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Ford Country

Page 23

by John Grisham


  “That ”would be nice, thank you."

  His words were crisp, his southern accent abandoned years ago. Emporia "wondered what else the young man had lost along the way. They settled around the wicker table, and she poured the sugary tea. There was a saucer with gingersnaps. She took one; he did not.

  “How's your appetite?” she asked.

  “It's gone. When I left here years ago, I lost a lot of weight. Got away from all the fried stuff and never really became much of an eater. Now, with this, there's not much of an appetite.”

  “So I won't be cookin' much?”

  “I guess not. Are you okay with this, this arrangement here? I mean, it seems like my family forced this down your throat, which is exactly what they do. If you're not happy, I can find another place.”

  “The arrangement is fine, Mr. Keane.”

  “Please call me Adrian. And what should I call you?”

  “Emporia. Let's just go with the first names.”

  “Deal.”

  “Where would you find another place?” she asked.

  “I don't know. It's all so temporary now.” His voice was hoarse, and his words were slow, as if talking required exertion. He wore a blue cotton shirt, jeans, and sandals.

  Emporia once worked in the hospital, and she had seen many cancer patients in their final days. Her new friend reminded her of those poor folks. Sick as he was, though, there was no doubt that he had once been a fine-looking young man.

  “Are you happy with this arrangement?” she asked.

  “Why wouldn't I be?”

  “A white gentleman from a prominent family living here in Lowtown with an old black spinster.”

  “Might be fun,” he said, and managed his first smile.

  “I'm sure we'll get along.”

  He stirred his tea. His smile vanished as the moment of levity passed. Emporia stirred hers too and thought: This poor man. He has little to smile about.

  “I left Clanton for a lot of reasons,” he said. “It's a bad place for people like me, homosexuals. And it's not so wonderful for people like you. I loathe the way I was raised. I'm ashamed of the way my family treated blacks. I hated the bigotry in this town. I couldn't wait to get out of here. Plus, I wanted the big city.”

  “San Francisco?”

  “I went to New York first, lived there a few years, then got a job on the West Coast. I eventually moved to San Francisco. Then I got sick.”

  “Why'd you come back if you have such strong feelings against the town?”

  Adrian exhaled as if the answer might take an hour, or as if he really didn't know the answer. He wiped some sweat from his forehead, sweat caused not by the humidity but by the sickness. He sipped from his glass. And he finally said, “I'm not sure. I've seen a lot of death recently, been to more than my share of memorials. I couldn't stand the thought of being buried in a cold mausoleum in a faraway city. Maybe it's just the Southern thing. We all come home eventually.”

  “That makes sense.”

  “And, I ran out of money, to be honest. The drugs are very expensive. I needed my family, or at least its resources. There are other reasons. It's complicated. I didn't want to burden my friends with another agonizing death.”

  “And you planned to stay over there, not here in Lowtown?”

  “Believe me, Emporia, I'd much rather be here. They didn't want me back in Clanton. For years they paid me to stay away. They disowned me, cut me out of their wills, refused to speak my name. So, I figured I'd upset their lives one last time. Make them suffer a little. Make them spend some money.”

  A police car drove slowly down the street. Neither mentioned it. When it was gone, Adrian took another sip and said, “You need some background, some of the basics. I've had AIDS for about three years, and I won't live much longer. I'm basically safe to be around. The only way to catch the disease is through the exchange of body fluids, so let's agree right now that we will not have sex.”

  Emporia howled with laughter, and she was soon joined by Adrian. They laughed until their eyes were wet, until the porch shook, until they were laughing at themselves for laughing so hard. A few of the neighbors perked up and looked from far away. When things were finally under control, she said, “I haven't had sex in so long I've forgotten about it.”

  “Well, Miss Emporia, let me assure you that I've had enough for me, you, and half of Clanton. But those days are over.”

  “Mine too.”

