Dead Head, fiction by J.L. Smith

Tonight of all nights Dot­tie had to go and devel­op a mind of her own.  Gears ground when he shift­ed.  Brakes squealed — air hissed from a hydraulic sys­tem that need­ed an over­haul.  Shocks worn so thin he felt every bump on the four lane high­way.  Too bad, because it was a beau­ti­ful night to dri­ve, roads clear — only a few cars here and there and the occa­sion­al rig pass­ing on his left.  The kind of night he wished he could flip to autopi­lot and let her dri­ve the rest of the way.  But he was a long way from that, tech­nol­o­gy-wise.  And the way she was act­ing, he'd need to stay awake to watch her.  Watch both of them, actu­al­ly, because Dale was stand­ing in the seat now, press­ing her face to the win­dow and streak­ing the glass he'd wiped down that morning.

"I told you to sit down," he said.

"I saw a sign for McDonald's," she said scoot­ing back on the cracked vinyl.

"Cou­ple miles yet," he said.  "You've got to stay in your seat until we stop."

She crossed her ankles, legs stick­ing straight out because she was too small for her knees to even bend over the edge.  "I love my new boots," she said.  They were sil­ver.  They had been the bait to get her into the truck.

Walt shift­ed down, winced as gears hacked like rusty saws through steel.  Dot­tie lurched up the exit ramp belch­ing smoke and grum­bling.  He made a wide turn at the gold­en arch­es, frown­ing.  Air hissed from leak­ing hydrolics.

"Mom­my said I couldn't have them."

"That's what your daddy's for," he said.  "To give you what your moth­er won't."

"Mom­my doesn't eat McDonald's any­more, either.  She says it's bad for me.  I think she doesn't like it because it's fat­ten­ing and she's wor­ried about her thighs."

Walt laughed.  "She's been wor­ried about those for a long time."

He took a twen­ty from the enve­lope beneath the seat and count­ed the cash left.  "Don't move," he said.  Knees stiff and back sore he climbed out of the driver's seat and pushed the door closed.  Fad­ed black let­ters on the once vibrant green fend­er, Cora's cur­sive hand­writ­ing: Dot­tie.  The paint was dull now, pocked with the dirt of two hun­dred thou­sand miles that had worn at the met­al like a riv­er carves out a canyon.  Liv­ing heat rose off the pave­ment and out of the radi­a­tor, undu­lat­ing the air.  He tugged at the pas­sen­ger door which had a recent habit of stick­ing.  When he got it open Dale leapt into his arms.

"Oof," he said, catch­ing her.

"Last time I was at McDonald's was for Sarah's birth­day," she said.  "Ronald was there, and I got to eat any­thing I want­ed.  Ice cream and apple pie."  She gig­gled.  "Two desserts.  Can I have ice cream?"

"Sure you can, Pump­kin."  He set her down and took her hand.  She looked both ways for traf­fic then led him into the bright restau­rant.  Dale's boots clicked against the red tiled floor.  She ordered a Hap­py Meal for the prize and a Quar­ter Pounder with cheese, a large Coke and an ice cream sun­dae.  He wasn't sure how she'd get through all that before the ice cream melt­ed.  "Just cof­fee," Walt said, hand­ing over a twenty.

They sat at a booth across from each oth­er.  Dale dug into the ice cream with a spoon, offered some to Walt but he shook his head, smiled while she man­aged to spread the syrupy white cream all over her mouth.  When she start­ed on the ham­burg­er he excused him­self, went to the bath­room and washed the grime from his weath­ered face, brushed out his mus­tache and beard with long, thick fin­ger­nails, and wiped his arms and neck with a damp, rough paper tow­el.  His brown eyes were sal­low, sunken.  He had rough cheeks, a fad­ing hair­line, spot­ted brown scalp and ears grown long like his father's.  Fifty-four years stared back at him, more than half that spent behind the wheel.  Arms locked against the porce­lain he lis­tened to the water's cas­cad­ing echo and count­ed four calls of "Dad­dy," before going back to the din­ing room.

A lit­tle boy about his daughter's age stood with his moth­er next to the play­ground.  The woman watched Walt approach with eyes ex-wife beady.  Dale, shriek­ing, lum­bered through a bin of col­ored plas­tic balls which she tossed into the air.  Her ham­burg­er lay half eat­en on the table, the Hap­py Meal untouched.

"Is that your daugh­ter?" the woman asked.  She had a long, thin face and a mouth that formed nei­ther a frown nor a smile.  She was decid­ed­ly unat­trac­tive.  "She kicked my son off the play­ground.  She needs to learn how to share."

"Sor­ry," Walt said.  He hadn't want­ed to bring any atten­tion to them.  How would it look, truck dri­ver out here in the mid­dle of the night with his kid?  "Dale," he barked.  "Come here."  Dale crawled out of the bin.  "She's just a kid," he said to the woman.  "Gets car­ried away some­times."  He winked: she was a moth­er, she must know about ram­bunc­tious chil­dren.  Dale, arms bone­less, shuf­fled to her father's side, her head down, a whim­per­ing child dread­ing pun­ish­ment.  "Apol­o­gize to the boy," Walt said.

Dale stud­ied her boots, voice bare­ly above a whis­per.  "I'm sorry."

"That's my girl."  He pat­ted her on the shoul­der, demon­strat­ing pride.  The woman nod­ded curt­ly, put her arm on her boy's shoul­der and walked away.  Walt gath­ered the uneat­en food and took his daughter's hand.  They said noth­ing to each oth­er on the way to the truck.  He opened her door for her.  "Hop on up," he said.  She obeyed, sat qui­et­ly while he came around to the driver's side and strug­gled up the step and fell in behind the wheel.  "What was that about?"  He put the bags of food in the small refrig­er­a­tor behind the pas­sen­ger seat, placed where he could get to it while he was driving.

She shook her head.

He turned the igni­tion key.  Dot­tie rum­bled, engine whirred but wouldn't start.  He pulled back and count­ed ten then turned it again.  She kicked once and he pressed light­ly on the gas and she cut out.  He count­ed ten and tried again.  She turned over.  He put on a lit­tle gas, pulled out the choke.  Dot­tie rum­bled but kept fir­ing, cab shiv­er­ing over the rum­bling engine.  He pat­ted the dash­board.  "That's my girl," he said.  He set­tled him­self in, shift­ed.  Dale stared qui­et­ly out the win­dow as he maneu­vered the truck back on to the high­way.  After five min­utes of silence he said, "You have to learn to share.  It's an impor­tant part of life, shar­ing.  We give and we get.  We don't get to keep.  Or at least, not all for our­selves."  He gunned the engine as he shift­ed to empha­size his point, hoped she wouldn't notice his hypocrisy.

"I was there first," she said.

"I don't want to hear it.  You were wrong to kick that boy out."

"Yes, dad­dy."

Trees and dark fields flowed past.  Mile mark­ing reflec­tors blinked like the eyes of ani­mals lurk­ing on the edge of night wait­ing to pounce, devour the truck if it stopped again, too soon or too late.  Dot­tie fought his efforts to shift gears, her aging engine demand­ing rest, restora­tion.  He didn't have time to stop, not now.  McDonald's had cost him anoth­er forty min­utes and he was already two hours behind sched­ule.  As though tor­ment­ing him, the GPS he had installed last week beeped to tell him he was off course.  He'd have to dri­ve all night, that was all there was to it.  He had hoped to stop at a motel, let Dale sleep in a real bed, but there was no time for it now.  He reached for his CB micro­phone but changed his mind.  He had turned it off hours ago to cut the chat­ter, spend some time with his kid.  That was the whole point here, to spend time with Dale.  Father and daugh­ter on the open road togeth­er.  Even­tu­al­ly Cora would find his chan­nel and start call­ing, but he'd wor­ry about that then.

"How about a song?" he said.

She con­tin­ued to stare out the win­dow.  She was only six but already she had devel­oped her mother's stiff resolve.

"Come on," he said.  "You pick it."

She turned, her mother's eyes wide.  She pulled loose strands of blonde hair out of her face.  She seemed about to jump out of her seat.  "You mean it?"

"Sure, sure, of course.  Keep me awake."

She smiled.

"That's my girl.  You shouldn't hide that pret­ty smile of yours."

She start­ed singing, some­thing he didn't know, which wasn't any big sur­prise.  He tried to hum along once he got the tune in his head, tapped fin­gers against the steer­ing wheel.  Her voice cracked but she sang with all her heart, clos­ing her eyes and clutch­ing her hands to her chest, being the­atri­cal about the whole thing, extend­ing her arms as though the road before them and the blink­ing reflec­tive road­side mak­ers were the eyes of an audi­ence cheer­ing her on.

Dot­tie coughed and sput­tered and choked.  Walt pulled her out of gear and flipped on the dash­board lights.  The engine tem­per­a­ture was ris­ing.  He let the truck coast while he turned on the heater, reached under the dash to open the vents.  Hot air blew over his feet and quick­ly filled the cab­in.  He cranked open his win­dow to let out some of the air.  "Roll yours down, too," he said, but the pas­sen­ger win­dow, like the door, hadn't been opened in years.  She couldn't get it open.  The smart thing would be to stop, but he had too much dis­tance to make up before morn­ing.  He kept his speed at just under 55 and for five long miles watched the ther­mo­stat while Dale sang qui­et­ly to her­self.  Sweat drib­bled under his arms, tick­led his back.  The tem­per­a­ture remained steady just below the red line and then slow­ly eased back­wards.  Not all the way, but back to a more man­age­able temperature.

Dale pulled off her boots.  "I'm tired," she said.  It was almost two.  "I wish I was in bed."

He threw a thumb at the sleep­er behind them.  "You can climb in back.  Ain't the Hyatt, but it's com­fort­able.  I'll wake you when we get there."

"No, my bed," she said, look­ing back through the cur­tain at a bare mat­tress with noth­ing but a rough red blan­ket wadded up on it and a pil­low he'd tak­en from the house before he left.  It had been Cora's and it still smelled like her.  He nev­er thought his daugh­ter would even­tu­al­ly rest her head on it.  "I miss Princess," Dale said.  "She sleeps with me.  She'll be lonely."

"Your moth­er will take good care of her."

She shook her head.  "Mom­my sneezes," she said.  "She's acerbic."

He laughed.

"It's not fun­ny.  Princess has to sleep alone when I'm not there."

"She'll be fine for a few nights."

Dale looked back through the cur­tain then climbed through.  Walt watched her through the mir­ror explore the liv­ing quarters–if it could be called that.  There wasn't much back there, just a bed and a lit­tle refrig­er­a­tor and a draw­er for clothes, though he didn't keep clothes in it.  "Don't open that," he said, afraid she'd find both the gun and his col­lec­tion of Play­boys.  He kept his tools in a box behind the cab, on the trail­er hitch.  She laid down on her side fac­ing him, curled into a ball and pulled the blan­ket up to her shoul­der.  They looked at each oth­er through the mir­ror.  She smiled.  "Good night, Pump­kin," he said.

"Good night, Dad­dy."  She yawned and closed her eyes.

Walt flipped off the inte­ri­or lights and stretched his back to set­tle into the seat that had long ago learned the pat­tern of his body.  Stars stretched across the bruised night.  Almost twen­ty years ago he'd stopped at a rest area off I‑90 in South Dako­ta and had looked up at the stars dot­ting the sky.  He'd chris­tened the rig then, for the stars that would guide him for the rest of his jour­neys.  That was before Cora, before Dale, before his world had come togeth­er and then fall­en apart.  Back when Dot­tie was young and he was young and stay­ing awake through these long night dri­ves didn't seem too hard.  He yawned.  In back, Dale slept.  The audi­ence had turned back into ani­mals.  He checked Dottie's gauges and drove.  Two hun­dred miles to go.

***

Cora answered on the first ring.  "Walt?"

"Hi, hon­ey."

"Thank god.  Is Dale all right?"

"We're fine.  She's fine.  Just out on the road."

"Can I talk to her?"

"She's asleep in back."

Cora sobbed.

"You know that gets to me, baby."

"Don't do this, Walt."

"I'm just spend­ing a lit­tle time with my lit­tle girl."

"Please just bring her home."

"I miss you," he said.

"Don't hurt her."

"That's not fair."  He wiped sweat off his face.  "We're on a lit­tle road trip, is all.  Dale's nev­er been out with me, not once.  Nev­er seen how I live, where I live.  She doesn't know who I am."

"You're not allowed unsupervised –"

"Who says I'm not allowed?" he said, pound­ing his fist into the steer­ing wheel.   "That damned judge?  What right does she have?  Can't see my own daugh­ter with­out some­body watch­ing us.  Like I'm a bad par­ent.  I'm not a bad parent."

Cora con­trolled her sobs.  "I know you're not."

"It's wrong to keep a father from his child," he whis­pered, not want­i­ng to wake Dale.  "I work three-hun­dred-six­ty days to keep that roof over your head, clothes on that girl's back, food on your table and in my stom­ach, gas in my tank, oil in my engine, all so I can keep mov­ing, keep dri­ving, stay one step ahead of every­body that wants to take it all away.  I pass through town to spend a few hours with my girl and you won't even take her out of school because you've got to work.  And that punk in the blue tie tells me I don't have the authority –"

"Three years, Walt.  What did you expect?"

"Three years of talk, Cora.  Noth­ing but talk.  I've talked and paid peo­ple to talk and lis­tened to oth­er peo­ple talk and even paid peo­ple to lis­ten to oth­er peo­ple talk and it's done me not one bit of good.  Use­less words, Cora.  I'm done with it."  His own hot breath sur­prised him.

"Let me just talk to her for a minute," she said.

"She's sleep­ing, I told you that.  Not gonna wake her up now."

"Please, Walt," Cora said.  "Please don't do this."

"I'll call again soon."  He pressed the but­ton to end the call.  He wished he'd told her he still loved her.

