Read Always Outnumbered, Always Outgunned (Socrates Fortlow 1) Online
Authors: Walter Mosley
Tags: #Literary, #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction, #General
Charles never spoke to Socrates after that day. He grew older and more somber and could be seen, now and then, collecting bottles and cans on the streets of Watts. Socrates watched Charles for all those years as he turned meaner and shabbier.
If he could have, Socrates would have told Charles that he was sorry for breaking his nose; that he was just recently out of the penitentiary when they had their fight. In the penitentiary you had to hurt somebody in your first few days on the block because you had to show that you weren’t a punk. A fight was no more than a housewarming in the joint.
S
ometimes, as the years passed, Socrates would have imaginary talks with Charles. He’d ask the yellow-eyed sloucher why he stayed around those same old streets.
“Why you out here actin’ like a hoodlum child when you a man should be makin’ sumpin’ out yourself?” Socrates mouthed the words silently on the bus coming home from his new job at Bounty Supermarket.
“An’ what you doin’ so special, old man?” the Charles in Socrates’ mind responded. “You live in that rat hole an’ take the bus to yo’ sto’ ev’ry day. What you makin’? What you doin’?”
“I got a job, man,” Socrates whispered. “I get up an’ go to work. I get a paycheck. I got me a bank account.”
The lady sitting in front of Socrates got up. At first he thought that she was getting off, but then she just changed seats.
He put his fingers to his lips and concentrated on keeping quiet. But then his mental friend said, “You a niggah just like me, Socrates Fortlow. Your shit stink an’ you down on the bottom of the white man’s ladder—right next to me. I cain’t go nowhere an’ you cain’t neither.”
“I can too!” Socrates said loudly “I go wherever I damn please!”
No one turned around to see what Socrates was talking about but they heard him—they could have testified to his vow.
{2.}
The very next Saturday morning, Socrates got on a bus headed for Santa Monica. The big blue bus was empty except for him and the driver—a black woman who liked to talk.
“Yeah, all my kids down Atlanta,” the driver said. “You know colored people always on the move. Always tryin’ to get somewhere fast. I done told’em they might as well stay here. I told’em that what you got to do is to make a stand somewheres. But they don’t listen. They say that they ain’t nobody givin’ no chance for no colored up here. Shoot. I ain’t askin’ nobody to give me a damn thing. Nobody give you nuthin’, now do they, mister?”
“Well,” Socrates said. “They might give you one thing.”
“Oh,” said the driver. “What’s that?”
“A good kick in the pants.”
That got the driver laughing. She laughed so hard that Socrates was afraid she’d run the red light they were approaching. But she didn’t. The brake trumpeted like a bull elephant and the bus swayed to a halt, giving Socrates the feeling that he was riding inside of a great wave.
“What you doin’ out here today?” the driver asked. “You work out here?”
“I come out here ’cause I wanted to,” Socrates answered. “You don’t have to spend yo’ whole life livin’ in a cave like some goddam caveman. I wanna see the ocean. I been in L.A. for eight and a half years an’ I ain’t seen the ocean once.”
“Hm! Well at least you know it,” the driver said, sneering with the satisfaction of the truth. “That’s what’s wrong wit’ so many people. Here they got the world right out there in front’a them an’ they complainin’ that they ain’t nuthin’ they could do. I’m wit’ you. Pay your fare an’ see what’s what.”
S
ocrates got off the bus at Lincoln and Pico. He wandered around that neighborhood until he happened upon the big blue ocean.
There was a ribbon of sidewalk running down the beach, about a hundred yards from the water. Near-naked men and women with good bodies traveled up and down the pedestrian road by walking and running, by blade skates and bicycle. There were skateboarders and surfers and men and women in wet suits. Everybody seemed hard at work at their recreation.
Socrates was reminded of the prison yard.
He had the same feeling he’d get when he was let out of solitary confinement. The yard was a wonderful place after a few weeks in the icebox. There was sunlight and the company of men. There were weights and checkers and magazines and talk. He was still in jail but he had the feeling of freedom after being let out of the punishment box. Even jail could feel good if they let you stretch your legs and squint at the sun once in a while.
T
he sun was hard and strong on the beach that day. Socrates took off his shoes and socks and put them in the pockets of his army jacket. Then he took off the jacket and slung it over his shoulder.
There were hardly any people down near the water. A few joggers; just as many dogs.
At the shoreline the surf was loud. It boomed and hissed and sang in a chorus of drowning bells. The sound was everything down near the water. The whole world was the blue god’s song.
“G
od ain’t nowhere near here, child,” Socrates’ aunt, Bellandra Beaufort, used to say. “He’s a million miles away; out in the middle’a the ocean somewhere. An’ he ain’t white like they say he is neither.”
“God’s black?” little Socrates asked the tall, skinny woman. He was sitting in her lap, leaning against her bony breast.
“Naw, baby,” she said sadly. “He ain’t black. If he was there wouldn’t be all this mess down here wit’ us. Naw. God’s blue.”
“Blue?”
“Uh-huh. Blue like the ocean. Blue. Sad and cold and far away like the sky is far and blue. You got to go a long long way to get to God. And even if you get there he might not say a thing. Not a damn thing.”
S
ocrates walked for miles on the curving beaches. The surface of the sand was hot from the sun but cool when his foot sank to the layer of moisture below. He went north past Malibu and on toward the blue of the water and sky. He stayed close to the ocean remembering his aunt’s sermons about how God was always beyond reach but how people were always trying to get there.
Men ain’t never satisfied wit’ what is an’ that’s why they’s only one out of a hunnert that’s happy
.
He ate three bananas and a peanut butter and jam sandwich from his pockets. The soft sand, the wind, and the wild seas made him feel as if he were staggering under some angry god’s rage.
