Copyright © 2005 by Carter Coleman
All rights reserved.
On pages 165, 166, and 232, the words of Jack Kerouac are from ON THE ROAD by Jack Kerouac, copyright © 1955, 1957 by Jack Kerouac; renewed © 1983 by Stella Kerouac, renewed © 1985 by Stella Kerouac and Jan Kerouac. Used by permission of Viking Penguin, a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
Warner Books
Hachette Book Group, USA
237 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017
Visit our Web site at www.hachettebookgroupusa.com.
First eBook Edition: January 2005
ISBN: 978-0-446-53219-8
Contents
Author’s Note
Victory
1989
Cage
Harper
The Green of the Garden of Eden
Cage
Harper
Cage
Learning to Lie
Harper
Cage
Harper
Cage
The Value of Money
Margaret
Cage
Franklin
Harper
The End of the South
Cage
Franklin
Cage
Independence Day
Cage
Margaret
Cage
Harper
Cage
Margaret
Cage
Family Conference
Cage
Harper
Cage
Harper
Pushing the Envelope
Margaret
Cage
Margaret
Cage
1999
Harper
Cage
Harper
Car Pool
Cage
Harper
Busted
Cage
Harper
Cage
The End of the World as We Know It
Harper
Cage
Harper
Cage
Harper
Margaret
Harper
Cage
Harper
Cage
Harper
Cage
Harper
Cage
Margaret
2001
Harper
Cage
ALSO BY CARTER COLEMAN
THE VOLUNTEER
For
Mary Carter Hughes Coleman
8 December 1937 to 15 February 2004
Author’s Note
This book is a work of fiction. All of the characters, incidents, and dialogue, except for incidental references to public figures, are imaginary and are not intended to refer to any persons, living or dead. Though Cage’s Bend is a real road where my family has lived for seven generations, the Cage family of the book bears no resemblance to the settlers, long departed, who left their name upon the place.
A man who has not passed through the inferno of his passions has never over-come them. They then dwell in the house next door, and at any moment a flame may dart out and set fire to his own house. Whenever we give up, leave behind and forget too much, there is always the danger that the things we have neglected will return with added force.
—C. G. JUNG,
Memories, Dreams and Reflections
Dad is sad
very, very sad.
He had a bad day.
What a day Dad had!
—DR. SEUSS,
Hop on Pop
Victory
1977
Eighty of us crowded behind a chalk line in the shade of huge evergreen oaks draped with a few dying wisps of Spanish moss. In a jumble of uniform colors—powder blue, puke yellow, rising-sun red, Orange Crush—all of us wore old-style basketball tops and bottoms, except for two runners from a New Orleans day school who looked girlish in green ultralight nylon minishorts. I overheard the starter tell the line judge, “Most of ’em white boys look like they come out of a concentration camp.” The line judge laughed. A strong wind kept gusting off the lake and the damp air felt colder than the forty-four degrees on Father Callicot’s key-chain thermometer. Short, balding, wearing a goatee, thin mustache, and a black suit with a clergy dog collar, Callicot stood on the line smiling like an evangelist at the six of us with Episcopal Knights in scroll across our gold jerseys. He put the thermometer in his pocket and placed his hand on my shoulder. “You’re the next state champ. I don’t need to tell you a thing.”
“Gee, thanks.” I rolled my eyes and stared down the fairway toward the lake.
“Circle up,” Callicot said, and we formed a wheel, holding our right arms to the center and stacking our hands on top of the coach’s. “Our Father, let us run like the wind ahead of this pack of heathens from across the state of Louisiana.”
“Amen,” the other Knights said automatically as I shouted, “Hallelujah! Running for the Lord!” Everyone laughed except for Father Callicot. We broke the circle and the team formed two lines behind me and my brother Nick.
I smiled at Nick. “Don’t let that coon ass from Point Coupe outkick you today.”
Nick hated these moments before a race. At home, sitting on the roof of our house, he’d prayed it would storm, but the afternoon sky was clear except for columns of smoke rising over the river from the Exxon refinery. Nick said without conviction, “He’s going to eat my dust.”
I just held my fists out in front of me at the edge of the line.
“Runners on your mark.” The starter raised the gun over his head. A handful of students and parents yelled from the sidelines and then there was silence.
I’m going to win. I’m going to go faster than ever before. I’m going to push through the pain. I’m going to win.
Nick looked queasy. His hands trembled. I gave him a fierce look and whispered, “You can take him.”
“Set.”
Pikh! Lost in the wind: the firing of the blank, the muted cheers of the spectators. Barefoot, Ford led three other black runners from cane plantations to the head of the pack, which funneled from the chalk line into a narrow stream along the center of the fairway.
After the first quarter mile, on the rise of a tee, Ford and I were out front, running side by side.
I glanced back. Nick was twenty runners behind.
“Think you can beat me today, Ford?” I said his name like he did—Fode.
“Beat you here last year.” Ford’s head bobbed up and down, almost touching my shoulder.
“You’re natur’ly more powerful than us. That’s what I heard.” I kept my voice from sounding too winded.
“Tell me sompin new.”
“No way any white boy could run barefoot.”
