Romance the heads of men obscure the swing of Charlie Chaplinâs cane. It strikes Walker that itâs only in the tunnels that he feels an equality of darkness. The sandhogs were the first integrated union in the country; he knows it is only underground that color is negated, that men become men.
Not even in the gloom of the cinema can he slip like a snake through his own skin.
When he was a ten-year-old boy in the swamps of Georgia, Walker forced a water snake to stay on a rickety wooden pier for five hours. He had heard it would dehydrate in the sun. The snake fought ferociously at first, wiggling from the pier toward the water, but he kept pulling it back by its head and tail. Remembering an old saying, he knew the snake wasnât poisonous: Red and yellow kill a fellow, red and black be nice to Jack. He didnât want to kill it himself, he just wanted the snake to die in the heat, but it kept on thrashing. The sun began to sink low in the Okefenokee sky. In frustration, the young boy put his foot on the snakeâs neck and slipped his knife in. Its innards were warm and he knocked them into the water. He brought the skin home to hang on his wall. Most of the house was made with logs, but his own room was composed of cinder block. He made a lot of noise hammering the nails. When the snake was stretched above his bed, his mother came in and asked him where he had gotten it. He told her the story, and she whipped him for his lack of respect.
She told him that all creatures deserved the very same treatment, that none were mightier than others, that all were made the same. They all came into the world with nothing and left the world with even less. Only belief in God and the goodness of man would bring them any happiness.
âDo it again,â she said, âand Iâll whip the fire out of you.â
After church that Sunday the preacher told him to make amends. He kept a different snake in a box after that, treated it carefully, fed it with mice, and was amazed to watch it molt out of itself during summers, leaving sheets of clear skin in the boxâmuch like the men he sees nowadays, a decade later, in the streets of New York, molted out of their civilian clothes into military uniforms, on their way to Europe to fight in the Great War, some of them even colleagues from the tunnels, uniforms crisp and ironed, military hats uncomfortably tilted on their heads. He has heard that, at the front, under bloody French sunsets, the sandhogs do well in their foxholes; they can dig quicker and faster and harder and deeper and further than anyone else.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
One Sunday afternoon, at the end of his visit, Walker says to Maura, âThere was a trick yâalls husband used to do, times, maâam. Heâd be there digging away in the tunnel with the rest of us. And see, he had this bullet that he found somewhere, on the street or something, I donât know. Anyways, we were at the front of the tunnel, and Con wasnât wearing no shirt or nothing. Most of the time we donât wear no shirts, see. And heâd up and shout, âLook at this, lads!â He had that funny way of talking, just like yâall. Tomahto. Potayto. That sort of thing. Anyways, he bent on over, olâ Con, and put the bullet into his stomach. Right on in. It went disappeared in there! He held that bullet in his belly all day long without dropping it, not a once! Working and digging away! And the rest of us were just laughing like there was no tomorrow.
âSo I know what yâallâre saying, maâam, âcause we miss him too, he broke the darkness for us too; thatâs what he did, olâ Con, he broke the darkness real good.â
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
On the morning of the inaugural run in 1917, Walker, in his red hat, makes his way along the cobblestones of Montague Street in Brooklyn. He smiles when he sees that most of the other sandhogs have come back in their