The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty by Eudora Welty


  He loves the way they all play, too—all those next to him. The far section of the band is all studious, wearing glasses, every one—they don't count. Only those playing around Powerhouse are the real ones. He has a bass fiddler from Vicksburg, black as pitch, named Valentine, who plays with his eyes shut and talking to himself, very young: Powerhouse has to keep encouraging him. "Go on, go on, give it up, bring it on out there!" When you heard him like that on records did you know he was really pleading?

  He calls Valentine out to take a solo.

  "What you going to play?" Powerhouse looks out kindly from behind the piano; he opens his mouth and shows his tongue, listening.

  Valentine looks down, drawing against his instrument, and says without a lip movement, "'Honeysuckle Rose.'"

  He has a clarinet player named Little Brother, and loves to listen to anything he does. He'll smile and say, "Beautiful!" Little Brother takes a step forward when he plays and stands at the very front, with the whites of his eyes like fishes swimming. Once when he played a low note, Powerhouse muttered in dirty praise, "He went clear downstairs to get that one!"

  After a long time, he holds up the number of fingers to tell the band how many choruses still to go—usually five. He keeps his directions down to signals.

  It's a bad night outside. It's a white dance, and nobody dances, except a few straggling jitterbugs and two elderly couples. Everybody just stands around the band and watches Powerhouse. Sometimes they steal glances at one another, as if to say, Of course, you know how it is with them—Negroes—band leaders—they would play the same way, giving all they've got, for an audience of one.... When somebody, no matter who, gives everything, it makes people feel ashamed for him.

  Late at night they play the one waltz they will ever consent to play—by request, "Pagan Love Song." Powerhouse's head rolls and sinks like a weight between his waving shoulders. He groans, and his fingers drag into the keys heavily, holding on to the notes, retrieving. It is a sad song.


  "You know what happened to me?" says Powerhouse.

  Valentine hums a response, dreaming at the bass.

  "I got a telegram my wife is dead," says Powerhouse, with wandering fingers.

  "Uh-huh?"

  His mouth gathers and forms a barbarous O while his fingers walk up straight, unwillingly, three octaves.

  "Gypsy? Why how come her to die, didn't you just phone her up in the night last night long distance?"

  "Telegram say—here the words: Your wife is dead." He puts 4/4 over the 3/4.

  "Not but four words?" This is the drummer, an unpopalar boy named Scoot, a disbelieving maniac.

  Powerhouse is shaking his vast cheeks. "What the hell was she trying to do? What was she up to?"

  "What name has it got signed, if you got a telegram?" Scoot is spitting away with those wire brushes.

  Little Brother, the clarinet player, who cannot now speak, glares and tilts back.

  "Uranus Knockwood is the name signed." Powerhouse lifts his eyes open. "Ever heard of him?" A bubble shoots out on his lip like a plate on a counter.

  Valentine is beating slowly on with his palm and scratching the strings with his long blue nails. He is fond of a waltz. Powerhouse interrupts him.

  "I don't know him. Don't know who he is." Valentine shakes his head with the closed eyes.

  "Say it agin."

  "Uranus Knockwood."

  "That ain't Lenox Avenue."

  "It ain't Broadway."

  "Ain't ever seen it wrote out in any print, even for horse racing."

  "Hell, that's on a star, boy, ain't it?" Crash of the cymbals.

  "What the hell was she up to?" Powerhouse shudders. "Tell me, tell me, tell me." He makes triplets, and begins a new chorus. He holds three lingers up.

  "You say you got a telegram." This is Valentine, patient and sleepy, beginning again.

  Powerhouse is elaborate. "Yas, the time I go out, go way downstairs along a long cor-ri-dor to where they puts us: coming back along the cor-ri-dor: steps out and hands me a telegram: Your wife is dead."

  "Gypsy?" The drummer like a spider over his drums.

  "Aaaaaaaaa!" shouts Powerhouse, flinging out both powerful arms for three whole beats to flex his muscles, then kneading a dough of bass notes. His eyes glitter. He plays the piano like a drum sometimes—why not?

  "Gypsy? Such a dancer?"

  "Why you don't hear it straight from your agent? Why it ain't come from headquarters? What you been doing, getting telegrams in the corridor, signed nobody?"

