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Substantiation
And the way the jury chose to believe the ridiculous stories of the defense. . . —Mamie Till, 1955 . . .with truth absent, hypocrisy and myth have flourished. . . —Look, January 1956 The sheriff says it wasn't Till we pulled from the river, that man was as white as I am, white as cotton blowed by the cotton gin fan that weighed him down, looked like he'd lain there weeks, not a kid at all. He was a stranger just out of Money, recalled by a store clerk, a hobo, and a crossroad guitarist. The reporter finds them at the once abandoned crossing. They say it's like the sheriff says, came up one night, headed Clarksdale way, another one, hat pulled down, right behind. Three days later, the bluesman says, a plague of starlings gathered into little boys those who fished and found the dead man's foot. The reporter stares into his cataracted, cotton eyes. He cannot find them, no matter where he looks. * The sheriff says this man's killer is on the loose and a killer emerges, a child watching from a sleeping porch catches a rustle in the bushes and soon everyone is on the hunt while in the courtroom someone is wondering about this poor murdered's family, who's missing him, and the next day his father appears unknown for work, his name on the payroll, then gets to work at a machine no one's ever seen, and someone is weeping on the Tallahatchie's bank, a little girl who wished her mother would die whose mother died at the hands of this stranger she's followed till he stepped in the river and disappeared. * The reporter asks for Too-Tight Collins at Charlestown jail and the sheriff says Who? The reporter asks why he's got him and sees the bullet on his tongue. Asks directions back to Greenwood, finds himself down Greenville way instead. Takes back roads back to Mound Bayou, wrong wrong turn to Parchman Farm where guards rifle from the woods. A change at the Eavesdrop Inn then he's bent picking cotton in a field. Come sundown, he hobos Sumner way and squats at courthouse windows where the sheriff shuffles cards for a blind man and the defense team. At a levee camp that night he asks for whiskey and she gives him a cup of names. He wires his paper that he's gone catfish fishing on the Tallahatchie, that he won't be coming home. * The defense says Till's alive and well on Detroit streets and someone's sure they've seen him, just off the train from Memphis, porters smuggling him out the back and now he's walking incognito, a worn fedora raked to shade the one eye. A cruiser eases through the streets, searchlight in doorways, the driver white, dressed like a cop but for the rope marks at his throat, the bullet in his eye. He has a mushmouth accent, talks water when he speaks, slept in a box from Greenville to Chicago under another man's name, a name he's ready to give up now. If Till is alive and well, he can't rest in Burr Oak Cemetery, will cruise where he's been said to be on the Detroit streets where everyone knows he's coming since he whistles like a train on the way out of town. * They say it was darker than a thousand midnights in the cabin, that they couldn't find him in the dark. They say that Moses brought him out at last, that someone else was in the truck to say that it was him that did the talk at Money. They say they took him for a ride, to rough him up, scare him on a river bluff then let him go. They say they let him off near Glendora, never seen again. They say Ain't it like a negro to swim the river with a gin fan round his neck. They say it was hog's blood in the truck what Too Tight washed. They say they never burnt no shoes, it was a barbecue. They say that Too Tight never worked for them, they never heard of Willie Reed. They say they never meant to harm the boy, that they didn't do a thing. * The defense says Mamie Till knows her son's alive and well, that she knows the body isn't his. That her lawyers came in weeks ago and dug a body up and used it for their own. That they've found fresh graves. That a Yazoo City widow found her husband's gone and Lazarus ain't walking back through Eden, Greenwood, Itta Bena. That Jesus Christ ain't come. Every Leflore County lawyer can't be wrong. One juror says he knows it, seen rights workers take their shovels out along the roads at night. That Sheriff Strider's right. That it's the northern poison got this all stirred up. That though a black might be fool enough to swim with a gin fan round his neck, this one wasn't one. That they should sit a while and drink a pop, to make it look right, look real. * In the nervous ward, Reed remembers Milam with the gun asking did he hear anything. Reed remembers saying no, he didn't hear anything, anything. Remembers not hearing the beating and the crying in the shed behind Milam's. Remembers not thinking, they beatin' somebody up there. Remembers not passing the shed, not hearing the beating. Remembers not remembering Milam not coming out, not asking if he'd heard. Remembers not not remembering on the stand, not not whispering the court reporter not not recording his not not remembered memory. Not not getting on the train. Not hearing anything, anything. Such quiet now. * Now hypocrisy can be exposed; myth dispelled. — Look, January 1956 The reporter hears Bryant's been bragging how he got away with murder. A few months back no one could make them, now they're seen at the cabin, at the bridge, their alibis are gone. The stranger emerges from the river then disappears. The little girl's mother rises from her grave, home just in time for dinner. Emmett Till boards a freight in Detroit and hobos to his grave outside Chicago. The crossroads station and its clerk disappear again and the hat disappears. Anywhere else, the reporter would have been called to the disappearing, but here there's nothing to say. Bryant's smile broadens as he retells it, how they were heroes, how they murdered Till. When the Look comes out, the town already knows. No one ever speaks to them again. * When the contractor guts the courthouse basement, the fan and the transcript are laid out on the street. Junkmen salvage metal, and the papers warp and tear in the rain. Starlings pick through the gutters' wreck and weave typescript fragments into their nests. Emmett Till watches, enwreathes their broods. Milam wakes up early each morning when the riot in the pear trees begins, starlings wolf-whistling for food, or just repeating what they've heard. One pair has woven strips of Look Bryant spreads throughout the woods. In twenty years no one's come. He opens a shotgun on the starlings' calls each morning and they spray like smoke or blood. But they regather and whistle overhead and shit back shot as they fly. Published in A Murmuration of Starlings (2008). Text may vary slightly from the video reading. |
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| Published: 1 April 2008
© 2008 Jake Adam York and Southern Spaces |
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