***

Dot­tie coughed as Walt pulled up to the load­ing dock.  He logged his dri­ving time and mileage, sub­tract­ing the side trip to get Dale.  He record­ed the McDonald's stop as being two hours to include a manda­to­ry sleep break that he hadn't actu­al­ly tak­en.  Dale was still asleep in back, blan­ket pulled over her head despite the heat.  He left the engine run­ning and climbed down from the cab, approached a young man in blue den­im over­alls who was attach­ing a loaded trail­er to anoth­er rig.

"Morn­ing," he said.

The young man looked up, mouth unhinged.  He had black, crooked teeth and a long neck punc­tu­at­ed by a plum sized Adam's apple.  He glanced over Walt's shoul­der at Dot­tie, wheez­ing like an ox who'd been run too hard.  "Inside," he said.  "Lou's the dock super­vi­sor."  A stream of tobac­co juice shot from his pursed lips and land­ed, splat, on the ground next to Walt's shoe.  He leaned over and cranked the hitch.

Inside Walt found Lou stand­ing behind a lectern.  He was in his fifties, bald­ing, white hair, glass­es perched on the end of a nose that had been bro­ken at least three times, pen­cil tucked behind his ear.  Walt hand­ed him his man­i­fest and log book.  Lou glanced at his watch.

"You're late."  He stud­ied the paper­work, not meet­ing Walt's eye.

"Rest stop," Walt said.

Lou tossed the log­book at Walt, unopened, unex­am­ined.  Walt just man­aged to grab it before it dropped to the floor.  "Rest on your own time."  He tore a slip of paper from a pad and held it out.  "Num­ber three."  He jerked his head to the left.

The third bay was emp­ty.  Walt backed the trail­er in until he felt the bump against the dock.  He jumped down and fetched chucks from the tool box behind the cab, blocked off his wheels.  A sign next to the open door read, "No Engine Idling."  Walt shook his head.  She might need a bit to get start­ed again, but he need­ed to impress these peo­ple.  He need­ed the work.  He climbed back into the cab and shut off the engine.  The trail­er door opened.  He checked the back to make sure the bun­dle of his daugh­ter was still snug beneath the blanket.

From inside the ware­house he watched as the crew unloaded his trail­er.  Fork­lifts rum­bled across a met­al ramp, car­ried out pal­lets of goods.  He had no idea what he was car­ry­ing.  These days he didn't care.  A job was a job.  If some­body want­ed some­thing hauled, he'd do it, no ques­tions asked.  The inside of the trail­er was a mess, walls dirty and dinged, a door that got stuck most of the time.  The tires were bald­ing.  Mud flaps had long since giv­en up flap­ping any­thing but their shred­ded selves.  Eigh­teen years, six months.  That's how long he'd had that truck and he took good care of her.  Did.  Past year or more had been espe­cial­ly hard, all his friends sell­ing out to the big con­glom­er­ates who paid for the upkeep on their trucks, pro­vid­ed health insur­ance and retire­ment plans.  Walt had always been a lon­er, though, liked the job because he was his own boss, picked his routes, picked his loads.  More and more, though, the big com­pa­nies were under­cut­ting him.  They had mod­ern equip­ment and track­ing capa­bil­i­ties.  It was becom­ing increas­ing­ly hard for him to find work.  It had been ten months since Dottie'd had a good over­haul and she was long over­due.  This job and the return would just about cov­er oil and fil­ters and new plugs and gas­kets and, maybe, a new set of tires.

He again hand­ed his log book to the dock super­vi­sor.  Lou glanced through it and shook his head, breathed in and out.  "'Pears in order," he said.  "Inspec­tors 'll believe it any­way."  He signed it and hand­ed it back to Walt.

"What's the return?" Walt said.

"Dead head."

"I was sup­posed to drop in Raleigh."

"You were sup­posed to leave with it last night," Lou said.  "I gave the run to anoth­er driver."

Walt grabbed the lectern.  "But that was my job."

"Out­ta my hands."

"Son of a bitch.  What am I sup­posed to do?"

The dock super­vi­sor shrugged.

"Got any­thing I can take?  I'll go any­where.  Haul anything."

"Noth­ing that ain't been assigned."  He wasn't look­ing at Walt, flipped through the papers on his makeshift desk, scrib­bled notes.  He stared at Walt's hands grip­ping the podi­um.  "Wait around, you want.  Some­body might bail."

Walt looked out over the park­ing lot.  Rigs were lined up to the street wait­ing for an open bay.  His chances of get­ting any­thing were slim. He could wait around, but what would he do with Dale?  The two of them couldn't just sit in the cab for the next, what, day, maybe more.  They could get a room at a motel for a night.  He could make some calls, find anoth­er run.  Work­ing on his own meant he had no office to find work.  It was all up to him, job to job, site to site.

"Shit."  He took his hands off the podi­um.  "Where do I get my check?"

"Checks are mailed out next week."

"Next week?  I'm sup­posed to get it when I drop."  Lou con­tin­ued look­ing through papers.  "Maybe they left –"

"Noth­ing."

"Cash then?"

"Look, office opens at ten.  Wait around or come back lat­er and talk to some­one upstairs."  He thumbed the ware­house as though the whole build­ing were upstairs.  A phone on the wall next to him rang; he grabbed it before it fin­ished it's first.  "Yeah.  God dammit, I said four.  Yes that's what I said.  Think I don't know my own damned voice.  Yeah, yeah.  On my way."  He slammed the phone down.  "Christ, I got­ta do every­thing around here."  He shoved past Walt and hus­tled around stacks of box­es on pallets.

Walt climbed back into Dot­tie and count­ed the cash left in the enve­lope.  Dale need­ed a real bed and a bath.  He couldn't afford a hotel, not now.  He fold­ed the enve­lope and slid it back in the pouch hid­den beneath his seat.  He closed his eyes, leaned back, breathed deep and count­ed to ten.

"Dale?"  He flipped on the inte­ri­or lights.  "Time to wake up, Pump­kin."  He crawled behind the red cur­tain, pulled back the blan­ket.  She was gone.  He laid the blan­ket back on the bed and pulled it away again think­ing that, like mag­ic, she would reap­pear.  But the bed was still emp­ty.  He pressed the mat­tress.  She was gone.  He yelled her name but his voice trav­eled nowhere in the con­fines of the cab.  He pulled out the draw­er, thought she may have crawled in there, but all he found were his Play­boys and his gun.  There was no where else to hide.  He kicked open the door and jumped out, land­ing stiff-legged, hard.  His right knee popped; he crum­bled.  Pain shocked him like ice water.  It was an old injury, a bad tack­le in high school.  He lay on the pave­ment, sup­press­ing a scream, clutch­ing his knee.  His face hot, tears welled.  He began to hyper­ven­ti­late.  He con­cen­trat­ed on his breath, teeth grit­ted against the pain that shot up from his leg, stretched over him like plas­tic wrap, suf­fo­cat­ing, mouth dry, sweat drip­ping into his eyes.  He gasped quick gulps of air that did noth­ing to sti­fle the pain, the unbear­able pain.  He forced him­self to breathe.

Dale.  He swal­lowed the dry­ness, opened his burn­ing eyes and breathed, once, deep.  All it took was once and then he could do it again and again and then he pushed him­self off the asphalt.  Shak­ing, mus­cles as tense as soft wood under a heavy load, he grabbed the open door and pulled, man­aged to get his left leg under him and stead­ied him­self on it, leaned against Dot­tie for sup­port.  He took a few more deep breaths then bent over to look under the chas­sis.  She wasn't there.

His right knee was already swelling, flesh press­ing against his jeans.  Veins pulsed with his thump­ing heart.  He didn't care.  He couldn't.  If he stopped any longer, if he let him­self con­tin­ue to think about, to even look at his knee, he would not be able to go on.  Find Dale, he told him­self.  Think on your feet, you're good at that.

"Dale," he called and wait­ed, blood bang­ing a steel drum in his ears.  He hopped along the trail­er and leaned against the dock.  "Hey," he called into the ware­house.  "Any­body there?"  The young man with the apple in his throat appeared, eat­ing a sand­wich.  "Yeah?"

Sweat stung his eyes.  "Have you seen…a lit­tle girl?"  He swal­lowed, the pain like a bristle­cone.  "My daugh­ter.  She was sleeping…inside.  Gone."

He took a thought­ful bite of his sand­wich.  His Adam's apple bobbed.  "Nope," he said.  "Don't think so."

"Can you ask?"  With a tensed claw Walt pinched the mus­cle above his quick­ly swelling knee.

"You all right?" the kid said.

"Just ask."

Lou emerged from behind a plas­tic cur­tain, fat bel­ly lob­bing ahead of him, cig­a­rette curl­ing smoke from between two arthrit­ic knuck­les.  "What's the problem?"

"Lit­tle girl," Walt said.  He strug­gled with shal­low breaths.  "My daughter."

"Yeah?"

"She's gone," he said.

"Kids aren't allowed on the dock or in the ware­house.  Com­pa­ny policy."

"Have you seen her?"

"You could be fined."

"She was asleep in the truck.  I don't know where she went.  She was there when I went in, and she's gone when I come back."

"You left her alone?"  His tone was judg­men­tal, contemptuous.

"She was asleep."

"What'd you leave her alone for?"

"I thought she'd be all right."

"Mm-hmm."  He blew smoke into morn­ing air.  Walt shiv­ered, though it wasn't cold.  "We'll keep our eyes open."

Using the trail­er for sup­port he limped to the front of the rig.  The park­ing lot was huge, more than a mile, prob­a­bly, in each direc­tion, half again as wide.  Trucks were lined up, rum­bling, spew­ing diesel exhaust, wait­ing for dock open­ings.  Dri­vers stood in groups, talk­ing, but they were too far to hear him call­ing.  "Dale," he screamed and wait­ed.  He fell against the bumper.  She could be any­where out there, wan­der­ing amid the trucks.  Maybe she thinks one of them is mine and she's already crawled inside, fall­en asleep on some­body else's bunk, he thought.  He tried putting weight on his leg but it was too painful to try to walk.  He stood while the dull throb­bing pound­ed from his knee.  Blood rushed in his ears.  An aper­ture of black­ness closed around his vision.  He clenched his jaw and breathed deep once, twice, three times, lean­ing back against the grill.  Heat rose from the radi­a­tor, from his swelling knee, from the cracked black asphalt, from his emp­ty stom­ach, from his heart like a stone, sink­ing.  He would have to climb into the cab and turn on the CB, call some of the oth­er dri­vers out there, get a search par­ty togeth­er.  He knew when he turned on the radio he'd hear Cora beg­ging him to come back.  What choice did he have?

"Hey, bud­dy."  Adam's Apple was on the dock.  He leaned over, hands on his knees.  "Secu­ri­ty found her."  He spit a wad of tobac­co juice onto the ground.

Hold­ing his breath against the surg­ing pain he pulled him­self up onto the dock, lurched past the young man, lum­bered through the plas­tic cur­tain, past the still smok­ing dock super­vi­sor qui­et­ly judg­ing him, down a hall­way to a secu­ri­ty guard sooth­ing a wail­ing voice through a locked door–Dale: scared, sob­bing and unwill­ing to emerge from the bath­room until her moth­er came for her.

 ***

The sun gave in to a blue­bon­net sky.  Dark­ness set­tled across the field behind the house.  Not his house any­more, but he still con­sid­ered it his.  He used to pull up and honk the horn, sur­prise Cora.  She'd run out across the front lawn in blue jeans and a fad­ed grey sweat­shirt, long blonde hair whip­ping in the wind behind her.  She pulled open the door and climbed up into the cab, wrapped her­self around him before he could even get the engine shut off.  That was years ago, when they were still hap­py.  Or thought they were.

His knee, still swollen, throbbed less; he had hard­ly moved it in four hours.  Dri­ving all day and into the night, try­ing not to shift, not to have to press the brake, the pain sheath­ing his head, blind­ing, unbear­able, and yet it had to be borne.  They had stopped once for gas and cof­fee, dipped into his cash reserves, no use sav­ing any­thing now.  Dale had grog­gi­ly gone into the truck stop with him, opened the door and held the Ther­mos while he filled it with cof­fee.  When they got back to the truck she had fall­en right back to sleep.

How hard it had been to get her out of the bath­room.  She cried from behind the locked door for thir­ty min­utes, wail­ing for her moth­er, her cat, her blan­ket.  How hard it had been to con­vince her that he wouldn't leave her again.  How hard it had been to lie.

"Dale," he said, nudg­ing her.  "We're home, Pumpkin."

She opened her eyes.  "Home?"

The door creaked.  "I'll help you down."  His knee was stiff but mov­able.  He climbed down, care­ful not to jump, teeth clenched against the throb­bing.  Dale rubbed her eyes when he reached up for her.  "Be care­ful," he said.

"How's your leg, Daddy?"

"Fine," he said.  He took her hand.  They walked across the cool, dew stained grass.  Walt list­ed to the left to com­pen­sate for the knee he couldn't bend.  Dale yawned; it was con­ta­gious.  She laughed at him, his gap­ing mouth a black hole.  Could it absorb all the bad things he had ever said, ever done, would do?

The key lay hid­den beneath the flower pot.  "Shh," he cau­tioned as he turned the lock.  He tried to squat but his knee wouldn't bend so he sat on the cool con­crete, leg stretched out.  "You be a good girl now, you hear?"

"Yes, Dad­dy."

He kissed her on the forehead.

"Are you gonna stay?"

That depends on your moth­er, he start­ed to say, thought bet­ter of it.  I've done enough dam­age, he thought.  "I don't think so," he said.  "I've got to get this run finished."

She yawned.  "You'll be back soon, though?"

"Of course."  How long before she stopped believ­ing him?

She hugged him.

"Don't wake your moth­er," he said.

She smiled and winked.  "I won't."

