When that gun went off, Charlie and Clatoo bust out the door, and I wasn’t too far behind them. Charlie went right, toward down the quarters. Clatoo went left, into Mathu’s garden, but he didn’t stop there. He kept going through the garden, over into the weeds, and I wasn’t more than a step behind him.
I could hear screaming back there in the house. I could hear shooting in the house, and even more screaming. Somebody opened the window, ’cause the light from the window fell across the garden, and me and Clatoo hit the ground and started crawling through the weeds. The weeds was dry, and you could hear it breaking, and the people in the road started shooting at us, but we kept down. When we reached that barbed-wire fence next to Rufe’s old house, we laid down and kept quiet. I could hear Clatoo breathing hard, and I was just as tired. I had scratched my face in two or three places crawling through the weeds.
I could still hear lot of shooting from the house. Not everybody had got out, ’cause every now and then you could see a shadow go by the window. Every time a shadow went by the window, somebody from the road shot back at the house.
“I want to get that son of a bitch myself,” Clatoo said.
“No more than I do,” I said. “We didn’t all get a chance at Beau, but we got a chance at him.”
We crawled closer to the ditch so we could get a better look at the tractor. But it was so dark, and the weeds so thick, you couldn’t see a thing till somebody shot. Then all you could see was the red fire from the gun.
I could hear the weeds cracking behind us, and I looked back, and I saw Mat, Jacob, and the Lejeune brothers crawling over to us.
“Everybody all right?” Clatoo asked.
“I think so,” Mat said. “Little scratches here and there, but all right.”
“Who was doing all that shooting in the house?” Clatoo asked.
Jacob laughed. “Billy Washington and Jean Pierre. That’s why I thought it was safer out here.”
“Nobody got hurt?” Clatoo asked.
“Just the ceiling,” Jacob said.
“Thank God,” Clatoo said.
We laid there quiet for a while.
“What now?” Mat said. He was right up against me, and he was breathing hard.
“We got to spread out,” Clatoo said. He turned on his side and looked back at us. “Mat, you and Jacob get in Rufe’s yard by that mulberry tree. Bing, you and Ding go farther up the quarters and cross the road. Holler, and fire. Mat, you and Jacob fire next, then me and Coot, and I just hope the rest of ’em do the same.”
Mat and Jacob started out first, then Bing and Ding Lejeune. You could hear the weeds breaking as they crawled over into Rufe’s yard. And even after the Lejeunes had gone all the way up to Corrine’s house, you could still hear dry weeds breaking. Them over by the tractor shot each time they heard the weeds breaking.
Me and Clatoo lay there waiting for the two Lejeunes to cross the road, and I could hear Jameson over by the house calling on God to have mercy on all of us. If it wasn’t Jameson calling on God, it was Glo calling for her little grandson Snookum. Jameson, then Glo; Glo, then Jameson. I heard Dirty Red call to Rooster to go shoot Jameson and shut him up. Jameson musta heard it too. There wasn’t another word from him.
The Lejeunes had crossed the road. Now one hooted, and both of them fired. Them at the tractor fired back in that direction. Mat and Jacob hooted, and fired. The ones at the tractor turned and fired that way. Clatoo looked at me and nodded. We both got on our knees, hooted, fired, and fell back down. We got one of them, ’cause I could hear his scream. Me and Clatoo looked at each other and grinned, and reloaded.
From down the quarters, everybody was firing. I could tell Rooster’s high-pitched voice, Dirty Red’s dry, hoarse voice—and Yank’s voice. Yank didn’t hoot like the rest of us. He hollered the way you holler at a rodeo when somebody’s riding a bucking horse. “Ya-hoo,” and shot. They had spread out good, and now all the way down the quarters they was hooting and shooting. I didn’t know the last time I had felt so good. Not since I was a young man in the war. Lord, have mercy, Jesus.
“You got anything left?” Clatoo asked me.
“Two more,” I said.
“We’ll shoot again, and save the last one,” Clatoo said.
