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"Can I park along here somewhere?"
"Oh; yessuh."
"Bigger, please please! Don't say sir sir to me.... I don't to me.... I don't like like it. You're a man just like I am; I'm no better than you. Maybe other white men like it. But I don't. Look, Bigger...." it. You're a man just like I am; I'm no better than you. Maybe other white men like it. But I don't. Look, Bigger...."
"Yes...." Bigger paused, swallowed, and looked down at his black hands. "O.K.," he mumbled, hoping that they did not hear the choke in his voice.
"You see, Bigger...." Jan began.
Mary reached her hand round back of Bigger and touched Jan's shoulder.
"Let's get out," she said hurriedly.
Jan pulled the car to the curb and opened the door and stepped out. Bigger slipped behind the steering wheel again, glad to have room at last for his arms and legs. Mary got out of the other door. Now, he could get some rest. So intensely taken up was he with his own immediate sensations, that he did not look up until he felt something strange in the long silence. When he did look he saw, in a split second of time, Mary turn her eyes away from his face. She was looking at Jan and Jan was looking at her. There was no mistaking the meaning of the look in their eyes. To Bigger it was plainly a bewildered and questioning look, a look that asked: What on earth is wrong with him? Bigger's teeth clamped tight and he stared straight before him.
"Aren't you coming with us, Bigger?" Mary asked in a sweet tone that made him want to leap at her.
The people in Ernie's Kitchen Shack knew him and he did not want them to see him with these white people. He knew that if he went in they would ask one another: Who're them white folks Bigger's hanging around with Who're them white folks Bigger's hanging around with?
"I-I.... I don't want to go in...." he whispered breathlessly.
"Aren't you hungry?" Jan asked.
"Naw; I ain't hungry."
Jan and Mary came close to the car.
"Come and sit with us anyhow," Jan said.
"I.... I...." Bigger stammered.
"It'll be all right," Mary said.
"I can stay here. Somebody has to watch the car," he said.
"Oh, to h.e.l.l with the car!" Mary said. "Come on in."
"I don't want to eat," Bigger said stubbornly.
"Well," Jan sighed. "If that's the way you feel about it, we won't go in."
Bigger felt trapped. Oh, G.o.dd.a.m.n! He saw in a flash that he could have made all of this very easy if he had simply acted from the beginning as if they were doing nothing unusual. But he did not understand them; he distrusted them, really hated them. He was puzzled as to why they were treating him this way. But, after all, this was his job and it was just as painful to sit here and let them stare at him as it was to go in.
"O.K.," he mumbled angrily.
He got out and slammed the door. Mary came close to him and caught his arm. He stared at her in a long silence; it was the first time he had ever looked directly at her, and he was able to do so only because he was angry.
"Bigger," she said, "you don't have to come in unless you really want to. Please, don't think.... Oh, Bigger.... We're not trying to make you feel badly...."
Her voice stopped. In the dim light of the street lamp Bigger saw her eyes cloud and her lips tremble. She swayed against the car He stepped backward, as though she were contaminated with an invisible contagion. Jan slipped his arm about her waist, supporting her. Bigger heard her sob softly. Good G.o.d! He had a wild impulse to turn around and walk away. He felt ensnared in a tangle of deep shadows, shadows as black as the night that stretched above his head. The way he had acted had made her cry, and yet the way she had acted had made him feel that he had to act as he had toward her. In his relations with her he felt that he was riding a seesaw; never were they on a common level; either he or she was up in the air. Mary dried her eyes and Jan whispered something to her. Bigger wondered what he could say to his mother, or the relief, or Mr. Dalton, if he left them. They would be sure to ask why he had walked off his job, and he would not be able to tell.
"I'm all right, now, Jan," he heard Mary say. "I'm sorry. I'm just a fool, I suppose.... I acted a ninny." She lifted her eyes to Bigger. "Don't mind me, Bigger. I'm just silly, I guess...."
He said nothing.
"Come on, Bigger," Jan said in a voice that sought to cover up everything. "Let's eat."
Jan caught his arm and tried to pull him forward, but Bigger hung back. Jan and Mary walked toward the entrance of the cafe and Bigger followed, confused and resentful. Jan went to a small table near a wall.