He closed the door behind her and strained to hear her feet pat­ter across the linoleum floor.  All he heard were the crick­ets.  He locked the door and replaced the key under the flow­er­pot.  He pulled him­self to his feet and stared out across the lawn, at Dot­tie wait­ing for him.  She was still emp­ty, a dead head about to chug through anoth­er long, lone­ly day.  Dale was bet­ter off with­out him, bet­ter off believ­ing that his rig was full than dis­cov­er­ing the truth: that he was haul­ing noth­ing more than air.  He was just anoth­er truck­er haul­ing a trail­er full of emp­ty promis­es.  He hob­bled down from the porch and walked across the cool morn­ing grass.  With each step, as he moved clos­er and clos­er to the only home he had, the pain in his knee became worse.  By the time he got to the cab all he could do was stand there and breathe heav­i­ly until he mus­tered the strength to climb up and behind the wheel.
jeffsmithThe short fic­tion of J.L. Smith has appeared in The Cyn­ic Online, Halfway Down the Stairs, Every Day Fic­tion and eFic­tion mag­a­zine.  He lives with his wife and daugh­ter in the remote north­west cor­ner of New Mex­i­co.  When not writ­ing his nov­el he can be found push­ing his daugh­ter through the desert in a run­ning stroller.

 

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News from the Hills and Surrounds

haun

Mil­dred Haun Con­fer­ence: A Cel­e­bra­tion of Appalachi­an Lit­er­a­ture, Schol­ar­ship, and Culture

My Big Red­neck Vaca­tion pffssshh

Clint Bowyer Doing a Redneck

The March of Mitch McConnell

Con­fer­ence on South­ern Lit­er­a­ture: Jeff Daniel Marion

Coal Min­er Exo­dus Threat­ens Industry

36th Annu­al Appalachi­an Stud­ies Con­fer­ence: Com­mu­ni­ties in Action, Land­scapes in Change

Obama's Oppor­tu­ni­ty for Bold Action on Cli­mate Change

Bar­bara King­solver at Hindman

Dal­ton Stid­ham Charged With Mur­der In Shoot­ing Near Haz­ard Com­mu­ni­ty And Tech­ni­cal College

First There Was a Mountain

Appalachia is New Home to Repub­li­cans and Intolerance

 

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Oxford Town, fiction by William Trent Pancoast

The lit­tlest black girl came breath­less from run­ning and stopped by my desk in the laun­dry office.

You need to come quick. Ricky’s gone crazy.

I saw the alarm and fear in her face and got up and fol­lowed her the hun­dred feet to the bank of com­mer­cial wash­ing machines lin­ing the wall of the plant. In front of the bleach bar­rel Rick­ey stood unsteadi­ly with the bleach pad­dle cocked like a ball bat ready to hit the oth­er wash­man Dar­rel. It was a hot Sep­tem­ber day in the laun­dry where even in win­ter the tem­per­a­ture would be over 90 degrees.

Ricky had looked a lit­tle drunk when he came in but I hadn’t cared. I’d have been drunk at this place too if I could have been. As I neared he kept hitch­ing the pad­dle back behind his right ear like he was at bat. Dar­rel had his eyes locked on Ricky’s and I fig­ured he would do a take­down when the swing came. Dar­rel had been all Ohio in wrestling and at tail­back for the Talawan­da Braves in Oxford Ohio.

Excuse me I said to the ladies in the cir­cle around the two wash­men when I pushed past. There was me and six or sev­en black girls from the neigh­bor­hood down the hill on the north side of town and five hill­bil­ly ladies from the coun­try­side plus a cou­ple of Mia­mi Uni­ver­si­ty coed dropouts stuck in Oxford like lint on a piece of laundry.

Give me the pad­dle I told Ricky. He dropped it sev­er­al inch­es right away and I could see in his eyes that he was relieved. He knew Dar­rel was going to kill him if it came down to it and he hand­ed me the pad­dle mak­ing sure I was between him and Darrel.

I knew that the pad­dle was a light­weight bal­sa sort of wood and wasn’t going to hurt a whole lot even if some­body got hit with it. Not like it was oak or ash and heavy enough to bust a head.

Go clock out I told Ricky and he was sober­ing up now from the adren­a­lin and backed up a few steps then walked up past the office to the time clock. It was silent till he was gone then the black girls gath­ered chirp­ing around Dar­rel. The foot­ball coach had told him to put on 15 pounds of mus­cle and get in top shape along with get­ting his ass enrolled at Mia­mi Uni­ver­si­ty and he would let him walk on next fall for a tryout.

You’re a hero one of them tossed my way. The oth­ers cooed assent know­ing that if Ricky had swung the pad­dle they and Dar­rel would prob­a­bly have been blamed any­ways since black folks in Oxfor­dO­hio in 1974 were still used to tak­ing the blame for most every­thing involv­ing con­flict with white folks.

I was half crazy from lack of sleep and the work­load I had tak­en on. I was doing my stu­dent teach­ing all day and man­ag­ing the com­mer­cial laun­dry on sec­ond shift. The col­lege and my spon­sor teacher had told me I couldn’t do what I was doing and I’d said okay and went ahead with it any­way. What were they going to do? Throw me out of school because I had to work my way in the world? My days start­ed at six and end­ed about 12:30.

All I want­ed was for these folks to get the fuck­ing laun­dry done so I could be fin­ished for one more day. I didn’t even have time to drink any­more. I was sur­round­ed in this col­lege town by beer and drugs and pussy and I spent my days with a class­room of eighth graders then tons of bloody hos­pi­tal laun­dry from DaytonOhio.

Let’s do the laun­dry I told every­one. They grum­bled as they made their ways slow­ly to their assigned areas. The first loads of hos­pi­tal gowns from the dry­ers had just hit the fold­ing tables and I put half the sorters over there. The big steam roller press we ran the sheets through was run­ning good tonight. All eight of the wash­ers were churn­ing suds except for the cav­ernous four hun­dred pound capac­i­ty behe­moth that Ricky had been pulled from and tossed like a bag of laun­dry across the con­crete floor.

He’d called Dar­rel a fuck­ing nig­ger then made the mis­take of turn­ing back to his work of stuff­ing a fifty pound mesh bag into the wash­er like it was busi­ness as usu­al after the insult. I have no doubt that Dar­rel had first called him a crack­er like I heard lat­er but I didn’t real­ly give a fuck. There was laun­dry to be done so I could go home and guys call­ing each oth­er crack­ers and nig­gers I didn’t have time for. Some­body some­where along the line should be respon­si­ble for telling all humankind that some moth­er­fuck­er soon­er or lat­er was going to call them a crack­er or a nig­ger or wop or dago or a sono­fabitch and that the cor­rect response was to grin and say that’s not nice and walk away. But no. Young men and old men had to beat each oth­er with bleach pad­dles and oth­er blunt objects when some­body called them a name. Sticks and stones motherfuckers.

They were all back to work and I head­ed to the office and tomorrow’s les­son plan. We were going to lis­ten to Richard Nixon’s res­ig­na­tion speech from the spring of the year. Clas­sic dip­shitese. God help us that a piece of shit like Nixon could have been elect­ed pres­i­dent. There would be a writ­ing reac­tion to his speech and I was jot­ting down top­ics when the lit­tlest black girl was back again breathless.

Rickey’s mom is here.

The lit­tlest black girl was hot and I loved it when she pressed up next to me. When I had first seen her and the oth­ers togeth­er the first night I saw that she was the lit­tlest one and that’s what she always was in my mind—the lit­tlest black girl. Her real name was Cindy. She wore over­sized glass­es. I liked her cute lit­tle ass and her nice boobs. She pushed close to my desk eye­ing my les­son plan. I could feel heat escap­ing from the neck of her white blouse and smell a nat­ur­al sweet­ness through her Ivory soap. I real­ly was start­ing to like her.

You the man­ag­er? I heard gruffly from the doorway.

I am the tired moth­er­fuck­ing man­ag­er I want­ed to say but instead said yes ma'am.

I learned in the next fif­teen min­utes from Ricky’s moth­er that Ricky was a fine upstand­ing youth with a fam­i­ly to sup­port and he damn well need­ed this job and she damn well expect­ed him to keep it or she would use her con­sid­er­able clout as assis­tant head of house­keep­ing of women’s dor­mi­to­ries on the South Quad to damn well make my life hell at Mia­mi University.

We had walked out of the office to the laun­dry area and she kept look­ing down the aisle at Dar­rel and he kept track of where she was look­ing and I wished there had been some grav­el to kick. They were the Oxford Hen­leys I was told. Gen­er­a­tions of them had lived on the same farm and lit­tle Ricky was des­tined for some form of great bull­shit. I took in all she was say­ing. I didn’t want trou­ble with anybody.

 ***

I nev­er aspired to be a laun­dry man­ag­er. I saw an ad in the Oxford Press for sec­ond shift help for min­i­mum wage at the Oxford Laun­dry down the hill on Col­lege Avenue. I didn’t real­ize till I got there that it was a com­mer­cial laun­dry. They did one hun­dred per cent hos­pi­tal laun­dry that I was soon to find was gross as punc­tured intestines. There were some­times fin­gers or oth­er ampu­tat­ed body parts wadded up in the bloody sheets or organ­ic items no one even want­ed to try and iden­ti­fy. Most­ly it was just bloody.

I usu­al­ly helped at the hor­ren­dous job of sort­ing. Help with some of the shit­work. Show the ladies I was one of them. And get them start­ed on it. They would stand and look at it some­how think­ing they could avoid what they knew they had to do. All of them had to say eww at least twice and exam­ine each bas­ket­ful as if siz­ing up the enemy.

I usu­al­ly said let’s sort this shit and grabbed a tan­gle of gowns and sur­gi­cal garb and they squawked like teenagers which half of them were. The black kids were all under age 20 and the white ladies were old­er pick­ing up a few bucks for their fam­i­lies for Christ­mas. When­ev­er pos­si­ble I assigned the old­er folks to this job. Hav­ing learned that bulling ahead was the best way to deal with bad shit in life they would get it done quick.

It was a nice June day when I applied for the job. My breath was sucked from me when I entered the place. Heat radi­at­ed off every item in the plant. Wash­ers and dry­ers, Steam boil­ers and press­es. But I came to find that it was a dry heat like they say Ari­zona has and was some­thing a per­son could adjust to.

Min­i­mum wage was $2 an hour. That would feed me. I had a thou­sand dol­lars saved up from my stint as a sales­man and only need­ed to get through anoth­er nine months. Turns out they were putting on a com­plete­ly new sec­ond shift to take care of a con­tract for a Day­ton hos­pi­tal and the own­er want­ed me to be the night man­ag­er. I had only want­ed to work about twen­ty hours a week but he offered me $200 a week salary. I could hard­ly turn down a job in a col­lege town dur­ing the Viet­nam War at two and a half times the min­i­mum wage. I took the job and it near­ly killed me.

***

My les­son plan was fin­ished and I was help­ing Dar­rel load the wash­ers. I enjoyed heft­ing the flop­py fifty pound mesh bags into the open­ings of the wash­ers. It was good exer­cise and I didn’t have to do it if I didn’t want to.

I was prob­a­bly respon­si­ble for the mess with Ricky and Dar­rel. The wash­man duties amount­ed to a per­son and a half job and we had two peo­ple to do it. They had been alter­nat­ing on the shit­ty part of the job with one of them at any giv­en time sit­ting for extend­ed peri­ods while the oth­er worked. The boss had noticed this when he stayed over a few times and told me he want­ed them busy. So I told them to work togeth­er think­ing that they would only make each oth­er mis­er­able. Not get stu­pid about it.

I tossed a bag into the medi­um wash­er in the mid­dle and saw a man enter the rear of the place through the fire door. He head­ed for the lit­tle roller press where Dar­lene was feed­ing pil­low­cas­es and an argu­ment ensued. Dar­lene was one of the hill­bil­ly ladies. She seemed glad to be here at work every night and did a great job help­ing get the laun­dry done and me home.

She rolled her eyes and shook her head no all the while tug­ging tan­gled wet pieces out of the basket.

There’s no fuck­ing sup­per I heard him say.

She was telling him what was at home to fix for him and the kids and he stood look­ing down at the gray enam­eled con­crete floor.

I took a step clos­er and he turned his head toward me. And you bet­ter just stay the fuck out of this he said.

Before I could react to what he said Dar­lene cut past me and was plead­ing for a few minute break to get her goofy half drunk hus­band out of there.

No prob­lem I assured her and head­ed back to the wash­ers. I kept my eye on them near the back door and in five min­utes all the shout­ing was over and he stood look­ing at her with his low­er lip quiv­er­ing and I swear he wiped a tear from his eye before she pushed him out the door into the park­ing lot.

Dar­lene hur­ried over to me. Thanks she said. We need the mon­ey from my job. It won’t hap­pen again.

I stood nod­ding my head and watch­ing her hur­ry back to her job. With an edu­ca­tion she would have made a good nurse or maybe a teacher. Folks worked hard. Every­where I’ve ever seen it’s the same. Peo­ple hump ass all day and night what­ev­er it takes to make a liv­ing. Bet­ter than grow­ing turnips for the king I guess but the work­ers always seem to get the short end of things.

I smelled John and turned to find the old man lean­ing on his broom. He was a human cloud of BO. Hot tonight he said blow­ing the sweet scent of Boone’s Farm Apple wine over me. That’s good wine he had told me one day. Bet­ter than that rot­ten Moger Dav­en he called the MD 20/20. I didn’t have the heart to tell him it wasn’t even real wine. But Boonie’s was pret­ty friend­ly stuff for a dol­lar twen­ty-five. In high school we called it liq­uid acid. A bot­tle of that stuff would set you free. Some­times I envied old John his dai­ly Boone’s Farm.

John had been a medic on Guadal­canal. The first 24 hours left him crust­ed in a lay­er of blood and dust and sand and he had start­ed shoot­ing up with the mor­phine from the emer­gency kits of the dead men. It was the only way he could keep going and do what a man and a sol­dier need­ed to do. After that he would nev­er again go anoth­er day with­out being fucked up on drugs or booze. Set­tling on the Boone’s Farm as he entered old age was prob­a­bly one of the bet­ter choic­es he had made in thir­ty years.

The evening was mov­ing along nice­ly now. The last of the dirty stuff was in the wash­ers. The work­ers were all doing a great job. I hadn’t had a chance to talk to Dar­rel and didn’t real­ly know what to talk to him about. Today was pay­day and every pay­day Thurs­day I treat­ed myself to a piz­za and some beer. The laun­dry paid in cash and I fin­gered the $157.36 in my pock­et and envi­sioned the piz­za. I head­ed back to the office think­ing maybe I could get a lit­tle nap.

