"Come, wash yo' face and drink yo' tea, Gerald, befo' it get cold," cried a voice.
"Orright, mama, ah comin'," and he ran away, uncertain of the escape, leaving the St. Thomas virgin with thepesoin her hand, stumped.
Fired by the beauty of the marbles and the speed of the tops—gigs—he'd go on secret escapades to the alley below and spin gigs and pitch taws with the boys who'd gather there. He had to be careful of thepacos. He had to be careful of the boys he played with. Some of them used bad words; some had fly-dotted sores on their legs. A city of sores. Some of them had boils around their mouths. Some were pirates—they made bloody raids on the marbles.
One day he was alone spinning his gig. Itwas a particularly rhythmical one. It was pretty, too—for he had dabbed a bit of wash-blue on top of it so that it looked beautiful when it was spinning.
Suddenly a gang of boys came up, Spanish boys. One of them, seeing his top, circling and spinning, measured it; then winding his up, drew back and hauled away. The velocity released made a singing sound. Gerald stood back, awed. The top descended on the head of his with astounding accuracy and smashed it into a thousand pieces. The boys laughed, and wandered on.
At marbles some of the boys would cheat, and say, "if you don't like it, then lump it!Chumbo!Perro!" Some of them'd seize his taw or the marbles he had put up and walk away, daring him to follow. In the presence of all this, he'd draw back, far back, brooding....
Sea on top of sea, the Empire mourned the loss of a sovereign; and to the ends of the earth, there sped the glory of the coronation.
Below Gerald's porch there spread a row oflecherous huts. Down in them seethed hosts of French and English blacks. Low and wide, up around them rose the faces and flanks of tenements high as the one Gerald lived in. Circling these one-room cabins there was a strip of pavement, half of which was shared by the drains and gutters. But from the porch, Gerald was unable to see the strip of pavement, for the tops of these huts were of wide galvanize, which sent the rain a foot or two beyond the slanting rim.
But it wasn't raining, the sun was shining, and it was the day of the Queen's coronation. On that galvanized roof the sun bristled. Flaky, white—the roof burned, sizzled. The sun burned it green, then yellow, then red; then blue, bluish white, then brownish green, and yellowish red. It was a fluid, lustrous sun. It created a Garden of the roof. It recaptured the essence of that first jungle scene. Upward, on one of the roof's hills spread the leaves of banyan tree. Fruit—mellow, hanging, tempting—peeped from between the foliage of coffee and mango and pear. Sunsets blazed forthfrom beyond the river or the yellowing rice hills on some fertile roof.
All day, the day of the coronation, Gerald stood on the porch, peering down on the burning roof. It dazzled him, for up from it came sounds; sounds of music and dancing. Sounds of half-drunk creoles screaming, "Sotie, sotie!" Flutes and "steel" and hand-patting drums; fast, panting music, breathless, exotic rhythm; girls, with only a slip on, wild as larks, speeding out of this room, into that one. All day, the day of the coronation, the music lasted, the dancing lasted, the feeling mounted.
A slippery alley connected Bottle Alley and Bolivar Street. Through it Gerald tiptoed, surreptitiously, to see thebomberoson parade. He stood at the edge of the curb, gazing up the street at the clang and clash of red flannel shirts, white pants, brass helmets and polished black leggings. Behind him was a canteen and it was filled to its swinging half-sized doors with black upholders of the Crown. Gazing under a half-door he could see hosts of trousered legs vaguely familiar to him.
The coronation rags of the bar were a dark,somber kind. Dark green leaves, black-green leaves—wreaths and wreaths of them.
"Come on, Dina, an' behav' yo'self. Yo' ain't gwine wine no mo' fi' suit any big teet' Bajan."
"Who is a big teet' Bajan?"
"Who yo' tink's talkin' to? I didn't know yo' wuz hard a hearing."
"Bet yo' ah lick yo' down, if yo' go long talkin' like dat?"
"Say dah again, ni, betcha yo' don't say dah again."
"Look at dese two, ni. Wuh, Bright, yo' ort to be shame o' yo'self, man, fightin' ovah a chigga-foot gal."
"Who yo' callin' chiggah-foot? Me?"
"Oi ent talkin' to you, soul."
"Ah buss yo' head open fuh yo', yes, yo' go on playin' wit' my Trinidad uman! See dah stick in de corner—"
"Butt 'e! Butt 'e down! Don' lick 'e wit' de stick! Butt 'e down!"
"Wuh 'bout it?"
"Wuh 'bout it? Wait an' see!"
