Stephen King: The Green Mile

Eh, Caleb?”

“Yes, sir,” the boy said shyly – the boy who would be beaten mercilessly on the play-yard by laughing, jeering bullies for all his miserable years of education, the boy who would never be asked to play Spin the Bottle or Post Office and would probably never sleep with a woman not bought and paid for once he was grown to manhood’s times and needs, the boy who would always stand outside the warm and lighted circle of his peers, the boy who would look at himself in his mirror for the next fifty or sixty or seventy years of his life and think ugly, ugly, ugly.

“Go on in and get your cookies,” his father said, and kissed his son’s sneering mouth.

“Yes, sir,” Caleb, said, and dashed inside.

Hammersmith took a handkerchief from his back pocket and wiped at his eyes with it – they were dry, but I suppose he’d gotten used to them being wet.

“The dog was here when they were born,” he said. “I brought him in the house to smell them when Cynthia brought them home from the hospital, and Sir Galahad licked their hands. Their little hands.” He nodded, as if confirming this to himself. “He played with them; used to lick Arden’s face until she giggled. Caleb used to pull his ears, and when he was first learning to walk, he’d sometimes go around the yard, holding to Galahad’s tail. The dog never so much as growled at him. Either of them.”

Now the tears were coming; he wiped at them automatically, as a man does when he’s had lots of practice.

“There was no reason,” he said. “Caleb didn’t hurt him, yell at him, anything. I know. I was there. If I hadn’t have been, the boy would almost certainly have been killed. What happened, Mr. Edgecombe, was nothing. The boy just got his face set the right way in front of the dog’s face, and it came into Sir Galahad’s mind – whatever serves a dog for a mind – to lunge and bite. To kill, if he could. The boy was there in front of him and the dog bit. And that’s what happened with Coffey. He was there, he saw them on the porch, he took them, he raped them, he killed them. You say there should be some hint that he did something like it before, and I know what you mean, but maybe he didn’t do it before. My dog never bit before; just that once. Maybe, if Coffey was let go, he’d never do it again. Maybe my dog never would have bit again. But I didn’t concern myself with that, you know. I went out with my rifle and grabbed his

collar and blew his head off.”

He was breathing hard.

“I’m as enlightened as the next man, Mr. Edgecombe, went to college in Bowling Green, took history as well as journalism, some philosophy, too. I like to think of myself as enlightened. I don’t suppose folks up North would, but I like to think of myself as enlightened. I’d not bring slavery back for all the tea in China. I think we have to be humane and generous in our efforts to solve the race problem. But we have to remember that your negro will bite if he gets the chance, just like a mongrel dog will bite if he gets the chance and it crosses his mind to do so. You want to know if he did it, your weepy Mr. Coffey with the scars all over him?”

I nodded.

“Oh, yes,” Hammersmith said. “He did it. Don’t you doubt it, and don’t you turn your back on him. You might get away with it once or a hundred times … even a thousand … but in the end -” He raised a hand before my eyes and snapped the fingers together rapidly against the thumb, turning the hand into a biting mouth. “You understand?”

I nodded again.

“He raped them, he killed them, and afterward he was sorry – but those little girls stayed raped, those little girls stayed dead. But you’ll fix him, won’t you, Edgecombe? In a few weeks you’ll fix him so he never does anything like that again.” He got up, went to the porch rail, and looked vaguely at the doghouse, standing at the center of its beaten patch, in the middle of those aging turds. “Perhaps you’ll excuse me,” he said. “Since I don’t have to spend the afternoon in court, I thought I might visit with my family for a little bit. A man’s children are only young once.”

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