But first I need­ed to sketch out the rest of my cours­es to com­plete my Mas­ter of Arts in Edu­ca­tion. That’s right. Mas­ter of Arts in Edu­ca­tion. Mia­mi had devel­oped a pro­gram to lure folks like me with a BA in Eng­lish to come and take a few more Eng­lish cours­es and the usu­al lame ass edu­ca­tion cours­es in order to allow them to step inside an Ohio classroom.

Nev­er mind that a BA in Eng­lish was far supe­ri­or to a degree in Eng­lish edu­ca­tion. I had start­ed on the edu­ca­tion route as a col­lege fresh­man and last­ed fif­teen min­utes into my first class. We were actu­al­ly sup­posed to divide into teams and cut out paper dolls. Yes. We would learn team­work that would be demon­strat­ed by this child­ish exer­cise and would apply all the way to high school Eng­lish instruction.

In my time here at Mia­mi I had seen things. Behav­ioral objec­tives was one of them. I had sat lis­ten­ing in amaze­ment to an exprin­ci­pal turned col­lege pro­fes­sor explain how we would learn to write our les­son plans couched in terms of behav­ioral objec­tives. It would nev­er be good enough to say we will read Neigh­bor Rosicky and dis­cuss it in class. No. We would say that the read­er of Neigh­bor Rosicky will learn the mean­ing of com­pas­sion and hope­ful­ly become com­pas­sion­ate. Hah. I’ve seen plen­ty of peo­ple who will nev­er com­pre­hend com­pas­sion and civility.

One such indi­vid­ual was in the grad­u­ate sem­i­nar in mod­ern poet­ry that spring. I was a writer of short sto­ries and had a nov­el under­way but the poet­ry sem­i­nar was what was avail­able. The logis­tics of the course escaped me and before I knew it I had end­ed up with Yeats and my pre­sen­ta­tion would be the first.

I was a Robert Frost kind of guy if I were to under­take poet­ry at all and was befud­dled as we went around the con­fer­ence table intro­duc­ing our­selves. When it was my turn I said my major was Mas­ter of Arts in Edu­ca­tion. One long­haired draft dodger thought that was fun­ny and burst out laugh­ing. I was get­ting ready to become a high school teacher to earn a liv­ing and this moth­er­fuck­er was rub­bing my nose in it. A gray-haired lady poked him with an elbow and he shut up.

So I’m mulling over my dis­con­tent remem­ber­ing being made fun of because my dad­dy didn’t have blank checks for Mia­mi Uni­ver­si­ty and bags of pot. Think­ing about how I’m even going to sur­vive the next eight fuck­ing weeks of 20 hour days when the lit­tlest black girl stood breath­less again by my desk. I inhaled her sweet­ness and fra­grance. I want­ed just me and her to go somewhere.

She leaned into me and said Darrel’s uncle is here.

I looked quizzi­cal­ly up at her.

Do you think I’m smart enough to go to col­lege? she asked.

I stood up and saw my chance to give her a hug and did. Yes I said you should go to col­lege. She hugged me back and I was ready to see Darrel’s uncle.

Hen­ry was a lit­tle short­er than Dar­rel but twice as wide and his breath smelled like garbage. I could not imag­ine what cheap form of whiskey could smell so foul.

I’m sure he had a noble pur­pose when he made plans to inter­cede at the laun­dry after he and the rest of the neigh­bor­hood heard of the fight. But now that he was here he didn’t seem to remem­ber why he had come.

Dar­rel my nephew he said.

I shook his hand and it was like grab­bing hold of a pota­to mash­er all hard and so big around I didn’t feel his fingers.

Equal­i­ty he shout­ed belch­ing a fog of garbage gas over me. We been through a lot.

I looked at Dar­rel to maybe see a way out of this but Dar­rel seemed as scared as I was becoming.

Jus­tice the uncle thun­dered and brought his right fist down like a pile dri­ver on the stain­less steel work table buck­ling its cen­ter and leav­ing it concave.

I stepped back as much to get away from the stench of his breath as any­thing and he stepped right with me.

It ain’t agonna hap­pen again he said.

This was a big man. Prob­a­bly 350 pounds and not a lot of fat. I learned lat­er from Dar­rel that night that Hen­ry had played defen­sive tack­le for the Steel­ers in the mid fifties.

Henry’s growl­ing and thump­ing went on for anoth­er five min­utes until Darrel’s aunt got there and start­ed slap­ping Hen­ry in the back of the head. Then she had the bleach pad­dle that had ignit­ed this whole mess spank­ing his back­side and chas­ing him across the floor as he held his hands over his ears and final­ly tum­bled out the back door into the park­ing lot.

I looked at Dar­rel and he shrugged and I shook my head. I sat along the wall for a few min­utes watch­ing the folks work. The lit­tlest black girl was by her­self push­ing bas­kets to the back of the plant and this told me the rest of the fold­ers were sit­ting. Let them sit. Let the work­ers of the world sit when they can I decreed.

It was after eleven when I went out and fired up the box truck and backed it into the load­ing dock. Tonight three of the black girls vol­un­teered to help push bas­kets and racks to the dock. Dar­rel and I sized up the load and got started.

I had always tried to be friend­ly and fair to Dar­rel and Ricky. They were dif­fer­ent but both were hon­est and did their jobs. We were about half way done load­ing the truck when I asked Dar­rel what happened.

He called me a nigger.

And?

I grabbed him.

You made con­tact first?

He was drunk.

Yeah I said.

I wish I could have got Dar­rel and Ricky sat down togeth­er. It would all just have been all right. They both would have jobs and be mov­ing ahead in what­ev­er they saw as the paths of their lives. But Ricky’s moth­er and Darrel’s uncle had mud­died that up. I didn’t ever want to see any of them again.

After we had fin­ished and stood lean­ing against the dock I told Dar­rel this was his last night too.

He fig­ured that was com­ing from the con­ver­sa­tion we had had while load­ing the truck and nodded.

I heard the girls argu­ing about what kind of three two beer they were going to get at the car­ry­out. One of them had her dad’s pick­up and they were going spot­light­ing on the road to Col­lege Cor­ner to see what was out in the coun­try at night.

Hey I hollered across the cin­der park­ing lot to the lit­tlest black girl.

Hey what?

I shrugged.

She ran up to me and gave me a seri­ous and squishy kiss then bounced gig­gling across the lot to the wait­ing Z71.

I shut down the boil­ers and locked up. Down the block I stopped at Domino’s and ordered a piz­za. I drove out to Mil­ville where I bought a six pack of real beer and drank one on the way back to get the pizza.

pancoastWilliam Trent Pancoast's nov­els include WILDCAT (2010) and CRASHING (1983). His short sto­ries, essays, and edi­to­ri­als have appeared in MONKEYBICYCLE, Night Train, As It Ought To Be, Sol­i­dar­i­ty mag­a­zine, and US News & World Report.  Pan­coast is retired from the auto indus­try after thir­ty years as a die mak­er and union news­pa­per edi­tor. Born in 1949, the author

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The Witching Women at Road's End, nonfiction by Casey Clabough

Slight­ly more than a cen­tu­ry ago a Mr. Sher­man Clabough was sher­iff of Sevi­er Coun­ty, Ten­nessee. One of his now scarce-remem­bered duties was to see to it that any young man in the sec­tion who turned twen­ty-one work the roads for an inde­ter­mi­nate peri­od so as to pay off his manda­to­ry poll tax. Of course, in the­o­ry a young man might sat­is­fy the sum out of pock­et, but it was irreg­u­lar for any­one to have much, if any, mon­ey in those times, espe­cial­ly folk who came from fam­i­lies back up in the hol­lows and hills. So it was that between the young men in the dis­trict and what­ev­er con­victs hap­pened to be on hand, the roads in the county—some of which spanned and twist­ed high up onto remote lone­ly slopes of the Smokies—were ten­u­ous­ly maintained.

The sher­iff was a tall, stern man with blonde hair and blue eyes that occa­sion­al­ly were remarked upon for their pierc­ing quality.

"He don't need that six-shoot­er to put holes in a body," a local man was heard to remark.

The sheriff's pa, dead for near­ly a decade, had been a Cap­tain in the 9th Cav­al­ry dur­ing the war and Sher­man, as his name inti­mat­ed, had inher­it­ed much of his father's mar­tial bear­ing. Though he was the runt of the fam­i­ly and the youngest of the four boys, it was he who took after his pa the most and so every­one allowed it was nat­ur­al he should become a law­man or a sol­dier rather than a farmer or a preacher.

Before he was twen­ty he mar­ried a Dod­gen girl, Mary, who gave him one child and died not long after she turned eigh­teen try­ing to deliv­er anoth­er. He remar­ried to an Ogle named Beda inside of two weeks, before Mary and her infant were even set­tled in the ground, and she filled his house with six chil­dren in eight years, the last four all born with­in a year of each other.

Now enter­ing his fourth decade and with a size­able fam­i­ly to feed, Sher­man did not take unnec­es­sary risks, though in his younger years he had drawn his pis­tol more read­i­ly and even killed a man on one occa­sion while rid­ing against the White Caps. Sevierville, hav­ing cleared its streets of such vig­i­lantes and been purged by fire at the turn of the cen­tu­ry, had become a peace­able ham­let and Sher­man found his duties not espe­cial­ly per­ilous. The occa­sion­al fam­i­ly feud in the moun­tains and mean week­end drunk were the only times he ever gave thought to draw­ing his pis­tol, and more often than not it was his capa­ble deputies who han­dled such mat­ters as these.

***

When trou­ble at last found Sher­iff Clabough it was of a par­tic­u­lar­ly woe­ful vari­ety as it both impli­cat­ed his offi­cial posi­tion and involved his extend­ed fam­i­ly. One of his nephews, Colum­bus Clabough—the fifth child in his eldest broth­er Isaac's brood—had dis­ap­peared high in the moun­tains while work­ing the roads to pay off his poll tax. Now every­one knew Colum­bus was no ordi­nary youn­gun of twen­ty-one. For one thing, he was either envied or admired among his male peers for hav­ing won the affec­tion of the girl wide­ly con­sid­ered the pret­ti­est thing around Gatlin­burg, Cora Nichols. He was also the prized son of his father Isaac on account of hav­ing stayed on to work the fam­i­ly farm rather than tak­ing after his old­er broth­ers and run­ning off to Knoxville or to join up with the army.

It was a fact, how­ev­er, that though Colum­bus was respect­ed in those parts for hav­ing remained to help his ma and pa, there were aspects of his per­son­al­i­ty which were deemed not exact­ly in his favor. Some thought him mighty queer on account of the fact he always kept to him­self so much, nev­er leav­ing the home­place up at the head of the hol­low unless it was to attend the Ban­ner school­house, which he ceased to do at the age of four­teen, or run an errand for his folks in the Burg, which he always did direct­ly and with­out any tar­ry­ing of his own. Though pos­sessed of a good singing voice, he nev­er attend­ed church—not even revival, which gen­er­al­ly was thought the best oppor­tu­ni­ty for a young man to accom­plish any seri­ous court­ing. Instead it was Columbus's habit when not work­ing the farm to stray across the moun­tains, hunt­ing, trap­ping, or gath­er­ing big mess­es of sang or ramps. What he came back with was always of uncom­mon­ly good quan­ti­ty and qual­i­ty, which drove more than one young man to try to fol­low him so as to deter­mine where he har­vest­ed his boun­ty. Yet none ever suc­ceed­ed in doing so. Either in a stream, a thick­et, or on a rocky hill­side, the boy's trail even­tu­al­ly would fade out and the thwart­ed track­er would return, not a lit­tle agi­tat­ed and remark­ing how queer it was for a body to just melt away into the moun­tains like that.

Giv­en such behav­ior, it sur­prised folks all the more that a gal like Cora Nichols had set her head on mar­ry­ing a fel­low like Colum­bus and done every­thing she knew to bring it about, from bak­ing him cakes and pies aplen­ty to deliv­er­ing them in her best red and yel­low dress with neck cut low. She met with no ini­tial suc­cess on account of usu­al­ly find­ing Colum­bus out work­ing the fields or away from home alto­geth­er on one of his jaunts across the moun­tains. By and by, how­ev­er, he began to take notice of her and would bring vit­tles and furs and oth­er things down the hol­low to where Cora lived in a lit­tle cab­in with her Aunt Azelia. When­ev­er he came to call the three of them inevitably would end up out on the porch in twist­ed old hick­o­ry limb chairs, per­haps in the wake of a meal, and hunt their heads for words to trade. Often this was a chore since Colum­bus wasn't the talk­ing type and Cora and her aunt had said about every­thing two women could to one anoth­er on account of hav­ing lived togeth­er ever since Cora's folks had passed away when she was nigh more than knee-high. Yet they were all com­fort­able enough in each other's silent com­pa­ny in that way peo­ple not much giv­en to talk often are.

There was nev­er any spark­ing to speak of, nor even what might right­ly be named court­ing, but a day even­tu­al­ly arrived when it may be said an under­stand­ing was reached.

"How come you quit the Ban­ner school," Cora asked Colum­bus, lean­ing for­ward in her chair so that it creaked, "when you was the best at read­ing for your age?"

It was the most direct ques­tion she had ever asked him and Colum­bus was silent for a long moment before respond­ing. "I don't right­ly know," he said at last, eyes vague­ly peer­ing up the hol­low. "I reck­on I'd about learned what I could and didn't much care for the com­pa­ny no more."

Unde­terred by this response, which impli­cat­ed Cora since she had attend­ed the school as well, she fol­lowed it with anoth­er ques­tion, just as direct. "And why is it you nev­er go to church and nev­er been to revival?"

Colum­bus shift­ed a lit­tle in his chair in what might have been a slight show of dis­com­fort, though when he answered his voice was the same. "I reck­on again I don't much miss the com­pa­ny and most times I'm away across the moun­tains some­where come Sunday."

