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Siesta
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About This Book
The fictional town of Georgetown, Alabama, is home to a sweeping cast of characters whose lives intertwine during a sweltering and languid summer.
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CHAPTER ONE
1. Isobaric
It was dry that summer. Mr. Estill, the weather man, up in the top of the Post Office Building, drew a daily red circle of high pressure over the South Atlantic States for two months almost without change. The pink roads round Georgetown were powdery from the lack of rain, and on nearly any day you could look about the low rim of hills and see one of those little white puffs of still smoke somewhere on the horizon from a fire in the pine trees. The river sank to three feet at the Sand Bar Ferry Bridge and some people began to be afraid that soon there wouldnāt be enough water to fill the power canal and run the cotton mills. Up above the railroad bridge The Georgetown Manufacturing Company played a famous baseball game on the red river bottom and Chris Troupe, the dentist, took his little nephew across to the narrow channel on the other side and waded through the shallow water to the Georgia bank with the boy in his arms: āNow you can tell your grandchildren,ā he said, āyouāve walked across The Congaree River.ā¦ Wave your hand at the train!ā
The golf course was burned almost khaki and you could drive three hundred yards if you were any good at all; boys like young āDubā Meigs, who were very good, sometimes drove the eighteenth which was three hundred and forty-five yards long. After the drought had continued for four weeks the congregation of the Sanctified Church on the hill above the golf course opened a series of prayer meetings in the afternoon and as you passed along the third fairway you could hear them over beyond the chinaberry trees wailing for rain with a syncopated cadence and an ecstatic slapping of palm upon palm that gave you a peculiar feeling at the back of your neck; Austin, anyhow, felt that way, though of course, as people were fond of pointing out, that was Austin. Anyhow, you couldnāt fail to hear the thin tunes all over the parched golf course, drifting about on the warm wind.
Once in early August a storm blew up out of the gulf and passed inland, cooling it off for a few hours. But the next morning the dust was rising up again in whirling flesh-colored clouds behind the old motor cars rattling in from the country, and September came with hardly a hint of fall.
Some people donāt believe there is any connection between the weather and the socially dramatic, but the boys down at the Daily News believe it and in July when the drought had gone on for about a month they began to notice a little increase of tension in their world, like a rabbit hunter walking up closer and closer to his brier patch.
In the meantime, simple people drove out over the hills after the sun had set to cool off, talked of the heat and the fluctuating decline of the cotton market, and prayed nightly for the salvation of their immortal souls.
2. Country Doctor
Thursday, June 4
Dr. Abercorn was a little blue. He paid only a minimum amount of attention to it, it being nothing more than some temporary maladjustment of chemicals, probably an excess of one of those that made you contented. First you purred with well-being, then you ordered up another jigger from the laboratory and positively radiated, then you ordered up another and things began to go a little bad.
Yesterday life had been, in a quiet way, rather good; he couldnāt quite remember what had shaken his balance. The world was full of millions of very sensitive scales, moving round, butting into things, butting into each other, blindfolded they were, like the Justice on top of the courthouse. That was it: millions of Justices, blindfolded, moving about with their chemicals held out in front of them poised in a nice scale, a sword in the other hand with which they laid about them when something upset the equilibrium. He couldnāt quite remember at the moment. Austin Toombs, whom he hadnāt seen for ten years, had come in suffering with acute idleness, but nothing else had happened. He had read Tristram Shandy most of the afternoonāoh, yes, it was Lucian; of course. His son, Lucian, wasnāt coming home right yet.
He had left his six-year-old Packard coupĆ© at the iron hitching-post on his curb and walked into the cool cement areaway under his front steps, his stethoscope in his coat pocket, his white suit beginning to lose some of its starch and get comfortable, and life had seemed in a quiet way rather good. He was expecting a telegram from Lucian saying when he would arrive, expecting to find it either in the bar across his screen door or on the stone-topped table in the hall. And it hadnāt been in the screen door. If Miss Cope had been there she would have put it on the wide arm of his leather chair and meticulously weighted it down with his prescription pad.
But Miss Cope was on the Atlantic. She had been wanting to go to Europe all her life; when Travel and The Geographic came she practically met them at the door. She had been saving toward the trip for years; he didnāt know how much she had accumulated, but when Lucian wrote him he would be home in May and Dr. Abercorn decided that Lucian could do her work and at the same time perhaps pick up an elementary knowledge of some of the local customs and that now was the best possible time for her to go to Europe and get it off her mind, she bought a first-class ticket on the Majestic and he thought she must have saved up a good deal.
Ten days later Lucian had written him from New York saying that his boat had just docked (he had been studying medicine in Paris) and that he would probably be down on the first of June, but would telegraph him definitely. So he told Miss Cope to go on the first. Yesterday had been the third, and he had heard nothing further from Lucian. He was a little sorry about that; not that it made a great deal of difference, two or three days one way or another, but he felt that such carelessness didnāt speak particularly well for the boy.
He had counted on Lucian quite a lot, too. When the boy was just a child, before his mother died, twenty years agoāGod! nearer thirtyāthey used to wander sometimes about the basement office, he telling the boy about that future time when he should grow up and they would open a private office for him on the other side of the hall. They could share the examining room at the back. He would come home from Baltimore and they would talk medicine in the stone-floored office, and the town would say sotto voce, not wanting it to get back to the old man, that young Abercorn was a better doctor than his daddy. And now that future time had become the present and Lucian was returning; he had been a little careless in saying he was coming on the first and then neither coming nor telegraphing, but it was a small matter; he would probably get there tomorrow or the next day.
