Read Time Done Been Won't Be No More Online

Authors: William Gay

Tags: #Time Done Been Won’t Be No More

Time Done Been Won't Be No More (10 page)

He warmed awhile then seated himself on a length of log and unpocketed and unwrapped a candy bar and ate it in tiny bites, forcing himself to chew slowly, making it last. There were two cigarettes remaining in the pack and he lit one and tucked the other carefully aside for the morning. When he'd finished the cigarette he built up the fire and lay down with the log for a pillow.

Out of the dark a whippoorwill called three times and ceased, whippoorwill, whippoorwill, whippoorwill. After a time another called from a distant part of the wood but the first remained silent, as if he'd said all there was to say. Edgewater closed his eyes and for a time images of the day lost drifted through his mind like a disjointed film he was watching. Slowly he settled into sleep.

His dreams were troubled and he tried to wake but could not. In the dream he was in a Mexican hotel room. There was a bed, a basin, a chest of drawers. From rooms up and down the hall came shouts and raucous laughter but no one was laughing here. Here something had gone awry.

The girl on the bed was leaking. Spreadeagled on spreading scarlet as if her white body lay on an enormous American Beauty rose that grew as malign and ill-formed as cancer. The old woman and her smocked assistant were preparing to flee. Rats who'd choose any ship but this one. The woman said something in Spanish he didn't understand and the man mimicked her hasty exit and left the door ajar and before he fled himself he leaned closely into her face and watched the fluttering of her eyelids and cupped his hand hard between her legs as if he'd contain her and don't, he said, don't, as if dying was a matter you had any say in.

He wanted out of the room and out of this dream and he went down the hall opening doors upon startled participants in their various couplings and a girl on hands and knees being mounted by her lover like a dog turned and studied him calmly over her shoulder with breasts pendulumed between her distended arms and her hair falling like a black waterfall and as her lover slid into her she looked away and Edgewater closed the door. In the room next a sailor was emptying a bottle of Rose hair oil into the graythatched vagina of an old woman and in the next a man turned to blow out the match he'd fired the window curtains with and he grinned at Edgewater and winked while behind him the gauzy curtains climbed the walls like flaming morninglories and the rosedappled wallpaper curled and smoked and stank like burning flesh.

His father and his sister were in the next room, the old man abed and the sister attendant. His caved face, his deathroom smell. The eyes of some old predator who's crawled into his den to die. She turned from her ministering with a damp cloth in her hand and Edgewater saw that the old man had been berating her and she was crying. She dropped the cloth, she turned away and leaned against the plaster. Undone, she wept against limegreen walls. Finally she turned upon her brother such a look of sadness and loss that he wept despite himself. If you weren't so, she said, and he closed the door in her face.

Before the last door he stood holding the last doorknob. It was hot to the touch and seemed to vibrate beneath his fingers and something was holding it on the other side of the door. He realized that beyond this door lay whatever the other rooms had been preparing him for. He steeled his nerve and took a deep breath of the smoky air and twisted the doorknob hard and shoved the door open and fell into the room.

He woke shaking and appalled and for a moment he didn't know where he was, where he'd been. He wiped a hand across his mouth. He held his face in his palms. God, he said. God. He raised his face and hugged himself against the cold. The fire had burned to a feathery white ash that rose and drifted in what breeze there was and there was a steely quality to the bluegray light that stood between the trees.

Objects were softly emergent, tree and stump and mossgrown stone, and to Edgewater these objects seemed to be attaining not mere visibility but existence, things that were being born into the world for the first time before his eyes and he studied these things in a kind of bemused wonder.

He had a thought toward rebuilding the fire but more than warmth he wanted quit of this glade of dreams and he paused only long enough to rake the ash away until he found a glowing coal to light his cigarette.

When he came out of the woods onto the roadbed there was already a faint roseate glow in the east and he went on toward it through the first tentative birdsongs. The world was awakening. All sounds were clear and equidistant, somewhere a cock heralded the dawn, on some unseen road a laboring truck shifted gears. A red rim of sun crept above the trees and consumed the horizon with gold and silver light.

