Thou art a beaten dog beneath the hail,
A swollen magpie in a fitful sun,
. . . Pull down thy vanity, I say pull down
--Ezra Pound, The Pisan Cantos, LXXXI
Dictionaries, magazines, encyclopedias, from the Anders-Risette
book publishing company out of Kansas City, Missouri. Which most
people haven't heard of. Which makes the selling harder. Which is
a challenge, and meeting it one of the satisfactions I have learned
to content myself with. Not happiness but the balance of a small
clean square of it. Not happiness which we were never promised but
certain treaties, concessions, compromises which make this life
bearable, make the cross each of us must carry a little lighter,
easier on the shoulders and back.
So I am not complaining. This life of mine is not without its
moments of fulfillment, of hope even. I drive up and down the
coast, up and down the southern third of the state and I am out of
myself then, out of the tightness that is myself and into the rest
of us, the mass of us. Which convinces me that I was right not to
shoot myself in a motel room along Interstate 10 on a night six
years ago when things were not well for me. Which is a comfort.
Look here, I said. For Celeste. She can read about what the kids
dress up like in Argentina and Honduras and Portugal. She can see
what Eskimos eat that live at the North Pole. Celeste is the
youngest member of the Singing Boudreaux, a family of
tongue-speaking Cajuns that live east of Saucier, and she has the
dark creole eyes they all have. They didn't take anything, though,
not even a magazine subscription, which means I failed. But here=D5s
where I turned it around, bought back the piece of redemption that
would carry me through the rest of the day, through the driving
back down 49 to the coast: Celeste has a sister named Marie who is
two years older and I talked Celeste and Marie into coming out
front of the trailer with me for a while, and I got them to sing
with me, J'ai marie un ouvrier, a fine old Louisiana song my
grandmother used to sing in the evenings when dusk would hit, the
air still and heavy and I would taste loneliness sharp behind my
tongue. It gave me comfort to sing with them not only because I
love the old ways but because I secretly loathe their
tongue-speaking, their forsaking of the Church for the quick cheap
thrill of Pentecostalism.
A pathetic compromise? I don't deny it. But I have learned among
other things in my seventeen years of selling things to people that
pride is not only a sin of the spirit but the most impractical and
luxurious thing that a person can cling to.
Hattiesburg is not good book-selling territory because it's a
college town and the people in that town know about things like
book publishing companies and want to buy their books from a firm
they have heard of. Neither is Ocean Springs because they are all
retired military from Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi where I
live. But if you follow 90 east around thirty miles you will come
to Pascagoula, which can be good if you time it right. Which I do.
Everybody in the town of Pascagoula, actually it's the city of
Pascagoula, is employed by Ingalls Shipbuilding which is the
biggest builder of Navy ships in the world. So by that you get it,
they are all welders and painters and shipfitters. There are a few
engineers, but they are not the kind to read much. In Pascagoula
they are all the kind to get married young and get on as
apprentices if they can to a welder or a painter or a drafter, and
they are the kind that will be laid off just when they have got
into debt for a car or a house or a baby, just when the Navy has
decided it doesn't need as many Aegis cruisers coming out of
Ingalls and Goula as it used to.
But I time it right, going down there when I hear there has been a
new contract signed between the high-ups at Ingalls and in the
Navy, and they are (all the welders and painters and shipfitters)
feeling nice about themselves and getting drunk in the evenings not
because they have to but because they want to, and I hit a couple
of trailer parks and dingy little subdivisions, and hitting
Pascagoula at this time some of them actually seem glad to see me.
Which you don't get much of if you sell. Which can get you down,
even if you have been doing it for as long as I have been doing it.
Which is hard. But timing it the way I do there is a moment of
uncareful joy, of generosity and they will buy a set of
encyclopedias for the kids. And even though I know they will make
three or four payments and then try to send them back and I will by
then have my 6.5 and let the company take it from there, I can
block it out sometimes, get caught up in it with them, believing
that contract will be good, they'll pay the mortgage down, start
that retirement plan, come out on top. And if they offer me a
beer or two or three which they sometimes will I sit with them at
the kitchen table or out on the front steps watching the sun drop,
bleeding down the pines. Feeling out of me and back in it,
humanity, all of us. Which is a reward, it is. The Nguyens and
the Trans live and work in Little Saigon, which is downtown Biloxi,
where I live. And where I'm a traitor, it's true.
I am one of the whites who has learned to pronounce their names
because he has a reason to, and they know it. I am not naive
enough to think they are fooled by it. But of course I am timing
this right too. It's summer, mid-July, and the trawls are full,
the jumbos are bringing ten dollars a pound off the pier, and I'm
making jokes with the Nguyens and the Trans about all the cash the
U.S. government is never going to see. And the kids I say could
sure use a good dictionary I bet, a hardback one that will last. And here's the good thing: they have never heard of the
Anders-Risette book publishing company out of Kansas City,
Missouri, but they have never heard of any book publishing company.
Which means I have made some money off the Nguyens and the Trans.