Then he had gone into the dim hall with the cool floor of blue and white octagonal stones, and seen the letter on the table; he knew as he touched it, even before he had tilted it to the light, that it was from Lucian. He had carried it in his fingers through the empty waiting room and laid it on his chair arm while he hung up his hat and washed his hands under the high spigot in the examining room; then he had turned on an oscillating fan and sat down.
DEAR GOVERNOR,
Sorry about the delay. Had expected to entrain Saturday but got tied up. Now have a bid to go up to Boston for a couple of weeks that is too good to pass by. We are going up tonight. Iām sure this will be O.K. with you. You can definitely count on me two weeks from todayā
And his chemicals had begun to get a little out of whack. Now, twenty-four hours later, they seemed about as disorganized as ever.
A short hesitant ring from the doorbell interrupted him, though he heard it only half consciously, having become used to paying no attention to it; patients obeyed the sign on the door, āRing and Walk In,ā and Miss Cope notified him.
He turned his eyes with some weariness out of the window at his elbow, gazing across the dusty joint-grass almost at a level of his head beneath the low-drooping boughs of the magnolia tree. The points of some of the long leaves had begun to turn from the dry weather. He took a small pouch from his coat pocket, inserted a ruminative finger and thumb, and pulled out a pinch of finely-shredded tobacco. Sometimes it seemed to ease his teeth. He must go to a dentist. Chris Troupe would do. These God damned infirmities!
The bell rang again, and he remembered that Miss Cope had gone to Europe. He went out into the waiting room.
It was a mulatto girl and she was standing almost invisible in the shade of the hall. She seemed to be cheaply dressed but clean.
āCome in,ā said the doctor in a resigned way. He sometimes ātook a lookā at a friendās servant, though the friend usually telephoned him in advance or came too.
āDr. Abercorn, sir?ā
āCome in the office,ā said the doctor, leading the way; the girl didnāt seem exactly like a servant, like a āwhite-folksā nigger.ā
He sat down in the dry sweep of his fan.
āWell, what seems to be the matter?ā He supposed it was the usual thing and he wondered how she would act when he put the needle into her arm vein; some of them were so scared they almost fainted.
āI heard you needed a nurse, sir.ā
āA nurse?ā
āYes, sir.ā
āNo, I donāt need a nurse.ā
She looked away at the revolving fan, shifting her weight from one foot to the other.
āMy regular nurse has gone away on her vacation, but sheās coming back next month.ā
āYes, sir.ā¦ And I donāt reckon you need anybody while sheās gone.ā
āNo. No, I donāt.ā
āYes, sir. Iāve been goinā out here to the colored college and I wanted to get some kind of a place during the vacation time. I saw in The News where Miss Cope had gone to New York and I was thinking maybe you might could use somebody while she was gone.ā
āHave you ever worked in a doctorās office?ā
āNo, sir. But last summer I did some work in the colored wing at the hospital.ā
āWhatās your name?ā He wondered if maybe it wouldnāt be just as well to have somebody until Lucian got home.
āLaney Shields, sir.ā
āMy son is coming back in a couple of weeks. I probably wouldnāt need anybody after that.ā
āIf I could just get something for two weeks.ā
The doctor looked at her slowly from head to foot; āAre you married?ā he said.
She hesitated a minute, flexing her fingers.
āYes, sir.ā
āIāll tell you, erāer, what did you say your name was?ā
āLaney Shields.ā
āIāll tell you, Laney, I really donāt need anybody, but if youād like to come and look after things round here until Mr. Lucian gets home I might be able to use you.ā
āYes, sir. Thank you very much, sir.ā
āI could pay you seven dollars a week.ā
āYes, sir. Thatād be all right, sir. I have some uniforms that I had at the hospital.ā
The doctor nodded. āAll right.ā¦ Youāll find a place to change back there in the examination room; thereās a closet over in the corner you can keep your things in. Come about quarter to nine and you can go home about six. The cook upstairs will fix you some dinner. You keep the place straight and answer the telephone andāand that kind of thing.ā When he stopped to think just what it was Julia Cope did all day he couldnāt quite say. Of course, though, she took letters and handled the bills, which this girl couldnāt do. But perhaps it would be just as well to have her after all. She seemed clean. White blood,āas usual.
āMy hours are twelve to two. Write down all messages. You can write, canāt you?ā
āYes, sir.ā
When she had gone he read the letter again and put it in his pocket. It had been over a year and a half since he had seen Lucian; sometimes he felt that he had not really seen him since that day he took him up to Lawrenceville when he was thirteen. He wondered if it had ever been quite the same after that. The boyās center of interest had shifted. But he felt that it was temporary; he felt that when the time came for Lucian to return for good, a yearās residence would change things. He had the right stuff in him. They spoke well of him at Saint Lukeās in New York, where he had done his interne job; Lucian had thought the experience would be broader than if he chose the Georgetown Hospital and the doctor had felt that he was probably right. Good for a young man to go to a big city, anyhow; he still sometimes saw in the blue flames of his coal fire a different Dr. Abercorn, different primarily from having served his interneship in a big city. He might not have come back to Georgetown at all. He was really, at heart, a little surprised that Lucian was coming back. In fact, he suspected that, at heart, he still felt a slight doubt that Lucian would get there. And if he got there, would he stay? Would he be satisfied with the old office? Except for an occasional coat of white paint, nothing had been done to it for twenty years.
He liked the room, himself, with the shallow coal grate and the black marble mantel and the wide glassed-in shelves of heavy books forming a base for ink drawings by Charles Dana Gibson and the famous picture of the dark-haired young woman sitting before a round mirror which upon second glance became a skull with her head and its reflection the eye sockets, the racks with ...
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Chapter One
- Chapter Two
- Chapter Three
- Chapter Four
- Chapter Five
- Chapter Six
- Chapter Seven
- Chapter Eight
- Copyright Page