him as his mother's had done when she gave him the dime.

He always wanted to hold hands when they touched him this way. But his mother had pulled back. “Now don't,” she had said. “Now don't.” When he tried to put his arm around her then, she had run, saying brokenly, “Oh, God, don't let him want to do that. Maybe you oughtn't to go. Naw, naw, you can go, don't cry.” She had followed him as far as the gate. “But don't touch nobody, Jake. Don't
touch
nobody,” she said all the time he was going down the road, as she had said so many times before.

Remembering, because it hadn't been too long, Jake did not try to find the hand in the dark now.

The movie music had begun softly at first, but now it came loud and thin, came to him slowly; then he began to listen, and there was nothing else. It came to him beautiful and sourceless and birdlike, filled the tent, and he heard it not with his ears, but way inside him. In the pit of his stomach he heard it and tasted with it his supper, the sour, warm taste of corn bread and buttermilk.

Then, as always when something moved him, the music began to creep up inside him, and he tightened his legs together. “Jake,” his mother had said before he left, “if you got to go, go outside behind a tree. Please, God, let him.”

He held himself rigid on the narrow campstool and continued to listen.

The music was in his chest now, hurting. It would move on up to his mouth, then it would be soundless—he knew. He knew he had to catch it before it was soundless. He waited in the dark for the right moment, while the music sang to him as the birds do before they fly away.

“Caw, caw,” the little boys would cry when Jake reached up after the birds. “I'm a bird, Jake. Catch
me
.”

The music rose, and it seemed to Jake soaring, going away. This was the moment, and he began to run after it, and it seemed so close he thought this time he had caught it. Then something held him and he turned, looked into the face he had seen before with colors on it, and the owner dragged him, pushed him into his seat roughly. “Stay down, Jake,” everyone called.

He felt the water running down his leg, but he sat still. The music had ceased, and he had forgotten it. He simply found himself, without surprise, sitting in the dark, as often he seemed to wake from a long sleep and find himself places, and he felt if he sat quietly long enough, it would come to him why he was there. But the small voice next to him soon whispered in his ear, “Look at the pictures.”

Then Jake became aware of the picture before him, and he looked at it, began to fit things together piecemeal: two men were on the white sheet; they were on horses; they held guns and pointed them in the air toward hills; one took off a big, wide hat, put it on again; they tied something over their faces. The men began to talk and Jake watched the movements of their mouths beneath the masks; he could tell when their mouths were opening and closing. He listened carefully, bent forward on his stool to hear them better.

He heard what they said, heard each one. One said something and he heard him distinctly; then the other said something and he heard him, but then he could not remember what the first had said. He started over again. He leaned forward more, watched and listened carefully to each man; would begin to think what one had said when the other would speak—and he turned his head quickly and began to think what
he
was saying. There was not enough time, and he began to feel the tightness coming on again.

People, sometimes even his mother, always spoke to him too fast. They said a word and he began to think about it, but when they continued to say words, it all became a jumble. He tried again and again to go back to the first word, but too many others had come between, and even his first faint glimmer would be gone. If there was time he felt he could know what was said; he was sure. Often he felt that if only he had time, he could even answer.

For he felt words inside him the way he felt music. The words came to him, starting in his stomach, and he listened to them carefully while they moved on up to his chest, began to hurt him; then in a rush the words would be in his mouth, and he would open it. He would hear the sounds he made and would be sure he had said the words clearly, and he would smile proudly; but he knew he had not when they looked away and said, “Wipe off your mouth, Jake.”

On the screen the two men went riding away suddenly toward the hills; the music came again very loud. Jake jerked up to listen, but it was not the bird music. This music went
pound pound pound
, faster and faster. It went galloping loud. It rose out of the dark and sounded terribly in his head. It went
thumpty thumpty thump
, louder and faster, came closer and closer, and he felt it was coming after him; there was no time to run from the tent. He screwed his eyes shut and pulled his head into his shoulders, held his hands over his ears hard. He ran within himself now, as he did when the little boys chased him, beating tin pails with rocks.

“I'm a bird, Jake. Listen to the birdies,” the little boys would yell, running after him, beating horribly. And he would run crazily for miles, holding his ears, and long after he outran them he still heard the poundings, and not until he came to a place that was quiet and had sat for a long time could he take down his hands; then he would cry, rubbing his ears. Now he began to cry. “Shut up that noise, Jake,” several of the men called out behind him in the dark.

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