Authors: Brad Watson
“Was it that way with you and Mrs. Thompson?” Jane said.
“We got along all right.”
She'd been rude again and wanted to kick herself. But she was curious. And still upset about Grace's matchmaking, she supposed, taking it out in a way on Dr. Thompson. Her only real friend.
“I apologize for asking that,” she said. “I'd better keep my mouth shut.”
“I really don't mind. We did kind of grow apart, there toward the end. I loved her. I think she loved me, too. But she began to
have a hard time showing it. I think that toward the end I just wasn't entirely the right man for her. I think she'd have preferred a life in town.”
“But your house is almost in town, barely outside it.”
He smiled, but just with one side of his mouth.
“I guess I mean she would've preferred a town life. Society.” He looked at her. “She was lonely for the kind of life she grew up with. Whereas I never really cared much for it.”
“How did you meet?” He'd never told her the story of that.
“Well, now, there you go. I was a biology student at the University of Alabama, intending to apply to Vanderbilt for medical schoolâalthough I wasn't decided on that yet.
“In any case, one weekend I went home with my friend Nate McLemore, who was from here in Mercury, and there was a social on the lawn at someone's home, I think it was a family named Meyer, and it was a very hot day. Several of the young ladies had parasols against the sun and heat. But as I was walking past this one girl, who did not have a parasol, she fainted dead away and landed right in my arms. I had her just like you'd bend someone down in a tango dance or something, and I had to hold her close for a moment or drop her, and before I could even lay her down on the grass she woke up, and looked straight into my eyes, obviously startled and shaken, and disoriented, of course. And for some reason, one of those odd things you do on impulse, I said, âDon't worry, I'm studying to be a doctor.' And do you know what she did then?”
“Tell me.”
“She laughed, of course. She must have realized, even in her state, that I was as discombobulated as she was. So that was the start of it.”
“She got the chance to look at you close up and intimate. It was by accident but it worked.”
He cocked his head at her and let a vague smile come into his expression.
“Maybe.”
He heaved a sigh and seemed to laugh at himself. “I don't know, I'm rambling.” He turned to her again. “I
have
been thinking about love. And I realize that I don't have the slightest idea what it is. But you felt it for that Key boy, didn't you? You believed you did.”
In spite of her blushing, she said, “Yes.”
He was quiet for a little while, seeming to study his fingernails.
“Jane. I have to say that I've never been certain that I was right to intervene the way I did, with you and that boy.”
“Do you think that's what it was? That you intervened? You said you only told him I couldn't have children.”
“That's true. It's all I told him. But I have to ask myself, why? Was I trying to prepare him in some way forâI don't know, for what he would either learn from you being together, or what you might have to tell him yourself someday? I felt like it was my obligation somehow, to say something. But maybe it wasn't. Maybe I should have just let things unfold however they might.”
Now she was quiet for a while. Then she said, “I thought about that. Of course. I was angry at first. I thought you should have let me tell him. But you ought to know. I decided that I wasn't at all sure I could even do that. I think maybe I was grateful to you, for at least giving him something.”
And then she told him about the afternoon when Elijah came to see her and she turned him away.
“Are you saying now I should have stayed?” Jane said.
“That I should have just told Elijah everything, and risk it?” Just the thought, just saying the words, made her heart race as if in fear.
“I don't know anything for sure, Janie.”
“But if he had been unable to get beyond the facts of what I told him, like you said back then, wouldn't my heartbreak have been even worse? And maybe even his, too?”
“I don't know,” he said again. “I did think so at the time.” He looked at her. “And you thought so, too, didn't you?”
She didn't reply for a moment, felt her heartbeat begin to slow to normal again.
“Yes,” she said then. “I did.”
“But the truth is, we can never really know.”
“Yes,” she said. “I suppose that is true.”
WHEN THE DRY
-CLEANING
business finally did fail the next year, in '38, Jane thought she'd go home to the farm, but Grace told her, somewhat mysteriously, to give her a few days, she might not have to leave.
“I don't know, Grace,” she said. “I kind of think that's where I ought to be. Anyway, what can you do now? We, I mean?”
“I think I know what I can do. And as for you, we can think about that later, if what I think I can do works out.”
“Well, I hope it's legal,” Jane joked.
Grace stopped. She was wearing what Jane considered to be a dress just shy of scandalous, was perfumed, in heels, and wore a lot of makeup, and sported a hat made of black cotton with a brim that practically covered one eye, hair down in bangs that practically covered the other.
“As a matter of fact, it's not. You might just say it's conditionally approved.”
And then she left. Got into her car, made a U-turn, and headed down the hill into downtown.
When she returned an hour later, she had a bottle of bootleg whiskey with her and told Jane to come sit with her in the kitchen while she had a drink. She poured herself a straight shot of it into a short glass, took a sip, cleared her throat, and removed the hat. Jane was mildly shocked to realize that Grace, with her bright red lipstick, milky pale skin, and yellow-blond hair, was actually a beautiful woman. Sexy, she'd have to say. She'd never realized that ever before. Whenever she'd looked at Grace, she'd only really seen what seemed to be the ugly side of her personality. It had effectively obscured her physical beauty, for Jane.
“What are you staring at?” Grace said.
“Oh. Nothing.”
Grace gave her a look, took another shot of the whiskey.
“All right, here's my big secret. I'll be starting tomorrow. Working for Miss Minnie. You know who I'm talking about?”
