A History of the African-American People (Proposed) by Strom Thurmond (45 page)

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Authors: Percival Everett,James Kincaid

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BOOK: A History of the African-American People (Proposed) by Strom Thurmond
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KINCAID: Long ago.

THURMOND: What about you, Mr. Everett?

EVERETT: No.

THURMOND: I don’t blame you. If I was colored, I wouldn’t see it either. You boys ready to go?

The BOYS: We’re ready.

THURMOND: Head ’em up and move ’em out. Mr. Kincaid, you ever milk a cow?

KINCAID: No.

Restaurant in Georgetown—Estelle’s Southern Cuisine

THURMOND: Is this table okay? It’s my usual place. I like to be close to the toilet.

EVERETT: It’s fine. We might find it convenient as well.

KINCAID: [pointing to a nearby table] Is that…

THURMOND: Tillman. You’ve met him, I’m sure. He’s always around. He’s here to keep some commie pinko bastard hippie lowlife from trying to cheat me out of the last couple years of my life.

EVERETT: Yes, these are your golden years.

THURMOND: You bet your sweet ass. The food is great here, just like my mammy used to make when I was a young whippersnapper. I especially like the fried okra and the lima beans. Their cornbread makes me feel like I’m home.

EVERETT: We’ve been considering abandoning the project.

THURMOND: Do you like grits?

EVERETT: There’s a raging fire behind you.

THURMOND: There’s nothing better than grits for supper.

EVERETT: [to Kincaid] He’s gone.

KINCAID: Senator, we’re not going to write
your
goddamn book.

THURMOND: Kincaid, why are you swearing?

EVERETT: [taps Thurmond] Senator?

THURMOND: I’m sorry, Mr. Everett, but I can’t hear anything on my left side.

EVERETT: Jim, tell him we’re leaving.

KINCAID: Percival wants me to tell you that we’re leaving.

THURMOND: Why, boys? I thought we were just coming to some kind of understanding.

KINCAID: We can’t figure out what you want this book to be.

THURMOND: It’s supposed to be a book. The title is
A History of the Colored People by Senator Strom Thurmond, America’s Oldest Living Lawmaker.
What’s so hard about that?

EVERETT: Tell him he needs to find some other guys, some Bible college professors maybe, to write
his
book.

KINCAID: You might be better off hiring somebody closer to your own politics to write
your
book. We’re going to write
ours
.

THURMOND: But I want Everett. He’s from the South. He’s colored. That’s a good thing, for my book anyway. I don’t know you, Kincaid, from Adam, but you’re a Yankee and that’s kinda like being colored, in some people’s eyes anyway. Are you boys serious about leaving?

KINCAID: We’re serious, very serious.

THURMOND: Well, I’m not listening. You boys think it over some more. We’ll just eat tonight. You can ask me questions and I’ll answer them and then you decide. Where’re you going, Mr. Everett?

EVERETT: I’m just moving over here next to Jim so you can hear me better. How’s this? Can you hear me?

THURMOND: Yes.

EVERETT: We’re doing
our
book, not yours.

THURMOND: Let’s talk about this.

Clarence Thomas stops by the table.

THOMAS: Senator Thurmond.

Tillman stands.

THOMAS: Senator, it’s me, Justice Thomas.

THURMOND: It’s okay, Tillman. It’s Justice Tom. Tom, how are you?

THOMAS: I’m fine. How about you?

THURMOND: If I were any finer, I’d be sick. Justice Tom, I’d like you to meet Professors Kincaid and Everett. Gentlemen, I’d like you to meet Justice Charles Thomas.

THOMAS: Pleased to meet you.

THURMOND: The professors here are helping me with my book. It’s about your people.

THOMAS: Republicans? [Thomas and Thurmond laugh]

THURMOND: Remember that song we sang at your house the night of your confirmation?

THURMOND and THOMAS: [to the tune of the Fats Domino song] I found my thrill on Anita Hill. [they laugh]

THOMAS: Let me tell you a story about this man. One night I was standing on E Street, outside the Corcoran Museum, in the pouring rain. It was coming down in sheets and not a single taxi would stop for me. I waved at one after another and none stopped. The drivers would look at me and just drive by. Then the Senator came out and he put up one finger and three cabs pulled up. Of course he let me take one. That was some night.

THURMOND: Where are you sitting?

THOMAS: We’re over by the kitchen. In fact, I’d better get back over there. I think my food’s arriving. I really hate cold chitterlings.

THURMOND: See you later, sweet tater. He’s a good boy, that Clevon. Dumb as a plucked chicken in a truck, but a good boy.

EVERETT: What do you mean by a “good boy”?

THURMOND: You know, does his job, doesn’t try to upset the pineapple cart.

KINCAID: Kisses ass.

THURMOND: [laughs] He has beautiful hands. Did you notice them?

EVERETT: Do you think he belongs on the Supreme Court?

THURMOND: Why not?

EVERETT: You just said he was dumb.

THURMOND: Lots of people are dumb. So what? He’s not so dumb that he’s not useful. Hell, nobody’s that dumb. Except maybe that Clinton. He just couldn’t keep his puppy in the house. Well, nobody can really, but he let everybody know about it. It’s good to let people play with your puppy, but hell, you can’t put a big neon collar on it with your name and address and everything. You’ve got to be discreet. Tom wasn’t too discreet with that Blueberry Hill woman, but we got him out of that mess. We need more like him.

