All the King's Men - Robert Penn Warren [244]
He was still there when I came up, a squirt with his hat over one eye and the camera hung round his neck and a grin on his squirt face. I thought maybe I had seen him around town, but maybe not, the squirts look so much alike when they grind them out of journalism school. “Hello,” I said.
He said hello.
“I saw you get that picture,” I said.
He said yeah.
“Well, son,” I said, “if you live long enough, you’ll find out there are son kinds of a son-of-a-bitch you don’t have to be even to be a newspaperman.”
He said yeah, out of his squirt face, and looked at am. Then he asked. “You’re Burden?”
I nodded
“Jesus Christ,” he exclaimed, “you work for Stark and you call somebody a son-of-a-bitch.”
I just looked at him. I’d been over all that ground before. I had been over it a thousand times with a thousand people. Hotel lobbies and dinner tables and club cars and street corners and bedrooms and filling stations. Sometimes they didn’t say it just exactly that way and sometimes they didn’t say it at all, but it was there. Oh, I’d fixed them, all right. I knew how to roll with that punch and give it right back in the gut. I ought to have known, I’d had plenty of practice.
But you get tired. In a way it is too easy, and so it isn’t fun any more. And then you get so you don’t get mad any more, it has happened so often. But those aren’t the reasons. It is just that those people who say that to you–or don’t say it–aren’t right and they are wrong. If it were absolutely either way, you wouldn’t have to think about it, you could just shut your eyes and let them have it in the gut. But the trouble is, they are half right and half wrong, and in the end that is what paralyzes you. Trying to sort out the one from the other. You can’t explain it to them, for there isn’t ever time and there is always that look on their faces. So you get to a point in the end where you don’t even let them have it in the gut. You just look at them, and it is like a dream or something remembered from a long time back or like they weren’t there at all.
So I just looked at the squirt face.
There were other people there. They were looking at me. They expected me to say something. Or do something. But somehow I didn’t even mind their eyes on me. I didn’t even hate them. I didn’t feel anything except a kind of numbness and soreness inside, more numbness than soreness. I stood there and looked at him and waited the way you wait for the pain to start after you have been hit. Then, if the pain started, I would give it to him. But it didn’t start, and there was just the numbness. So I turned around and walked away. I didn’t even mind the eyes that were following me or the snatch of a laugh somebody gave and cut off short because it was a funeral.
I walked on down the street with the numbness and soreness in me. But what had happened at the gate hadn’t given it to me. I had had it before I came.
I went on down the Row toward the Stanton house. I didn’t imagine she’d want to see me right then, but I intended to leave word that I would be at the hotel down at the Landing till late afternoon. This, of course, if something didn’t break about the Boss’s condition
But when I got to the Stanton house I learned that Anne wasn’t seeing anybody. Katy Maynard and the nurse weren’t superfluous any more. For when Anne entered the house she went into the living room and stood there just inside the door and looked slowly all over the place, at the piano, the furniture piece by piece, the picture above the fireplace, the way a woman looks over a room just before she sails in to redecorate that place and rearrange the furniture (that was Katy Maynard’s way of putting it), and then she just gave down. She didn’t even reach for the doorjamb, or stagger, or make a sound, they said. She just gave down, now it was over, and was out cold on the floor.
So when I got there, the nurse was upstairs working on her, and Katy Maynard was calling the doctor and taking charge. There wasn’t any reason for me to stay. I got in my car and headed back to the city.