  They all laugh. End of that chorus.

  "What time is it?" Powerhouse calls. "What the hell place is this? Where is my watch and chain?"

  "I hang it on you," whimpers Valentine. "It still there."

  There it rides on Powerhouse's great stomach, down where he can never see it.

  "Sure did hear some clock striking twelve while ago. Must be midnight."

  "It going to be intermission," Powerhouse declares, lifting up his finger with the signet ring.

  He draws the chorus to an end. He pulls a big Northern hotel towel out of the deep pocket in his vast, special-cut tux pants and pushes his forehead into it.

  "If she went and killed herself!" he says with a hidden face. "If she up and jumped out that window!" He gets to his feet, turning vaguely, wearing the towel on his head.

  "Ha, ha!"

  "Sheik, sheik!"

  "She wouldn't do that." Little Brother sets down his clarinet like a precious vase, and speaks. He still looks like an East Indian queen, implacable, divine, and full of snakes. "You ain't going to expect people doing what they says over long distance."

  "Come on!" roars Powerhouse. He is already at the back door, he has pulled it wide open, and with a wild, gathered-up face is smelling the terrible night.

  Powerhouse, Valentine, Scoot and Little Brother step outside into the drenching rain.

  "Well, they emptying buckets," says Powerhouse in a mollified voice. On the street he holds his hands out and turns up the blanched palms like sieves.

  A hundred dark, ragged, silent, delighted Negroes have come around from under the eaves of the hall, and follow wherever they go.

  "Watch out Little Brother don't shrink," says Powerhouse. "You just the right size now, clarinet don't suck you in. You got a dry throat, Little Brother, you in the desert?" He reaches into the pocket and pulls out a paper of mints. "Now hold 'em in your mouth—don't chew 'em. I don't carry around nothing without limit."

  "Go in that joint and have beer," says Scoot, who walks ahead.

  "Beer? Beer? You know what beer is? What do they say is beer? What's beer? Where I been?"

  "Down yonder where it say World Café—that do?" They are in Negrotown now.

  Valentine patters over and holds open a screen door warped like a sea shell, bitter in the wet, and they walk in, stained darker with the rain and leaving footprints. Inside, sheltered dry smells stand like screens around a table covered with a red-checkered cloth, in the center of which flies hang on to an obelisk-shaped ketchup bottle. The midnight walls are checkered again with admonishing "Not Responsible" signs and black-figured, smoky calendars. It is a waiting, silent, limp room. There is a burned-out-looking nickelodeon and right beside it a long-necked wall instrument labeled "Business Phone, Don't Keep Talking." Circled phone numbers are written up everywhere. There is a worn-out peacock feather hanging by a thread to an old, thin, pink, exposed light bulb, where it slowly turns around and around, whoever breathes.

  A waitress watches.

  "Come here, living statue, and get all this big order of beer we fixing to give."

  "Never seen you before anywhere." The waitress moves and comes forward and slowly shows little gold leaves and tendrils over her teeth. She shoves up her shoulders and breasts. "How I going to know who you might be? Robbers? Coming in out of the black of night right at midnight, setting down so big at my table?"

  "Boogers," says Powerhouse, his eyes opening lazily as in a cave.

&nbs
p; The girl screams delicately with pleasure. O Lord, she likes talk and scares.

  "Where you going to find enough beer to put out on this here table?"

  She runs to the kitchen with bent elbows and sliding steps.

  "Here's a million nickels," says Powerhouse, pulling his hand out of his pocket and sprinkling coins out, all but the last one, which he makes vanish like a magician.

  Valentine and Scoot take the money over to the nickelodeon, which looks as battered as a slot machine, and read all the names of the records out loud.

  "Whose 'Tuxedo Junction'?" asks Powerhouse.

  "You know whose."

  "Nickelodeon, I request you please to play 'Empty Bed Blues' and let Bessie Smith sing."

  Silence: they hold it like a measure.

  "Bring me all those nickels on back here," says Powerhouse. "Look at that! What you tell me the name of this place?"

  "White dance, week night, raining, Alligator, Mississippi, long ways from home."

  "Uh-huh."

  "Sent for You Yesterday and Here You Come Today" plays.