  “Good. Keep your hands to yourself and I'll do the same. Other than that, it's wise if we take some precautions.”

  “The nurse lady came out yesterday and explained thangs.”

  “Good. Laundry, dishes, food, medicine, rules of the bathroom. All that?”

  “Yes.”

  He rolled up his left sleeve and pointed to a dark bruise.

  “Sometimes these things open up, and when they do, I'll put on a bandage. I'll tell you when this happens.”

  “I thought we weren't gonna touch.”

  “Right, but just in case you can't control yourself.”

  She laughed again, but briefly.

  “Seriously, Emporia, I'm pretty safe.”

  “I understand.”

  “I'm sure you do, but I don't want you living in fear of me. I just spent four days with what's left of my family, and they treated me like I'm radioactive. All these folks around here will do the same. I'm grateful that you agreed to care for me, and I don't want you to worry. It won't be pretty from now on. I look like I'm already dead, and things will get worse.”

  “You've seen it before, haven't you?”

  “Oh yes. Many times. I've lost a dozen friends in the last five years. It's horrible.”

  She had so many questions, about the disease and the lifestyle, about his friends, and so on, but she put them aside for later. He seemed tired all of a sudden. “Let me show you around,” she said.

  The police car drove by again, slowly. Adrian watched and asked, “So how often do the cops patrol this street?”

  Almost never, she wanted to say. There were other sections of Lowtown where the houses were not as nice, the neighbors not as reliable. There were honky-tonks, a pool hall, a liquor store, groups of young unemployed men hanging around the corners, and there you would see a police car several times a day. She said, “Oh, they come by occasionally.”

  They stepped inside, into the den. “It's a little house,” she said, almost in defense. He, after all, had been raised in a fine home on a shady street. Now he was standing in a cottage built by his father and owned by his family.

  “It's twice as large as my apartment in New York was,” he said.

  “You don't say.”

  “I'm serious, Emporia. It's lovely. I'll be happy here.”

  The wooden floors shined with polish. The furniture was perfectly centered along the walls. The windows were bright and clear. Nothing was out of order, and everything had the look of constant care. There were two small bedrooms behind the den and kitchen. Adrian's had a double bed with an iron frame that covered half the floor. There was a tiny closet, a dresser too small for a child, and a compact air conditioner in the window.

  “It's perfect, Emporia. How long have you lived here?”

  “Hmmm, maybe twenty-five years.”

  “I'm so happy it'll be yours, and soon.”

  “So am I, but let's not get in a hurry. Are you tired?”

  “Yes.”

  “Would you like a nap? The nurse said you need a lot of sleep.”

  “A nap would be great.”

  She closed the door, and the room was silent.

  While he was sleeping, a neighbor from across the street strolled over and sat with Emporia on the porch. His name was Herman Grant, and he tended to be on the curious side.

  “What's that white boy doin' here?” he asked.

  Emporia was ready with the answer, one she had been planning for a few days now. The questions and confrontations would come and go, she hoped. “His name is Adrian Kea
ne, Mr. Isaac Keane's youngest, and he's very sick. I have agreed to take care of him.”

  “If he's sick, why ain't he at the hospital?”

  “He's not that kind of sick. There's nothin' they can do at the hospital. He has to rest and take a sackful of pills every day.”

  “Is he a dead man?”

  “Probably so, Herman. He will only get worse, then he'll die. It's very sad.”

  “Has he caught cancer?”

  “No, it's not cancer.”

  “What is it?”

  “It's a different disease, Herman. Something they have out in California.”

  Ford Country

  “That don't make any sense.”

  “A lot of things don't.”

  “I don't understand why he's livin' with you, here in our side of town.”

  “As I said, Herman, I'm takin' care of him.”

  “They makin' you do it 'cause they own the house?”

  “No.”

  “You gettin' paid?”

  “Mind your own business, Herman.”

  Herman left and headed down the street. Before long, word had spread.