"Look out, Lucian, befo' he chop open yo' head."
"Oh mi Gahd!"
"H'm! Yo' beast! Yo' whelp! Leave my uman alone."
A figure, washed in blood, fell backwards through the half-door on to the refuse-littered pavement.
All night Sarah sat up, imploring the Lord to have mercy upon them, and beseeching Bright to mend his reckless ways. His head bandaged up, he lay on the bed, a ghastly figure, the pain crushing the fire out of his eyes.
"Yo' ort to tek dis as a warnin'," she said, "an' steady yo'self." And he only moaned in pain.
All night Gerald was restless, bruised by his mother's sorrow, and unable to rid himself of the hideous nightmares surrounding it.
In the morning the lodgers grew restive.
"Yo' heah all dah ruction las' night, Maria, like dey wuz bringing up a dead man up de stairs?"
"Oi taught dey was gwine break down de house—"
"No," flounced Maria, "no ask-ee fuh me, me no no."
"But ent yo' hear um, Miss Collymore? Ni?"
"No harm meant, soul—"
"Didn't you, Mrs. Bright?"
"Yes, I heard it."
"Wha'm wuz, ni? Yo' know?" All eyes were turned upon her. But she calmly responded, "It was my husband. He went to a ball given by the tailors and he must have had too much ice cream—"
"Yes?" some one tittered.
"Fuh true?"
"Yo' see, evah since he wuz home he liked to eat ice cream, but it don't agree wit' him—"
"Yo' don't say."
"No, it don't agree wit' he, an' he nose run blood like a stan'pipe run water. An' dey put 'e out 'pon the verandah fuh hol' 'e head back, and he fell asleep an' de moon shine 'pon 'e all night—"
"Oi had a boy who got de moon in he face, dah way, heself."
"Well, you know den. As I wuz—he sit dey all night wit' de moon shinin' in 'e face, wit' he head cocked back, an' when dey fomembah an' come out an' look at 'e dey fine 'e had oneeye shut up, an' instead o' stoppin' de blood de moon only start it running wussah."
"Hey, we can't 'elp yo' wid 'e, ni, Miss Bright?"
"No, soul, Oi jess takin' dis fish tea fuh 'e. Dey say it is good fo' wash 'e eye wid. Dey say it will ca'y way de redness an' de soreness."
"G'long, soul, an' do yo' bes' fuh get 'e bettah."
Taking broth to him, she murmured, "Ain't yo' shame o' yo'self to hav' me bring yo' something to eat—"
"Oh, God, uman, don't torture me," he cried, tossing in misery and pain.
"Don't torture yo', ni, Oi mus' love yo'—is dah wha' yo' wan' me fuh do?"
"Oh, God, lemme 'lone," he cried, raving like a bull, "lemme bones rest in peace, ni?"
"Yo' scamp yo'! Yo' heart ort to prick yo' till yo' las' dyin' day fuh all yo' do to me an' my po' chirrun—"
"Oh, how many times I gwine heah de same old story?"
"Old? It will never be old! As long as I've got breath in my body—as long as I is gotmy boy child to shield from de worle—from de filth and disease of this rotten, depraved place—as long as I got my fo' gal chirrun in B'bados in somebody else han'—um can't be a old story!"
"Giv' me de t'ing, no," he cried, tired and exhausted, "if yo' gwine giv' me, an' le' me head res' in peace. Yo' don't know how bad it is hurtin' me now."
The day he was ready to go back to the shop, she said to him, "Tek heed, Lucian, yo' heah, yo' bes' tek heed, an' men' yo' ways—"
"O Jesus! jess because yo' been tendin' to me when I wuz sick, yo' tink yo' gwine tell me wha' to do, ni, but yo' lie, uman, yo' lie!" and he sped downstairs, swanking, one eye red and flashing.
To the pirates and urchin gods of Bottle Alley, Gerald was the bait that lured a swarm of felt-hattedpacoswho kept the alley under sleepless surveillance. It was risky to loiter, play marbles, spin gigs—and there wasn't enough to keep Gerald occupied upstairs. So he hit upon the notion of going at dusk to hisfather's shop. There he'd gather rum bottles and cotton reels, open up the backyard and inveigle the Judge's son to come down and play shells—and shut his ears to the men's vile banter....
One day, after the men had gone, he saw his father take a glass bowl from a shelf far back in the shop and put it on his machine. He was drawn to it, for, squirming about in the weed and moss, was a congeries of little black reptiles.
"Papa, wha' is dese, ni?"
