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    But the new pride that the café brought to this town had an effe almost everyone, even the children. For in order to e to the café you did not have to buy the dinner, or a portion of liquor. There were cold bottled drinks for a nickel. And if you could not even afford that, Miss Amelia had a drink called Cherry Juice which sold for a penny a glass, and ink-colored and very sweet. Almost everyone, with the exception of Reverend T. M. Willin, came to the café at least once during the week. Children love to sleep in houses other than their own, and to eat at a neighbors table; on such occasions they behave themselves detly and are proud. The people iown were likewise proud when sitting at the tables in the café. They washed before ing to Miss Amelias, and scraped their feet very politely ohreshold as they ehe café. There, for a few hours at least, the deep bitter knowing that you are not worth mu this world could be laid low.

    The café ecial be to bachelors, unfortunate people, and ptives. And here it may be mentiohat there was some reason to suspect that Cousin Lymon was ptive. The brightness of his gray eyes, his insistence, his talkativeness, and his cough -- these were all signs. Besides, there is generally supposed to be some e between a hunched spine anbbr></abbr>d ption. But whehis subject had beeioo Miss Amelia she had bee furious; she dehese symptoms with bitter vehemence, but on the sly she treated Cousin Lymon with hot chest platters, Kroup Kure, and suow this wihe hunchbacks cough was worse, and sometimes even on cold days he would break out in a heavy sweat. But this did not prevent him from following along after Marvin Macy.

    Early every m he left the premises ao the back door of Mrs. Hales house, and waited and waited -- as Marvin Macy was a lazy sleeper. He would stand there and call out softly. His voice was just like the voices of children who squat patiently over those tiny little holes in the ground where doodlebugs are thought to live, poking the hole with a broom straw, and calling plaintively: &quot;Doodlebug, Doodlebug -- fly away home. Mrs. Doodlebug, Mrs. Doodlebug. e out, e out. Your house is on fire and all your children are burning up.&quot; In just such a voice -- at once sad, luring, and resigned -- would the hunchback call Marvin Maame each m. Then when Marvin Macy came out for the day, he would trail him about the town, and sometimes they would be gone for hours together out in the s.

    And Miss Amelia tio do the worst thing possible: that is, to try to follow several courses at once. When Cousin Lymohe house she did not call him back, but only stood in the middle of the road and watched lonesomely until he was out of sight. Nearly every day Marvin Macy turned up with Cousin Lymon at diime, and ate at her table. Miss Amelia opehe pear preserves, and the table was well-set with ham or chi, great bowls of hominy grits, and winter peas. It is true that on one ociss Amelia tried to poison Marvin Macy -- but there was a mistake, the plates were fused, and it was she herself who got the poisoned dish. This she quickly realized by the slight bitterness of the food, and that day she ate no dinner. She sat tilted ba her chair, feeling her muscle, and looking at Marvin Ma<bdi>..</bdi>cy.

    Every night Marvin Macy came to the café aled himself at the best and largest table, the one in the ter of the room. Cousin Lymht him liquor, for which he did not pay a t. Marvin Macy brushed the hunchback aside as if he were a s mosquito, and not only did he show no gratitude for these favors, but if the hunchback got in his way he would cuff him with the back of his hand, or say: &quot;Out of my way, Brokeback -- Ill snatch you bald-headed.&quot; When this happened Miss Amelia would e out from behind her ter and approach Marvin Macy very slowly, her fists ched, her peculiar red dress hanging awkwardly around her bony knees. Marvin Macy would also ch his fists and they would walk slowly and meaningfully around each other. But, although everyoched breathlessly, nothing ever came of it. The time for the fight was not yet ready.