  *

  The chief stopped by the coffee shop for pancakes, and be-fore long Dell had him cornered. “I just don't understand why you can't quarantine the boy,” she said loudly, for the benefit of all, and all were listening.

  “That takes a court order, Dell,” the chief said.

  “So he's free to just walk around town, spreadin' germs everywhere?”

  The chief was a patient man who'd handled many crises over the years. “We're all free to walk around, Dell. It's somewhere in the Constitution.”

  “What if he infects somebody else? Then what'll you say?”

  “We checked with the state health department. AIDS killed seventy-three people last year in Mississippi, so those folks have seen it before. AIDS ain't like the flu. The only way to catch it is through body fluids.”

  Silence, as Dell and the rest of the customers thought hard about all the different fluids the human body can produce. During the pause the chief worked on a mouthful of pancakes, and after he swallowed, he said, “Look, no need to get excited. We're watchin' thangs closely. He's not botherin' anybody. Just sits on the porch mainly, him and Emporia.”

  “I hear folks're already upset down there.” “That's what they say.”

  At the barbershop, a regular said, “I hear the coloreds ain't too happy down there. Word's out they got this funny boy hidin' in one of his dead daddy's old rental houses. Folks're angry.”

  “Can't blame them. What if he moved in next to you?”

  “I'd get my shotgun and keep his ass on his side of the fence, for sure.”

  “He's not hurtin' anybody. What's all the fuss?”

  “I read an article last night. They're predictin' AIDS will become the deadliest disease in the history of the world. It'll kill millions, mainly in Africa, where evidently ever'body just screws ever'body.”

  “Thought that was Hollywood.”

  “There too. California has more AIDS cases than any other state.”

  “Ain't that where the Keane boy picked it up?”

  “That's -what they say.”

  “It's hard to believe we got AIDS here in Clanton in 1989.”

  In the clerk's office, a young lady named Beth had center stage over doughnuts because her husband was a city police officer and yesterday he'd been sent to check on things in Lowtown. He drove past the little pink house of Emporia Nester, and sure enough, as rumored, sitting there on the front porch was a pale, emaciated young white man. Neither the policeman nor his wife had ever met Adrian Keane, but since half the town had been scrambling to find old yearbooks from Clanton High, there were class photos circulating. Since the policeman had been trained to quickly identify suspects, he was fairly certain that he had seen Adrian Keane.

  “Why are the police watchin' him?” Myra asked, somewhat irritated.

  “Well, my husband was there because that's what he was told to do,” Beth answered sharply.

  “It's not a crime to have a disease, is it?” Myra shot back.

  "No, but the police are supposed to protect the public, aren't

  they?"

  “So, by watchin' Adrian Keane and makin' sure he stays on the porch, the rest of us will be safer, is that what you're sayin', Beth?”

  “I didn't say that, so don't put words in my mouth. I can speak for myself.”

  And so it went.

  *

  He slept late and stayed in the bed for a long time, staring at the white board ceiling and wondering how many days were left. Then he again asked himself why he was where he was, but he knew the answer. He had watched so many of his friends waste away. Months earlier he had made the decision that those friends still living would not be burdened with watching him. It was easier to say good-bye with a quick kiss and a strong embrace, while he was still able.

  His first night in the pink house had been the usual series of chills and sweats, memories and nightmares, brief naps and long periods of staring into the darkness. He was tired when he awoke, and he knew the fatigue -would never leave. Eventually, he eased out of bed, got dressed, then faced the chemicals. There were over a dozen bottles of pills, all lined up in a neat row, all in an order that the doctors had decreed. The first barrage included eight medications, and he washed them down with a glass of water. He would return several times during the day for more combinations, and as he screwed the caps back on, he thought about how futile it was. The pills were not advanced enough to save his life—that cure was so far away—but designed only to prolong it. Maybe. Why bother? The cost was $1,000 a month, money his family grudgingly supplied. Two friends had committed suicide, and that thought was never far away.

