Native Son - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
There was silence. Jack lit a cigarette. Gus looked away, avoiding the conversation.
"If old Blum was a black man, you-all would be itching to go. 'Cause he's white, everybody's scared."
"I ain't scared," Jack said. "I'm with you."
"You say you got it all figured out?" G.H. asked.
Bigger took a deep breath and looked from face to face. It seemed to him that he should not have to explain.
"Look, it'll be easy. There ain't nothing to be scared of. Between three and four ain't n.o.body in the store but the old man. The cop is way down at the other end of the block. One of us'll stay outside and watch. Three of us'll go in, see? One of us'll throw a gun on old Blum; one of us'll make for the cash box under the counter; one of us'll make for the back door and have it open so we can make a quick get-away down the back alley.... That's all. It won't take three minutes."
"I thought we said we wasn't never going to use a gun," G.H. said. "And we ain't bothered no white folks before."
"Can't you see? This is something big big," Bigger said.
He waited for more objections. When none were forthcoming he talked again.
"We can do it, if you n.i.g.g.e.rs ain't scared."
Save for the sound of Doc's whistling up front, there was silence. Bigger watched Jack closely; he knew that the situation was one in which Jack's word would be decisive. Bigger was afraid of Gus, because he knew that Gus would not hold out if Jack said yes. Gus stood at the table, toying with a cue stick, his eyes straying lazily over the billiard b.a.l.l.s scattered about the table in the array of an unfinished game. Bigger rose and sent the b.a.l.l.s whirling with a sweep of his hand, then looked straight at Gus as the gleaming b.a.l.l.s kissed and rebounded from the rubber cus.h.i.+ons, zig-zagging across the table's green cloth. Even though Bigger had asked Gus to be with him in the robbery, the fear that Gus would really go made the muscles of Bigger's stomach tighten; he was hot all over. He felt as if he wanted to sneeze and could not; only it was more nervous than wanting to sneeze. He grew hotter, tighter; his nerves were taut and his teeth were on edge. He felt that something would soon snap within him.
"G.o.ddammit! Say something, somebody!"
"I'm in," Jack said again.
"I'll go if the rest goes," G.H. said.
Gus stood without speaking and Bigger felt a curious sensation-half-sensual, half-thoughtful. He was divided and pulled against himself. He had handled things just right so far; all but Gus had consented. The way things stood now there were three against Gus, and that was just as he had wanted it to be. Bigger was afraid of robbing a white man and he knew that Gus was afraid, too. Blum's store was small and Blum was alone, but Bigger could not think of robbing him without being flanked by his three pals. But even with his pals he was afraid. He had argued all of his pals but one into consenting to the robbery, and toward the lone man who held out he felt a hot hate and fear; he had transferred his fear of the whites to Gus. He hated Gus because he knew that Gus was afraid, as even he was; and he feared Gus because he felt that Gus would consent and then he would be compelled to go through with the robbery. Like a man about to shoot himself and dreading to shoot and yet knowing that he has to shoot and feeling it all at once and powerfully, he watched Gus and waited for him to say yes. But Gus did not speak. Bigger's teeth clamped so tight that his jaws ached. He edged toward Gus, not looking at Gus, but feeling the presence of Gus over all his body, through him, in and out of him, and hating himself and Gus because he felt it. Then he could not stand it any longer. The hysterical tensity of his nerves urged him to speak, to free himself. He faced Gus, his eyes red with anger and fear, his fists clenched and held stiffly to his sides.
"You black sonofab.i.t.c.h," he said in a voice that did not vary in tone. "You scared 'cause he's a white man."
"Don't cuss me, Bigger," Gus said quietly.
"I am am cussing you!" cussing you!"
"You don't have to cuss me," Gus said.
"Then why don't you use that black tongue of yours?" Bigger asked. "Why don't you say what you going to do?"
"I don't have to use my tongue unless I want want to!" to!"
"You b.a.s.t.a.r.d! You scared b.a.s.t.a.r.d!"
"You ain't my boss," Gus said.