Then Cora asked her most direct ques­tion, the one in fact which brought about their under­stand­ing. "Do you reck­on when your ma and pa are gone you'll live all alone in that house up at the head of the hol­low and nev­er go nowhere except across them mountains?"

Colum­bus was silent for a long time, but when at last he answered he looked Cora direct­ly in the face, with the same blue eyes his Uncle Sher­man had. "I've nev­er giv­en any thought to the time when ma and pa are to be laid to rest, and I reck­on there'll always be spells when I'm away in the moun­tains." He paused before con­tin­u­ing. "But what­ev­er oth­ers may say, there is folks I like vis­it­ing and com­pa­ny I hope to always keep."

Colum­bus grinned as he uttered these last words even as Cora blushed, and though Aunt Azelia remained silent as a porch post, the words in her mind were "Praise be."

 ***

Though Sher­man Clabough did not know the par­tic­u­lars of his nephew's vague and uncon­ven­tion­al engage­ment, word had reached him of the young man's impend­ing mar­riage to Cora Nichols. A fair judge of folks on account of the duties of his office, the sher­iff was not as sur­prised as oth­ers by the arrange­ment. Hav­ing spo­rad­i­cal­ly tak­en note of the boy as he grew, he admired rather than took umbrage at Columbus's with­drawn silence, inde­pen­dence, and pen­chant for hunt­ing up things in the moun­tains. More­over, the fact that the boy had stayed on to work broth­er Isaac's farm was a com­fort to his mind and he mused more than once that if the youn­gun were to become a lit­tle more socia­ble and were so inclined, he might make a decent deputy by and by.

Yet now Sher­man feared the worst and suf­fered a not insignif­i­cant bur­den of guilt as each day passed fol­low­ing Columbus's dis­ap­pear­ance. After all, it was he who had allowed the boy to con­duct his road work alone, as he had request­ed, along the most obscure of moun­tain thor­ough­fares, many of which con­sti­tut­ed lit­tle more than trails. At the time it had seemed a nat­ur­al fit for his nephew's inde­pen­dence and exten­sive knowl­edge of the slopes. Yet now all man­ner of poten­tial dan­gers haunt­ed his mind: from chance encoun­ters with rat­tlers or painters to human men­aces from the likes of boot­leg­gers or jeal­ous admir­ers of Cora Nichols.

Columbus's axe, rake, and shov­el had been dis­cov­ered rest­ing against a stunt­ed chest­nut tree at the end of a road high on a rocky peak as if they had been set there in no par­tic­u­lar hur­ry, yet in vain Sher­man rode the near­by trails and hill­sides, putting his deputies and vol­un­teer searchers to shame by stay­ing out the bet­ter part of sev­er­al nights and occa­sion­al­ly even sleep­ing in the sad­dle. Still the moun­tains offered him no clues and with each pass­ing day Sherman's hope waned even as his deputies took to trad­ing uncer­tain glances among them­selves and the vol­un­teers began to strag­gle away. After all, it was not unusu­al for a man to be tak­en by the moun­tains and the folks who lived among the Smok­ies had a feeling—not unlike a clock in the head—when it looked as though a body was gone for good. And as much as Sher­man Clabough sought to ignore the tick­ing in his own mind, he had begun to accept, loath as he was to do so, that too much time had elapsed and it was not for him to lay eyes on his nephew again.

***

On the day of his dis­ap­pear­ance, Colum­bus Clabough worked steadi­ly toward the end of the road he knew was about to give out. He had passed the last res­i­dence, a dilap­i­dat­ed aban­doned cab­in said to have been built by a trap­per before the war, some two miles back down the moun­tain and kept on along the switch­back curves and crum­bling lime­stone roadbed as the way grew ever nar­row­er. Here and there saplings had sprung up in the road due to its lack of use and these he felled with one-hand­ed blows of the axe, leav­ing them where they lay as he moved on, rake and shov­el gripped togeth­er in his oth­er hand. A more chal­leng­ing task was lift­ing or rolling to the road­side boul­ders which had tum­bled down into the thor­ough­fare. Some were the man­age­able size of can­taloupes or water­mel­ons while oth­ers proved more on the order of trunks or chests. It was these lat­ter rocks he strug­gled with the most, grunt­ing as he awk­ward­ly turned them end over end toward the road's edge.

It was get­ting on late in the work day. The sky remained over­cast. Even though it was only the begin­ning of Octo­ber, the air was raw and point­ed, pro­pelled by a con­stant breeze one often encoun­ters when near­ing the sum­mit of a moun­tain. Colum­bus knew if he lin­gered much longer he would be hard-pressed to make it home before dark. Yet some­thing with­in him—pride, stub­born­ness, the van­i­ty of youth—filled him with a desire to fin­ish off the road: to see both it and his labor on it to their respec­tive ends.

It is not dif­fi­cult to guess which course of action won out. Toil on he did, hurl­ing or rolling boul­ders and chop­ping saplings, until he arrived at what he reck­oned must have been the road's ter­mi­nus. One must say reck­oned, for though the imprint of the roadbed con­tin­ued on, the saplings sprang up in clumps, mere inch­es from each oth­er, and two great immov­able rocks the size of wag­ons blocked any fur­ther poten­tial progress by a wheeled vehicle.

The clouds had thick­ened, dim­ming the moun­tain­sides, and cast­ing the hol­lows into a deep­er hue of dark­ness. Colum­bus knew it was time to depart and that he'd like­ly be walk­ing in the moon­light ere he reached the oth­er side of Gatlin­burg. Yet he lin­gered on for a moment con­sid­er­ing with some sat­is­fac­tion first the cleared way behind him and then the wall of rock and wood which dic­tat­ed the thoroughfare's end. But just as he turned from tak­ing in the slop­ing moun­tain­side for­est which lay beyond the ces­sa­tion of his efforts, his nose caught a whiff of wood smoke and anoth­er odor he could not quite place. Tak­ing note of the shift­ing breeze, he deter­mined the smell was borne from around the moun­tain­side. He paused only for an instant, real­iz­ing that search­ing out the smoke con­demned him to a night's jour­ney or sleep­ing in the woods, yet he had embraced such pri­va­tions before and, besides, had made it his life's busi­ness to search out the mys­ter­ies and for­lorn places of the Smok­ies. Care­ful­ly he laid his tools against a chest­nut trunk and set off in the direc­tion the wind beckoned.

He walked per­haps a quar­ter of an hour in the fad­ing dim­ness before he caught the smell again. It was stronger this time but issued it seemed from a place high­er up the moun­tain. Accord­ing­ly, he adjust­ed his course, mak­ing his way patient­ly, tak­ing short shuf­fling steps so as to avoid slip­ping on an invis­i­ble loose rock or tum­bling over a way­ward root.

The moun­tain­side steep­ened, the quan­ti­ty of trees less­en­ing and giv­ing way to bush­es and out­crop­pings of rock. Colum­bus found him­self lean­ing for­ward, grasp­ing nar­row trunks and edges of rock for sup­port, before col­laps­ing to all fours and draw­ing him­self up bod­i­ly wher­ev­er his hands found some­thing stur­dy enough to bear him. It was dark now and he advanced as much by touch as sight.

At last he emerged on a rock plateau of sorts where he could stand straight again, and it was here his search con­clud­ed, for some way across the rocks, accom­pa­nied by the now-famil­iar odor, he made out the faint glow of a fire flick­er­ing in the breeze and what he took to be the hint of a voice.

It was not dif­fi­cult to walk qui­et­ly over the rock and Colum­bus advanced slow­ly in the dark­ness, tak­ing short steps, ears attuned. Yet silent as he tread­ed, when he came with­in per­haps twen­ty paces of the fire, a voice rang out—feminine, old, raspy.

"Come on over and fool your face, pil­grim!" it exclaimed.

"Yes'm," he replied into the moun­tain wind for lack of any­thing else bet­ter to say.

As he advanced the unsteady flames revealed two old women clad all in black stand­ing on either side of the fire, on which stood a large earth­en­ware pot.

The sight of the pot revealed to Colum­bus the odor he had been unable to name: moon­shine. Yet he had nev­er heard tell of woman boot­leg­gers and ancient ones at that. Indeed, their bear­ing and the whole scene rather sug­gest­ed his mother's child­hood tales of witch­ing women. Lack­ing in super­sti­tion, Colum­bus felt fool­ish at the thought but trou­bled nonetheless.

When he came to stand with­in the full illu­mi­na­tion offered by the fire­light, what he saw added to his dis­com­fort. The two female fig­ures might have been twins in their hor­rid decrepi­tude. They shared the same deep wrin­kles, hooked noses, and tooth­less mouths, only one of the old women—the one he guessed must have called out to him—possessed twin­kling, hard black eyes while the oth­er wore a near-obliv­i­ous expres­sion on her hang­ing yel­low cheeks.

The more obser­vant of the pair watched Colum­bus as her hand stirred the pot with a thick stick.

"Wel­come, Colum­bus Clabough," she said.

"You know my name?" replied the incred­u­lous youth.

"It's long been our habit to know what goes on in these moun­tains," said the old woman, "and we fig­ure there's less than the num­ber of fin­gers on a hand, the men who might hunt us out when we're about our business—and Isaac Clabough's wan­der­ing boy is one of them."

"But I won't hunt­ing you," said Colum­bus, grow­ing more uncomfortable.

"Yet here you are," said the old woman, black eyes flash­ing briefly in the fire­light. "Here you are."

To com­bat his grow­ing anx­i­ety Colum­bus began to talk, uncon­scious of the fact his words occa­sion­al­ly stum­bled over each oth­er. He was work­ing the old road that ran up the oth­er side of the moun­tain. He had smelled the smoke. It was noth­ing to him what the two old ladies were doing up here.

The speak­ing crone inter­rupt­ed him. "When there's folks that take an inter­est in a body's busi­ness, even if they don't mean to, well then them's folks a body most like­ly can do without."

For the first time the oth­er old woman made a sound—a gut­tur­al, watery, ascend­ing noise that might have been muf­fled laughter.

Colum­bus fought back some­thing akin to fear. He was being threat­ened. The thought of such fee­ble crea­tures doing him any phys­i­cal harm seemed laugh­able, yet he won­dered if they were alone or if there could be oth­ers some­where out in the dark­ness. How had these two hags tot­ed a big pot to the sum­mit of the moun­tain with­out ben­e­fit of any road or trail Colum­bus knew of? He shiv­ered involuntarily.

"There's a comet a‑coming," said the first one.

"What?" asked Colum­bus, near­ly at wits' end. "What's that?"

"A thing that flies from place to place across the heav­ens. Folks will have nev­er seen the like."

The oth­er hag grinned.

"It'll glow at night," con­tin­ued the first one, "and the tail that comes out behind it will be near as wide as the sky and black as coal."

She ceased stir­ring the pot sud­den­ly and, flat­ten­ing her wrin­kled hand, passed it over the pot.

"The tail of that comet will sweep across the earth," she con­tin­ued, "and when it pass­es some things will be changed though folks won't know what they are."

Then she lapsed into a raspy frag­ment of song:

                        There was an old woman didn’t have but one eye

                        But she had a long tail that she let fly.

                        Every time that she went through a gap,

                        She left a piece of her tail in a trap.

The crone grinned at Colum­bus in the wake of the last verse, the gap­ing black­ness where her teeth should have been trans­form­ing the expres­sion into a dis­gust­ing, mirth­less gesture.

"What's the tune about, boy? It's a riddle."

Colum­bus, shook his head, no longer capa­ble of think­ing clearly.

"Why, a nee­dle, of course," said the old woman, as if instruct­ing a child.

"Now looky here," she con­tin­ued, "you do some­thing for us—you make like that nee­dle and go where we say go for a spell—and you needn't pay no mind to comets and ail­ments and the like. You'll live a long life to boot, though its writ on you you'll nev­er have any youn­guns to call your own.

"Elect to do oth­er­wise and you'll have wor­ries aplen­ty, now and on up till the time of your dying."

Colum­bus looked from one hag to the oth­er, tak­ing in again their dread­ful phys­i­cal degra­da­tion which nonethe­less afford­ed them a pow­er he lacked the capac­i­ty to fath­om. He real­ized sud­den­ly he had been sweat­ing heav­i­ly, his shirt well-nigh drenched. The breeze shift­ed sud­den­ly and the smoke of the fire washed over him, forc­ing unbid­den tears to form in the cor­ners of his eyes. He coughed soft­ly, low­er­ing his head, and on lips which trem­bled slight­ly he offered them his response.

***

Colum­bus Clabough died in Decem­ber 1973, a few months shy of his nineti­eth birth­day and just a hand­ful of weeks before I entered the world. True to the prophe­cy of the witch­ing women he and Cora Nichols nev­er had any chil­dren, and true to an oath they exact­ed of him, he nev­er told any­one the nature of the ser­vice he per­formed for them. His body lies in LynnhurstCeme­tery, Knoxville, the secret buried with him.

Casey Clabough

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The Unbearably Penultimate of Parable, poetry by Dennis Mahagin

I drove over the fat rope thing
that made the bells ding and
ling and then this grease mon­key appeared
at my open win­dow, wear­ing braid­ed ponytail
with his Speed Rac­er eyes, brandishing
a tat­tered broach rag thing he whipped
about like … *what?* about twenty
watts of dirty lar­i­at– surely
a dervish with a nascent
flourish.
"Fill her up?" he asked.

"Nah," I said "sev­en bucks of unleaded." …

"Sev­en bucks?"

"Yah."
This was a spot in Cougar, Wash­ing­ton where they still
did Full Ser­vice; in fact, if you tried to pump your own
a plac­ard said they're just as like to call the law. Before
the days of video pok­er machines, or vir­tu­al speed balls,
a stand­ing ad in the Thrifties main­tained somebody
could come over (even, or espe­cial­ly, in the middle
of the night) to buy your car for scrap,
you sign over the title, oh, it never
seemed right.

"Check that oil?" said the kid.