He got up on his knees and elbow and cupped his mouth to throw his voice.
“Mat, Jacob, Ding, Bing, fire at that tractor.”
They hooted and fired. You woulda thought you was listening to a bunch of Indians—Lord, have mercy. Clatoo looked at me. We got up quick, fired, and fell back down. Clatoo turned on his side and cupped his mouth: “Down the quarters—fire.” And down the quarters, they was firing even before Clatoo had finished saying it.
Snookum
They was shooting everywhere. Soon as the sheriff went down, they started shooting. Shooting out the front door, shooting out the window, shooting up in the ceiling—shooting everywhere. Just hollering and shooting. I told myself, boy, you better get out of here. Gram Mon had Toddy and Minnie by the hands and hollered for me to stop, but I told myself, no indeed, I’m getting out of here while the getting is good, and I shot out through the kitchen and went under the house. Then I started crawling toward the front. I didn’t stop till I had reached the front steps.
Now I could see the sheriff, old Mapes, sitting out there on the walk, trying to get up. Rocking this way, that way like one of them big old scoiling kettles—trying his best to get up. But he was too big to make it by himself, and I sure wasn’t going out there to help him.
The people was still shooting and hollering. I could hear them in the house over my head, shooting and hollering. I could hear Gram Mon calling me; Reverend Jameson calling the Lord—the rest of them just shooting and hollering.
Then I saw Lou crawling fast on the other side of the house. He was crawling on his knees and his elbows, crawling fast. Then something made him stop, and he looked under the house at me. It was dark under there, and it took him a good while to make me out.
“Snookum, that’s you under there?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Don’t you hear your gram mon?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Get to the back,” he said.
I didn’t answer him. I wasn’t going back there either. Gram Mon wasn’t going to beat me for not answering her the first time.
“Stay down,” Lou said, and started crawling again. He was carrying a pistol. He crawled over to where Mapes was sitting on the walk rocking, rocking, trying to get up. “You all right?” he asked him.
“Sure,” Mapes said. “I’m just sitting here for the view.”
“Your deputy resigned,” Lou said, showing Mapes the pistol.
“Keep it,” Mapes said. “Anybody else got hurt?”
“I don’t think so.”
Mapes tried to get up again, but he was too big.
“You need help?” Lou asked him.
“More than you can give,” Mapes said. “You’re in charge. Raise your right hand. You do swear—”
“Like hell,” Lou said.
“You’re still in charge,” Mapes said. “Now, don’t bother me anymore tonight.”
“What am I supposed to do?” Lou asked him.
“You figure that out,” Mapes said. “Just leave me alone.”
Horace Thompson
aka
Sharp
Leroy got winged. It wasn’t bad, no more than a scratch, but he was over there sniveling like a gut-hanging dog. Luke told him to shut up, we all told him to shut up, but he went on sniveling, sniveling like some kinda gut-hanging dog.
“I’m dying,” he said. “I’m dying. Y’all don’t even care.”
“If you don’t shut up, you will be dying,” Henry told him. “Big killer you turned out to be.”
“Y’all didn’t say they had all them guns,” he said.
“No shit,” Henry said.
“I’m dying,” he said.
“Shut him up,” Luke whispered. “Shut him up.”<
br />
“Shut up,” Henry whispered viciously. Then I heard a slap. “Shut the fuck up.”
Now he really started his sniveling.
“I’m go’n give myself up, I’m go’n give myself up.”
“You walk out of here, and I’ll blow your back off,” Henry said. “You in it, fucker. You go’n stay here till the end.”
“Mapes?” Leroy called. “Mapes?”
“Shut up,” Henry said, and hit him in the mouth.
“No,” he said, crying. “Mapes?” he called.
“What?” Mapes answered from the yard. We couldn’t see him, only hear him. From his voice, he sounded weak. Luke hadn’t intended to kill him when he shot him, only to stop him. “What you want?” he called back.
“This here is Leroy. Leroy Hall. I ain’t nothing but a child, Mapes.”