  The waitress, setting the tray of beer down on a back table, comes up taut and apprehensive as a hen. "Says in the kitchen, back there putting their eyes to little hole peeping out, that you is Mr. Powerhouse."...

  "They seeing right tonight, that is him," says Little Brother.

  "You him?"

  "That is him in the flesh," says Scoot.

  "Does you wish to touch him?" asks Valentine. "Because he don't bite."

  "You passing through?"

  "Now you got everything right."

  She waits like a drop, hands languishing together in front.

  "Little-Bit, ain't you going to bring the beer?"

  She brings it, and goes behind the cash register and smiles, turning different ways. The little fillet of gold in her mouth is gleaming.

  "The Mississippi River's here," she says once.

  Now all the watching Negroes press in gently and bright-eyed through the door, as many as can get in. One is a little boy in a straw sombrero which has been coated with aluminum paint all over.

  Powerhouse, Valentine, Scoot and Little Brother drink beer, and their eyelids come together like curtains. The wall and the rain and the humble beautiful waitress waiting on them and the other Negroes watching enclose them.

  "Listen!" whispers Powerhouse, looking into the ketchup bottle and slowly spreading his performer's hands over the damp, wrinkling cloth with the red squares. "Listen how it is. My wife gets missing me. Gypsy. She goes to the window. She looks out and sees you know what. Street. Sign saying Hotel. People walking. Somebody looks up. Old man. She looks down, out the window. Well?... Ssssst! Plooey! What she do? Jump out and bust her brains all over the world."

  He opens his eyes.

  "That's it," agrees Valentine. "You gets a telegram."

  "Sure she misses you," Little Brother adds.

  "No, it's nighttime." How softly he tells them! "Sure, it's the nighttime. She say, What do I hear? Footsteps walking up the hall That him? Footsteps go on off. It's not me. I'm in Alligator, Mississippi, she's crazy. Shaking all over. Listens till her ears and all grow out like old music-box horns but still she can't hear a thing. She says, All right! I'll jump out the window then. Got on her nightgown. I know that nightgown, and her thinking there. Says, Ho hum, all right, and jumps out the window. Is she mad at me! Is she crazy! She don't leave nothing behind her!"

  "Ya! Ha!"

  "Brains and insides everywhere, Lord, Lord."

  All the watching Negroes stir in their delight, and to their higher delight he says affectionately, "Listen! Rats in here."

  "That must be the way, boss."

  "Only, naw, Powerhouse, that ain't true. That sound too bad "

  "Does? I even know who finds her," cries Powerhouse. "That nogood pussyfooted crooning creeper, that creeper that follow around after me, coming up like weeds behind me, following around after me everything I do and messing around on the trail I leave. Bets my numbers, sings my songs, gets close to my agent like a Betsy-bug; when I going out he just coming in. I got him now! I got my eye on him."

  "Know who he is?"

  "Why, it's that old Uranus Knockwood!"

  "Ya! Ha!"

  "Yeah, and he coming now, he going to find Gypsy. There he is, coming around that corner, and Gypsy kadoodling down, oh-oh, watch out! Ssssst! Plooey! See, there she is in her little old nightgown, and her insides and brains all scattered round."

  A sigh fills the room.

  "Hush about her brains. Hush about her insides."

  "Ya! Ha! You talking about her brains and insides—old Uranus Knockwood," says Powerhouse, "look down and say Jesus! He say, Look here what I'm walking round in!"

  They all burst into halloos of laughter. Powerhouse's face looks like a big hot iron stove.

  "Why, he picks her up and carries her off!" he says.

  "Ya! Ha!"

  "Carries her back around the corner...."

  "Oh, Powerhouse!"

  "You know him."

  "Uranus Knockwood!"

  "Yeahhh!"

  "He take our wives when we gone!"

  "He come in when we goes out!"

  "Uh-huh!"

  "He go out when we comes in!"

  "Yeahhh!"

  "He standing behind the door!"

  "Old Uranus Knockwood."

  "You know him."

  "Middle-size man."

  "Wears a hat."

  "That's him."

  Everybody in the room moans with pleasure. The little boy in the fine silver hat opens a paper and divides out a jelly roll among his followers.

  And out of the breathless ring somebody moves forward like a slave, leading a great logy Negro with bursting eyes, and says, "This here is Sugar-Stick Thompson, that dove down to the bottom of July Creek and pulled up all those drownded white people fall out of a boat. Last summer, pulled up fourteen."

