Bad Day at Black Rock (1955) | |
Plot Synopsis (continued)
In the jail house with Doc, the soul-searching, ineffectual Sheriff considers quitting after losing his self-respect: "Let Smith find himself a new boy. I can't take it another day." He despairs about how he has been under Reno Smith's ruling sponsorship for over four years and stricken by the realization that he is unable to do his rightful job. He accepted, at face value, the story of "what happened" and was held hostage to it:
On a desert road through rough terrain, Macreedy drives between enormous boulders until he comes upon a flattened clearing surrounded by more rocks. In their midst are the charred remains of the farmer's burned-out ranch, a mysterious patch of lovely wildflowers, and an abandoned well. He stoops and gathers a few flower buds in his hand and pockets them. From an extreme distance, Coley spies on him through a pair of high-powered binoculars as the grim-faced Macreedy jumps into his vehicle and drives away. Coley pursues in his larger Packard sedan, following the jeep along the curvy road surrounded by rock outcroppings. Coley's heavy car overtakes Macreedy's small jeep, rams into the jeep's rear bumper, and attempts to cut him off or careen into him - to cause him to lose control and send him off the road. With one arm, Macreedy frantically maintains control on the twisting road. To avoid being killed, Macreedy swings the jeep off the road and brings it to a halt in front of some rocks. As he turns slightly in his seat, he sees Coley standing above him on the road - peering down at him by the side of his Packard. Macreedy drives back into town and parks on the main street behind Coley's car. On the hotel's front porch, Coley stands picking his teeth with a toothpick, and contemptuously greets him, along with his cohorts Reno and Hector. The self-satisfied thug has effectively scared the one-armed man: "Well, if it's not Macreedy, the world's champion roadhog...You ought to be more careful, man - all that one-arm driving...It's a threat to life and limb...You could get yourself killed that way, nosin' all over the countryside." Inside the hotel, Macreedy tells Pete that he's ready to check out, but he is held hostage in town. There's no train until the next morning and the nearest bus stop is Sand City - thirty two miles away:
He walks up to Liz' garage, where the jeep has been returned for him - now "the jeep's not for rent." Liz hesitantly protects the secrets of 'her' town (where "somethin' kind of bad happened"), vowing that she doesn't want to "get involved" and disturb the status quo, in a place that Macreedy believes has been forsaken by "the rule of law":
During another conversation with the suave, wary and menacing Reno outside the gas station, Macreedy learns of the self-contained town kingpin's hostility to strangers [Reno functions as a demagogue in the mold of Senator Joseph McCarthy] - and his racist, prejudicial hatred for the Japanese during the war. Smith laments how various groups use the "West" for their own purposes - historians, book writers, and business developers. Macreedy knows that he is uncovering an awful past secret in the West and is now searching for the murderer of the Japanese farmer in the midst of crazed, roughneck murderers who are camouflaging their hatred:
Macreedy laughs - suspicious of Smith's explanation: "I don't believe you." He calmly states that he found a graveyard out there: "There's somethin' buried up there....(He pulls the wildflowers from his pocket.) That means a grave. I suppose you knew that. I saw a lot of it, you know, overseas. I figured it wasn't a human grave because it wasn't marked. Kind of a mystery, isn't it?" After Macreedy has pieced together some of the puzzling clues to Komoko's death, Reno becomes increasingly antagonistic and realizes that the stranger is going to turn him in for playing a role in Komoko's disappearance. Macreedy realizes that he may not leave Black Rock alive. In the next scene, Macreedy strolls down to Doc Velie's establishment, identified on its windows: "VETERINARY, MORTICIAN, T.R. Velie., Jr." In the alleyway next to the building, Hector leans against the wall and watches Macreedy enter the doctor's office. In the backroom, Macreedy finds Doc Velie sipping a glass of milk. Macreedy tries to telephone the state police (at "4-2-4") to report a possible crime against the missing farmer, but since the phone lines are switched through the hotel desk and controlled by Pete at the switchboard [a sign behind him reads "SMILE"], he is prevented from reaching the outside world ("the lines are all busy"). Opportunistically, Doc looks at Macreedy as a "potential customer...Everybody is - I get 'em comin' and goin'." The doctor explains how people have come out to the West with misguided dreams to try mining, farming, and other unsuccessful methods to become prosperous:
Doc prophesies that Macreedy faces insurmountable problems: "They're gonna kill you with no hard feelings." Macreedy snaps back nastily: "And you're gonna sit there and let 'em do it." The cryptic-speaking Doc is usually "consumed with apathy" and feels compelled to defend his non-involvement:
However, he is the first in the town to help Macreedy by offering him his "limousine" - an old-fashioned hearse parked out back. But the car's ignition doesn't spark and the engine only grinds. Hector appears to explain that "somethin's wrong" - "Could be the wirin'..." Suddenly, Hector reaches into the hood area and rips out the distributor cap and triumphantly exclaims: "Yeah, it was the wirin'." With Macreedy's only possible exit from town now blocked, Doc informs him that there isn't much time: "Well, you got at least till dark. They'd be afraid to see each other's faces." Macreedy walks to the telegraph agent's office and writes out a message to be telegraphed to Sand City's State Police: "Please wire or phone me re urgent and dangerous situation." But the scared, anxious, upset, lemonade-drinking Hastings, who is ruled over by Reno Smith, is hesitant about sending it:
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