    There is one particular reason why this winter is remembered and still talked about. A great thing happened. People woke up on the sed of January and found the whole world about them altogether ged. Little ignorant children looked out of the windows, and they were so puzzled that they began to cry. Old people harked bad could remember nothing in these parts to equal the phenomenon. For in the night it had snowed. In the dark hours after midnight the dim flakes started falling softly oown. By dawn the grou<mark>.</mark>nd was covered, and the strange snow bahe ruby windows of the church, and whitehe roofs of the houses. The snow gave the town a drawn, bleak look. The two-room houses he mill were dirty, crooked, and seemed about to collapse, and somehow everything was dark and shrunken. But the snow itself -- there was a beauty about it few people around here had ever known before. The snow was not white, as Northerners had pictured it to be; in the snow there were soft colors of blue and silver, the sky was a gentle shining gray. And the dreamy quietness of falling snow -- when had the town been so silent?

    People reacted to the snowfall in various ways. Miss Amelia, on looking out of her window, thoughtfully wiggled the toes of her bare foot, gathered close to her he collar of her nightgown. She stood there for some time, then eo draw the shutters and lock every window on the premises. She dosed the plapletely, lighted the lamps, and sat solemnly over her bowl of grits. The reason for this was not that Miss Amelia feared the snowfall. It was simply that she was uo form an immediate opinion of this , and unless she kly and definitely what she thought of a matter (which was nearly always the case) she preferred to ig. Snow had never fallen in this ty in her lifetime, and she had hought about it one way or the other. But if she admitted this snowfall she would have to e to some decision, and in those days there was enough distra in her life as it was already. So she poked about the gloomy, lamp lighted house and pretehat nothing had happened. Cousin Lymon, on the trary, chased around in the wildest excitement, and when Miss Amelia turned her back to dish him some breakfast he slipped out of the door.

    Marvin Macy laid claim to the snowfall. He said that he knew snow, had seen it in Atlanta, and from the way he walked about the town that day it was as though he owned every flake. He s the little children who crept timidly out of the houses and scooped up handfuls of snow to taste. Reverend Willin hurried down the road with a furious face, as he was thinking deeply and trying to weave the snow into his Sunday sermon. Most people were humble and glad about this marvel; they spoke in hushed voices and said &quot;thank you&quot; and &quot;please&quot; more than was necessary. A few weak characters, of course, were demoralized and got drunk -- but they were not numerous. To everyohis was an occasion and many ted their money and plao go to the café that night.

    Cousin Lymon followed Marvin Macy about all day, seding his claim to the snow. He marveled that snow did not fall as does rain, and stared up at the dreamy, gently falling flakes until he stumbled from dizziness. And the pride he took on himself, basking in the glory of Marvin Macy -- it was such that many people could not resist calling out to him: &quot; Oho, said the fly on the chariot wheel. What a dust we do raise. &quot;

    Miss Amelia did not io serve dinner. But when, at six oclock, there was the sound of footsteps on the porch she opehe front door cautiously. It was Henry Ford Crimp, and though there was no food, she let him sit at a table and served him a drink. Others came. The evening was blue, bitter, and though the snow fell no lohere was a wind from the pirees that swept up delicate flurries from the ground. Cousin Lymon did not e until after dark, with him Marvin Macy, and he carried his tin suitcase and his guitar.

    &quot;So you mean to travel?&quot; said Miss Amelia quickly.

    Marvin Macy warmed himself at the stove. Thetled down at his table and carefully sharpened a little stick. He picked his teeth, frequently taking the stick out of his mouth to look at the end and wipe it on the sleeve of his coat. He did not bother to answer.

    The hunchback looked at Miss Amelia, who was behind the ter. His face was not in the least beseeg; he seemed quite sure of himself. He folded his hands behind his bad perked up his ears fidently. His cheeks were red, his eyes shining, and his clothes were soggy wet. &quot;Marvin Macy is going to visit a spell with us,&quot; he said.

    Miss Amelia made no protest. She only came out from behind the ter and hovered over the stove, as though the news had made her suddenly cold. She did not warm her backside modestly, lifting her skirt only an inch or so, as do most women when in public. There was not a grain of modesty about Miss Amelia, and she frequently seemed tet altogether that there were men in the room. Now as she stood warming herself, her red dress ulled up quite high in the back so that a piece of her strong, hairy thigh could be seen by anyone who cared to look at it. Her head was turo one side, and she had begun talking with herself, nodding and wrinkling her forehead, and there was the tone of accusation and reproa her voice although the words were not plain. Meanwhile, the hunchbad Marvin Macy had gone upstairs -- up to the parlor with the pampas grass and the two sewing maes, to the private rooms where Miss Amelia had lived the whole of her life. Down in the café you could hear them bumping around, unpag Marvin Macy, aing him settled.