"Leave them, sir!" his father shouted, "an' get away from there!"
He drew back, afraid. The place was silent. He watched his father furtively. His face was clouded, agitated, aflame. He tore off his coat, peeled back his shirt sleeve, and revealed a red, sore arm. He squeezed it, the while gritting his teeth. He moved over to the bowl, wincing in pain. Gerald was stricken dumb. Up to the bowl his father crept, taking one of the shiny, slimy reptiles and planting it on the red sore, to feast there. Uncomprehending Gerald patiently waited.
Later he was in bed, half-asleep, listening tothe storm. A hurricane of words passed by—hot, carnal words. The fury subsided, and there ensued a sober sympathetic calm.
"Lucian, darling," he heard his mother say, "wha' yo' doin' fuh de arm, ni?"
"Oh, Oi is orright."
"Yo' bin to de doctor, man?"
"No."
"An' you mean to tell me yo' gwine sit down an' not do nutton fuh dah han' yo' got dey. Hey, man, yo' know wuh is good fo' yo'self?"
"Oh, Oi put a leech on it teeday. Dah ort to draw out all de bad blood."
As the nights advanced, the heat became more and more severe. It was useless to try to sleep. Body smells, body vapors, the room's need of oxygen—grew tense, exacting.
"Yo' know, Sarah, dis t'ing is really hurtin' me; why um is worse dan Oi taught um wuz. Um is stickin' me jess like a needle."
"H'm, tell yo' so—tell yo' yo' won't men' yo' ways."
"O Christ," he roared, "why yo' don't say yo' glad an' done?"
At Sixth and Hudson Alley there was abranch of the Plymouth Brethren, and Sarah suddenly went about the business of securing "acceptance" there. Now, so far as running it went, the shop was out of Bright's hands. He was ill, and had to stay at home. One of the men, Baldy, a mulatto Antiguan, took hold of things.
By way of the Sixth Street Mission, his mother rooted religion into his soul. Every night he was marched off to meeting. There, he'd meet the dredge-digging, Zone-building, Lord-loving peasants of the West Indies on sore knees of atonement asking the Lord to bring salvation to their perfidious souls. In the isles of their origin they were the tillers of the soil—the ones to nurture cane, and water sorrel, stew cocoanuts and mix Maube—now theirs was a less elemental, more ephemeral set of chores. Hill and vale, valley and stream gave way to wharf and drydock, dredge and machine shop. Among the women the transfiguration was less brilliant. Dull. The "drops" and cakes and foods and pops vended to the serfs and squatters on insular estates found a husky-throated market at the ends of the pay car lines.
Thursday night was prayer meeting. Religiously Sarah and Gerald went. All the brothers and the sisters took a deep and vital interest in him. They'd bring him sweets, and coppers, and stare long at him, their eyes wet, and soft. They came, a drove of them, to the house, all dressed in black, which set the neighbors talking.
He was not a child of the Lord, he did not believe in the Scriptures, but it did not serve to rob them of their sense of charity. So they came to see, and give words of courage to the family of the sick man. They'd read passages of the Bible to him, and marvel at the priceless wonders of Christ Jesus. And then one day he said to her, "Sarah, I think I ort to go to the horspitral—I can't see—my eyes is painin' me so bad. Oi wondah wha' is de mattah wit' dem."
"Didn't de medicine de doctah giv' yo' do yo' any good, Lucian?"
"Oh, that bitter t'ing? Good wha'! Oi feel like Oi could cut off this bleddy old han'—"
"It still hurtin' yo, Lucian?"
"Cuttin' me like a knife."
After they came and got him, Gerald began to feel things ever so much more keenly. His vision, too, grew less dim. But a pallor fell on things. In the morning he went to the cesspool to whistle to the canary while the Cholo girl washed it. But as he approached she fled in terror screaming "No, no, don't touch—go 'way—yo' no good—no clean—me no like yo' no mo'." The little boy, the seven o'clock one, refused to let him come near him. "No, no," he also cried, "me mama no like—" None of the old gang, who'd been willing to elude or defy thepacosand foregather down in the alley came any more. And he didn't go to the shop, either. It was so dark and silent over there. Only Baldy looked on—all the other men, one by one, had gone to other places to work. Dust grew high, thick. Spiders spun webs on the very frame of the door.