“That’s too bad,” Mapes called back.
“I’m a white boy, Mapes,” Leroy called.
“That’s too bad, too,” Mapes said.
“Satisfied now, fucker?” Henry said.
He got crazy with his sniveling now. He was all bent over with his sniveling. Just coughing and spitting. If the niggers didn’t know where we were before, they sure knew where we were now.
Luke inched a little bit from behind the back tire of the tractor out into the road. He looked up the quarters, down the quarters, then moved back.
“Seen anything?” I asked him.
“How can you see a nigger at night?” he said to me. “Hey, Mapes?” he called.
“What you want, Luke Will?” Mapes called back.
“Got a boy hurt pretty bad. I want to get him outa here.”
“Go on and take him out,” Mapes said.
“Them niggers will shoot us.”
“Shoot them back,” Mapes said. “Shoot them like you shot me.”
“One of them niggers shot you. We didn’t shoot you.”
“I have witnesses you did it,” Mapes called. He rested a second before he went on. “And you’re going to pay for it. Every last one of you.” He rested again. “If you get out of here alive.”
“He want them niggers to kill us.” Leroy started sniveling again. “He want them niggers to kill us.”
“And I told you to shut up,” Luke said, and swung around and kicked him. He kicked him again and again. “I told you to shut up, to shut up, to shut up,” he said, kicking him.
Henry, Alcee, and I grabbed Luke and held him down while Leroy crawled out of the way.
“Take it easy, Luke,” I said. I had him by the shoulders. “Take it easy, Luke. Take it easy.”
He was breathing hard. He had tired himself out kicking Leroy. But he had enough strength to raise his arm and knock the hell out of me. Any other time he woulda had a fight on his hands, but I knew what was bothering him now. He had brought us here, and now everything had backfired, and he didn’t know how to get out of it.
Leroy was laying over there in the ditch, balled up on his elbows and knees. Nobody paid him any mind.
Luke moved up against the tire again.
“Mapes,” he called. “I’m out of bullets. You go’n let them niggers shoot us down like dogs?”
Mapes didn’t answer him. But Charlie did, from down the quarters. You could hear him, but you couldn’t see the black ape.
“I got some extra shells,” he called to Luke. “How many you need, Luke Will? Send one of your boys to come get ’em.”
“I wonder what them niggers been drinking to make them all so brave,” I said to Luke.
Luke moved around the tire and looked down the quarters; then he moved back against the tire again.
“They all over the place, Luke,” I said. “Ain’t no way we can get out of this.”
“You backing out too?” he asked.
“No,” I said.
I knew him too well. He could be mean when he wanted to. Mean toward anybody. He looked at me a while; then he looked at Alcee and Henry under the front trailer.
“Y’all boys all had enough, huh?” he asked. “Is that it?”
We had enough, but nobody would dare say it.
“I hope y’all know how Clyde’s going to take this,” Luke said, and moved back against the tire. “Say, Mapes?” he called toward the house. “Call them niggers off, we ready to turn ourselfs in.”
Mapes didn’t answer him.
“Mapes, can you hear me?” Luke called again.
“I can hear you,” Mapes said. He sounded weaker than he did before. “Talk to Dimes. He’s in charge.”
“Hey, Dimes,” Luke called.
“I can hear you, Luke Will,” Dimes called back. Then a second later we heard him say, “Hey, Charlie—Mr. Biggs.”
“That’s all right, you can call me Charlie,” Charlie answered from down the quarters. “We all in the dirt now, and it ain’t no more Mister and no more Miss. And it ain’t no deal. They go’n put me in that ’lectric chair for one, might’s well put me in there for two. No deal.”
“That nigger sounds like he means it,” I told Luke.
Behind us, in the ditch, Leroy went on with his sniveling. Henry and Alcee lying under the front trailer looked over at Luke, waiting to hear what he had in mind. Luke looked back at them; then he looked at me—a look I had never seen before. Luke was bigger and stronger than anybody around him, never had to back down to anything. But now he looked worried, real worried.
