GEORGE GARRETT
Gator Bait
1.
Everywhere I go these days, I hear people—and
I mean good people, well-meaning and intelligent—speak up and speak
out against cynicism. And so would I. Except that, seriously, I don't
agree with them.
Whenever I do, in fact, respond, when I choose to
speak up, too, I hear myself calling for more cynicism. To my
surprise, if not to my shame, I hear myself saying things like this:
"We must teach and encourage our children to
be deeply and sincerely cynical. Otherwise they will be lost victims
in the savage world we have made and are giving over to them.
"Those who profess to be alarmed about the power
and prevalence of cynicism in our time are really and truly (and maybe
only) concerned that others will be able to see through the pathetic,
shabby veils of their dedicated self-interest and self-aggrandizement.
"Now is that a cynical thing to say, or what?"
2.
As he remembers it now, the boy must have been young.
Couldn't have been in the sixth grade yet; for in the picture of himself
that is part and parcel of the memory he has and holds, he is still wearing
short pants. That was the family custom in those days—to change
over from shorts to long pants, from child to boy, at the beginning of
sixth grade at the Delaney Street Grammar School. The custom may have
been different in other families and in other places and at other schools,
maybe even at other schools right here in his hometown. How would he
have known at the time? His world, at least the one outside of home and
family, was mainly composed of the raw, lightly grassy playground (with
squeaky swings, with rust-jointed seesaws and a jungle gym) and the sweat-smelling,
fart-stinky world of classrooms within the brick school building, that
world and, as well, the dangerous zone of half a mile from school and
playground to the quiet, shady block, called Phillips' Place, a dead
end street ending at the edge of a lake, Lake Copeland, where he lived.
"My Lord, it's all still there and pretty much
the way it was!" he exclaims to his grandchildren more than a half
century later. Here he is, briefly showing them around some of the old
places and the old house, if it's still there, on Phillips' Place. He
had to stop for a traffic light by the school. At that same corner, when
he finally was in the sixth grade and still years before there was a
traffic light there, he had been a Patrol Boy with his blue overseas
cap, a sash and a badge and the power to hold up his hand and stop all
traffic so that the school children could safely cross. Sometimes Officer
Rogers, a real policeman, was there, too; but often he was all on his
own.
Stopped a moment, waiting for the red light to change,
he watches a shrill swarm of black children (not a white face among them,
as far as he can tell) playing on what seem to be the same old swings,
seesaws and jungle gym.
In the days he is remembering it was in the midst
of the deep and bitter season of the Great Depression and still very
much the old world of de jure segregation. Remembering now what
he will not tell or try to explain to his grandchildren from Pennsylvania,
not so much out of a sense of guilt or shame or indifference as out of
. . . complexity, that word we so often hide behind these days
when something under discussion or debate demands more than a sound byte
of serious attention.
Will not tell them, not now anyway, how Velma, the
maid, and Joe, her husband, who did plumbing and odd jobs, and their
several children lived in the little house (itself long gone now) set
behind their house. How they always ate breakfast together so Velma could
cook for all the children at once, then hurried off, books and pencils
and lunch bags in hand, a block or so all together in the same direction
as a group, like a little team or something, except there were no integrated
teams then; until Velma's children turned off on a side street and headed
for what everyone called the colored school, half a mile away in another
direction.
It was, as was ever and always for any child, purely
and simply the way of the world. The world was whatever it was, not to
be deeply questioned or much changed, improved or destroyed, loved or
hated, except in small and separate and specific parts. World was a huge
mysterious grownups' game and it was our (his) necessity, not merely
duty, to discover the rules of that game, and to abide by them, or else
to be punished, wounded or even destroyed on account of his unacceptable
and unholy ignorance. Thus they could eat breakfast together, the same
breakfast, at the same kitchen table, with Velma's children (he has long
since, in fifty some years, forgotten their names, though he can still
vaguely see their more or less interchangeable faces); could have carried
exactly the same sandwiches, cookies and pieces of fruit in their lunch
bags. They could and did freely play together, a lot of the time in the
pine woods behind the house or along the spooky and swampy edges of the
lake where he and his brothers would sometimes tease Velma's boys with
scary tales of savage alligators in the lake. World said that all colored
people were scared to death of alligators. So why not? Once they made
one of them, the youngest—was he named Willie?—cry from fear;
and then Velma made a stern, sad face and said she was "disppointed" that
they would try to frighten her little boy. And they solemnly and sincerely
promised not to do anything like that again, an oath which, for a fact,
they honored for quite a while, at least until that time when they stumbled
onto the nest of a real live alligator who snapped at them. And they
ran like a wild wind, yelling and shouting like a bunch of crazy Holy
Rollers all the way back to the house and the safety of the kitchen.