KINCAID: Let me ask you this: Do you believe that black people have it better now than they did in 1950?

THURMOND: What do you mean by “better”?

KINCAID: Do you think black people are treated equally?

THURMOND: I believe they always have been treated equally. They had less, but, hell, that’s just the way it was. If they had the money, they could have bought what I bought in 1950.

EVERETT: An education?

THURMOND: Of course.

EVERETT: Equal education?

THURMOND: Yes. Equal, however separate. But that’s all changed now. Heck mercy, man, you teach with Kincaid here at that College of South California?

KINCAID: Lordy.

THURMOND: This happened in the war. I was a tank commander and I was at the Battle of the Bulge. We were well away from the front line, but I could hear the artillery all night and the real distant bangs of mortar fire. It was cold and wet and we were stuck in the holler waiting for orders. It was a mess. About four hundred men stuck in there and I remember a lot of them boys were from New Jersey for some reason. Where it wasn’t muddy, the ground was frozen hard. So when those Negro soldiers showed up, we put them right to work digging us some latrines. Boy, they really saved the day for us. As I remember, they dug real nice latrines. They tickled me too, the way they wanted to go fight some Germans. Those diggers were a godsend.

KINCAID: That’s some story.

THURMOND: You see, that’s partly why I want to write this book. I want the diggers of the world to know that I appreciate them. I want them to know that we white people don’t think of them simply as dirty diggers or lazy diggers or even agitating diggers.

EVERETT: You really are nuts, aren’t you?

THURMOND: I don’t mean to be offensive.

KINCAID: God just made you that way.

THURMOND: God. That’s the other reason. I’m getting old. I don’t know if you noticed. I know I’m not going to live forever. And when I die I’d like to have a seat at the big party, if you know what I mean. You probably don’t. I’m talking about heaven, boys. I’m cramming for finals, trying to make amends, trying to have my parking ticket validated.

EVERETT: Even if the cows have already left the barn.

THURMOND: I realize I’ve done some underhanded things and that I’ve hurt a lot of colored people. But hell, I hope I’ve hurt as many liberals and Jews. But we’re all Americans, aren’t we? And that’s what counts. The world has changed. You got that Colin Powell now and that Rice woman in the damn White House with a Republican president. Granted, he ain’t the sharpest hoe in the shed, but he is a Republican, and peaches grow in trees and not on vines, you know what I’m saying? Times are different. Now we got Muslims and Arabs to hate. You know a lot of them are pretty dark. What’s that tell you?

EVERETT: Okay, that’s enough.

KINCAID: Let’s go.

THURMOND: But we haven’t eaten.

Everett and Kincaid walk to the door. Thurmond follows.

THURMOND: Wait up, fellas. Maybe we could just hang out.

KINCAID: Where did we park?

EVERETT: Hell if I know.

THURMOND: The air out here is nice, ain’t it. Hey, watch this.

EVERETT: He’s standing on his head again.

KINCAID: I think we parked up that way.

EVERETT: Jim?

KINCAID: Yeah?

EVERETT: He looks funny.

KINCAID: What do you mean?

EVERETT: Look at his face. And he’s not talking.

KINCAID: Oh, shit.

EVERETT: Where’s Tillman? Tillman!

TILLMAN: What is it?

EVERETT: He’s not talking.

TILLMAN: Oh, shit.

KINCAID: What is it, Tillman?

TILLMAN: Fucking shit.

EVERETT: He’s dead.

KINCAID: Dead?

EVERETT: You know, not alive.

TILLMAN: Shit, shit, shit. Hollis! Hollis! [pulls out his cellular phone] Hollis! Where are you? Well, get the car over here. EVERETT: Shouldn’t you get him down?

TILLMAN: I think you two should just get out of here.

KINCAID: I’m for that.

MAN IN RAGS AND A SHOPPING CART: Senator Thurmond?

TILLMAN: Stand clear, sir.

MAN IN RAGS: That’s Senator Thurmond.

WOMAN IN A TIGHT RED DRESS: Look at that man on his head.

MAN IN RAGS: That’s Senator Strom Thurmond.

TILLMAN: Everybody get back.

HOLLIS: Oh my good lord. Tillman, help me get him into the car.

EVERETT: Jim, let’s get out of here.

HOLLIS: Watch his head.

TILLMAN: Why?

S
IMON
& S
CHUSTER
, I
NC
.
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020

June 23, 2003

Professor Percival Everett

Professor James Kincaid

Department of English

University of Southern California

Los Angeles, CA 90089-0354

Dear Sirs:

I regret to inform you that the materials you have sent us do not justify our going forward with this project. By actually reading the contract, you will see that we are simply exercising our rights, enumerated therein in any number of clauses.

We wish you all good fortune in finding another publisher. I am sure you will have no difficulty doing so.

Sincerely,

Arthur Sullivan

Arthur S. Sullivan

Senior Editor

F. Everett

P
ERCIVAL
E
VERETT

P
ERCIVAL
E
VERETT
is the author of fifteen works of fiction, among them
Glyph, Watershed,
and
Frenzy
. His most recent novel,
Erasure
, won the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award and did little to earn him friends. Everett lived in South Carolina from age five to sixteen. In 1989, he was invited to address the South Carolina State Legislature, but during his speech refused to continue speaking to them because of the presence of the Confederate flag, thus touching off a controversy that ended with the flag being removed from the Capitol building some years later.

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