“If you make it and I don’t, look after Verna and the kids,” he said to me.
“What?” I said. Because I didn’t expect to hear that.
“How many shells you got left?” he asked.
“Couple,” I said. “We can make a run for it. Make Tee Jack swear we never left there tonight.”
“What about him?” Luke said, nodding toward Leroy.
“Fuck him,” I said. “Nobody told him to get shot.”
I could hear him sniveling behind me.
“Give me your shells,” Luke said.
“Then I won’t have any.”
“Take his. He can’t use them.”
I passed him the two shells I had, and he put them into the gun.
“Luke,” I said. “We can still get out of this. Don’t do nothing foolish.”
“Verna and the kids, if I don’t make it,” he said.
“Mapes won’t let them niggers shoot us down like dogs.”
He grinned to himself. Then he looked at me a long time, shaking his head.
“Mapes ain’t in charge no more, Sharp,” he said. “Charlie is. We got to deal with Charlie now. You ready to deal with Charlie, Sharp?”
I wasn’t ready to deal with any Charlie, and he knew it. He moved back against the tire and looked down the quarters where Charlie was waiting.
Antoine Christophe
aka
Dirty Red
Charlie was up in the ditch, I was right behind him. Yank and Tucker and Chimley was over to the right. I think Clabber was somewhere back there, too. I crawled up even with Charlie and laid there ’side him. He was like a big bear laying there.
“Light me a stub, Dirty,” he said.
I had a couple in my pocket, and I got out one and lit it. I handed it to him, and he took couple of good draws and handed it back to me.
“Charlie?” Lou called, from Mathu’s yard.
“What you want?” Charlie answered.
“Let them turn themselves in, Charlie.”
“No, sir,” Charlie called back.
“It’ll be murder now, Charlie,” Lou said.
“It was murder before,” Charlie said.
“No, Charlie,” Lou called. “With Beau it was self-defense. Candy will swear to that.”
Charlie didn’t answer him. He reached for the cigarette, and I handed it to him. He turned his head to draw on it, so the people up the quarters couldn’t see the light.
“Charlie,” Lou called again.
“I ain’t gone nowhere,” Charlie answered him.
“I got your parrain here, Char
lie,” Lou said. “He wants to come out there and talk to you.”
“I don’t want Parrain out here,” Charlie said. “Parrain told me to stand. I’m standing up to Luke Will.”
It was quiet after that. Pitch black and quiet. Charlie laid there like a big old bear. And I was right there ’side him.
“You scared, Dirty?” he asked me.
“Not here ’side you, Charlie.”
“Don’t never be scared no more, Dirty,” he told me. “Life’s so sweet when you know you ain’t no more coward.”
I nodded my head. But I wanted some more.
“Charlie,” I said.
He was looking up the quarters toward the tractor.
“Charlie,” I said again.
“Yeah, Dirty?” he said, still looking up the quarters.
“What you seen back there, Charlie?”
He didn’t answer me. Just laying there like a big bear, with that double-barrel shotgun ’cross his arm.
“Charlie, what you seen in them swamps?” I asked him again.
“You seen it, too, Dirty,” he said, not looking at me.
“I didn’t see nothing, Charlie. What did you see?” I asked him.
“All of y’all seen it,” he said.
“No, I didn’t see nothing,” I said. “I’m just here, Charlie. Like all the rest. I didn’t see nothing.”
He looked back at me. “You got it, Dirty,” he said. “You already got it, partner.”
“Got what, Charlie?”
He grinned at me. “Light me another stub, Dirty.”
I fished in my pocket for another one and took it out. While I was lighting it, I heard Lou calling from Mathu’s yard.
“I’m coming out there, Charlie,” he said.
“You not getting my gun,” Charlie called back. “Go take Luke Will’s gun.”
“Luke Will, I’m coming out there,” Lou called.
A Gathering of Old Men Page 19