But he went oftener to the Sixth Street Mission, he and Sarah. The folks there weren't fickle,—firm, solid, lasting. His mother had become one of them. He was one of them now. He'd go on Thursday evenings to prayer meetings. The evenings were long and hot. He would go to sleep in the midst of some drowsy exhaustless prayer. All would be silent. Hours of silence to God. Then they'd rise, slowly, back-crackingly, and he'd be left kneeling, snoring. He would be immune to pinches, nudges, murmurs. They'd be useless, he would be fast asleep. His mother'd pinch him, quietly, but he'd be as stiff as a log till the service was over.
All in black—veil, hat, gloves, shoes, dress.
At Sixth and Bolivar they took one of those modest subdued coaches, not adorned by any wig-powdered Jamaican Pretty Socks, and bade the driver take them to the city hospital.
The sun dealt the city some stern body blows. The piazzas were strewn with folk. Bees and flies and fleas sang and buzzed and added to the city's noise and squalor. Swinging onto rafts hoisted high on porches parokeets and parrots screeched and chattered incessantly. In cages set in the shades of windows bright-feathered and trill-voiced birds languished half-sleepily. Down on the piazza among the oldwomen and the children the Duque ticket sellers and the sore-footed heathens, there were monkeys. Tied to poles greasy and black with banana grime they were lathering their faces with spit. Slowly they ascended the head of the street, the chapel of the Christ Church, felt a bit of the onrushing sea wind, and made the drive. The sea wind beat against them. It was cool and refreshing. At last they were at the hospital.
A high box, square, gauze-encased and white with a dim black object in it was set at the end of a back porch—wide, long, screened, isolated. Facing it was a planted plot, gardened by Asiatics, seen through the dusty screen. Near the sloping end of the porch the rosebush was withering; mocking the bitter fury of the sun the sunflowers were slightly bowing. Accustoming one's eye to the dead reach of things beyond the screen one saw a terra cotta sky and lank, parched trees with reddish brown foliage. One saw, sizzling, at the mouths of dying flowers, blue-winged humming birds—
An eternity had passed since the doctor hadbrought them there, and all the sorrow and anguish inside her rushed to Sarah Bright's eyes.
"Yo' mus' pray fuh me, Sarah," were the first words that came to her from the box square.
"Yes, Lucian," she said, concurring in their finality.
He emitted a groan, and she patted Gerald's face, forcing the child to look away.
"An' wuh duh say, Lucian," she asked, with piety and anxiety, "wuh duh say, ni?"
Their eyes were fastened on the fixed intensity of the sun, but their ears were attuned to the tiniest rustle of the glazed sheets, and the restless figure under them. Then he said, "Ah'm in a bad way, gyrl."
She took out a little white handkerchief and dried first Gerald's mouth and nose, then her own glistening eyes.
He groaned, and was restive again. "De doctah say no use—de oil ent no good."
"No?" there was a quiet suspense in her voice.
"No bloomin' good!" he flung, unearthing some of the old asperity.
"Don't, Lucian," she entreated, "fomembah Jesus."
"Oh, God, dis han'!" he groaned, tossing fiercely.
He ruffled the sheets, and a lizard, a big lanky bark-hued one, slid down the trunk of the cocoanut tree, after some gawkier prey.
"An' dey ent try nutton else," she said, again exhuming the handkerchief.
"Oh, dese Yankees don't cyah wuh de do to yo'—dey don't cyah. Duh wouldn't even giv' yo' a drop o' hot wattah, if yo' ask me. No, dey ent try nutton else."
"Hush, don't cry, Gerald," she said, hunting for a piece of Chinese candy, "yo' mustn't cry, son."
"An' wuh dey gwine do, Lucian," she said, reluctantly risking the query.
"Put me 'way—Palo Seco—dah's de colony."
"Don't cry, son, never min', mama will tek care o' Gerald—oh, my son, you'll break my heart."
"'E love 'e pappy, ent 'e?" he smiled, then turned his moistening eyes to the black wall behind him.
"Well," she said, her eyes clear and dry, "theLord wuks His wonders in a mysterious way. What's to be, will be."
He, too, was weeping; but she held on, driving the mirage to the winds.
"Yo' kin come to see muh, Sarah," he said, "dey allow yo' one visit a year—yo' mus' come, yo' hear?"
"Yes, Lucian, I'll come."
"An' yo' mustn't call me bad, yo' heah?" he pleaded, the water in his eyes, like a young culprit.
"God forbid, dear—be quiet now. Come, Gerald, time fi' go, son." She adjusted his hat, and a bell started ringing.
"An' yo' mus' tek good cyah o' yo'self, heah Sarah, an' don't le' nobody tek exvantage o' yo', yo' heah, dis is a bad country—"
"Yes, Lucian."
THE END