That Velma's boys, even little Willie, beat them home from the lake did
not necessarily confirm the truth about colored people and alligators,
because Velma's boys could always outrun them anyway. At least for short
distances.
Of course, it wasn't all funny. There was a time,
he remembers, when some boys from over in the colored neighborhood, which
was not all that far away, came to play and fool around at the lake.
Neither he and his brothers nor any of Velma's boys were around at the
time. They only heard about it later. One of those colored boys fell
in the lake. None of them could swim, so the others ran all the way back
to their own neighborhood to get help instead of coming directly to any
of the houses on Phillips' Place. By the time they returned, the boy
was dead and the fire engines came and the firemen pulled his dark, glistening
body out of the water and tried to revive him.
It remains something that the man can now see in
memory as if he had, in fact, been there.
They could and did play together in the woods and
by the lake; but, it was understood and strictly observed, not in the
park nearby where the white boys played baseball or tackle football in
season and where, in the words of the tough and trashy white kids, the
ones who were barefoot, wore overalls, and "borrowed" sandwiches
and cookies at school lunch time or else went hungry, "no niggers
allowed." No girls either. Nigger, that was a word he wasn't
allowed to use, though sometimes, playing in the park, he used it along
with the other guys just to sound as rough and ready as they were. That
was where he picked up another taboo word—fuck. Which,
in innocence, he used at the supper table once and earned a memorable
spanking with his father's leather belt.
The light will change in a second or two and he
will drive on a couple of blocks and turn right into Phillips' Place
to let them see the old, white frame, two storey house, recently painted
by whoever owns it, looking kind of spiffy, his father would have said.
No longer a little green island shaded by live oaks and almost surrounded
by tall and shadowy pine woods. Now fully "developed," all
the casual space occupied with newer houses, crowded together cheek by
jowl. And the lake is now as tame and safe and private as a swimming
pool.
"We used to climb all over those big old trees.
We had a wonderful tree house in one of them," is all that he will
think of to tell them before turning around at the dead end. Talking
about the enormous live oaks, bearded with Spanish moss and twice as
old or even more than he is and likely to live more than twice longer,
too, unless a hurricane should rip and tumble them or some fool should
decide to cut them down in order to widen the narrow little street by
a few feet. The town itself has lost more than a hundred of these magnificent
trees to progress.
He is driving his politely bored and quietly restless
grandchildren to Disney or Universal or Sea World or maybe the Space
Center on the east coast, wherever it is they really want to be. Probably
it will be the latter, a little distance, an hour or so from where they
already are. For it is during that ride, while the children doze off,
that he will begin to remember the story that began with a picture of
himself still wearing short pants. . . .
It would have to have been a Saturday morning, a
day when his father didn't usually go to work at his downtown office.
When he did choose to go to work on Saturday, he would usually take one
of them, his brothers or himself, along with him. While his father did
things with papers on his big shiny desk and sometimes talked on the
telephone or, every once in a while, rang a little electric bell for
a uniformed boy about his own age, give or take, to come and pick up
a telegram and take it back to the office of Postal Telegraph or its
rival, Western Union. Once in a great while he entrusted his own son,
whichever was with him at the time, to deliver the text of a telegram
directly to the office. This boy especially liked that, imagining himself
in the splendid blue of Postal or the brown of Western Union. Jog trotting
several blocks into the heart of downtown. Bringing urgent messages that
would soon enough set the wires humming and at some distant place have
a boy like himself pedaling furiously on his official bicycle to deliver
good or bad news to somebody.
His father would do some work in his private office
and the boy would have the freedom of the rest of the office used by
his father's two secretaries and also the other room with all the law
books in bookcases all around and a large table where, he was told, his
father would meet with clients and discuss business.
So much that he didn't know or understand then.