Jane shook her head.
“You ever heard of a brothel, sister?”
Jane shook her head again. Then nodded. “Well,” she said, “kind of.”
“It's where men pay women to have sex with them. At Miss Minnie's it pays well.”
Jane was just nodding slightly, knowing her eyes were big and no doubt plaintive and stupid-looking. As if to confirm it, Grace laughed, quietly and almost to herself.
“Okay, so I don't want to sling hash or hamburgers, or clean rich people's houses, or work in some filthy factory. Miss Minnie has always liked me. She's been a customer for a long time, didn't you know that?”
“Oh,
that
Miss Minnie. The tall one with the beautiful white hair.”
“Right. And the expensive clothes. And the Yankee accent. She's from Michigan. And she is a lady, even if she does manage a house full of ladies of ill repute. And she is in good standing with the police and many well-heeled businessmen in this town.”
“And she runs aâwhat do you call itâa brothel? Grace. If Papa and Mama were to find outâ”
“Papa and Mama have never really had any control over me, and you know it.”
“Yes,” Jane said.
“And there's something else.”
“What?”
“She also agreed to do me another favor, and that is to hire you.”
“Me! What are you talking about?”
“Not to service the men, for God's sake. Miss Minnie's is a high-class operation. They don't go in for, let's say, the odd experience.”
They stared at one another a long moment.
“Anyway, I was teasing you. I'm not going to be a whore there.”
“Whore.”
“Right. The ones that do it with the men. Miss Minnie has admired my business acumen, my smarts. And she knows I mean business when I do business. I'm going to be what I guess you'd call her manager. Let her take it a bit easier from now on.”
“Oh.” Jane had been imagining Grace lying in a four-poster bed all day, naked or half naked, fanning herself with a Japanese fan, drinking gin, smoking cigarettes in between rutting with any stranger who walked through the door with his thing in his hand. But now she thought about it, Grace didn't like people, women or men, well enough to have a job like that, with constant intimacy, be it phony and vulgar or not.
“Oh,” she said again. “Well, what is it you'd have me doing, then?”
“You might imagine there's a whole lot of sheet-washing going on in a place like that,” Grace said. “Sex can be a messy business. They change the bedsheets on every bed several times a day. Now, you know how to run a big washing machine. The pay will not be near as good as what I'll make but it will do its part toward keeping this roof over our heads and food in the pantry. I'll be as skinny as you if all we keep eating is what vegetables you grow in the garden and one hunk of meat every week.”
“No. Grace. I don't think I want to do it. I don't think I could.”
“No? So, you just expect me to support you? Or Mama and Papa to just support you?”
“I can work a field. Cook and clean. I can earn my keep up there. I can tend cattle, need be. Papa needs help more than ever, nowadays.”
“Well,” Grace said. She poured herself another shot of the whiskey and lit a cigarette. Apparently going outside to smoke was too much trouble now. “Well, if you want to live on a farm, work a plow, weed a field, pick cotton, stick your arm up the ass of a cow, then I guess that's your business.”
“How do you think I would like being in a house where behind
every door a caravan of strange men were sticking their stinkhorns into the same women all day long? I wonder how long you will like it.”
Grace French-inhaled from her cigarette, squinting against the smoke, and blew it out the corner of her red lips.
“I guess I'll find out,” she said. “But it'll be them, not me. The only âstinkhorns,' as you say, that I'll see will be the ones I pluck for myself.”
B
ut now there was the problem of
how
to go back home. Not the simple act of going home, which could be accomplished by calling and catching a ride with the doctor, or being packed and ready to go home next time her father came into town. The problem was that if she went home she would be questioned about why she was returning, and why now, and what was going on with Grace, and so on. And she had never lied to them, not exactly, and she wasn't good at prevarication, anyway. Lying, or attempting to, or even considering it, embarrassed her, which felt like an oddly humiliating weakness.
And so she lingered, which irritated Grace, although it didn't seem as if Grace's new work disagreed with her. If anything, she came home in a better mood than she'd usually enjoyed coming home from the dry-cleaning and laundry shop. Jane tried to stay on her good side by keeping the house spotless, and the garden in shape, and the yard, and always had supper cooking and dishes washed. Grace grumbled a bit but it was also evident that she was glad she didn't have to do those things. She hadn't done much in the way of those things since Jane had arrived six years earlier.
Then her father came one dayâhe was not going to the stockyard every week or even every month anymoreâand when she
went out to his truck, which had no cattle in the empty bed, and spoke to him through the open passenger window, he didn't seem to hear her. She spoke louder, and he turned his head slowly. Then he said, “Why don't you drive us on over, sister?”
He shut the engine off and slowly got out and made his way around the hood, keeping one hand on the truck. He looked shaky and his eyes staked his path but really seemed to see nothing, blind sight. She caught his arm and helped him into the passenger seat. He felt even more bone-thin than he looked. He smelled of liquor already, in late morning, but it didn't feel like that was the governing problem.
“Where are we going, Papa?” she said.
“Stockyard,” he said.
“Are you looking to buy something?”
He looked at her as if she'd said something odd or mysterious, then craned his neck around to look into the truck bed through the rear window.
“Well,” he said. “I thought I brought along a cow.”
“Did you forget to load her up?”
He looked at her again with that look of incomprehension. Then settled back in his seat and looked out the windshield. Raised a hand forward as if to say,
Let's go on now, then
.