The Moviegoer
swift cat-efficiency, then out and away with the children, surging to and fro in their light inconstant play, her eyes fading in a fond infected look.
Thérèse is telling about her plans to write her Congressman about the Rivers and Harbors bill. Thérèse and Mathilde are something like Joan and Jane in the Civics reader.
âIsnât that Tessie a case?â my mother cries as she disappears into the kitchen, signifying that Tessie is smart but also that there is something funny about her precocity.
âWhereâs Roy? We didnât see a car. We almost didnât walk over.â
âPlaying poker!â they all cry. This seems funny and everybody laughs. Lonnieâs hand curls. If our arrival had caused any confusion, we are carried quickly past by the strong current of family life.
âDo you have any more crabs, Mother?â
âAny more crabs! Ask Lonnie if we werenât just wondering what to do with the rest. You havenât had your supper?â
âNoâm.â
Mother folds up the thick layer of newspaper under the crab carcasses, making a neat bundle with her strong white hands. The whole mess comes away leaving the table dry and clean. Thérèse spreads fresh paper and Mathilde fetches two cold bottles of beer and two empty bottles for hammering the claws and presently we have a tray apiece, two small armies of scarlet crabs marching in neat rows. Sharon looks queer but she pitches in anyhow and soon everybody is making fun of her. Mathilde shows her how to pry off the belly plate and break the corner at the great claw so that the snowy flesh pops out in a fascicle. Sharon affects to be amazed and immediately the twins must show her how to suck the claws.
Outside is the special close blackness of night over water. Bugs dive into the tight new screen and bounce off with a guitar thrum. The children stand in close, feeling the mystery of the swamp and the secrecy of our cone of light. Clairain presses his stomach against the arm of my chair. Lonnie tries to tune his transistor radio; he holds it in the crook of his wrist, his hands bent back upon it. Once his lip falls open in the most ferocious leer. This upsets Sharon. It seems to her that a crisis is at hand, that Lonnie has at last reached the limit of his endurance. When no one pays any attention to him, she grows fidgetyâwhy doesnât somebody help him?âthen, after an eternity, Mathilde leans over carelessly and tunes in a station loud and clear. Lonnie turns his head, weaving, to see her, but not quite far enough.
Lonnie is dressed up, I notice. It turns out that Aunt Ethel, Royâs sister, was supposed to take him and the girls to a movie. It was not a real date, Mother reminds him, but Lonnie looks disappointed.
âWhat is the movie?â I ask him.
âFort Dobbs.â His speech is crooning but not hard to understand.
âWhere is it?â
âAt the Moonlite.â
âLetâs go.â
Lonnieâs head teeters and falls back like a dead manâs.
âI mean it. I want to see it.â
He believes me.
I corner my mother in the kitchen.
âWhatâs the matter with Lonnie?â
âWhy nothing.â
âHe looks terrible.â
âThat child wonât drink his milk!â sings out my mother.
âHas he had pneumonia again?â
âHe had the five day virus. And it was bad bad bad bad bad. Did you ever hear of anyone with virus receiving extreme unction?â
âWhy didnât you call me?â
âHe wasnât in danger of death. The extreme unction was his idea. He said it would strengthen him physically as well as spiritually. Have you ever heard of that?â
âYes. But is he all right now?â
She shrugs. My mother speaks of such matters in a light allusive way, with the overtones neither of belief nor disbelief but rather of a general receptivity to lore.
âDr Murtag said heâd never seen anything like it. Lonnie got out of bed in half an hour.â
Sometimes when she mentions God, it strikes me that my mother uses him as but one of the devices that come to hand in an outrageous manâs world, to be put to work like all the rest in the one enterprise she has any use for: the canny management of the shocks of life. It is a bargain struck at the very beginning in which she settled for a general belittlement of everything, the good and the bad. She is as wary of good fortune as
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