He knew his father was a lawyer, evidently a good one, popular with some
people (especially the plentiful poor, both black and white) and disliked
by many others, especially the Country Club people, though not even they
would openly express their feelings about him because he was feared as
much as he was respected. He was, in fact, a powerful man and a dangerous
enemy. He was, as this old man knows now and could not possibly have
imagined then, something rarer than all of the above. He was also a good
man. Which is another story. His goodness was the source of much of his
power and the reason that the others, those who came up against him,
in the law courts or anywhere else, feared him.
"Think of him as a little bit like Gregory Peck
in To Kill a Mockingbird," one of his brothers said when
it came time to return and to bury their father. "Only with balls.
Peck was a pussy. Daddy would have won that case. He won tougher ones
than that. He was the best."
Because he was the best, he had plenty of well-to-do
clients willing to pay top dollar for his services and thus willing to
support his addictive habit of pro bono work.
"The most amazing thing," his brother continued, "was
that even though he took a lot of cases for indigent black clients, he
was never-ever named, not out loud at least, as a 'nigger lawyer.' Not
by anybody."
Adding: "Not by anybody who planned to keep
his full mouthful of teeth and a straight nose."
On this particular Saturday morning, like the others
when his father went to work on the weekend, they would go into town,
a mile or so at most, hang around the office where he could play with
pencils and yellow pads and the big old typewriters and paper clips,
all the stuff of an office, while his father did his work. Along
about noon his father would usually quit and take him down the street
to Riddle's Drug Store where—for the price of a dime, equal to
the boy's weekly allowance—he could enjoy a chocolate ice cream
soda. After that treat they would walk home together, his father sometimes
whistling if the weather was good and he felt he had accomplished something.
The walking part, going along the sidewalk to and
from the little office building, always embarrassed the boy. That was
because of his father's bad limp. Badly wounded in the Great War, he
had been left with one straight leg (might as well have been made of
solid wood), a couple of missing fingers and some ugly scars on his face.
The boy's older brothers told him that their father had been a big hero
in that war, that he had (buried in a bureau drawer) medals and ribbons
to prove it. That proved, then and now and forever, that he was absolutely
fearless. This, to the extent that it was true or, anyway, perceived
as an uncontested fact, only added to his father's aura of invincibility.
That much he knows now. Then it also added to the boy's embarrassment.
His father was not a joiner in any case and never
belonged to any of the veterans' groups—the American Legion or
the VFW. As far as he knew, his father only spoke of the war with one
other human being—a Canadian man who played the organ and was the
choirmaster at St. Luke's Episcopal Church. Can't remember his name,
either, anymore. (Names are lost and forgotten first, they say.) But
his father always had the greatest respect for the Canadian soldiers. "They
were the best I ever saw," he said. Once in a while he and the Canadian
would talk in low voices about the Great War. Whatever they were saying
made them laugh a lot.
They walked past the school, past a row of elegant
old houses, including the home of the county judge with whom his father
often joshed about this and that. Usually, it was about the latest "reversal" (whatever
that was) he had achieved at the expense of Judge Copperthwaite.
"I've lost count how many times I've reversed
that old boy," his father said, laughing.
At the office, after the exciting elevator ride
up to the seventh and top floor, while fiddling with his keys, his father
told him that in a little while a couple of clients would be coming and
that he should be quiet while they were there. It won't be long.
Maybe as much as an hour later, he witnessed, through
the partially open door to the conference and library room, the two men
arrive and be ushered into his father's office. They were both light-skinned
colored gentlemen, very well dressed, from shiny shoes to careful hair.
They spoke carefully, too, with an alien, indeterminate white man's accent.
By voice alone he would have guessed that his father was the black man
of the group. They also had a small, slightly yippy little dog, a yellow
dog on a leash, with them.
His father firmly shut the door to the conference
room. But the boy knew that if he stood close, ear to door, he could
hear most of what was being said in the office.
Now, driving east to some kind of tourist trap with
his grandchildren, the boy, who has come to be an old man himself, longer-lived
than his father, cannot begin to remember all the words spoken in his
hearing. Cannot replicate the text of the conversation in his father's
office.
No matter.
It went something like this:
They said that they had heard nothing but good
things about the lawyer. That he was highly respected by everyone,
even his enemies; and that in the black community he was like some
kind of a household god.
One of them, chuckling to indicate that it was
only a joke, chided him for taking business away from some of the Negro
lawyers who were not as trusted as he was.