  "Hello," says Powerhouse, turning and looking around at them all with his great daring face until they nearly suffocate.

  Sugar-Stick, their instrument, cannot speak; he can only look back at the others.

  "Can't even swim. Done it by holding his breath," says the fellow with the hero.

  Powerhouse looks at him.

  "I his half brother," the fellow puts in.

  They step back.

  "Gypsy say," Powerhouse rumbles gently again, looking at them, "'What is the use? I'm gonna jump out so far—so far....' Ssssst—!"

  "Don't, boss, don't do it agin," says Little Brother.

  "It's awful," says the waitress. "I hates that Mr. Knockwoods. All that the truth?"

  "Want to see the telegram I got from him?" Powerhouse's hand goes to the vast pocket.

  "Now wait, now wait, boss." They all watch him.

  "It must be the real truth," says the waitress, sucking in her lower lip, her luminous eyes turning sadly, seeking the windows.

  "No, babe, it ain't the truth." His eyebrows fly up, and he begins to whisper to her out of his vast oven mouth. His hand stays in his pocket. "Truth is something worse, I ain't said what, yet. It's something hasn't come to me, but I ain't saying it won't. And when it does, then want me to tell you?" He sniffs all at once, his eyes come open and turn up, almost too far. He is dreamily smiling.

  "Don't, boss, don't, Powerhouse!"

  "Oh!" the waitress screams.

  "Go on git out of here!" bellows Powerhouse, taking his hand out of his pocket and clapping after her red dress.

  The ring of watchers breaks and falls away.

  "Look at that! Intermission is up," says Powerhouse.

  He folds money under a glass, and after they go out, Valentine leans back in and drops a nickel in the nickelodeon behind them, and it lights up and begins to play "The Goona Goo." The feather dangles still.

  "Take a telegram!" Powerhouse shouts suddenly up into the rain over the street. "Take a answer. Now what was that name?"

  They get a little tir
ed.

  "Uranus Knockwood."

  "You ought to know."

  "Yas? Spell it to me."

  They spell it all the ways it could be spelled. It puts them in a wonderful humor.

  "Here's the answer. I got it right here. 'What in the hell you talking about? Don't make any difference: I gotcha.' Name signed: Powerhouse."

  "That going to reach him, Powerhouse?" Valentine speaks in a maternal voice.

  "Yas, yas."

  All hushing, following him up the dark street at a distance, like old rained-on black ghosts, the Negroes are afraid they will die laughing.

  Powerhouse throws back his vast head into the steaming rain, and a look of hopeful desire seems to blow somehow like a vapor from his own dilated nostrils over his face and bring a mist to his eyes.

  "Reach him and come out the other side."

  "That's it, Powerhouse, that's it. You got him now."

  Powerhouse lets out a long sigh.

  "But ain't you going back there to call up Gypsy long distance, the way you did last night in that other place? I seen a telephone.... Just to see if she there at home?"

  There is a measure of silence. That is one crazy drummer that's going to get his neck broken some day.

  "No," growls Powerhouse. "No! How many thousand times tonight I got to say No?"

  He holds up his arm in the rain.

  "You sure-enough unroll your voice some night, it about reach up yonder to her," says Little Brother, dismayed.

  They go on up the street, shaking the rain off and on them like birds.

  Back in the dance hall, they play "San" (99). The jitterbugs start up like windmills stationed over the floor, and in their orbits—one circle, another, a long stretch and a zigzag—dance the elderly couples with old smoothness, undisturbed and stately.

  When Powerhouse first came back from intermission, no doubt full of beer, they said, he got the band tuned up again in his own way. He didn't strike the piano keys for pitch—he simply opened his mouth and gave falsetto howls—in A, D and so on—they tuned by him. Then he took hold of the piano, as if he saw it for the first time in his life, and tested it for strength, hit it down in the bass, played an octave with his elbow, lifted the top, looked inside, and leaned against it with all his might. He sat down and played it for a few minutes with outrageous force and got it under his power—a bass deep and coarse as a sea net—then produced something glimmering and fragile, and smiled. And who could ever remember any of the things he says? They are just inspired remarks that roll out of his mouth like smoke.

 
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