“Too much shag carpet.”
“And you’ve got a big dick and an extra tendon in your leg.”
Ford looked up and grinned. “Yo’ mama knows about one of them things.”
“The dick or the tendon?”
“The tendon.” Ford laughed, breaking his smooth stride.
I accelerated a yard ahead before Ford realized I was pulling away.
Nick was back there watching me gradually shrink into the distance. Nick trained harder than anyone in the state, while I showed up hungover Saturday mornings and kicked his butt. Outclassed by big brother, who knew you so well, even what you were thinking.
At the half-mile mark Father Callicot squawked in his high voice, “Right on time!”
Rounding a corner coming out of magnolia trees, I looked over my shoulder and I was ten yards ahead of Ford and twenty ahead of the pack. Nick was idly picking off the competition, composing a poem for the school mag:
Hemmed by runners on every side,
Pain ingrained
on every face,
I hurt more with every stride,
I must increase the pace.
Breaux, the tall Cajun from Point Coupe, was loping along behind Nick, using him to break the icy headwind off the lake. Nick had never beaten the Cajun, though the last three races he’d been within seconds. Nick lacked the killer instinct—he didn’t believe he could beat him and therefore he didn’t.
I led the first lap around the golf course with nobody pushing me. Ford was my only competition and I’d broken his spirit by beating him the last five races of the season. There was no one left but the clock.
By the third lap the pain had set in for even the strongest. This was the pain Nick dreaded from the night before. This was much worse than the pain of practice which Nick dreaded through every school day during fall cross-country and spring track season. Nick wanted to turn down the pain, slacken off just enough to secure fourth place, and ride out the last five minutes of agony. Nick distracted himself from the pain by reciting his poems. I burned it like gasoline, turned it into rage.
Father Callicot yelled my time at the two-and-a-half-mile mark. Dad was dressed just like Callicot. Mom wore a plaid wool coat. Little Harper had on my letter jacket, which hung to his knees and hid his hands in the sleeves. Dad cupped his hands, yelled, “You’re breaking the record!” My girlfriend, Robin, was hopping up and down in her cheerleader getup.
Long rolling strides glided me along the fairway. A half minute back Nick and Breaux were crossing the creek. Ford had gained a yard, so I turned, fixed my eyes on the fluttering plastic ribbons of the chute, and switched into overdrive. The kick was the consummation of the pain, a purity beyond thought. I gave a rebel yell and leaned forward, my mind filled by an imaginary sheet of liquid flame racing before me across the grass. The tape broke across my chest, the judge shouted a new state record, and I raised my arm in the Black Power salute like the brothers who lost their medals in the ’68 Mexico City Olympics, then careened through the chute, tripped, and almost knocked down one of the cane poles at the end. I picked myself up, turned around.
Ford was decelerating down the chute, hadn’t even bothered to kick. Smiling as he reached me, I stuck out my palm for a soul slap but he looked away and jogged off toward a couple of black coaches from Ascension.
I limped along the edge of the fairway toward the long string of runners. Nick and Breaux were shoulder-to-shoulder coming down the homestretch. Nick was drowning in the pain of his lungs and arms and legs all shrieking, begging him to slow down. Breaux broke away, doubled the length of his stride, gained a yard.
“Kick, Nick! Kick! Kick! Kick!” I shouted, sprinting toward him, just out of bounds. “You can take him! Take him! Kick!”
Nick screamed a lame-ass version of my rebel yell and pulled even with Breaux, who was wavering, flapping his arms like broken wings, while Nick’s were pumping smoothly like pistons. Both their faces were twisted, their tortured breathing audible across the fairway.
“You’ve got him, Nick.” I was running flat out trying to stay with him.
Neck and neck, twenty yards from the chute with Breaux not slowing, Nick’s pain fused into a sense of inevitable defeat. He just couldn’t outkick Breaux. He never could. Black spots floated before him in the gray air. He felt faint. My voice was hoarse from shouting. “You can take him, dammit! Don’t give up!”
“Go, Nick!” Mom yelled from the finish line.
“Come on, son!” Dad yelled.
“Go, dammit, go!” Little Harper squealed, and Mom did a shocked double take.
Nick heard the cheering as from a long distance and forced his knees higher. The black spots bloomed bigger, obscuring the mouth of the chute. We were all out of focus. He heard me yell, “Breaux’s fading. Now, brother! Now!” Suddenly believing he could take him, clawing deeper than ever before into the primal instinct, Nick broke through the pain and edged past Breaux into the chute. His momentum carried him a few feet more, then he nearly tumbled but caught himself and moved along like a blind drunk. I grabbed him before he fell coming out of the chute.
“I took him out!” Nick gasped.
“Yeah. You dusted him.” I slapped him on the back. “I been telling you all season you could beat him.” I opened my hand wide the way Dad used to when we were tiny, and said, the way he used to, “Put ’er there, pal.” Nick smiled and clasped my hand.
Coach Callicot scurried over to congratulate us, and Nick, copying me as usual, said, “Thanks be to Jesus.”
