no tow truck going to be there until morning. Got two hours of sleep. Then the highway patrol called my hotel room. Tow truck's on the way. I got to be there when they arrive. Can you believe that? I'm not there, they won't touch it. Just drive away. Called a cab. Never came. Hope we get there before the tow truck.'
'I'll do my best.'
'I guess I should have taken a plane. It's not that I'm scared of flying. But I cashed in the ticket; I'm on my way to New Orleans. Hour's flight, four hundred and forty dollars. Day's drive, thirty dollars. That's four hundred and ten dollars spending money, and I don't have to account for it to anybody. Spent fifty dollars on the motel room, but that's just the way these things go. Academic conference. My first. Faculty doesn't believe in them. But things change. I'm looking forward to it. Anthropologists from all over the world.' He named several, names that meant nothing to me. 'I'm presenting a paper on the Haitian coffee girls.'
'They grow it, or drink it?'
'Neither. They sold it, door to door in Port-au-Prince, early in the morning, in the early years of the century.'
It was starting to get light, now.
'People thought they were zombies,' he said. 'You know. The walking dead. I think it's a right turn here.'
'Were they? Zombies?'
He seemed very pleased to have been asked. 'Well, anthropologically, there are several schools of thought about zombies. It's not as cut-and-dried as popularist works like
'I don't know,' I said. I was pretty sure
'They were children, little girls, five to ten years old, who went door-to-door through Port-au-Prince selling the chicory coffee mixture. Just about this time of day, before the sun was up. They belonged to one old woman. Hang a left just before we go into the next turn. When she died, the girls vanished. That's what the books tell you.'
'And what do you believe?' I asked.
'That's my car,' he said, with relief in his voice. It was a red Honda Accord, on the side of the road. There was a tow truck beside it, lights flashing, a man beside the tow truck smoking a cigarette. We pulled up behind the tow truck.
The anthropologist had the door of the car opened before I'd stopped; he grabbed his briefcase and was out of the car.
'Was giving you another five minutes, then I was going to take off,' said the tow-truck driver. He dropped his cigarette into a puddle on the tarmac. 'Okay, I'll need your triple-A card, and a credit card.'
The man reached for his wallet. He looked puzzled. He put his hands in his pockets. He said, 'My wallet.' He came back to my car, opened the passenger-side door and leaned back inside. I turned on the light. He patted the empty seat. 'My wallet,' he said again. His voice was plaintive and hurt.
'You had it back in the motel,' I reminded him. 'You were holding it. It was in your hand.'
He said, 'God
'Everything okay there?' called the tow-truck driver.
'Okay,' said the anthropologist to me, urgently. 'This is what we'll do. You drive back to the motel. I must have left the wallet on the desk. Bring it back here. I'll keep him happy until then. Five minutes, it'll take you five minutes.' He must have seen the expression on my face. He said, 'Remember. People come into your life for a reason.'
I shrugged, irritated to have been sucked into someone else's story.
Then he shut the car door and gave me a thumbs-up.
I wished I could just have driven away and abandoned him, but it was too late, I was driving to the hotel. The night clerk gave me the wallet, which he had noticed on the counter, he told me, moments after we left.
I opened the wallet. The credit cards were all in the name of Jackson Anderton.
It took me half an hour to find my way back, as the sky grayed into full dawn. The tow truck was gone. The rear window of the red Honda Accord was broken, and the driver's-side door hung open. I wondered if it was a different car, if I had driven the wrong way to the wrong place; but there were the tow-truck driver's cigarette stubs, crushed on the road, and in the ditch nearby I found a gaping briefcase, empty, and beside it, a manila folder containing a fifteen-page typescript, a prepaid hotel reservation at a Marriott in New Orleans in the name of Jackson Anderton, and a packet of three condoms, ribbed for extra pleasure.
On the title page of the typescript was printed:
Hurston,
I took the manila folder, but left the briefcase where it was. I drove south under a pearl-colored sky.
People come into your life for a reason. Right.
I could not find a radio station that would hold its signal. Eventually I pressed the scan button on the radio and just left it on, left it scanning from channel to channel in a relentless quest for signal, scurrying from gospel to oldies to Bible talk to sex talk to country, three seconds a station with plenty of white noise in between.
Over and over. It washed over me, driving through the day, on the back roads. Just driving and driving.
They become more personable as you head south, the people. You sit in a diner, and along with your coffee and your food, they bring you comments, questions, smiles, and nods.
It was evening, and I was eating fried chicken and collard greens and hush puppies, and a waitress smiled at me. The food seemed tasteless, but I guessed that might have been my problem, not theirs.
I nodded at her politely, which she took as an invitation to come over and refill my coffee cup. The coffee was bitter, which I liked. At least it tasted of something.
'Looking at you,' she said, 'I would guess that you are a professional man. May I enquire as to your profession?' That was what she said, word for word.
'Indeed you may,' I said, feeling almost possessed by something, and affably pompous, like W. C. Fields or the Nutty Professor (the fat one, not the Jerry Lewis one, although I am actually within pounds of the optimum weight for my height). 'I happen to be . . . an anthropologist, on my way to a conference in New Orleans, where I shall confer, consult, and otherwise hobnob with my fellow anthropologists.'
'I knew it,' she said. 'Just looking at you. I had you figured for a professor. Or a dentist, maybe.'