Lawyer dropped the small talk and told them he
had examined the materials, such as they were, that they had sent him.
He said he had some serious questions that they, or somebody, would
have to answer. He had also read the press clippings, with full skepticism,
bordering on contempt for the ineptitude and inaccuracy of the press,
especially in complex legal matters. He went on to say that though
he hadn't yet made up his mind, he was already inclined to take the
case. That it was certainly a tough one, but that there was a faint
chance he could win an acquittal or at least he might be able to save
the defendant from the electric chair.
One of them (man with dog?) allowed that except
for one Southern sheriff, who seemed to take his sworn duty seriously,
there wouldn't be a problem and they wouldn't be here now.
How's that? His father asked quietly.
The boy knew that something had annoyed his father, sensed that his
father was edgy with suspicion when he spoke so softly, controlling
himself. Well now, the man told him. You people didn't usually let
a case like this come to court at all. I'm surprised they didn't hang
the fellow in the first twenty-four hours.
His father: Sheriff, that one, anyway, is a good
man. Predictably does his job and does it well. Bear in mind that with
his pathetic salary, he will never own a pair of shoes as nice—English
aren't they?—as yours. And a case like this one could cost him
his job and, more than that cost himself and all his family dearly
in days to come.
Man said, I didn't run for public office.
Father said, Good thing, too.
Other man. Please don't misunderstand us. We are
fully aware of your position and we understand and appreciate the position
and problems of the Sheriff . . . Jackson, isn't it?
Father: Johnson.
Other Man: Whatever.
At this point the two visitors began to talk about
money. Boy couldn't understand much of it at the time; and though he
knows some things about money now, he isn't quite sure what transpired.
He imagines that they showed him a cashier's check—"You can
have it in cash if you want it"—for a large sum of money.
He heard his father whistle and laugh out loud.
"That's a whole lot of money for a country lawyer," his
father said. "But let's not talk about the money just yet. Let's
talk about the case. I'll lay out my approach for you and you can decide
for yourselves whether you want me to represent you or not."
"Not us," one of them said. "We want
to hire you to represent the defendant. We don't want to be directly
involved."
"Then you have a problem. You are paying for
it and he must believe that you all are responsible for him."
"Who knows what he knows? The poor man is retarded."
From here on memory is cloudy, partly because the
words and terms were beyond the boy. Partly because he was bored and
thinking ahead to an ice-cream soda. Partly because there was a little
gray and white bird, a mockingbird, outside, hopping on the window sill,
singing a variety of tunes.
What happened was his father briskly went over the
details of the case, a particularly vicious rape case, outlining, in
a general way, the strategy he would develop. Laying in the limits of
his defense.
"You are something else," one of them said. "I
believe you could save his ass, for whatever that's worth, like that.
I'm impressed. But that's not exactly what we had in mind. We see the
case like this. . . ."
And they outlined a plan of their own, rich with
legal jargon, whereby they would like to see the man defended.
"That is kind of an interesting idea," his
father told them. "It will absolutely guarantee that this man dies
in the electric chair. No doubt about it. We do it your way and the man
will die. Sorry. I won't do that for you."
From here on the two men did most of the talking,
more or less in unison.
That he was clearly a first-rate lawyer in every
way. No doubt.
But that they would not even consider his ideas
for how to handle the case.
That they would be paying him a very large sum
of money—bet it's the biggest you have earned so far in your
lifetime—not to showboat and show off what a brilliant litigator
he is, but to do it their way, exactly the way they wanted it done.
In which case your man is dead meat,
his father told them.
That, yes, that is exactly what will happen and
exactly what they wanted to happen.
I don't think I understand you. Would you
be so kind as to say it again?
What they said was something very much like this,
allowing for the fact that it was, of course, more delicately expressed
than the boy would have been able to remember.
How they represented a very large organization
(initials meaningless to the boy) that was devoted and dedicated
to the enhancement of oppressed people all over the world.
How the defendant was probably guilty as all get
out.
How, in any event, he had nothing, nothing at
all, to contribute to our society or to the world.
How, thanks to the power of the press, his fate
now mattered, had meaning.
How, by dying in Old Sparky, the electric chair,
he would probably do more for his people and more for social justice
than any or all of us sitting here in your office today.