"You yellow!" Bigger said. "You scared to rob a white man."
"Aw, Bigger. Don't say that," G.H. said. "Leave 'im alone."
"He's yellow," Bigger said. "He won't go with us."
"I didn't say I wouldn't go," Gus said.
"Then, for Chrissakes, say what you going to do," Bigger said.
Gus leaned on his cue stick and gazed at Bigger and Bigger's stomach tightened as though he were expecting a blow and were getting ready for it. His fists clenched harder. In a split second he felt how his fist and arm and body would feel if he hit Gus squarely in the mouth, drawing blood; Gus would fall and he would walk out and the whole thing would be over and the robbery would not take place. And his thinking and feeling in this way made the choking tightness rising from the pit of his stomach to his throat slacken a little.
"You see, Bigger," began Gus in a tone that was a compromise between kindness and pride. "You see, Bigger, you the cause of all the trouble we ever have. It's your hot temper. Now, how come you want to cuss me? Ain't I got a right to make up my mind? Naw: that ain't your way. You start cussing. You say I'm scared. It's you who's scared. You scared I'm going to say yes and you'll have to go through with the job...."
"Say that again! Say that again and I'll take one of these b.a.l.l.s and sink it in your G.o.dd.a.m.n mouth," Bigger said, his pride wounded to the quick.
"Aw, for Chrissakes," Jack said.
"You see see how he is," Gus said. how he is," Gus said.
"Why don't you say what you going to do?" Bigger demanded.
"Aw, I'm going with you-all," Gus said in a nervous tone that sought to hide itself; a tone that hurried on to other things. "I'm going, but Bigger don't have to act like that. He don't have to cuss me."
"Why didn't you say that at first?" Bigger asked; his anger amounted almost to frenzy. "You make a man want to sock you!"
"...I'll help on the haul," Gus continued, as though Bigger had not spoken. "I'll help just like I always help. But I'll be G.o.dd.a.m.n if I'm taking orders from you you, Bigger! You just a scared coward! You calling me scared so n.o.body'll see how scared you you is!" is!"
Bigger leaped at him, but Jack ran between them. G.H. caught Gus's arm and led him aside.
"Who's asking you to take orders?" Bigger said. "I never want to give orders to a p.i.s.s-sop like you!"
"You boys cut out that racket back there!" Doc called.
They stood silently about the pool table. Bigger's eyes followed Gus as Gus put his cue stick in the rack and brushed chalk dust from his trousers and walked a little distance away. Bigger's stomach burned and a hazy black cloud hovered a moment before his eyes, and left. Mixed images of violence ran like sand through his mind, dry and fast, vanis.h.i.+ng. He could stab Gus with his knife; he could slap him; he could kick him; he could trip him up and send him sprawling on his face. He could do a lot of things to Gus for making him feel this way.
"Come on, G.H.," Gus said.
"Where we going?"
"Let's walk."
"O.K."
"What we gonna do?" Jack asked. "Meet here at three?"
"Sure," Bigger said. "Didn't we just decide?"
"I'll be here," Gus said, with his back turned.
When Gus and G.H. had gone Bigger sat down and felt cold sweat on his skin. It was planned now and he would have to go through with it. His teeth gritted and the last image he had seen of Gus going through the door lingered in his mind. He could have taken one of the cue sticks and gripped it hard and swung it at the back of Gus's head, feeling the impact of the hard wood cracking against the bottom of the skull. The tight feeling was still in him and he knew that it would remain until they were actually doing the job, until they were in the store taking the money.
"You and Gus sure don't get along none," Jack said, shaking his head.
Bigger turned and looked at Jack; he had forgotten that Jack was still there.
"Aw, that yellow black b.a.s.t.a.r.d," Bigger said.
"He's all right," Jack said.
"He's scared," Bigger said. "To make him ready for a job, you have to make him scared two ways. You have to make him more scared of what'll happen to him if he don't do the job than of what'll happen to him if he pulls the job."
"If we going to Blum's today, we oughtn't fuss like this," Jack said. "We got a job on our hands, a real job."
