You Jake? he said.
Yep.
You know Suttree?
He turned and looked down at Harrogate. He spat into a steel cuspidor on the floor and wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. Yeah, he said. I know him.
You know where he’s at?
What’ll you take for them britches?
Harrogate looked down. Them’s all the ones I got, he said.
Well. He aint here.
I was wonderin if you might know where he’s at.
Home I reckon.
Well where’s he live?
He lives down on the river. I believe in one of them houseboats.
Houseboat?
Yep. Jake bent, the change in his apronpocket swinging. He began to brush the dust toward the corner pocket. Harrogate had turned to go.
What about that shirt?
What about it?
How would you trade?
Hell fire, said Harrogate. Yourn’d do me for a overcoat.
Jake grinned. Come back, little buddy, he said.
At the bottom of Gay Street he stood leaning on the bridge rail looking down at the waterfront. There’s the goddamned houseboats, he said.
Coming down the steep and angled path behind the tall frame houses he thought he heard a voice. He tilted back his head to see. Half out from a housewindow high up the laddered face of sootcaulked clapboards hung some creature. Sprawled against the hot and sunpeeled siding with arms outstretched like a broken puppet. Hah, he called down. Spawn of Cerberus, the devil’s close kin.
Harrogate clutched his lower teeth.
A long finger pointed down. Child of darkness, of Clooty’s brood, mind me.
Shit, said Harrogate.
The window figure had raised itself to address some other audience.
See him! Does he not offend thee? Does such iniquity not rise stinking to the very heavens?
This viperous evangelist reared up, his elbows cocked and goat’s eyes smoking, and thrust a bony finger down. Die! he screamed. Perish a terrible death with thy bowels blown open and black blood boiling from thy nether eye, God save your soul amen.
Shit fire, said Harrogate, scurrying down the path with one hand over his head. When he reached the street he looked back. The figure had wheeled to a new window the better to see the boy past his house and he leaned now with his face pressed to the glass, his dead jaundiced flesh splayed against the pane and one eye walled up in his head, a goggling visage misshapen with hatred. Harrogate went on. Great godamighty, he said.
He went down Front Street past a rickety store where blacks lolled and eyed his advent doubtfully and he took a dogpath across the gray fields toward the shantyboats, emerging onto the railway with his curious trousers striped with sootprints of the weeds he’d forded, the air hot and breathless with the smell of cinders and creosote and the fainter reaches of oil and fish standing off in a sort of haze along the river itself.
He climbed the mudstained cleated plank of the first houseboat and tapped at the door. A small eddy of garbage and empty bottles circled slowly in the water beneath him. When the door opened he was looking into the face of a coalcolored woman who wore an agate taw in one eyesocket. What you wants? she said.
I thought maybe old Suttree lived here but I dont reckon he does.
She didnt answer.
You dont know where he lives do ye?
Who you huntin?
Suttree.
What you wants with him.
He’s a old buddy of mine.
She looked him up and down. He aint goin to mess with you, she said.
Shit, said Harrogate. We go way back, me and Suttree do.
Suttree was up at first light to run his lines. The gray shape of the city gathering out of the fog, upriver a gull, pale and alien bird in these midlands. On the bridge the lights of the cars crossed like candles in the mist.
Maggeson was already on the river when he set forth, standing like some latterday Charon skulling through the fog. With a long pole he hooked condoms aboard and into a pail of soapy water. Suttree paused to watch him but the old man drifted past without looking up, standing with prurient vigilance, in the cropped shore currents watchful and silent.
Suttree rowed in a sunless underregion of swirling mists, through bowls of cold and seething smoke. The bridgepier loomed and faded. Downriver a dredger. Two men at the rail smoking, stitched out of the fog and gone again, their voices faint above the puckered chug of the engine. The red of the wheelhouse light went watery pale and faded out. He oared slowly, waiting for the fog to lift.
When he ran his lines some of the fish were dead. He cut the droppers and watched them slide and sink. The rising sun dried and warmed him.
He was back by midmorning and sat on the rail and cleaned his catch. Ab’s cat came and perched like an owl and watched him. He handed it a fish head and it bared a razorous yawn of teeth and took the head delicately and went back along the rail. Suttree skinned two catfish and wrapped them in newsprint and washed his knife and his hands in the river and rose.