How it might have been better in the long run
if he had been lynched at the outset as he very likely would have been
if there had not been an unusual Sheriff who was willing to risk everything
to protect the man and to do his duty.
How saving his life, though it might be just,
and even possible, was not a serious option.
How, in short, they wanted to pay a lot of money
to a very good lawyer to lose the case with some style and plausibility.
How you, sir, have been to Great War, in the thick
of it, and must know more than most of us how little a single human
life (especially a deformed and disabled one) matters in the grand
scheme of things. To weigh the life of a retarded rapist against the
goals and legitimate aspirations of a whole people is to try to balance
a feather against a wealth of gold.
How, finally, though there may not be other lawyers
in this state who are as gifted and can do as well as he can, nevertheless
there is a gracious plenty of attorneys who will jump at the chance
to earn that kind of money and notoriety. Not to mention the possibility
of a retainer from their distinguished organization to handle various
and sundry kinds of business for them for many years to come.
How the only embarrassment they felt was in having
to tell him these obvious facts of life.
After all that talking, it was very quiet for a
minute or two, a long minute or two. Then or later, he pictured his father
with his face turned to one side, resting on the cool surface of his
desk. Something he had seen his father do before.
One of them spoke first: "Sir? Are you all
right?"
"No, I am not all right. Not at all," his
father began, clearing his throat and talking softly, though soon his
voice would be much louder, on the edge of a yell or a shout.
"I want you two to stand up and walk right out
of my office. Goddamn you both to hell and your little yellow dog, too!
I want you to leave here and now and never come back again. I don't want
to find you around here or even to hear that you are in the vicinity.
I want you out of this town and out of my life before I can count to
ten or I will throw your sorry asses right out of the window. And then
I will piss all over your grave."
He did not have to begin counting to ten because
they were already out of the office, down the hall and the stairway (unwilling
to linger and wait for the elevator to come) mumbling to each other and
the little dog yipping and yapping.
Then he heard his father sobbing in his office.
Sobbing, as he had never seen him and never would. Sobbing out of rage
and frustration and helpless sorrow for the fallen world.
He waited until the sound stopped. Looked down from
the window where the mockingbird had been before and saw the two men
jump into a shiny car (Cadillac?) in the parking lot and take off driving
fast.
In a moment or two his father opened the door and
came in the conference room. He looked fine, a little puffy around the
eyes, but otherwise very much the same as usual.
He did not mention what had just happened, not then,
not ever. Instead he looked his youngest son up and down and smiled at
him.
"Let's go get ourselves an ice-cream soda, huh?"
Took two steps toward the elevator and then turned
and looked at the boy again.
"Long as we are down here, let's go over to
Morrison's Men's Store and buy you a half decent pair of long pants."
"But, Daddy, I'm not in the sixth grade yet."
"Fuck the sixth grade!" His father laughed
out loud. "Fuck 'em all, son. The time has come."
3.
Years later, when he died and we all came home from
far places for the funeral, we found that he had left behind a letter
for each one of us. Mine was based on the fact that, as a child, I had
loved Tarzan movies and stories about exploring in Africa. For a while
I talked a lot about growing up and going to Africa and having all kinds
of neat adventures there.
I had forgotten all about that brief phase of my
life until I read his letter to me.
Here is part of what he wrote to me:
I have never been a real explorer, but I have
traveled my own way in spirit—a way that no one else could
wholly follow or accompany me upon or fully understand—unless
you do. So, in a sense, at least, I am an explorer myself.
And that is what I want you to be—an
independent-minded man, following your understanding as far as it
will go and then faring on beyond the marches of your conscious mind,
trusting without limit to your true instincts. It is that journey
that ultimately will be your African adventure, your trek into the
unknown.
I want you to reject all conformity to the
standards and conventions that does not square with your own consecrated
ideals—reject them not to lower yourself below them but to
elevate yourself above them. Stand for the truth, have convictions
and the courage of them. Be yourself and fear no one. And then you
will have all the danger and tribulations and all the glory of your
African adventure.
Strange, he didn't even mention the Great War, but,
then, he seldom did so.
What a legacy!
As for myself?
Well, that is another story, one with its own odds
and ends, its predictable ups and downs. I have lived a long and not
uneventful life, but I have not (yet) lived up to his passionate example
or his brave expectations.
Still, how grateful I am for that challenge. How
deeply I cherish the example of his pride and hope.
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