  The house was already warm, and he remembered the long humid days of his childhood, the hot, sticky summers he had not missed in his other life.

  He heard Emporia in the kitchen and went to say hello.

  He didn't eat meat or dairy products, so they eventually set' tied on a plate of sliced tomatoes from her garden. A strange breakfast, she thought, but Aunt Leona had said to feed him whatever he wanted. “He's been gone for a long time,” she'd said. Afterward, they fixed cups of instant chicory coffee with sugar and moved to the front porch.

  Emporia wanted to know all about New York City, a place she'd only read about and seen on television. Adrian described it, talked about his years there, college, his first job, the crowded streets, endless stores and shops, ethnic neighborhoods, masses of people, and wild nightlife. A lady at least as old as Emporia stopped in front of the house and called out, “Hello, Emporia.”

  “Mornin', Doris. Come sit with us.”

  Doris did not hesitate. Introductions were made, without handshakes. Doris was the wife of Herman Grant, from across the street, a very close friend of Emporia's. If she was nervous around Adrian, it was not evident. Within minutes the two women were talking about their new preacher, a man they were not sure they liked, and from there they launched into church gossip. For some time they forgot about Adrian, who was content to listen with amusement. When they finished with church business, they moved on to the families. Emporia, of course, had no children, but Doris had enough for both. Eight, most of them scattered up north, with thirty-some-odd grandchildren and younger ones after that. All sorts of adventures and conflicts were discussed.

  After an hour of listening, Adrian jumped in during a pause. “Say, Emporia, I need to go to the library and check out some books. It's probably too far to ”walk."

  Emporia and Doris looked at him oddly, but held their tongues. Even a casual glance at Adrian revealed a man too frail to make it to the end of the street. In this heat the poor boy would collapse within a rock's throw of the pink house.

  Clanton had one library, near the square, and had never considered a branch in Lowtown.

  “How do you get around?” he asked. It was obvious Emporia did not own a car.

  “J
ust call the Black and White.”

  “The what?”

  “Black and White Taxi,” Doris said. “Use 'em all the time.”

  “You don't know the Black and White?” Emporia asked.

  “I've been gone for fourteen years.”

  “Yes, you have. It's a long story,” Emporia said as she shifted her weight and settled in for the tale.

  “Yes, it is,” Doris added.

  “There are two brothers, both named Hershel. One black, one white, about the same age. I'd say forty, wouldn't you, Doris?”

  “Forty's 'bout right.”

  “Same father, different mothers. One over here. One over there. Father ran off long ago, and the Hershels knew the truth but couldn't come to grips with it. Eventually, they got together and accepted what the whole town knew anyway. They sorta look alike, don't you thank, Doris?”

  “White one's taller, but the colored one's even got green eyes.”

  “So they start a taxi company. Got a couple of old Fords with a million miles. Painted 'em black and white, and that's the name of the company. They pick up folks here and haul 'em over there to clean houses and shop, and they sometimes pick up folks over there and bring 'em here.”

  “For what?” Adrian asked.

  Emporia looked at Doris, who met her gaze, then looked away. Adrian smelled some wonderful small-town dirt and wasn't about to back off. “So, tell me ladies. Why do the taxis bring white folks across the tracks?”

  “They have some poker games over here,” Emporia admitted. “From what I hear.”

  “And some women,” Doris added quietly.

  “And illegal whiskey.”

  “I see,” Adrian said.

  Now that the truth was out, the three of them watched a young mother walk down the street with a brown sack of groceries.

  “So, I can just call one of the Hershels and catch a ride to the library?” Adrian asked.

  “I'm happy to call for you. They know me well.”

  “They're nice boys,” Doris added. Emporia left the porch and went inside. Adrian smiled to himself and tried to believe the story of two brothers named Hershel.

  “She's a sweet woman,” Doris said, fanning herself.

 

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