The Moviegoer
to me, cured, by good whiskyâtook on for me the same larger-than-life plenitude as Sam himself). They lived first in the Quarter and then in the Mexican state of Chiapas, where I visited them in 1954. There he wrote a novel called The Honored and the Dishonored which dealt, according to the dust jacket, with âthe problem of evil and the essential loneliness of man.â Sam broke his leg in search of some ruins in a remote district and nearly died before some Indians found the two of them. He and Joel were very fond of each other and liked to joke in a way that at first seemed easy-going. For example, Sam liked to say that Joel was just the least little bit pregnant, and before they were married Joel liked to say that she was sick and tired of being Samâs bawd; I liked hearing her say bawd in that big caramel voice. She liked to call me Leftenant: âLeftenant, it has at long last dawned on me what it is about you that attracts me.â âWhat?â I asked, shifting around uneasily. âYouâve got dignidad, Leftenant.â It was not a good thing to say because thereafter I could never say or do anything without a consciousness of my dignity. When I visited them in Mexico, each spoke highly of the other and in the otherâs presence, which was slightly embarrassing. âHeâs quite a guy,â Joel told me. âDo you know what he told me after lying under a cliff for thirty six hours with two inches of his femur sticking out? He said: Queenie, I think Iâm going to pass out and before I do, Iâm going to give you a piece of adviceâGod, I thought he was going to die and knew and was telling me what to do with his bookâand he said quite solemnly: Queenie, always stick to Bach and the early Italiansâand passed out cold as a mackerel. And by God, itâs not bad advice.â Sam would say of Joel: âSheâs a fine girl. Always cherish your woman, Binx.â I told him I would. That summer I had much to thank him for. At the City College of Mexico I had met this girl from U.C.L.A. named Pat Pabst and she had come down with me to Chiapas. âAlways cherish your woman,â Sam told me and stomped around in very good style with his cane. I looked over at Pat Pabst who, I knew, was in Mexico looking for the Real Right Thing. And here it was: old Sam, a regular bear of a writer with his black Beethoven face, pushing himself around with a stoic sort of gracefulness; and I in my rucksack and with just the hint of an old Virginian voice. It was all her little California heart desired. She clave to me for dear life. After leaving Mexicoâhe had been overtaken by nostalgia, the characteristic mood of repetitionâSam returned to Feliciana where he wrote a nostalgic book called Happy Land which was commended in the reviews as a nice blend of a moderate attitude toward the race question and a conservative affection for the values of the agrarian South. An earlier book, called Curse upon the Land, which the dust jacket described as âan impassioned plea for tolerance and understanding,â had not been well received in Feliciana. Now and then Sam turns up in New Orleans on a lecture tour and visits my aunt and horses around with Kate and me. We enjoy seeing him. He calls me Brother Andy and Kate Miss Ruby.
âWeâve got to get Kate out of here and to do it, I need your help.â
Sam comes bursting through Kateâs new shutters and starts pacing up and down the tiny courtyard where I sit hunched over and bemused by the malaise. I notice that Kate has begun peeling plaster from the wall of the basement, exposing more plantation brick. âHereâs the story. Sheâs going to New York and youâre going to take her there. Take her there today and wait for meâIâll be back in ten days. She is to see Etienne Suëâyou know who he is: one of those fabulous continental geniuses who is as well known for his work in Knossan antiquities as his clinical researches. The man is chronically ill himself and sees no more than a handful of patients, but heâll see Kate. Iâve already called him. But here is the master stroke. Iâve already made arrangements for her to stay with the Princess.â
âThe Princess?â
There is a noise above us. I blink up into the thin sunlight. Bessie Coeâso called to distinguish her from Bessie Baham the laundressâa speckle-faced Negress with a white
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