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If He Hollers Let Him Go Part 17

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'We ought to do this more often,' I said.

'What, speculate on our savouriness?' she asked, raising her brows. 'Do you by any chance think that you are more palatable than I?'

The little blonde waitress came up just in time to hear the last of it and she gave a spontaneous giggle. Alice blushed and looked disconcerted, but the waitress gave her a friendly smile and attached the tray to the car door. I ordered a couple of chicken sandwiches and milk, and Alice ordered a sandwich of tuna-fish salad and iced tea.

When the waitress left I said to Alice, 'See, you got caught.'

She laughed. 'Wouldn't it be funny if she thought we were cannibals?' Then after a moment she said wistfully, 'I'd love to go to the beach today and just laze in the sun.'



'Let's do.'

'Oh, I can't. I have another conference at three.' She sighed. 'Life is just one d.a.m.ned thing after another.'

'You're not just saying it,' I echoed.

We were silent for a moment and I looked around at the people in adjoining cars. With the exception of us, they were all white. I noticed several of them glancing furtively at us and I figured they were trying to make out what nationality Alice was. Now I felt self-conscious, slightly ill at ease. I wondered if I'd ever feel perfectly at ease around white people.

Alice hadn't noticed; she was looking over toward the riding academy where three white girls were cantering their mounts around the oval.

'Take me riding Sunday morning, darling,' she said impulsively.

I felt myself frowning. 'I don't know of any place in the city we can go now. The place in Watts is closed for the duration and you know how most of these other places are--they don't even want us to park and watch.'

She didn't answer right away and I wondered for a moment if she'd been riding at the white places. Then I thought about her going out with Leighton the night before, and while it didn't exactly bother me, I had to say something about it.

'Did you have a-nice time last night?' I asked politely, and the next instant I could have bitten off my tongue.

She gave me a curious sidewise look and her face went sober. 'Yes,' she said. 'Did you?'

I winced and all of a sudden the pressure was back on me. 'Baby, let's don't do this to each other,' I said, but I knew that wasn't enough. I had to tell her why we shouldn't. After a moment I said simply, 'I love you.'

She turned slowly to face me and her eyes were like misty stars. 'That's the first time you've ever said that without any qualifying remarks,' she said with a look on her face that made her really beautiful.

'I've never meant to qualify it,' I said. 'You know us cullud folks just talk that way.'

After a moment she murmured, 'But yours comes from a lack of self-restraint, really.'

I watched the fluid motion of her long slender fingers as she absently fiddled with the steering wheel and thought wonderingly that I'd never noticed before how beautiful they were. Then I thought of what they said about being able to tell a Negro by the half-moons in their finger-nails, and reflected half laughingly on what they'd have to do if the nails were painted.

Finally I said seriously, 'I know. T wonder what's the matter with me, myself. Everything I do or say seems wrong. But I don't do it deliberately, it just turns out that way.'

'Your only trouble is maladjustment, darling,' she said. 'Please don't think I'm trying to rub it in, but there're simply no other words to express it. You don't try to adjust your way of thinking to the actual conditions of life.'

The waitress brought our orders and we were silent while she served them. But now both of us had lost our appet.i.tes.

'When I do try to get pushed around,' I said, beginning to tighten up inside again. 'Sometimes I get to feeling that I don't have anything at all to say about what's happening to me. I'm just like some sort of machine being run by white people pus.h.i.+ng b.u.t.tons. Every white person who comes along pushes some b.u.t.ton or other on me and I react accordingly.' I turned to look at her. 'Do you ever get that feeling?'

She was looking at me too, not critically as I'd expected, but with a strange deep sympathy. She didn't answer, but there was something in her look that just drew me right on out.

