Read Searching for Caleb Online
Authors: Anne Tyler
Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Family Life, #Psychological
Was this Lafleur Boudrault young and pretty, by any chance?
But Lafleur Boudrault was the Creole gardener, not pretty at all- a scar down one cheek and a permanent wink. Long dead now. Survived by his wife Sulie. He wouldn't have helped out anyway: a cross-grained sort.
Eli traveled once again to Baltimore and sought out Sulie, who was moving a dustcloth around and around the attic. Nowadays all she did was dust.
She would not give up her cloth, which had to be pried from her fingers in her sleep as you would pry a pet blanket from a child in order to wash it. And what she dusted was not helpful at all-never the furniture, which Lord knows could use a dusting, all those bulbs and scallops and crevices; but only the hidden places that didn't count, the undersides of drawers and the backs of picture frames and now these trunks and cartons in the attic, which she had been on for weeks and weeks. They couldn't get her to stop. They wanted to pension her off; didn't she have family somewhere? They were almost certain there had been a daughter. But Sulie only laughed her cracked, rapid laugh and said, "Now you wants to do it.
Now you wants." Oh, she was mad, no question about it. But Eli needed Caleb's contemporaries and there were not all that many to pick and choose from.; He climbed the narrow, hollow, pine-smelling steps to Laura's attic, submerging first his head and then his shoulders and then his wool-wrapped body in a heat so intense that it seemed to be liquid, and/at the last he was merely floating upward in a throbbing dull haze.
He swam between crazed china hurricane lamps and slanted portraits, across rugs rolled and stacked like logs, toward the spindly figure briskly polishing an empty Pears soap box down where the dusty light fingered its way through the louvers. "Mrs. Sulie Boudrault?" he asketf, and without looking up she nodded and hummed and went on polishing.
"Widow of Lafleur Boudrault?"
She nodded.
"You wouldn't happen to know where Mr. Caleb Peck has got to."
Then she stopped polishing.
"Well, I thought they wouldn't never ask," she said.
She settled him on a china barrel, and she herself sat on a stack of St.
Nicholas magazines with her dustcloth clutched daintily in her lap. She was a very small woman with stretched-looking skin and yellow eyes. Her manner of speaking was clear and reasonable, and her story proceeded in a well-ordered way. No wonder: she had had over half a century in which to arrange it.
"When first Mr. Caleb had left us," she said, "I told Lafleur, 'Lafleur, what do I say?' For I know where he had went to yet I would hate to give him away. 'Lafleur, do I lie?' 'That ain't never going to come up,' he say. 'Them folks don't think you know nothing.' Well, I was certain he was wrong. I waited for old Mrs. Laura to fix me with her little eyes.
She the one to watch for. Mr. Justin the First couldn't do nothing, maybe wouldn't have anyhow, but he had that Mrs. Laura so scared she would do it for him and more besides. She was one scared lady, and it had turned her mean and spiteful. Watch out for Mrs. Laura, I told myself, and so I watch and waited and plan how to answer what she ask. But she never do.
Never once. Never even, 'Sulie, do you recollect if you served Mr. Caleb breakfast that day?' Never a word."
Sulie set her skirt out all about her-a long draggled white eyelet affair that hit halfway down her skinny calves, with ankle-high copper-toed work shoes swinging below them. After thinking a moment, she dug down into her pocket and came up with a handful of Oreos, mashed and limp. "Have you a cookie," she said.
"Thank you," said Eli.
"She never ask. Nor none of the others. Took me some time to see they never would. 'Why, looky there!' I say to Lafleur at last, and he say, 'Told you so. They don't reckon just old us would know nothing,' he say.
So my eyes was opened. That was how. I made up my mind I wouldn't tell till they say straight out, 'Sulie, do you know?' And Mrs. Laura I wouldn't give the time of day even. I never did. She Live forty-six years after Mr. Caleb had went and I never spoken to ht9r once, but I don't fool myself she realize that. 'Sulie is getting so sullen,' was what she say. Even that tooken her five or so years to notice good."
Eli finished the Oreo and dusted off his hands. From his pocket he took: a spiral notebook and a Bic pen. He opened to a blank page.
"Now," said Sulie.
She stood up, as if to recite.
"Mr. Caleb was a musical man," she said.