The sun rose high and was hot on his head. But a cold wind tore off the waters and chilled his bones.
Socrates knew that Charles Rinnett had never been this far—not on his own, not sober, not with his eyes open.
“Out of the icebox,” he said to himself. “And into the sea.”
{3.}
Socrates walked on, freezing and burning and feeling a freedom that he only ever dreamt about when he was a child on his bitter aunt’s lap. The sun arched high above, almost washing out the blue in the sky, and then began to descend.
Socrates saw seashells and syringes half buried in the surf; he saw a group of gulls rending the corpse of a brown dog; he saw the patterns of high tide rippled in the dry sand. Here and there was salted foam, like dried semen, sketched into sandy depressions.
Everything was harsh and beautiful the way he’d always known life to be. Socrates felt every breath and wondered if he could leave the life he’d made back down around Charles and his grinning fool friends.
I
f he got tired he sat down. There was fruit and sandwiches enough in his pockets. He knew that he should turn around but he had the notion that there might be something waiting for him up ahead. Something that he could take home. Something that would keep him from forgetting what he had seen and felt.
H
e passed many people on the way north but never spoke. Sometimes he’d nod and smile; now and then his greeting was returned.
Toward the later afternoon he saw a couple walking his way from far up the shore. A man in layers of gray and a woman dressed in bright clothes. He was large and she was slight with a youthful gait. She swung one hand back and forth while the other arm was wrapped around her lover’s waist.
They were certainly lovers, Socrates could tell that. He was older and she was the kind of child that drove older men crazy. There was a double passion in them. His gait was heavy, deliberate; hers so lighthearted that she was almost in flight there next to him.
Socrates hoped that they would keep walking in his direction. He wanted to see their faces and smile at them.
From afar Socrates thought the man might have been black, or Mexican, or maybe he was just a very tan white man. The girl had to be white though. Her skin almost shone in the afternoon sun.
It didn’t matter. Nothing did in the breathlike wind of the blue ocean; the screaming and chiming and hissing of some language that was older than men were, older than life itself. Socrates heard the words of that blue god in the base of his brain.
It made him feel crazy and struck him dumb.
Slowly the couple came toward him.
He trudged on.
When they were less than a hundred feet distant, Socrates was sure the man was black but he was no longer positive about the girl. Her skin was olive closer up.
The girl or woman, white or black, whatever she was, waved at Socrates and his heart jumped. He felt like a child again about to meet new friends at the playground sandbox.
{4.}
“Hey, man,” said the large Negro, who was dressed all in gray.
“What’s happenin’?”
He took Socrates’ hand in a powerful grip. It was rare that Socrates encountered a man as strong as he was. He might have been aging, he might have lost his wind, but Socrates could still lift a forty-gallon trash can brimming with water and walk it a full city block.
“Hey,” the young woman said with one quick breath. Her skin was amber and her long hair was everything from blond to brown; from straight to curly. Her eyes might have been green. But it was her face that gave Socrates pause. The features were sparse on a long, horselike skull. The extended bone of her nose came down, broadening a little toward the generous lips. Her cheeks were high but the sloping curve of her forehead diminished their effect.
She was a beautiful woman-child, not more than seventeen, and strange to look at—almost not human.
“We were watchin’ you,” the girl said. “Gordo thought that you were a soldier like him but I said no. I said that you weren’t ever in any army. You walk like nobody ever taught you how to march.”
Socrates smiled and nodded.
“Well?” the man asked.
“Well what?”
“Were you in the army?”
“Not hardly,” Socrates said.
The girl socked Gordo in the upper arm and shouted, “Hah! I win!”
“You want a drink?” Gordo asked Socrates. He slung a large gray backpack from his shoulders and sank to his knees in the sand. “This is Delia.”
Delia stuck out her hand and when Socrates took it she pulled so that he would sit down with them.
“What’s your name?” she asked.
“Socrates.”
“Wow. Far out,” she mouthed. Maybe she was whispering but Socrates couldn’t hear her over the sound of the waves.
Gordo pulled a quart bottle of cheap red wine from the backpack.
“We got weed too. You want some smoke?” he asked.
“Wine’d be fine.”
Gordo had a boy’s face with hair that had gone more than half gray; salt-and-pepper through his mustache and eyebrows. He unscrewed the bottle top and took a deep swig of the red wine.
Socrates took the next drink.
Delia held the bottle to her open mouth and poured the wine in, spilling some down her multicolored patchwork vest. She laughed and handed the bottle back to her man. Gordo twisted the bottle into the sand.
“What brings you out here?” Gordo asked Socrates.
“Nothin’ that I could tell,” Socrates answered. “Just out for a walk. I do that about every twenty years or so.”
Gordo smiled. “You want somethin’ to eat? We got chili and tortilla chips.”
“And soda,” Delia added.
“Sure,” Socrates said. He was thinking that he should go home, back to Watts. He was thinking that he was too far out. A voice in his head actually said, “Go home now, Socrates,” but the wind and the water made the voice small and insignificant.
Delia pulled up her leather skirt and folded her bare legs in the sand.
“There’s a bunch of driftwood a mile or so back there. Up toward the canyon,” Gordo said. “We could go on up there. Nobody’ll see a fire.”
Socrates was staring at those long brown legs.
When Delia looked into his eyes her grin turned into a silent laugh.
{5.}
They went back up the beach about a mile, then under Pacific Coast Highway through a concrete drainage ditch. The steep canyon they entered was narrow and nameless. It went about a thousand yards into the Santa Monica Mountains and then came to a halt. Throughout the dry streambed were tangled piles of driftwood, brought in on countless high tides.
“You come out here much?” Delia asked Socrates as they picked their way through the creek bed.