"Sure," I said, as if late
for a pic­nic, Christ, need­ing a shave, and some
hitch­hik­er with brown Gand­hi face and bomber
jack­et, just to come sham­bling up the medium
island, change the direction
of my life.
Now the kid was going
great guns, Quixot­ic with squeegee
and copi­ous ammo­nia bug juice in the middle
of my pane. Only 9 years prior,
Mt. St. Helens had blown

the cap off that whole face, and I knew
I should have been some­place, by then:
a feel­ing it, in my bones, yet you could get
plum dis­com­bob­u­lat­ed dri­ving those winding
roads, up around Cougar. The sun
shin­ing, like to break your freaking
heart; this kid had a tat­too of a miniature
anchor, inch­es away from his carotid
artery swing­ing like clapper
inside a bell. All of it, added
up just as well to a feeling

of being recounted
lat­er: in a week, I'd lose
my ride to those cage crush­ers out of Gre­sham, fat
Sopra­nos with pom­padors, that hideous run­ning ad
inside a Thrifty. Lit­tle black snowflake smudgies
and a sil­ver ball of steel, no bigger
than any pic­nic basket.

"Check that tire pres­sure?" said the kid, wiping
his fore­head you haven't seen skin­ny until this
sweat, and then hiss, what I'd be telling you

about … "Nah," I said "lis­ten how I get back
to Portland?"

He point­ed south with left
hook, or claw I hadn't noticed
till now, sun glint on chrome, lumi­nous moon
cuti­cle drilling down to the no thumb, no thumb,
no bone at all sir so piteous young and full of
jones. "Here," I said hand­ing out my last

ten­ner, open win­dow, scent of black tar
and choke cher­ries, fresh baked bread
infused by 3 in 1, I'd just turned thirty
two, up in Cougar some­times smoking
rub­ber, and I hard­ly ever used
the rear view.

dennismahaginDen­nis Maha­gin is the author of the chap­book, "Fare,"
avail­able from Red­neck Press, and the print collection,
"Grand Mal," pub­lished by Rebel Satori Press

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Good Pussy and Jerry and Kildow, fiction by William Pancoast

This town got any good pussy? was the first thing I ever heard Kil­dow say. New hires Jer­ry and Kil­dow had joined us on a job 100 miles north­east of Colum­bus seed­ing a golf course and there they were at 7:00 a.m. plan­ning their evening for­ay into the lit­tle burg up the road.

I could use me a fat lit­tle momma.

Squeeze your dick so hard she’ll bring tears to your eyes.

That’s the one I’m look­ing for.

Let’s get this show on the fuck­ing road then.

The show was the first flatbed of straw we would be work­ing. It had bare­ly got below 80 overnight and the bales radi­at­ed the day before’s heat. Jer­ry and I would be haul­ing them to load the straw blow­er Kil­dow had lucked into oper­at­ing because of his small stature. Old Hol­land would be spray­ing seed with the water canon and the boss’s son Jake dri­ving the tank truck hooked to the flatbed and blower.

Jer­ry had joined the Army in 1956 when he turned 18 his sopho­more year of high school and spent a year and a half as a cook before being tossed for shoot­ing smack. He nev­er did fig­ure out how it hap­pened. Most­ly just fell in with that crew from the Bronx. But he couldn’t kick it when he got back to Oakridge Ohio and it didn’t take long for his clum­sy bur­glar­ies to lead the police to him. He end­ed up spend­ing two years at the bar­bar­ic refor­ma­to­ry in Cranston. After that ordeal he was clean and hard­ly ever ven­tured past beer in the drug world. Now unbe­liev­ably he lived at home with his old man whose hob­by had been beat­ing the shit out of his kids when he got home from the bar every night but now was burnt out and dis­abled from the booze and cig­a­rettes and steel mill. 

Kil­dow was just a badass. He wasn’t a big guy. Five-eight maybe 165 pounds. But he would climb you like a mon­key with over­sized arms punch­ing the face or back of the head at close range while he held on to the neck. Every bad dude has to kick a cop’s ass and he had done that when he was 21. Nobody that knew him both­ered to fuck with him anymore. 

Kil­dow and Jer­ry laughed more that morn­ing than I had heard of laugh­ter for the last five years with a machine gun bar­rage of jokes and rib­bings and pussy rants. I found myself drawn to them yet I sensed the dan­ger there. A per­son might ven­ture too far into their fan­ta­sy world and maybe nev­er come back. I just knew I need­ed to hear what they had to say about their world and the plen­ti­ful pussy there. 

And then there was just work itself that led me to have enough respect for their world to enter it. The sum­mer before I had been a hod ten­der. My arms and back swollen with sore­ness every morn­ing for two weeks. In high school I had scrubbed the girls’s shit­ter at the J C Pen­ney store while the cheer­lead­ers wait­ed after school to get in and pee and primp. The store man­ag­er knew my par­ents and I learned lat­er that it was his per­son­al inter­ven­tion in sched­ul­ing that had placed me scrub­bing the girls’ restroom while they watched. He want­ed to teach me a lit­tle humil­i­ty. I had the humil­i­ty down. Any­one who ever worked a shit job with no exit in sight has plen­ty of that. I had become a work­ing man by age eigh­teen as much as I could say that I was any­thing. I was intrigued by the antics of Jer­ry and Kil­dow and impressed with Kildow’s charis­ma. I would be one of them.

The first night we went into town around 8 in Kildow’s ’56 Ford. A rat­tly black coupe that he would bet any­one $5 they couldn’t snatch a five dol­lar bill off the dash­board while he was accel­er­at­ing. I got to sit up front since Jer­ry and Kil­dow had tak­en a lik­ing to me because nei­ther one of them had ever known any­one going to col­lege. I laughed and start­ed to say bull­shit but only got the bull out before Kil­dow slammed that baby in sec­ond gear and plas­tered me to my seat. We had picked up a twelve pack and the beer was going right to our heads with the heat and it seemed fun­ny to all of us. I nev­er saw any­thing like that I said. What the hell kind of motor you got in this? Jer­ry was laugh­ing hard­er than any of us and kept say­ing over and over you didn’t fuck­ing believe it did you Whitey? They had tak­en to call­ing me Whitey when they saw me that morn­ing because of my blond hair. 

Jer­ry slugged down his third beer through his laugh­ter and became increas­ing­ly ani­mat­ed. By the time we had found the only bar in the cross­roads town of Weber and ordered a piz­za from down the street Jer­ry was get­ting bug-eyed and hap­py as hell. 

That day on the golf course had wast­ed all of us. I had lost eight pounds accord­ing to the scale at the truck stop we were sneak­ing into for show­ers every evening. By ten o’clock I saw that I wasn’t going to be able to keep up with these guys. Noth­ing was hap­pen­ing at the bar and when I razzed my new friends about the loud-mouthed frizzy-haired lone female in the place they assured me the good pussy would be there lat­er. I set off on the mile walk down the coun­try road to the golf course where we were sleep­ing in a barn used as machin­ery storage.

We had set up cots in the barn and even with the end doors open to catch what­ev­er breeze there was the place was hell­hole hot. I sat on the end of my cot think­ing over the day. Might have been the hard­est day’s work I had ever done. It ranked right there with the hay-bal­ing I had done a few times. This was a pre­vail­ing wage job since it was all munic­i­pal and state projects so I could make enough mon­ey this sum­mer to pay all my col­lege expens­es. I climbed in my sleep­ing bag and closed my eyes lis­ten­ing to the crick­ets and some night birds I couldn’t iden­ti­fy and smelling old manure and oil and grease. I felt a plop on the edge of my pil­low. I inched my hand over and felt the fur and then came the flur­ry of bat wings as the sono­fabitch took flight again. I pulled the bag over my head and passed out.

Rise and shine moth­er­fuck­ers was the first thing I heard in the morn­ing fol­lowed by time to shit shine show­er and shave. Laugh­ing I pulled the cov­ers off my head.

Good pussy Whitey. You should have stuck around. 

Jer­ry and Kil­dow were already dressed and get­ting it togeth­er for anoth­er day in the field. I had to hur­ry to avoid being left behind as Kil­dow revved that big old motor and spun the tires in the grav­el just out­side the barn. Jake and Hol­land were stay­ing at the motel beside the truck stop and we met them for break­fast there. Jake was get­ting ready to fin­ish his MBA in the fall and all he could do was bitch about hav­ing to work every sum­mer in order to get his col­lege bills paid and a wad of cash in his pock­et for beer and girls at school. 

At break­fast Kil­dow got to talk­ing about a Bea­gle he had grow­ing up and which had dug holes all around its dog house to stay cool in weath­er like this. It lived its entire life except when it was tak­en hunt­ing chained to an eye-bolt on the dog house in the back­yard. After he had done six months in the pen for the cop beat­ing he moved in with a girl who had seen him while she was vis­it­ing her broth­er and they had got­ten intro­duced at vis­i­ta­tion. Her place had a fenced in back­yard and he moved his four­teen year old Bea­gle there from his mother’s back­yard. The first week­end out of prison he spent build­ing a dog house. He fig­ured the old girl could make up for lost time in this clean and safe new home. But she fussed over her sur­round­ings lay­ing pained by arthri­tis in the open­ing of the new lum­ber-smelling struc­ture just like she still wore the chain and nev­er strayed 10 feet from the dog house. He had to move out after a cou­ple months when his girl­friend dis­cov­ered what an incur­able cock­hound he was. Left his old dog because of the lit­tle girl who loved her then got a call that she had snapped at the three year old. He went and got his dog and took her out to the reser­voir where he held her under­wa­ter. I just want­ed her to feel what free­dom was like Kil­dow said and ate his pancakes.

That day was hot­ter than any I ever remem­ber in my entire life. We sweat so much and then quit. Our skin got dry and clam­my then we sweat some more. Jer­ry was hav­ing trou­ble pick­ing up the bales by lunchtime his hands were so swollen and blis­tered through the cheap cot­ton gloves we had picked up at the truck stop. The sweat dried in salty cir­cles around our eyes and the straw dust coat­ed all the skin bared. Every now and then Jer­ry or I would col­lapse on the trail­er bed and wait for the ener­gy to return then get up and go anoth­er round with the bales. They got heav­ier and heav­ier as the hours passed. I thought hard about how it would be to have this to look for­ward to all my life. Shit work in the hot sun. Jake was rid­ing in the shade of the truck so he real­ly didn’t com­pre­hend how the sun was drain­ing us. 

At the after­noon break at 3:30 we had about 15 bales to go on the sec­ond flatbed. Jake want­ed to go until sev­en so we could maybe fin­ish up ear­ly on Fri­day so he could get home to his girl­friend. I was watch­ing Jer­ry when he said that and saw him shud­der. He and Kil­dow nei­ther one were in a posi­tion to call it a day. Hol­land sat sto­ical­ly lis­ten­ing. He would do what­ev­er the boss told him but you could see the numb­ness in his eyes.

We were all in pain and I guessed it was up to me to save us. With­out a union there weren’t any rules in our favor. Sup­pose we just fin­ish that load and call it a day? I said cautiously.

We need to get this hole done today Jake said. Hol­land? he asked the old man who was real­ly the brains of the outfit.

Hol­land had been at it for thir­ty years with Jake’s dad who was a con­niv­ing lit­tle man who had fig­ured out how to bid on state projects from books in the prison library. I nev­er quit he said. But I’ve had enough for this day.

We quit at 5:30 and the last thir­ty min­utes into the new trail­er of straw Jer­ry was hap­py as hell. Don’t get any bet­ter than this he said and I saw that the impend­ing ces­sa­tion of pain was what he was refer­ring to. Look­ing for­ward to cool­ing down and get­ting a show­er and hav­ing a few beers to save our lives from this infer­no. We maybe weren’t a whole lot dif­fer­ent from Kildow’s dog I thought one day years lat­er mulling over that day of my life. Maybe all behav­ior is about escap­ing pain.

I got me a nap in an easy chair near the trucker’s lounge after my show­er. That and a steak din­ner at a Lake Erie mari­na restau­rant twen­ty miles to the north had me feel­ing like a human being again. We hit sev­er­al honky tonks on the way back south after sup­per. At the last one when we walked into the chill of a ful­ly cranked air con­di­tion­er Jer­ry elbowed me. There you go Whitey.

Kil­dow led us to a table with three col­lege look­ing girls. I fol­lowed along. Then he leaned for­ward with his Pop­eye fore­arms bulging toward the girls as he placed his hands on the table. Ladies this is your lucky night. Whitey here is God’s spe­cial treat for the female species. 

After buy­ing me and the girls enough beer to get us half drunk Kil­dow winked at me and he and Jer­ry left.

I’ll take you home said the one I had tak­en a lik­ing to. 

Next morn­ing in the barn I woke to Whitey got him some pussy!

I wasn’t going to tell them I didn’t.

The lit­tle blonde with the nice titties!

Brunette with the hairy box!

Most­ly we talked about soci­ol­o­gy. She was also major­ing in it at Ohio State in Columbus.

 

After break­fast I was in the truck with Jake going to help fill the tank with water and mix the grass seed. The old tanker bounced down the fair­way to the water tip­ple by the rail­road and I braced myself to keep from bang­ing my head on the window.

You and that ex-con were tak­ing it pret­ty easy yes­ter­day. I saw you lay­ing around back on the flatbed.

I looked at him through the morn­ing haze the tem­per­a­ture already bump­ing 80. Bullshit.

Bull­shit? I saw it. I don’t know why the old man keeps hir­ing these fuck­ing bums.

Jake was cute. Dim­pled cheeks unwor­ried face. He had been five years ahead of me in school and drove a new red ’57 Chevy con­vert­ible and had a pret­ty girl­friend to ride around town with him. Us younger kids would see him at the root beer stand or the dri­ve in. He had been some­body we want­ed to be.

But now as I looked at his per­fect pro­file in the morn­ing sun slant­i­ng through the wind­shield I hat­ed him for the spoiled punk that he real­ly was. Nobody fuck­ing off on the flatbed yesterday.

He jerked his head to look at me. I say you were. Ex-con fuck­offs and you.

Fuck you.