'Take for instance doing something as simple as going downtown to a moving picture show. Every white person I come into contact with, every one I have to speak to, even those I pa.s.s on the street--every G.o.dd.a.m.n one of them has got the power of some kind of control over my own behaviour. Not only that but they use it--use it in every way. Say if I ride the streetcar, the conductor can make me stand there waiting for my change or he can make me ask two or three times for a transfer. Then when I get off and walk down the street the pedestrians can make me step aside to let them pa.s.s. The cas.h.i.+er at the theatre can sell me loge seats when she knows there aren't any, and the doorman can send me on up to the balcony, knowing that there aren't any loge seats, then the usher will find the worst possible seat for me. And there's the picture--it's almost certain to offend me in some kind of way. If there're Negro actors in it the roles they play will be offensive; and if it's a play with no part at all for Negroes, if you get to thinking about it, you resent the fact of seeing the kind of life shown you'll never be able to live. The h.e.l.l of it is, it's not just one little thing--say if I bought the wrong ticket I could take it back and have it exchanged, but it's selling me the ticket and making me go through all the rigmarole. But it's not only that, it's the pressure they put on you of being able to do these things to you. . . .'

My throat began feeling dry and I paused to take a swallow of milk. 'I don't mind some of it,' I went on. 'I know that most people don't have too much to say about the way they live. But I don't have anything at all to say about the way I live--nothing. Take my job--I've never been anything but a flunkey for Kelly, a go-between for him and the coloured workers. Many a time I've been standing down in the tool crib with the other leadermen discussing a new job with Kelly, but whenever I made any kind of suggestion or said anything at all, no matter how sound it was, Kelly just brushed it aside as if I hadn't spoken. I never did have any real authority. Sometimes Kelly'd even have other leadermen give me my a.s.signments. And then the very first time I tried to use a little authority I got slapped down.'

'I understand, darling,' she said. 'But you shouldn't feel too badly about it. That is typical of most Negroes working in a supervisory capacity where white and coloured are employed. Many Negroes whom we think are in top positions are actually no more than figureheads and are much more frustrated than you. I can't give direct orders on my job either, although I am cla.s.sified as a supervisor. Only suggestions. It almost drives me mad to see cases handled incorrectly and have no power to correct them. Oft-times I have the feeling that I haven't earned two cents since I've been on my job--that I'm just there, keeping someone else out of a job.' She sighed. 'But that is simply one of the conditions of life.'

'I know,' I said. 'But it rankles just the same. I don't like to be pushed around all the time. A guy wants to feel he can control at least some of his life. All this morning--' I caught myself about to tell her how my resentment toward Madge had built up to the place where all that morning it had been controlling me like a puppet on a string. Instead I said, 'I don't want to always be thinking about my race either. I get awful G.o.dd.a.m.n tired of it. But the white people make me think about it in every way. I never get a chance to think like an ordinary guy.'

'I must tell you again, Bob darling,' she said. 'You need some definite aim, a goal that you can attain within the segregated pattern in which we live.' When I started to interrupt she stopped me. 'I know that sounds like compromise. But it isn't, darling. We _are_ Negroes and we can't change that. But _as_ Negroes, we can accomplish many things, achieve success, live our own lives, own our own homes, and have happiness. There is no reason a Negro cannot control his destiny within this pattern. Really, darling, it is not cowardly. It is simply a form of self-preservation.'

'Listen, baby, it's not that I want to argue. I don't want to ever argue with you any more. And I've already made up my mind to conform--so it isn't that. But please don't tell me I can control my destiny, because I know I can't. In any incident that might come up a white person can use his colour on me and turn it into a catastrophe and I won't have any protection, any out, nothing I can do about it but die. And if that's controlling my destiny--'

'That isn't true, Bob,' she said patiently. 'I will admit that we are restricted and controlled in our economic security, that we have to conform to the pattern of segregation in order to achieve any manner of financial success. And I will grant you that we are subject to racial control in securing education, in almost all public facilities, welfare, health, hospitalization, transportation, in the location of our dwellings, in all the component parts of our existence that stem directly or indirectly from economy.

'But, darling, all of life is not commercial. The best parts of it are not commercial. Love and marriage, children and homes. Those we control. Our physical beings, our personal integrity, our private property--we have as much protection for these as anyone. As long as we conform to the pattern of segregation we do not have to fear the seizure of our property or attack upon our persons.

'And there are many other values that you are not taking into consideration--spiritual values, intrinsic values, which are also fundamental components of our lives. Honesty, decency, respectability. Courage--it takes courage to live as a Negro must. Virtue is our own, to nurture or destroy.