And here's where the traitor part comes in. I head west down
Division, hit the beach, take Popps Ferry and I'm not in Little
Saigon anymore. And I can talk about the lousy Nguyens and Trans
bringing more of their lousy Nguyens and Trans over to rape the
Sound, sweep the shrimp practically right out of the trawls of the
Thibodeaux and the Dedeaux and the Malloys and the Sabatinis. They
eat their fucking cats, Tony Sabatini said to me, an eighteen
year-old kid. I wouldn't know, I said back to him (and felt bad
about, and went to Confession about). I never had much for the
greedy little bastards anyway. Feeling sick when I said it.
Feeling the fried rice and snow peas with chicken and shrimp from
the Luc Truong Cafe flop solid, a solid flop in my stomach. But
the Thibodeaux and the Dedeaux and the Malloys and the Sabatinis
fall for it sometimes. If I stay around long enough, if I have
enough patience which is the main thing in my business.
At first after the divorce I didn't go, out of sympathy for my
wife who is a good Christian without ever seeming to try, which
often made me jealous when we were married. But I started missing
St. Ignatius, and Our Lady of Sorrows is a half-hour drive and
doesn't have Father Luke, who is the best priest I have ever known.
So I came back to St. Ignatius and discovered, and this surprised
me though it shouldn't have, she wasn't bothered at all by my being
there. I looked over at her several times during sermon and she
was looking up at Father with a look on her face I can only
describe, and this doesn't describe it really, as full of peace.=20
That's how she looked, and it made me jealous right there in the
middle of Mass, of her faith, her unconscious, easy faith. She
could lose herself in it, be swallowed up by God while I sat three
pews over looking at her face every few minutes wondering how she
could do it. That's the kind of person my wife is.
So that is one of my weaknesses. Jealousy. Of my wife, of
several men I have known, most recently of my cousin Raymond
Talbot, who worked for years on the line at Barq's Root Beer which
is made and bottled here in Biloxi. Who was promoted to head of
distribution for Harrison, Hancock, and Jackson counties when a new
head man came in and in two years was promoted to head of
distribution for Mississippi and Louisiana. Who got my son Terry
his first job which is Raymond's old job that was left open when he
was promoted the first time. Who is now looked up to by my son
Terry.
And I am a petty man. Irrational, angry, obsessed with things of
no importance. I lost a sale three days ago because I was still
upset with the clerk I had left at the Texaco station five miles
back. So I pressured the couple, rushed the pitch, made the old
guy angry, left angry myself.
I had to drive down to the seawall and let the wind blowing in off
the Gulf cool me, watching the gulls chase the shrimpers sliding
past in front of the horizon. Watching the water slip by, dipping
and rising against the gray wall that I remember being knocked down
along with everything else in this town by Camille in '69, when I
had been married to my wife for two years. And it calmed me, eased
my tightness, filled me with peace. I firmly believe that the
priests are special men, that only they are privileged to commune
with God, but the nearest I have felt to him I have felt there,
surrounded by others. All of us looking out toward Horn Island
where Walter Anderson painted in water colors brightly the crabs
and fish and snakes and gators and out beyond Horn Island, to the
hazy and blue horizon curving down to a place that is beyond my
vision.
I have said that life is not happy. What I have not said is that
happiness is a destructive lie, a destroyer. Which I'm saying now.
Which convinces me again that I was right not to kill myself in a
room at the Days Inn on the way to Damascus, Alabama six years ago.
When I had been divorced from my wife for a year, when the
Boudreaux were not yet blessed with the gift of tongue-speaking,
when the Nguyens and the Trans would not let me into their houses.
What happened, what convinced me not to pick it up, the long
throat of it lying black against the pillow, shining up to me? It
doesn't matter--a knock on the door, a wrong number, a woman
sighing in the next room. I was staring through the window, out at
the headlights streaking down 49 not merging but periodic,
separated, and I knew. Without leaving the room and climbing the
dark hill leading up to the exit ramp, that there it stood. Huge,
dark, rough in its violent glory. All of us driving in its shadow.
Which persuaded me not to shoot myself, and was my salvation. And
leads me up and down the southern third of the state and yields up
parcels of grace which carry me through, even me, a not-very-good
Catholic, a divorced husband, a sinner, unworthy, me.
Here is how I described myself to someone who asked last week: I
am forty-three, a good Catholic (I try to be anyway, certain times
in my life I have been more successful at this than others), a
hunter, an ex-pitcher, a divorced husband, a drinker, a father of a
son. And I sell things to people.
I am one of the whites who has learned to pronounce their names
because he has a reason to, and they know it. I am not naive
enough to think they are fooled by it.
Amelia Fortenberry Franz received her M.A. in English/Creative
Writing from Texas A&M University in 1993, and her fiction and
non-fiction have appeared in such journals as The Texas Review, English in Texas, and The Morpo Review. In addition to teaching
junior high school in the San Antonio area, she co-edits (with
husband Matthew) Gruene Street: An Internet Journal of Prose and
Poetry.