Wise Blood - Flannery O'Connor [56]
The face watched him for almost an hour while he performed on the nose of his car every time Hoover Shoats raised his hand with two fingers pointed. When the last showing of the movie was over and there were no more people to attract, Hoover paid him and the two of them got in his car and drove off. They drove about ten blocks to where Hoover lived; the car stopped and Hoover jumped out, calling, "See you tomorrow night, friend"; then he went inside a dark doorway and Solace Layfield drove on. A half-block behind him the other rat-colored car was following steadily. The driver was Hazel Motes.
Both cars increased their speed and in a few minutes they were heading rapidly toward the outskirts of town. The first car cut off onto a lonesome road where the trees were hung over with moss and the only light came like stiff antennae from the two cars. Haze gradually shortened the distance between them and then, grinding his motor suddenly, he shot ahead and rammed the back end of the other car. Both cars came to a stop.
Haze backed the Essex a little way down the road, while the other Prophet got out of his car and stood squinting in the glare from Haze's lights. After a second, he came up to the window of the Essex and looked in. There was no sound but from crickets and tree frogs. "What you want?" he said in a nervous voice. Haze didn't answer, he only looked at him, and in a second the man's jaw slackened and he seemed to perceive the resemblance in their clothes and possibly in their faces. "What you want?" he said in a higher voice. "I ain't done nothing to you."
Haze ground the motor of the Essex again and shot forward. This time he rammed the other car at such an angle that it rolled to the side of the road and over into the ditch.
The man got up off the ground where he had been thrown and ran back to the window of the Essex. He stood about four feet away, looking in.
"What you keep a thing like that on the road for?" Haze said.
"It ain't nothing wrong with that car," the man said. "Howcome you knockt it in the ditch?"
"Take off that hat," Haze said.
"Listenere," the man said, beginning to cough, "what you want? Quit just looking at me. Say what you want."
"You ain't true," Haze said. "What do you get up on top of a car and say you don't believe in what you do believe in for?"
"Whatsit to you?" the man wheezed. "Whatsit to you what I do?"
"What do you do it for?" Haze said. "That's what I asked you."
"A man has to look out for hisself," the other Prophet said.
"You ain't true," Haze said. "You believe in Jesus."
"Whatsit to you?" the man said. "What you knockt my car off the road for?"
"Take off that hat and that suit," Haze said.
"Listenere," the man said, "I ain't trying to mock you. He bought me thisyer suit. I thrown my othern away."
Haze reached out and brushed the man's white hat off. "And take off that suit," he said.
The man began to sidle off, out into the middle of the road.
"Take off that suit!" Haze shouted and started the car forward after him. Solace began to lope down the road, taking off his coat as he went. "Take it all off," Haze yelled, with his face close to the windshield.
The Prophet began to run in earnest. He tore off his shirt and unbuckled his belt and ran out of his trousers. He began grabbing for his feet as if he would take off his shoes too, but before he could get at them, the Essex knocked him flat and ran over him. Haze drove about twenty feet and stopped the car