"I had heard he was."
"He like most music, but colored best. He like ragtime and he copied everything Lafleur do on the piano. He like stories about them musicians in New Orleans, which is where Lafleur come from. Lafleur had got his self in a speck of trouble down there and couldn't go back, but he would tell about the piano players in Storyville and what all went on. Understand this was back long time ago. Didn't many people know about such things.
"Then times got hard and Miss Maggie Rose left us. I had to move on over to Mr. Daniel's house and tend the babies. I was not but in my teens then. I had just did get married to old Lafleur. I didn't know much but I saw how Mr. Caleb was mighty quiet and maybe took a tad more to drink than was needed. But I never thought he'd leave. One night he come down cellar to our bedroom, me and Lafleur's. Knocks on our door. 'Lafleur,' he say, 'this fellow down at the tavern is talking about a trip to New Orleans.'
" 'Is that so/ say Lafleur.
" 'Wants me to go along.'
" That so.'
" 'Well, I'm thinking of doing it.'
" 'Why, sure,' Lafleur tell him.
" 'Permanent,' Mr. Caleb say. 'Unannounced.'
"But still, you see, we didn't have no notion he was serious.
"He ask Lafleur was there someplace to go, to stay a whiles. Lafleur mention this white folks' boardinghouse over near where his sister live at. Mr. Caleb wroten it down on a piece of paper and fold it careful and left. We didn't think a thing more about it. Come morning he arrive for breakfast, sometime he would do that. Eat in Mr. Daniel's kitchen. 'Fix me a lot now, Sulie,' he say. 'Can't travel far on an empty stomach/
Well, I thought he meant travel to town. I fix him hotcakes. I set out his breakfast and when he had done finished he thank me politely and left. I never did see him again."
She considered her fingernails, ridged and yellowed like old piano keys.
"Could I have that boardinghouse address?" Eli asked her.
"Yes, why surely," she said, and she gave it to him, slowly and clearly, having saved it up on purpose all these years, and he wrote/ it in his notebook. Then she faded off, so that Eli thought she ha/3 forgotten him.
He rose with care and tiptoed to the attic steps. He had already dipped one ankle into the coolness below when she called hi/m. "Mr. Whoever-you-are!"
"Ma'am?"
"When you tell how you found him," she said, "make certain/you put in that Sulie known the answer all along."
So now he had an address, but it was sixty-one years old. He knew he couldn't expect too much. He caught a plane to New Orleans that night. He took a cab to where a boardinghouse had stood in the spring of 1912. All he saw was a supermarket, lit inside with ghostly blue night lights, hulking on an asphalt parking lot.
"I reckon there's no sense hanging around," he told the cab driver.
Eli registered at a small hotel from which immediately, despite the hour, he called every Peck in the telephone book. No one had an ancestor named Caleb. He went to bed and slept a sound, dreamless sleep. On the following day, he set out walking. He picked his way past suspicious-looking hidden courtyards and lacy balconies, secret fountains splashing, leprous scaly stucco, monstrous greenery and live oaks dripping beards of moss, through surprising pockets of light where the air seemed to lie like colored veils. In various echoing buildings, archives both official and unofficial, he wandered gloomily with his hands in his pockets peering at yellowed sheet music, clippings, menus, and sporting-house directories under glass, as well as cases full of dented trumpets and valve trombones that appeared to have come from the dimestore. In the evenings he attended nightclubs, where, wincing against the clatter of brass and drums, he sidled between the tables to stare at the curling photographs on the walls and the programs once handed out during Fourth of July celebrations. There was no Caleb Peck. There was never that stiff, old-fashioned white man's face or Panama hat.
Eli's wife called, sounding lank and dragged out with the heat. "But it's hotter here," he told her. "And you ought to see the bugs." She didn't care; she wanted him home. What was he doing there, anyhow?
"I'll be back in another week," he told her. "In a week I'm going to have this thing wrapped up."
It was August eighteenth. Although he did not have a single new clue, he was beginning to feel excited.