Breaux passed us, heading for an underfed, bony-faced girl with puffed-up blonde hair, and I called out, “Hey, coon-ass boy, best you get used to staring at the back of Nick’s jersey.”
“Fuck you, rich boys. Wait for track season.” Breaux’s chest was all bowed up.
“Hell, we ain’t rich,” Nick, the diplomat, said. “Just go to a rich school’s all.”
“That’s right, Breaux. We’re all bros,” I called out.
“Bonjour, Monsieur Breaux,” Dad said, coming up from the side. He was as tall and slender as the muscular Cajun runner whom he patted on the back. In the twenty-five years since he was a quarter-miler at Sewanee, he had run five miles at first light while saying his daily prayers.
Breaux’s chest fell and he humbly shook Dad’s hand. “Bonjour, Père Rutledge.”
“Coon-ass Catholics have an inbred respect for clergy,” I whispered to Nick as Dad inquired after Breaux’s family, and I suddenly felt bad about being mean.
“My boys.” Mom, a foot shorter and ten years younger than Dad, bobbed up and down, beaming like a lighthouse. “My champions. Where are your warm-ups? You’ll get pneumonia.”
The other runners were crowding through the chute.
“Come on, Nick, let’s go congratulate the losers. I’m going to miss Ford.”
“Shouldn’t you wait for your warm-ups?”
“Robin’ll bring ’em, Mom,” I said over my shoulder, placing my arm around Nick’s back. “It’s going to be just you and Breaux next year. You saw you can beat him today. Don’t ever let him beat you again. Drive him down. That’s what I did to Fode. Hell, his kick used to be twice as fast. I just beat the spirit out of him.”
“The Machiavellian approach.” Rubbing his arms, Nick shivered and looked around for Robin. “Where’s your girlfriend? I’m freezing to death.”
After a race I never felt the cold. “You’re my wingman, Nick. Couldn’t have a better wingman.”
“I’ve got a better one.” Nick looked straight at me. “I got the best wingman in Baton Rouge.”
1989
Cage
I struggle not to see, not to hear, to hold on to the vision which melts away into red darkness. Then I open my eyes. Black water slowly swallows the sun. The beach is bathed in faint pink light and the ocean breeze combs the tall sea grass like invisible fingers through thick fur. I’m not sure how long I’ve been dreaming on this dune. Waves roll in endlessly, rushing back and rolling in again. Silently I pray, Where are you, Nick? Are you with me? Don’t abandon me now out here on the edge of night. I’m not the boy I used to be. Can you forgive me? A falling star streaks across the paling sky. I tell him, “Little Harper’s coming tomorrow, but he’s all grown-up now. Bigger than you and me. He’s the only one of us who’s as big as Dad.”
“Harper?” a soft voice whispers in the wind. “Who’s Harper?”
I turn and watch as her hair darkens, the lines across her forehead disappear, and the flesh beneath her chin draws taut until she’s the age when she brought me into this world.
“Cage, do you hear me?” the girl asks, smiling like she’s about to burst out laughing.
I realize that she is the girl who gave me the acid and I cast around my head for her name. “Do you hear me?”
She laughs. “Where were you?”
“Tripping,” I say.
“No shit, Sherlock. You were gone.”
“Time tripping.” It’s too difficult to explain. “Did I tell you you look like my
mother? She’s very beautiful.”
“That’s a line.”
“That’s the gospel truth. Same raven hair and angelic face. Just like my mama in the full bloom of youth.”
“There is something very, very wrong with you.”
“And you are very, very intuitive. Where are you in school again?”
“Sarah Lawrence.”
“I forgot. I’m very, very impressed.”
“Let’s go.” She lifts a half-empty bottle of Rolling Rock, stands up, and reaches her hand down to me. “We’re out.”
“I like your spirit.” I rise and brush the sand from my pants, then brush off her small, flat ass. She laughs and pushes my hand away. I pick her up by the waist and she tilts forward, kicking her feet and giggling as I carry her over the dune. “Were you ever a cheerleader?”
“Hell, no.” She twists free.
“I dated a cheerleader in high school. A homecoming queen. I was just thinking of those provocative uniforms. Imagine dressing up the prettiest girls in tight sweaters and tiny miniskirts and having them jump up and down, bouncing their boobs and flashing their crotches at all the middle-aged dads in the crowd. It’s perverse.”
“Are all southern boys as crazy as you?” she asks, smiling.
I stop walking. “What do you think?”
“I hope not.”
Harper
In late May after my freshman year at Tulane, I leave the South for the first time. I’m worn-out from exams and partying but too excited to sleep, since I’ve never been so far north and never been to an East Coast resort island. I’m nervous about going someplace full of rich Yankees who might take me for a hick but I’m also thrilled to spend time with Cage. It’s just like him to get me a cool summer job. He’s ten years older and has always been the ideal big brother. On the long flight from New Orleans to Boston, I remember times he took me fishing and hunting and how when I was in high school he would come to Baton Rouge nine hours from Vanderbilt in his ancient Oldsmobile just to cheer me on during championship meets, the way he would run along the field beside me, urging me to run faster. And I did. Broke the freshman half-mile record when he was driving me on. Cage is a very cool brother.
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