“It’s natural, idn’t it? My mama ran off when I was little, and I always say my. .”
Her silence stopped him. She stood looking down at the little brush-tangled creek.
“What does your mother do?” he asked.
“She teaches in the negro women’s college in Shelby, english literature.”
“I knew it. I knew she had a job too. I’d like to meet her.”
Celia’s nose was long and straight, her lips had a thin sculptured rim. She opened her mouth but didn’t speak.
“You were talking about being a doctor.”
“No, I’m not. .”
“It’s all right. I want to know.”
“I think about going to medical school, but when I do — think about it — it seems as if I’m just marching. . you know, as if I am following orders.”
“Does your stepfather want you to be a doctor?”
“No, I don’t think. . well, he never speaks of it. I guess he would like. . I don’t know. . it’s some feeling I get that I ought to be doing something important, when I don’t know if I really want to do anything at all.”
She looked at him in a slightly embarrassed way and he could see in her shining black eyes that she thought she’d said too much.
“Nothing’s clear to me,” he said and laughed.
“Well, you’re young.” Saying this her mouth turned down in something like chagrin and she touched his wrist, lightly, a touch he would later recall, little pats not of electrical fire but of restoration.
“It’s not that,” he said. “I mean I know what I want to do, but. .”
“What’s that?”
“What do I want to do?”
“Yes.”
“I want to write books.”
She didn’t laugh but her face became serious and she turned her head away. A flock of blackbirds streamed westward. They were walking again, passing in and out of shade. The grass where the sun touched it was the color of brass. The earth under the trees gave off a musty smell, smell of mushrooms and the drifting underworld.
“A couple years ago I started keeping a notebook,” he said.
“Do you write stories?”
“Mostly I take notes, write down facts, the names of things. I make a lot of lists.”
“Of what?”
“The names of railroad companies. Flowers. Different kinds of rocks. People’s names, their accents, hometowns, words they use a lot.” It sounded silly as he said it.
She glanced at him out of the corner of her eye — something wild in there — turned abruptly and said she had to go back. Had she changed — what was it? He wanted to stop her, to kiss her, but he couldn’t believe she’d let him.
“Wait—”
“No. I can’t.”
He reached out his hand — as if it was the last, the only thing he could do — and touched the sleeve of her cotton shirt, but she was already turning away, already walking.
They returned along the path to the car they had parked under the short wooden bridge. Instead of getting in she walked to the creek and stood gazing at it. The water was black and shiny like the skin of fox grapes. He followed and stood beside her. He wanted to take her hand, but she was holding it in a way — clasping her left wrist with her right hand — that made it difficult. Across the creek three buzzards resting in a tall cypress got clumsily up and rowed off. Delvin watched them go, thinking that they were so black and large and ponderous that you wanted them to have some big meaning. He said this to Celia.
“Like something tragic,” she said.
“Like a sign of death or something.”
“Well, they are that.”
“Since they eat dead animals. But you’d think that creatures so striking ought to have an independent meaning.”
“You don’t think they do?”
“No. In the funeral business you hear a lot about remarkable meanings. People talk about premonitions of dying and about what the deceased had to say before he or she passed or how the death means something special was or did or is about to happen.”
“And you don’t believe any of that.”
“I believe dying strikes people really hard, most of them, and sometimes it shakes them loose from what they were holding on to.”
“You’re pretty smart.”
“Well, in some areas I’ve seen a lot.”
“Dying scares me. I don’t like to think about it.”
“I guess it would scare you.”
She gave him a searching look. “They told you all about my father.”
“Yes. What little a stranger could tell.”
“I shouldn’t talk about him as if he was still alive, but I always do. I’m one of those who got shook loose by somebody dying.”
“Me too,” he said. “Dying — or missing.”
“What do you mean?”
He told her about his mother’s flight.
“Did you look for her in the photographs?”
He brightened at her thinking that. “Yes. She wasn’t there. But I wondered last night — again — if I might have overlooked her.”
“I don’t want to think you might have a picture of my father.”
“We don’t.”
“How do you know?”
“We don’t have anybody who fit the description.”
She clasped herself in her arms and turned away from him. A truck rumbled over the wooden bridge, making running slapping sounds as the tires went over the boards. Around the creosoted wooden pilings the current displayed little brown froth collars. At any minute, he thought, the water could pull the bridge away. A thin shiver went through him; he wanted to run. But he made himself stay still. His head had begun to hurt.
“Are you all right?” she asked.
“I’m okay.”
“You look discomposed.”
“Sometimes I feel like everything is about to collapse. As if the next second it’ll all be knocked down and swept away.”
“I feel that way too sometimes.”
“Or sometimes I feel like it’s already happened. As if I’m standing in havocs and confusions.”
“Yes.”
“I used to sit at night out on the back steps of this orphan’s home I lived in and it would seem like if I got up I wouldn’t be able to prevent myself from stepping off into the dark that would swallow me up. Nothing I could do to hold myself from it. I’d sit there shivering, afraid to move at all. I could hardly call myself. Somebody’d have to come get me.”
He’d not talked like this to anybody before. And it was as if he’d not thought this way or felt this way or had these things happen before he said them. As if his life was not something that occurred out in the world, but instead was a collection of stories that came to him out of his heart and mind. He thought of telling this to Celia, but he knew he wouldn’t say it correctly.
“Sometimes,” he said, “I touch some living thing, like a bush or a bit of slick grass, or a. . cricket. . and I feel like I’m going to disappear.”
This was no better, and he flushed as he said the words. She was silent. He could not put properly what he felt. With a feeling that he must or die he wanted to tell her how it felt to be pulled into the state he was trying to describe, but he couldn’t. Maybe every part of this had only to do with her being here.
Below the low gray bank they stood on was a narrow stretch of white sand. He had seen this before, white sand under cutback dark soil. It too had given him a peculiar feeling. He was full of peculiar feelings. He didn’t want to let her know what a curioussome person he was, but then he did.
She put her hand again on his bare wrist. The touch felt so powerfully delightful that he thought he could run up the steps of it right into her heart. But it was only a friendly touch, a pat. She smiled at him and her smile was congenial, nothing more. Way back in the woods a bird, some unidentifiable, ridiculous creature, let loose a single cry, round and sweet as a scuppernong grape. He jumped down to the sandy bar and stood there peering upstream under the bridge. Big clots of brush tucked under the eaves. He had a great desire to jump into a boat and float away down the stream, but the stream was too shallow, the dark water turned thin and copper colored as it washed the sand edge, and he had no boat. A turtle with a saucer-shaped black and yellow shell perched on a slanted log. It wobbled and fell into the water; he didn’t know they were so ungainly.