He was pissed most­ly prob­a­bly because he had to be here with us bums and pushed his right fist over the seat space and caught my chin. I gave him back a right cross and he leaned away then grabbed me in a head­lock. He was strong from play­ing foot­ball in high school and col­lege and I couldn’t get away. I start­ed punch­ing him and he tight­ened the vise. When we hit a big rut his grip loos­ened and I hit him in the nose and he let go.

Fuck you. I’m quit­ting. You’re a fuck­ing asshole.

No no. I need you here.

I saw that he had quick­ly real­ized he would be short­hand­ed and not be able to get the work done for the rest of the week.

Dou­ble our breaks. Two in the morn­ing and two in the after­noon. No work after three when it’s so fuck­ing hot.

He stared at me with the spoiled jock anger jump­ing out of his dark eyes. Yeah. Yeah okay. Four though.

That day and the rest of the week passed a lit­tle cool­er. With our extra breaks and one ear­ly quit day we all recov­ered some and added a lit­tle weight back. Jer­ry was a lost crea­ture with a big heart and I liked him. Fri­day after­noon the talk turned to get­ting home and ready to par­ty. Be at the Grot­to Jer­ry told me. Good time acoming!

I had nev­er been to the Grot­to which was an uptown bar full of what us kids had always called greasers losers hill­bil­lies. When I got there about eight the place was noisy and teem­ing with the Fri­day night work­er crowd. Stand­ing at the end of the bar was Jer­ry all lit up and bug-eyed and off to the races. This week was what he did now that his life was straight­ened out. He worked hard long hours with­out the desire or know how to get rich and then he got fucked up and had a good time with the mon­ey that he had earned.

Stand­ing with him was a chunky girl with a white hal­ter top which glis­tened in the strobe lights that acti­vat­ed when the band played. Jer­ry waved me over to join them and hugged me into the girl who had turned to face me and now had her breasts squished into my stom­ach. Man this is Gina he yelled above the noise of the music and squeezed us hard­er. She grabbed my dick and then squirmed back towards Jerry.

The evening was a blur with Jer­ry buy­ing drinks for folks he knew and spend­ing up the pay­check advance he had got­ten ear­li­er in the day. I cashed my check and bought us a cou­ple of rounds. Kil­dow got there about ten and it was then I found out that Gina was his girl. She whis­pered into his ear and he winked at me guess you two already met and slapped my shoulder.

Kil­dow could dance and he got Gina sweat­ed up and sat her down and found a fresh one and kept going. He was smooth like a gym­nast in move­ment and strength. It was after one when they start­ed on the Bac­ar­di 151 light­ing it on fire before they did shots. I had been try­ing to leave for a cou­ple of hours but now my evening was esca­lat­ed as I took my turn at the shots and did two that I remember. 

Then it was clos­ing time and Jer­ry said we’re going swim­ming you’re dri­ving and I was jos­tled out the door by six or eight of the friends I had made that night. I got in my ’49 Chevy and sat in the rel­a­tive qui­et of the park­ing lot lis­ten­ing to cars start­ing and revving and Jer­ry said fol­low that Stude­bak­er and I put it in gear.

I wasn’t fit to be dri­ving and was all over the road. I had heard of the place we were head­ed an aban­doned quar­ry about eight miles out of town but guys in my gen­er­a­tion had nev­er par­tied out there. It all seemed like a bad idea. Jer­ry was still cranked and he just shook his head no when I asked if we could call it off. Always got to fin­ish he said.

When we got there and had start­ed along the path through the woods we heard the splash­ing and yelling from the wide expanse of inky water bare­ly lit by the half moon through the haze of clouds. Gina was the only girl there and she hap­pi­ly strolled among the naked guys half of them strut­ting around with hard dicks.

Jer­ry was strip­ping down drop­ping his clothes in a pile. Come on he said.

I took off my t‑shirt and dropped my jeans and there was Gina in front of me. Before she could grab my dick again I dove off the bank and joined the oth­ers in the water. The chill of the quar­ry final­ly cooled me after the week of heat and I tread­ed water watch­ing the goings on around me. Kil­dow was behind me hud­dled in the water with one of the guys.

Then we were all on the bank get­ting dressed. I pulled my pants on and Gina put a lip lock on me and grabbed me again. I heard Kil­dow laugh­ing off to the side and then he slapped my shoul­der. Good pussy he said lean­ing into my ear as he and the oth­er fel­low bumped past. Touch­ing Kildow’s girl scared me and I stood still with her hang­ing on to my rear belt loop.

I smelled weed then and took a hit when it came my way. Anoth­er cou­ple hits and I real­ized how drunk and fucked up I was. We were all on the dark path again and Gina was hang­ing on to me and it became appar­ent that she and I were leav­ing togeth­er. I heard Jer­ry jab­ber­ing and he joined us at my car.

I was out of the park­ing lot first and gunned it to show off. Near­ly lost it and head­ed back to town. I was hav­ing trou­ble see­ing now and won­der­ing what the hell I had got myself into. I had me a lit­tle hill­bil­ly girl I was going to fuck if I want­ed to. Jer­ry was talk­ing a mile a minute like maybe he had got­ten some speed in him. 

I was going too fast when I came to the curve a mile from the quar­ry and the right front wheel went off the right side of the road. The berm was deep and when I pulled back the steer­ing wheel jerked out of my hands and banged my wrist. Then the car veered clear across the road and I slid into deep grass that ground­ed my frame and stopped us like a para­chute would then spun us loose in a cir­cle. I felt Gina slid­ing away from me and grabbed her arm then watched as Jer­ry slid on out the pas­sen­ger door that had been jolt­ed open. 

I got stopped and sat in the qui­et then saw the head­lights behind me. My door was jammed so I pushed Gina out the door and slid across the bench seat. A cou­ple oth­er cars pulled along­side the road and in their head­lights I saw Jer­ry lying at the base of a tree. I got there at the same time Kil­dow did. He turned Jer­ry over and it was obvi­ous his neck was bro­ken. Blood cov­ered his scalp and his eyes were still bugged out.

Gina get in my car he said.

Kildow’s face was calm and lit up by the head­lights behind us. Whitey it’s been nice know­ing you.

I had no idea where he was going with this. Was he going to kill me after what I had done to Jer­ry? Man I’m sor­ry I said.

Shit hap­pens. You get in your car and get the fuck home. You weren’t here tonight. No one ever seen you.

But Jer­ry. The truth is….

There ain’t any truth one way or the oth­er about this. There ain’t any­thing true or false any­where I’ve ever seen Whitey. Stuff just is. I’ll take care of Jerry. 

I stood and backed through the group and Kil­dow and anoth­er guy already had Jer­ry picked up. They tossed him in the trunk of the ’56 Ford.

The cars were pulling out and head­ing back to the quar­ry. Kil­dow leaned on the win­dow of my old Chevy. Get you lots of pussy Whitey he said and was gone.

I drove slow on the way home. The way I should have been dri­ving ear­li­er. But I was in a dif­fer­ent world then. 

I didn’t go back to work the next Mon­day. I had enough mon­ey saved up to get through the sec­ond sum­mer ses­sion and fall and win­ter quar­ter at Ohio State in Colum­bus. I got a room on 12th Avenue and dug into my stud­ies. In the fall I looked up that girl from the honky tonk and end­ed up mar­ry­ing her a year later.

I learned from the home­town paper that Jer­ry had bro­ken his neck at the quar­ry when he dived into a rock in the shal­low area a ways from where we had been swim­ming. I changed my major to phi­los­o­phy that win­ter. Fig­ured I’d find out if there real­ly were true and false things in the world.

As best as I have been able to fig­ure through my bachelor’s degree in phi­los­o­phy and the master’s degree in psy­chol­o­gy and twen­ty years of coun­sel­ing folks and all that I’ve learned as a human being there are some things that are true and oth­ers that are false and some are both. 

I had expect­ed to feel bad about what hap­pened to Jer­ry. I want­ed to feel bad. But I nev­er did.

pancoastWilliam Trent Pan­coast's nov­els include WILDCAT (2010) and CRASHING (1983). His short sto­ries, essays, and edi­to­ri­als have appeared in Night Train, Sol­i­dar­i­ty mag­a­zine, and US News & World Report.

 

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Building a Church, fiction by Lara Konesky

He was quite cer­tain that life most­ly was noth­ing but cre­ation and evo­lu­tion.  Boys were sup­posed to become men and all that shit, and the men build fam­i­lies and hous­es and empires.  He thought a lot about the word man, and the word man was dif­fer­ent than the idea of a man, and the idea of a man was noth­ing but a social con­struct forced upon him.

Most men fight demons and they spend so much time fight­ing demons that they just stay.  Stunted.

He was deep in thought and did not want to have sex with his girl­friend.  Sex with him, he knew, was an event that took too much ener­gy. He want­ed to save his ener­gy for pon­der­ing.  He knew she real­ly want­ed to, though, because her eyes and her hands became needy crea­tures with fangs and a bone to pick with him for not giv­ing her every­thing she wanted.

He let her give him head, and she seemed fine with that.  He didn’t ask if she need­ed any­thing in return, but she didn’t seem to be unsat­is­fied so he just let it go.

He actu­al­ly thought maybe a nap would be bet­ter than think­ing.  His girl­friend asked him for his cred­it card, and he gave it to her so she wouldn’t both­er him for awhile.  Most­ly, he liked to be alone.

Most men stop fight­ing only to rest their minds.

Have you ever watched a per­son die?” He asked his girl­friend, who was done shop­ping, and was lin­ger­ing around his per­son­al space until he noticed her.

Is this some role play­ing game?” She asked, sud­den­ly excit­ed.  Her eye­balls leaped across the room and did a joy­ful dance.  He stared blankly at her sil­ly eyes.

You are stu­pid. I am not sure why I love you.” he said, and she took it as a compliment.

Most peo­ple have bod­ies of water, but you have a body of Vod­ka,” she said, and he took it as a compliment.

"Your reli­gion is one of apa­thy. You wor­ship not giv­ing a shit about shit." She told him, on the last day they spent together.

Lat­er on, she told her friends he was prob­a­bly gay. This was the only expla­na­tion for how lit­tle they had sex, and why he hard­ly looked up from the movie he was watch­ing when she final­ly left for good.

koneskyLara Konesky is a 33 year old part time ESL teacher, lazy bum ass, and writer from Colum­bus, Ohio.  Her first book, Next to Guns, can be found at www​.griev​ousjone​spress​.com (Griev­ous Jones Press, 2009). She co-edit­ed (with Andrew Tay­lor, Erbac­ce Press) and con­tributed to Blood at the Chelsea (Erbac­ce Press 2010), an anthol­o­gy of writ­ers writ­ing for oth­er writ­ers. You can also read Lara's work online and in print at New Aes­thet­ic, Gut­ter Elo­quence, Curb­side Splen­dor, Word Riot, Left Hand Wav­ing, and var­i­ous oth­er rad places.…

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News from the Hills and Surrounds

appalachiamapThis post is a con­tin­u­a­tion of what I want­ed to do with FCAC from the begin­ning; that is, to reg­u­lar­ly post rel­e­vant news and tid­bits as relat­ed to lit­er­a­ture and Appalachia and so forth. I get a fair num­ber of arti­cles worth shar­ing, so I'm going to do one news post a week. Feel free to com­ment. It'll be more fun for every­body. Please please feel free as well to email me sim­i­lar arti­cles you find in your inter­net trav­els. I'll post a link to your site if I end up using a link you send me. Hit me up as well if the URL no longer func­tions, or if you have any oth­er ques­tions. rusty.​barnes@​gmail.​com

These arti­cles were found (most­ly) through Google alerts attached to the terms 'hill­bil­ly,' 'red­neck,' 'white trash,' and 'Appalachia,' with occa­sion­al arti­cles lift­ed from the Appal­net listserv.

MTV Loves Creekers

A.M. Homes' Lat­est Char­ac­ters Rich White Trash?

Grow Appalachia Pro­gram begins at PMSS

Rus­sell Lee’s Appalachia

Unearthed arti­facts help pin­point key Hat­field-McCoy fam­i­ly bat­tle in east­ern Kentucky

Moun­tain res­i­dents want to be allowed to con­tin­ue killing maraud­ing elk

TV's 'Jus­ti­fied' might not film in Ken­tucky, but its sto­ries are firm­ly root­ed in state

Stop­ping the decay: den­tal woes in Appalachia

U.S. Coal Indus­try Not Well-Posi­tioned to Ben­e­fit From Increased Short-Term Glob­al Demand

EPA's Progress Report on the Effects of Hydrofrack­ing on Drink­ing Water

Gas Drilling Is Called Safe in New York

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The Fire, fiction by Rod Siino

On the day of the fire, my father and I stood in the snowy park­ing lot of my apart­ment com­plex and watched the water from the hoses trans­form my base­ment unit into a wad­ing pool. The smoke escap­ing from the bro­ken win­dows of the four-sto­ry brick build­ing drift­ed upward, stop­ping about fifty feet above the flat rooftop. There it hung–not black, exact­ly, more a char­coal gray–a result of some freak inver­sion effect caus­ing it to hang there for hours after the last flames had been doused, a lin­ger­ing reminder of my cur­rent circumstance. 

The next day, when the thaw hit, every­thing began to melt, and I began to move out. We walked through the foot-high water in my liv­ing room, float­ing paper­back books and record albums bob­bing around like so much lit­ter in a pol­lut­ed lake. 

Get those up,” my father said, point­ing to a cor­ner of the room.

Like a corpse doing a dead man’s float, my brand new golf bag with a new set of Tour blades was knock­ing against a wall from the waves we made by mov­ing about the apart­ment. I gath­ered them up, heavy with water and grime, and threw the bag over my shoul­der as a cad­dy does when he read­ies him­self to walk a fair­way. All I want­ed then was to head to a range; hit some balls; swing free and easy and ready myself for the next round, but that wouldn’t come for months. We silent­ly walked out of the mess and into the snowy day­light and free­dom of the park­ing lot, pud­dles and snow melt­ing all around us. I leaned the bag against my truck, shiv­er­ing, cold from wad­ing through my apart­ment. We stood there, an old man and his grown son, and hugged. It was the first time he’d hugged me since I was a kid. It was the last time he’d ever hug me.