"Sit down, Bigger."
Bigger sat. Jan and Mary sat in front of him.
"You like fried chicken?" Jan asked.
"Yessuh," he whispered.
He scratched his head. How on earth could he learn not to say yessuh yessuh and and yessum yessum to white people in one night when he had been saying it all his life long? He looked before him in such a way that his eyes would not meet theirs. The waitress came and Jan ordered three beers and three portions of fried chicken. to white people in one night when he had been saying it all his life long? He looked before him in such a way that his eyes would not meet theirs. The waitress came and Jan ordered three beers and three portions of fried chicken.
"Hi, Bigger!"
He turned and saw Jack waving at him, but staring at Jan and Mary. He waved a stiff palm in return. G.o.dd.a.m.n! Jack walked away hurriedly. Cautiously, Bigger looked round; the waitresses and several people at other tables were staring at him. They all knew him and he knew that they were wondering as he would have wondered if he had been in their places. Mary touched his arm.
"Have you ever been here before, Bigger?"
He groped for neutral words, words that would convey information but not indicate any shade of his own feelings.
"A few times."
"It's very nice," Mary said.
Somebody put a nickel in an automatic phonograph and they listened to the music. Then Bigger felt a hand grab his shoulder.
"Hi, Bigger! Where you been?"
He looked up and saw Bessie laughing in his face.
"Hi," he said gruffly.
"Oh, 'scuse me. I didn't know you had company," she said, walking away with her eyes upon Jan and Mary.
"Tell her to come over, Bigger," Mary said.
Bessie had gone to a far table and was sitting with another girl.
"She's over there now," Bigger said.
The waitress brought the beer and chicken.
"This is simply grand!" Mary exclaimed.
"You got something there," Jan said, looking at Bigger. "Did I say that right, Bigger?"
Bigger hesitated.
"That's the way they say it," he spoke flatly.
Jan and Mary were eating. Bigger picked up a piece of chicken and bit it. When he tried to chew he found his mouth dry. It seemed that the very organic functions of his body had altered; and when he realized why, when he understood the cause, he could net chew the food. After two or three bites, he stopped and sipped his beer.
"Eat your chicken," Mary said. "It's good!"
"I ain't hungry," he mumbled.
"Want some more beer?" Jan asked after a long silence.
Maybe if he got a little drunk it would help him.
"I don't mind," he said.
Jan ordered another round.
"Do they keep anything stronger than beer here?" Jan asked.
"They got anything you want," Bigger said.
Jan ordered a fifth of rum and poured a round. Bigger felt the liquor warming him. After a second drink Jan began to talk.
"Where were you born, Bigger?"
"In the South."
"Whereabouts?"
"Mississippi."
"How far did you go in school?"
"To the eighth grade."
"Why did you stop?"
"No money."
"Did you go to school in the North or South?"
"Mostly in the South. I went two years up here."
"How long have you been in Chicago?"
"Oh, about five years."
"You like it here?"
"It'll do."
"You live with your people?"
"My mother, brother, and sister."
"Where's your father?"
"Dead."
"How long ago was that?"
"He got killed in a riot when I was a kid-in the South."
There was silence. The rum was helping Bigger.
"And what was done about it?" Jan asked.
"Nothing, far as I know."
"How do you feel about it?"
"I don't know."
"Listen, Bigger, that's what we want to stop stop. That's what we Communists are fighting. We want to stop people from treating others that way. I'm a member of the Party. Mary sympathizes. Don't you think if we got together we could stop things like that?"
"I don't know," Bigger said; he was feeling the rum rising to his head. "There's a lot of white people in the world."
"You've read about the Scottsboro boys?"
"I heard about 'em."
"Don't you think we did a good job in helping to keep 'em from killing those boys?"
"It was all right."
"You know, Bigger," said Mary, "we'd like to be friends of yours."
He said nothing. He drained his gla.s.s and Jan poured another round. He was getting drunk enough to look straight at them now. Mary was smiling at him.
"You'll get used to us," she said.
Jan stoppered the bottle of rum.
"We'd better go," he said.