    That is the way Marvin Macy crowded into Miss Amelias home. At first Cousin Lymon, who had given Marvin Macy his own room, slept on the sofa in the parlor. But the snowfall had a bad effe him; he caught a cold that turned into a winter quinsy, so Miss Amelia gave up her bed to him. The sofa in the parlor was much too short for her, her feet lapped over the edges, and often she rolled off onto the floor. Perhaps it was this lack of sleep that clouded her wits; everything she tried to do against Marvin Macy rebounded on herself. She got caught in her own tricks, and found herself in many pitiful positions. But still she did not put Marvin Macy off the premises, as she was afraid that she would be left alone. Once you have lived with another, it is a great torture to have to live alohe silence of a firelit room when suddenly the clock stops tig, the nervous shadows in ay house -- it is better to take in your mortal ehan face the terror of living alone.

    The snow did not last. The sun came out and within two days the town was just as it had always been before. Miss Amelia did not open her house until every flake had melted. Then she had a big house ing and aired everything out in the sun. But before that, the very first thing she did on going out again into her yard, was to tie a rope to the largest branch of the aberry tree. At the end of the rope she tied a crocus sack tightly stuffed with sand. This was the pung bag she made for herself and from that day on she would box with it out in her yard every m. Already she was a fine fighter -- a little heavy on her feet, but knowing all manner of mean holds and squeezes to make up for this.

    Miss Amelia, as has beeioned, measured six feet two inches i. Marvin Macy was one inch shorter. I they were about even -- both of them weighing close to a hundred and sixty pounds. Marvin Macy had the advantage in slyness of movement, and in toughness of chest. In fact from the outoint of view the odds were altogether in his favor. Yet almost everybody iown was betting on Miss Amelia; scarcely a person would put up money on Marvin Macy. The town remembered the great fight between Miss Amelia and a Fork Falls lawyer who had tried to cheat her. He had been a huge strapping fellow, but he was left three-quarters dead when she had finished with him. And it was not only her talent as a boxer that had impressed everyone -- she could demoralize her enemy by making terrifying faces and fieroises, so that even the spectators were sometimes cowed. She was brave, she practiced faithfully with her pung bag, and in this case she was clearly in the right. So people had fiden her, and they waited. Of course there was  date for this fight. There were just the signs that were too plain to be overlooked.

    During these times the hunchback strutted around with a pleased little pinched-up face. In many delicate and clever ways he stirred up trouble between them. He was stantly plug at Marvin Macys tr to draw attention to himself. Sometimes he followed in Miss Amelias footsteps -- but these days it was only in order to imitate her awkward long-legged walk; he crossed his eyes and aped her gestures in a way that made her appear to be a freak. There was something so terrible about this that even the silliest ers of the café, such as Merlie Ryan, did not laugh. Only Marvin Macy drew up the left er of his mouth and chuckled. Miss Amelia, when this happened, would be divided between two emotions. She would look at the hunchback with a lost, dismal reproach -- then turn toward Marvin Macy wit<s></s>h her teeth clamped.

    &quot;Bust a gut!&quot; she would say bitterly.

    And Marvin Macy, most likely, would pick up the guitar from the floor beside his chair. His voice was wet and slimy, as he always had too much spit in his mouth. And the tunes he sang glided slowly from his throat like eels. His strong fingers picked the strings with dainty skill, and everything he sang both lured and exasperated. This was usually more than Miss Amelia could stand.

    &quot;Bust a gut!&quot; she would repeat, in a shout.

    But always Marvin Macy had the answer ready for her. He would cover the strings to silehe quiveriover tones, and reply with slow, sure insolence.

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