Now he started shadowing the gaudy, sunglassed tourists, who seemed to know something he did not. They were always in possession of secret addresses: the lodgings of palsied old sax-hornists, clarinetists, past employees of the Streckfus Excursion Lines and granddaughters of Buddy Bolden's girlfriends. (Who was Buddy Bolden?) Eli slipped in behind them through narrow doors, into dingy parlors or taverns or bedrooms. Sometimes he was ushered out again. Sometimes he would pass unnoticed. Then he introduced questions of his own, all of them out of place:
"You wouldn't know a jazz cellist, by some chance."
"Any good musicians out of Baltimore?"
"Whereabouts were you in the spring of nineteen twelve?"
Ancient, dusty eyes peered back at him, but never ancient enough.
"Nineteen twelve? What kind of memory do you think I got, boy?"
By imperceptible degrees the Pecks had altered Eli. He had begun to ignore the passage of time, as if it were somehow common. He felt irritated that ordinary people could not do the same.
Days were tiresome, yes, and hard on the feet, but nights were worse. The string of clubs, bars, cafes, dance halls, and strip joints went on forever, and all the music sounded the same to him: badly organized. Eli slipped into a place and out again, into the next. He ducked away at any mention of cover charge, waved off waiters and hostesses. When pressed, he ordered Dr. Pepper; mostly he left before things had gone that far. The scent of success discouraged him. He wanted failure, spooky little hole-in-the-wall cafes. For surely, he was thinking now, Caleb himself was a failure. Whatever he had ended up doing, it had not left any mark upon this town.
He entered bars that smelled of mildewed wood, that had names like The High Note or Sportin' Life, where a few musicians played raggedly and without much interest. A black man sang above a guitar:
My train done left, Lord, done left me by the track, My train done left, Lord, done left me by the track. Tell the folks in Whisky Alley I ain't never coming back . . .
Eli shook his head. He slid past a drunkard and returned to the sidewalk, where he milled among the tourists in a greasy, neon-lit, garlic-smelling night.
The following morning, he was up unusually early. He ate breakfast in a coffee shop near where he had been the night before, and he strolled past the same bars, but they were closed now. Farther down, an aproned man was sweeping the entrance of a strip joint that looked cheerful and homely by daylight. "Tell me," Eli said to him. "You know that little old bar back there? Easy Livin'?"
The man squinted. "What about it?"
"You know what time it opens?"
"Most likely not till evening," said the man. "You got a wait, fellow."
"Well, thank you," Eli said.
This morning he did not delve any further into the archives of jazz. He bought a paper and read it in a park. He had a second cup of coffee and a glazed doughnut. Then when the movies opened, 'he toured the city catching Jimmy Stewart films. Eli very much admired Jimmy Stewart. , At six o'clock he had a plate of scrambled eggs in a diner, followed by another cup of coffee and apple pie a la mode, then he set off toward Easy Livin'-on foot, since it wasn't far. He took his time. He nodded soberly as he walked and he looked about him with $ well-meaning expression such as Jimmy Steward might have worn. When he reached his destination, he straightened his string tie before stepping through the battered door. , Easy Livin' was dark even now, when it was barely twilight. There was a bar with a brass rail, a few scarred tables, and at the end of the room a raw wooden platform for the entertainers. At the moment, there were no other customers. Only a boy behind the bar, and on the platform the black man who had sung the night before. He was squatting to hitch up some sort of electrical wire. He didn't even look around when Eli came up behind him, "Say," said Eli. "Could I ask about a song?"
The singer grunted and then rose, brushing off his dungarees. He said, "This here is not one of them jazz joints, baby. Go on up the street."
"Last night you were singing," Eli said.
"Only the blues."
"Ah," said Eli, who did not see the difference. He pondered a moment. The singer looked down at him with his hands on his hips. "Well," Eli said, "you were singing this here song I was wondering about."
"Which."
"Song about a train."
"All songs got trains," the singer said patiently.
"Song about Whisky Alley."
"Mm-hmm."
"You recall it?" Eli asked.
"I sung it, didn't I?"
"You know who wrote it?"
"Now how would I know that?" the singer said, but then, all of a sudden:
"Stringtail Man."
"Who?"
"The Stringtail Man."
"Well, who was that?"
"I don't know. White fellow."
"But he's got to have a name," Eli said.
"Naw. Not that I ever knew of. White fellow with a fiddle."
"A fiddle," said Eli. "Well-I mean, ain't that a little peculiar for jazz?"