"Sure. Sure, I know," Bigger said.
Bigger felt an urgent need to hide his growing and deepening feeling of hysteria; he had to get rid of it or else he would succ.u.mb to it. He longed for a stimulus powerful enough to focus his attention and drain off his energies. He wanted to run. Or listen to some swing music. Or laugh or joke. Or read a Real Detective Story Magazine Real Detective Story Magazine. Or go to a movie. Or visit Bessie. All that morning he had lurked behind his curtain of indifference and looked at things, snapping and glaring at whatever had tried to make him come out into the open. But now he was out; the thought of the job at Blum's and the tilt he had had with Gus had snared him into things and his self-trust was gone. Confidence could only come again now through action so violent that it would make him forget. These were the rhythms of his life: indifference and violence; periods of abstract brooding and periods of intense desire; moments of silence and moments of anger-like water ebbing and flowing from the tug of a far-away, invisible force. Being this way was a need of his as deep as eating. He was like a strange plant blooming in the day and wilting at night; but the sun that made it bloom and the cold darkness that made it wilt were never seen. It was his own sun and darkness, a private and personal sun and darkness. He was bitterly proud of his swiftly changing moods and boasted when he had to suffer the results of them. It was the way he was, he would say; he could not help it, he would say, and his head would wag. And it was his sullen stare and the violent action that followed that made Gus and Jack and G.H. hate and fear him as much as he hated and feared himself.
"Where you want to go?" Jack asked. "I'm tired of setting."
"Let's walk," Bigger said.
They went to the front door. Bigger paused and looked round the poolroom with a wild and exasperated expression, his lips tightening with resolution.
"Goin'?" Doc asked, not moving his head.
"Yeah," Bigger said.
"See you later," Jack said.
They walked along the street in the morning suns.h.i.+ne. They waited leisurely at corners for cars to pa.s.s; it was not that they feared cars, but they had plenty of time. They reached South Parkway smoking freshly lit cigarettes.
"I'd like to see a movie," Bigger said.
"Trader Horn's running again at the Regal. They're bringing a lot of old pictures back."
"How much is it?"
"Twenty cents."
"O.K. Let's see it."
They walked six blocks in silence. It was eleven-thirty when they reached Forty-seventh Street and South Parkway and the Regal was just opening. They bought tickets and walked into the darkened movie and took seats. The picture had not yet started and they sat listening to the pipe organ playing low and soft. Bigger moved restlessly and his breath quickened; he looked round in the shadows to see if any attendant was near, then slouched far down in his seat. He glanced at Jack and saw that Jack was watching him out of the corners of his eyes. They both laughed.
"You at it again?" Jack asked.
"I'm polis.h.i.+ng my nightstick," Bigger said.
They giggled.
"I'll beat you," Jack said.
"Go to h.e.l.l."
The organ played for a long moment on a single note, then died away.
"I'll bet you ain't even hard yet," Jack whispered.
"I'm getting hard."
"Mine's like a rod," Jack said with intense pride.
"I wished I had Bessie here now," Bigger said.
"I could make old Clara moan now."
They sighed.
"I believe that woman who pa.s.sed saw us."
"So what?"
"If she comes back I'll throw it in her."
"You a killer."
"If she saw it she'd faint."
"Or grab it, maybe."
"Yeah."
Bigger saw Jack lean forward and stretch out his legs, rigidly.
"You gone?"
"Yee-eeah...."
"You pull off fast...."
Again they were silent. Then Bigger leaned forward, breathing hard.
"I'm gone.... G.o.d.... d.a.m.n...."
They sat still for five minutes, slumped down in their seats. Finally, they straightened.
"I don't know where to put my feet now," Bigger said, laughing. "Let's take another seat."
"O.K."
They moved to other seats. The organ still played. Now and then they glanced back up to the projector's room high in the rear of the theatre. They were impatient for the picture to start. When they spoke again their voices were throaty, drawling, tinged with uneasiness.
"You reckon it'll go all right?" Bigger asked.