Hunger lay in his stomach like a fistsize chunk of teeth and claws and broken bones but his heart was lifting and his feet felt fleet and light. The day was new and unused and this day was one that had never existed before and he saw it as a footpath that led into a world that was sensual and manyfaceted and complex beyond his understanding, but for the moment he was comfortable in it and roofs and shelter and ill weathers were things of no moment. He thought the only dwelling he needed was the unconfined and unwalled world itself.

 

MEMOIRS

THE MAN IN THE ATTIC

T
HAT YEAR THERE SEEMED NO
place to keep warm. Wintertime in New York town, the wind blowing snow up and down the streets, sleet spinning against the glass storefronts, wind coming gritty and razorous out of the mouths of alleys, cutting through your clothing to the bone. This was the last of 1963, the cusp of ‘64: Kennedy was in the graveyard and Johnson in the White House, and something was in the wind. The first hints of disquiet in the air. Some dire chord had been strummed, the vibrations were rolling outward, wars and rumors of wars.

Drunk on the rhetoric of Thomas Wolfe, I had left my home in the South and come looking for experience. I had determined to open myself to everything the world had to offer, good and ill, to accumulate life and hoard it like a miser and, at some more contemplative point, try to make sense of it. I had joined the Navy, and now I was in Brooklyn, where Thomas Wolfe had walked the midnight streets and chanted: I wrote ten thousand words today. The Navy had promised travel and experience, and so far it was working out. I was new at the job, but already I had been hassled by cops and hustled by folks in the financial end of the love business, beaten up by Canadian Airmen in Esquimalt, by a street gang in Brooklyn and by a surly bartender in Long Beach. Experience was unfolding itself to me like a flower.

I even had a girl. Her name was Sara and she had almond eyes and long, straight chestnut hair. She was a freshman at a city college and she was into social causes like the burgeoning civil-rights movement. She loved poetry and books and music. She even believed me when I told her I was going to be a writer. We had met in the summer and been together as often as we could through the fall and winter. It was understood that we were soulmates, that we would always be together.

We hung out mostly in the Village, looking for the already ancient footprints of Ginsberg and Kerouac, listening for the fading chants of the Beat Poets, listening to jazz and folk music and blues in the cafés and coffee houses. I was in my civilian clothing, trying to blend, but already the world was aspiring toward a hip scruffiness the Navy wouldn't tolerate and I had to make do with my regulation haircut and polished shoes.

One Night we were in a coffeehouse when a girl sang a song unlike anything I'd ever heard. This place was a basket-house, a club where musicians who didn't have paying gigs could perform a set then pass the basket around the audience. If you liked the songs you'd drop a half-dollar or handful of change.

This song seemed to be called, “Don't Think Twice, It's All Right” —that was the refrain that ended every chorus. It sounded full of contradictions—traditional in form yet new in sentiment, a love song and a kiss-off, hard and soft, tough and tender at the same time. It was a way of looking at things, a way of turning a hard exterior toward a world always looking for your weaknesses, and it came at you from all over the place. It was bathed in a gothic twilight, roosters crowing at the break of dawn, with more departures down long lonesome roads than a noir novel. It was love and bitterness swirled together: Goodbye's just too good a word, babe. So I'll just say fare-thee-well.

I have to talk to her, I told Sara. I want to know where she learned that song.

I don't think so, Sara said. You just want to meet that singer.

We met her anyway.

Haven't you heard of Bob Dylan? This is a Bob Dylan song. He's got a lot of others, too, and they're all great.

Bob Dylan. I had a vague memory of reading his name in a Nat Hentoff
Playboy
article on folksingers. But Hentoff hadn't mentioned this.

The next weekend Sara took me uptown to a record shop she said carried everything, and I bought two Bob Dylan albums. The second one,
The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan
, had “Don't Think Twice” on it. Listening on the phonograph in Sara's bedroom I realized the words were only half the story: the song was at least half attitude, acting, role-playing something. As if James Dean had merged with Rimbaud and Raymond Chandler and strapped on a flat-top Martin.

And I realized something else. You couldn't duplicate this; this was a one-time thing. Spend a lifetime learning the picking, and you couldn't get it the same way twice. Learn every shading and nuance of voice, and this would still be the only one in the world. Even Dylan couldn't duplicate it, try to Xerox it and the machine would short-circuit and smoke and burn. I felt there was no precedent for this that you could trace folk music back through its entire history, and you would not hear anything like this. The song and the song's performance came out of someplace raw and powerful, painful as an open wound. It was a way of looking at things in a single frozen moment of time.