'After all, darling, these are the important things in life. These things that are within us that make us what we are. And we can control them. Every person, no matter of what race, creed, or colour, is the captain of his soul. This is much more important, really, than being permitted to eat in exclusive restaurants, dwell in exclusive neighbourhoods, or even to compete economically with people of other races. It depends, darling, on our own sense of values.'

For a long time after she'd stopped talking I didn't say anything at all because I was just getting it. If somebody had told me this a long time ago, made me see it in just this way, it would have saved me a lot of trouble. Because I was seeing it then for the first time. No matter what the white folks did to me, or made me do just in order to live, Alice and I could have a life of our own, inside of all the pressure, away from it, separate from it, that no white person could ever touch. I saw that then, and I turned to her, tense and serious.

'Will you marry me, Alice?'

I qever saw her mouth go so tender as when she said, 'Yes, Bob. Didn't you know that I would?'

I went all b.u.t.tery inside. 'When?'

'Whenever you want.'

'Next month?'

She nodded. I leaned forward and kissed her again with long and steady pressure. Her eyes closed, her lashes lowering like two tiny fans on her cheeks, and her body flowed forward as her lips came out to meet mine, soft and resilient and budding and full of hope, like the beginning of a new life. That was when I knew it, when I lost all doubt. I could take anything the white folks wanted to put on me, as long as I had this. Because this was it; I knew this was it; this was the number that John saw.

When we broke apart she sat there for a time, relaxed, with her eyes closed; and when she opened them they held a little laugh. 'Will you apologize to the girl you had the fight with?' she asked.

I began laughing too, deep inside. 'You never give up, do you, baby?' I said, adding, 'You know I will.'

Suddenly she said, 'I don't want you to.'

We both laughed together, so wonderfully happy. 'You only win,' I said.

After a moment she started to tell me how she came to know Stella. I tried to stop her, but she had to tell me, she said, she had to get it out from between us. A girl friend of hers had suggested they go there one night after they'd attended a concert at the Hollywood Bowl. She'd gone back once with the same girl. While she'd been hep to the play, it had only been curiosity on her part; she'd never been up with it, never even gone as far as she had the night I was with her. But what was great about it was that I believed her.

After that we had a togetherness we felt nothing could destroy. We felt we'd gotten over the river Jordan into the promised land. Did you ever just know you were right? No matter whether you were gambling or working or operating on a guy, you just had that feeling and you knew it. That was the way it was with us.

'I'm part you now and you're part me,' she said.

'I'm all you.'

'No, I'm all you, if anything.'

'Unh-unh, we're both it.'

Then we were laughing again.

We'd be married sometime the middle of July, we planned.

'People will think funny things because no one ever marries in July,' she said.

'What do we care what people think?' Then I said, 'I'll sell my car and buy us a house. A fellow offered me two grand for it just a couple of weeks ago.'

'I saw the cutest little place for sale. On a little hill beside Monterey Road.'

'Way out there? It'll take me a year to get to work.'

'I'll drive you to work every morning, but you'll have to arrange to ride back with someone else. Although I could meet you downtown every evening--perhaps at the P.E. station.'

'Unh-unh, a bar's the place,' I said.

Then we became serious and talked about means.

'You can keep your job until the first baby comes,' I consented, feeling very male and important. 'But after that it'll be home, sweet home for you, baby.'

'It might be some time before we're able to afford a baby,' she pointed out. 'You're going to be a schoolboy for about three years--don't forget that, _Papa_.'

'Oh, we'll have the baby whether we can afford it or not,' I said.

She gave me a sly, sidewise glance and began giggling. 'How do you know?'

I was startled for a moment, then I began laughing.

She wouldn't help me to decide about my job. Whether to quit and go to another yard or stay on at Atlas as a mechanic. That was entirely up to me, she said. But she did point out that I might be better off if I stayed on at Atlas and tried to get my job back so I could keep my deferment.

'One thing,' I said. 'Wherever I go, I'll keep out of trouble. I'll get along and make good on the job. You won't have to worry about that.'

She leaned over and kissed me. 'Don't behave too well, darling. I might not love you so much.'

'Anyway, when I enter U.C.L.A. this fall I'll have to go on the graveyard s.h.i.+ft, and there might be a better bunch of workers.'

It was exciting, planning for the future. It gave everything a new meaning, an importance it had never had before.

Suddenly I noticed something strange and looked around. All of the cars that had been there when we came were gone. I glanced at my watch. It was a quarter to two.

'I'll have to run,' I said.

'You'll have dinner with us. We'll tell Dad and Mother.'

'I know they'll jump for joy.'

She laughed. 'Oh, they like you, really, darling. And they've already guessed how I feel.'

I paid the check and turned to kiss her. I didn't want to ever let her out of my arms, but finally I had to. Then I jumped out, hurried over to my car. I turned one way, she turned the other; we waved to each other. I'll never forget her smile just before she pulled away.

Driving back, I noticed the fields of young corn beside the road and resolved right then to get some place where we could have a victory garden. It'd be fun growing things.

For the first time in my life I felt satisfied. I didn't think of marrying Alice as a way out. I felt that it was what I wanted, what I'd always wanted. I could see myself at forty, dignified, grey at the temples, pleading the defence of a Negro youth. 'Gentlemen of the jury, let me tell you about frustration, a social disease, a disease imposed on peoples of minority groups over and above their control. It is this frustration that drives these youngsters to crime; it is as if society picks them up bodily and hurls them into it. Gentlemen of the jury, I say to you, it is as unjust to condemn this youth for a disease that society has imposed on him....'

G.o.dd.a.m.n, I sounded like Clarence Darrow himself, I thought, laughing out loud. Then I sobered. Maybe by that time people would have gotten over the notion, I thought. Maybe they wouldn't be so p.r.o.ne to believe that every Negro man was the same, maybe they would have realized how crazy the whole business was. I sure hoped they'd have some G.o.dd.a.m.n sense by the time my son was grown.

But my mind wouldn't hold it. My thoughts were full of Alice. I just shook my head. It was one of those miracles. I was a different guy; didn't think the same; didn't feel the same. That was what it did for me. Set me up. Big tough world, but I got you beat now, I thought exultantly. _Peace, Father, it is truly wonderful_.

CHAPTER XX.

When I checked back in I decided suddenly to have a talk with Mac. I was worrying about my job deferment. At the last minute I didn't want to have to go into the Army and lose everything--Alice and my dream and even my good intentions. So I swallowed my pride and turned toward the tin-shop office.

Mac kept me waiting again; but I waited. Finally when he saw I wasn't going to leave he beckoned me over.

'What's on your mind, Bob?' he asked, his big sloppy body overflowing his huge desk chair, and his eyes twinkling in his jolly red face as if I was the one guy he wanted to see the most.

'I'd like to talk to you about staying on in my job,' I said, swallowing. 'I promise you, you won't have any more trouble out of me.' It was hard getting it out but I made it.

'Think you've learned your lesson, eh?' He beamed. 'Got that chip off your shoulder, eh?'

I swallowed again, felt my Adam's apple bobbing in my throat. 'Yes sir,' I said in a high, weightless voice.

'That's fine,' he purred, looking about. I was suddenly conscious that everybody in the office was listening. 'Think you can co-operate with the other workers now without losing your temper?'

'Yes sir.'

He wagged his finger at me and said laughingly, 'Now you're just trying to keep out the Army--that's it, isn't it?'

'I'll admit I don't want to go into the Army,' I said. 'But that's not the reason I want to keep my job.' I paused, then told him, 'I want to get married.'

'Well! Married eh?' His big jolly face took on a-congratulatory expression. 'Marriage'll do you a lot of good, boy. Settle you; make you more reliable.' He paused, then showed a friendly interest. 'One of the girls in the yard?'

'No, sir, she's a social worker,' I said. 'A supervisor in the city welfare department.' It did me a lot of good to tell him that.

'Oh!' His face went suddenly sober and a peculiar distrustful look came into his eyes. 'Did you ever hear of Executive Order No. 8802?' he asked abruptly.

I didn't get the connection right away but I said, 'Yes sir, its the President's directive on fair employment.'

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