Of course there were other songs on the album, and sure enough, they were all great. There was even a song that evoked Sara, a Girl from the North Country, where snowflakes fall and the wind hits heavy on the borderline, a girl with hair that hung long and rolled and flowed all down her breast. Of course, more properly this was the East, not the North, but to the heart, the points of the compass are not only useless, but irrelevant.

In the fullness of time, “Don't Think Twice” showed up on all the jukeboxes. Not by Dylan, but by Peter, Paul and Mary, who'd made it a moderate hit. Every bar and restaurant we went to, I rolled a lot of change down the throats of jukeboxes.

I didn't notice that Sara was becoming much vexed with the song until it was too late. I had suspected something was amiss. Long silences had crept into conversations that previously held no space for them. I would glance at her, and she would be watching me in a sort of speculative way. Perhaps our souls did not interlock as perfectly as we'd thought.

I'm sick of that damn song, she finally said. And I may have misjudged you. Your taste. He can't sing, and not only that, but he's not a poet, the way you say he is. It's ridiculous, that rooster crowing at the break of dawn crap. Does he assume everyone owns a rooster? I've never even seen a rooster. And he's always walking down those long lonesome roads. It's just sentimental bullshit.

I was outraged. Sentimental was the kiss of death, bullshit was even worse. Her own taste was now being called into question. It's not sentimental. Romantic, maybe, but not sentimental.

Romantic sentimental narcissistic bullshit. You only like it because it's the way you think. Or the way you'd like to think. And it's not only that. He's got into your head. You've gotten too far into this stuff, and you've let him into your head. It's warped your whole philosophy.

My philosophy? Well, this was a hell of a note. Here I didn't even know I had a philosophy, and the damned thing was warped. Broken before I even had a chance to use it. I tried to protest. This wasn't another girl. It wasn't another guy. It was a song, and I should be able to turn this thing around.

If you'd think about it, I said, if you could change your mind and stay.

Her eyes went cold. She was receding already, accelerating through the red shift, a girl from the North Country seen through the wrong end of a telescope. I had inadvertently paraphrased a line from the song, and naturally she'd recognized it.

Stabbed in the heart. Here on the dark side of the road. The future yawned before me. Years of the Navy to go, I was barely out of the starting gate. Our lives together forfeit. Our house unbuilt, our children unconceived. Nothing to do, nothing to say. Except goodbye's too good a word, babe. So I'll just say farethee-well.

Orders had come through; my ship was leaving New York. It was cold the morning we got underway. Rain, mist off the sea like pale smoke. Sara's father came aboard to see me off. We stood awkwardly on the fantail, the sea choppy, the ship rocking against its lines. He was glad to see me go. He had never trusted my relationship with Sara, never trusted the breakup to last. He'd never trusted me. He asked prying questions, he watched me all the time, he stood with his ear pressed against Sara's bedroom door when we were in there, you could hear him there breathing.

He'll turn on you, he told Sara. They persecute Jewish people in the South.

I hadn't known that.

They even lynch them. They've done that in Georgia.

I hadn't known that either. I had never been to a lynching, never known anyone who had.

For some odd reason he'd brought his old duffel bag from World War II. He handed it to me with the solemnity of ceremony. I want you to have this, he said. I accepted it. It was heavy and I wondered what it was. Luger salvaged from the battlefield? The severed head of Hitler? Live hand grenades unpinned? A bomb with its clockwork whirring?

It was grapefruit. They were enormous. They looked like heavy pink bowling balls.

These are not your ordinary grapefruit, he said. These are expensive gourmet grapefruit. I hope that you can appreciate their quality. I hope you enjoy them. You can share them with you little friends.

Other books

Poisoned Pearls by Leah Cutter
King's Sacrifice by Margaret Weis
Thicker Than Blood - The Complete Andrew Z. Thomas Trilogy by Crouch, Blake, Konrath, J.A., Kilborn, Jack
Choked Up by Janey Mack
Release by Louise J
Stonewielder by Ian C. Esslemont
El tesoro del templo by Eliette Abécassis


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024