That set of golf clubs had been one of many I’d owned through­out my life. When I was a boy, my father had brought me home my first golf club, which he’d found in the bin of used clubs at the pro shop of the course where he played every week with his bud­dies from work. My father was an elec­tri­cal engi­neer, and worked for a defense con­trac­tor. His real love, though, was the game he played once a week, weath­er per­mit­ting. We lived togeth­er, just the two of us, in a small town in Mass­a­chu­setts. This was long after my moth­er had left us and then died in a car acci­dent. His golf day was Sat­ur­day, and on the par­tic­u­lar Sat­ur­day he brought me the club I was twelve and, at that time, was grad­u­al­ly becom­ing aware of his affin­i­ty for the game. We watched the pros on tele­vi­sion often, and he’d speak in rev­er­en­tial tones about their abil­i­ties, as if these were traits every­man should have. “See?” he would say. “Do you see the con­cen­tra­tion? The focus?”

From the moment I first held that junior 7‑iron with a fac­sim­i­le of Chi Chi Rodriguez’s sig­na­ture etched into the back, I set out to learn the game of golf. It was a good way to break into it, my father said, hav­ing just the sin­gle club. 

Learn it a club at a time,” he said, “if you ever want to be a shot-maker.” 

I car­ried that club with me wher­ev­er I went. I’d stand in front of our black and white tele­vi­sion on Sat­ur­day or Sun­day after­noons study­ing the pros, imi­tat­ing their swings, in awe of their calm under pres­sure. Some­times I stood at atten­tion, as I would in church dur­ing those times when you’re sup­posed to be qui­et, in total silence while the announc­er whis­pered about Jack Nick­laus look­ing over a five-foot­er for par, or Arnold Palmer on the tee hit­ting anoth­er big drive–always strik­ing the ball so hard it looked as if he’d need trac­tion for the torque he’d exert­ed on his back. 

He’s try­ing to hurt that ball,” my father said with a smile. 

Back then, Tiger Woods wasn’t even born yet; the best golfers were guys like Nick­laus and Palmer and Gary Play­er, play­ing at places with names that cap­tured my imag­i­na­tion: Augus­ta, Bal­tus­rol, Shin­necock Hills, Winged Foot, The Roy­al & Ancient, and Pine­hurst #2.

My father was like many fathers, apt to point out to his son life’s lessons from the minu­tia of the seem­ing­ly unre­mark­able. He wasn’t big on plat­i­tudes, though. He’d nev­er say a thing like, “There aren’t any short­cuts to suc­cess,” or “If at first you don't suc­ceed try, try again.” For him, golf and the pro­fes­sion­als we watched tran­scend­ed what until then to me were sim­ply clubs and balls and pret­ty pic­tures of fair­ways and greens. I grad­u­al­ly came to under­stand that the expanse of a golf course was more a place of refuge where you were alone with your thoughts, chal­lenged your­self in small ways, where sub­tle changes have pro­found effects on final results.

Walk­ing around my neigh­bor­hood, cut­ting through neigh­bors’ yards with friends or even by myself, I could be seen with Chi Chi on my shoul­der, a twelve year old boy dream­ing of becom­ing a shot-maker—to have the char­ac­ter­is­tics my father found so impor­tant: con­fi­dence, focus, dri­ven by the desire to be excel­lent at some­thing. Noth­ing then, or now, pro­vid­ed more moti­va­tion for me than to make my father proud of me. At first I played in my back­yard with plas­tic golf balls, and then, some­times with my father, went down to the school play­ground with used balls from his bag. 

Be a shot-mak­er, Pete,” he would say. 

It seemed that I shanked and hooked and sliced a thou­sand shots before I’d move to the next club. I’d spray balls across that field at every angle and tra­jec­to­ry in my some­times futile attempt at mas­ter­ing a club. Even­tu­al­ly, I grad­u­at­ed to a full set, learn­ing each club as my father pre­scribed.

One sum­mer, I was prob­a­bly thir­teen or four­teen by then, my friends and I laid out a nine-hole par three golf course on the play­ground. We used just our 7‑irons, a club that typ­i­cal­ly yield­ed shots of a hun­dred thir­ty yards or so for us. The course incor­po­rat­ed a park­ing lot as a water haz­ard, and the woods all around as out of bounds. If you hit the school build­ing, it was a two-shot penal­ty. Giv­en our love for the sound of smash­ing glass, if you broke a win­dow it was only a one-shot penal­ty, even if your ball was lost inside the school. We used the jun­gle gyms, slides, swing sets, see-saws and even a sew­er grate, all scat­tered across the field, as the holes. Hit the tar­get and you were con­sid­ered “in.” Win the match and you’d win the Mas­ters, or one of the Opens or the PGA.

As I prac­ticed ear­ly on and learned more about the game from my father and from the pros on tele­vi­sion, I decid­ed I’d always be a golfer. But I nev­er want­ed to be a pro­fes­sion­al golfer. I would leave that to those on the Tour, the dis­ci­plined play­ers who could get home from a hang­ing lie two-hun­dred fifty yards from a green sur­round­ed by deep bunkers or water. Me, it’s tak­en time, but I’ve devel­oped a ser­vice­able game–one that comes and goes, takes me to the heights of joy as much as it does to the low­est lev­els of frus­tra­tion. I’ve played many rounds, even won a cou­ple local tour­na­ments like my father did, but mak­ing a career out of it wasn’t for me. I could nev­er take up as a pro­fes­sion that which I love so well. 

 

Grow­ing up, I spent most of my time out­doors. It’s what comes with liv­ing alone with your dad. When he was at home, he’d give me things to do around the house, and do things with me, help with home­work or talk about golf tech­niques. When he was at work or out with his bud­dies, he gave me leave to do what I want­ed, which usu­al­ly meant walk­ing the neigh­bor­hood streets with my friends, play­ing in the woods, golf­ing on the play­ground. He was there for me when I need­ed him, though. Years lat­er, when Tom Tay­lor set fire to my apart­ment build­ing, caus­ing most of my belong­ings to suf­fer water dam­age, my father was there car­ry­ing fur­ni­ture and sog­gy books out of my apart­ment and into a rental van. It took us two days in that Jan­u­ary thaw, and by then he was near­ly sev­en­ty years old.

And so, I grew to be most com­fort­able out­doors. I love the smell of fall­en leaves, the greens and yel­lows of the grass dur­ing sum­mer, and the sun on my shoul­ders year-round. Land­scap­ing just seemed to hap­pen nat­u­ral­ly. Not a glam­orous career, as my father often remind­ed me, but I’m out­side most of the year, and I know every­thing there is to know about lawn care in this part of the coun­try. The north­east presents chal­lenges for grass because the weath­er varies to extremes between the cold win­ters and the humid­i­ty of the sum­mers. When a cus­tomer wants to know about blue­grass­es, fes­cues, rye­grass­es and bent grass­es, and which ones are best adapt­ed here, I’m your man. I tell them I’m par­tic­u­lar­ly fond of Ken­tucky Blue­grass for its excel­lent recu­per­a­tive and repro­duc­tive capac­i­ty. It devel­ops a dense turf stand, has excel­lent col­or and mows more clean­ly than tougher-blad­ed grass­es such as peren­ni­al rye­grass. It also has greater cold tol­er­ance than either peren­ni­al rye­grass or tall fescue. 

True, I spend win­ters doing oth­er activ­i­ties to keep me finan­cial­ly afloat, like snow plow­ing. But win­ter doesn’t mean that I stop think­ing about golf. I still prac­tice my swing indoors, where I can also do my visu­al­iza­tion exer­cis­es. I close my eyes and see myself mak­ing shots, hit­ting fair­ways off the tee, drop­ping a 3‑iron soft­ly onto a postage stamp green from two-twen­ty, mak­ing a thir­ty-foot ben­der for a par. Some­times I imag­ine I’m at the tee of the 12th hole at Augus­ta, my father in the gallery, look­ing at a hun­dred fifty-five yarder with a nar­row, cant­ed green guard­ed by Rae’s Creek. A shot-maker’s hole. Hit it too high and the wind can get hold of your ball and knock it down into the water or move it away from tar­get; too low and you can skip it into the rear bunker, set­ting your­self up for a come-backer with the water wait­ing on the far side of the green. I pic­ture myself drop­ping a 7‑iron right next to the pin–every time. 

 

Although the smell of the fire clinged to every arti­cle of fur­ni­ture, cloth­ing and oth­er fix­tures and acces­sories I owned, we dried it all out as best we could, packed up what was sal­vage­able and moved me here. This was three years ago. I think the smell is gone now, but maybe I’ve got­ten so used to it that I just don’t notice it anymore. 

Were it not for my liv­ing room being in a state of dis­ar­ray, it would be a pleas­ant set­ting for qui­et sum­mer nights like this one. I have proof. Pho­tographs, cur­rent­ly in a safe deposit box, were done for insur­ance pur­pos­es at my father’s sug­ges­tion. He pho­tographed this entire apart­ment, each and every sur­viv­ing item, and pack­aged them all up in a pho­to album. He looked hag­gard that day after we’d fin­ished mov­ing, a lit­tle more hunched over than nor­mal, his skin tone grow­ing paler by the moment. 

I told him to be care­ful, that he’d exert­ed him­self more than nec­es­sary, but he scoffed at the idea of slow­ing down and said, sim­ply, “Next time you’ll be ready.” 

The pho­tos he hand­ed to me show a room that is more than just liv­able, no ques­tion; it was to be envied. But since I moved, I’m not a good clean­er. Except for nar­row paths from the liv­ing room to the kitchen to the bed­room to the only bath­room in the apart­ment, the hard­wood floor has gone miss­ing. Scat­tered around the apart­ment is my album col­lec­tion of near­ly a thou­sand, some with­out their orig­i­nal cov­ers, lost in the fire. The albums aren’t the prin­ci­pal com­po­nent of the clut­ter. Books and mag­a­zines, some in piles, some scat­tered, are every­where. There’s unwashed sil­ver­ware, unopened mail, opened mail, pock­et change, soda bot­tles and cans, a piz­za box, a few golf balls, an over­turned table lamp bro­ken from an errant prac­tice swing, a Wil­son per­sim­mon head dri­ver, a leather-gripped Tour blad­ed 7‑iron and, of course, the record albums. All of the albums were once alpha­bet­ized with­in their respec­tive gen­res: rock, jazz, clas­si­cal, etc. Now none are alpha­bet­i­cal and most are unplayable. 

Tom Tay­lor was nev­er arrest­ed for start­ing the fire. It was gen­er­al­ly agreed, though, by those of us who were affect­ed by the fire, that he’d done it. We’d heard the apart­ment com­plex, which he owned with a part­ner, was in the way of a larg­er devel­op­ment they’d want­ed to build. Accord­ing to the police, though, noth­ing could be proven. To what I’m sure was Tom’s great dis­ap­point­ment, one of my neigh­bors report­ed the fire before it could do per­ma­nent dam­age, so it wasn’t a total loss for insur­ance pur­pos­es. I’m guess­ing that at this point Tom has found oth­er oppor­tu­ni­ties in real estate. 

Like me, Tom was a golfer of some mer­it, and more than once the two of us had casu­al­ly dis­cussed what it would take to own and oper­ate a golf course. He’d not been a mem­ber at a pri­vate club then, pre­fer­ring to accept the invi­ta­tions of those who were mem­bers. He often said he admired my turf knowl­edge and my abil­i­ties as a land­scap­er, and that one day he hoped he’d be able to offer me an oppor­tu­ni­ty to use my tal­ents on some­thing, in his words, “more sub­stan­tial than just cut­ting and seed­ing lawns and doing yard clean ups.” Now, this, of course, was before the fire, and if Tom has sim­i­lar aspi­ra­tions now, I haven’t heard. He took golf seri­ous­ly, though, and had a par­tic­u­lar source of pride that he seemed to take great care in nur­tur­ing: Tom had an uncan­ny resem­blance to Gary Play­er. The only thing miss­ing was Player’s South African accent. A golfer well known for being in great phys­i­cal con­di­tion, Play­er wore black almost exclu­sive­ly. He had a cer­tain appeal among fans and stature among his com­pe­ti­tion as some­one to be admired, if for noth­ing else than his excel­lent sense of style. Nobody looked bet­ter in a pair of black slacks, a black short-sleeve Per­ry Ellis but­toned to the top, and black pullover vest than Gary Play­er. Tom, who like Play­er was short and slight, wore only black, even in sum­mer. Just the way the pant leg fell off their knees and down to their feet, with the crease bend­ing at the ankle; and their shoul­ders, broad as they were, accent­ed per­fect­ly by the ubiq­ui­tous vest. These were golfers with style.

 

After years of being a land­scap­er, I’d grown used to my father’s occa­sion­al polite­ly neg­a­tive com­men­tary about my career choice. Although he said he was proud of me a num­ber of times, he did express his con­cern about the inher­ent pit­falls of being a small busi­ness owner. 

A guy work­ing out of his truck with a cou­ple lawn mow­ers and a two-man crew is not a viable busi­ness long-term,” he would tell me. 

Sure, I strug­gled for a while—all with the unstat­ed aim of mak­ing him proud of me. It took me years to under­stand how to man­age the costs asso­ci­at­ed with equip­ment upkeep and pay­roll. Not to men­tion the lit­tle things like billing cus­tomers, pay­ing for sup­plies; and then there’s just deal­ing with cus­tomers, which in my case is more of a chal­lenge because, for bet­ter or worse, my clien­tele have always been what I would con­sid­er wealthy – anoth­er way of say­ing that they’re know-it-alls with noth­ing bet­ter to do than tell me how to do my job. Just because a guy’s a doc­tor, he fig­ures he knows every­thing. I have debat­ed turf types with sur­geons who don’t know the dif­fer­ence between a Bermu­da grass and a fes­cue. One guy thought a rhi­zome had some­thing to do with the atmos­phere. Then there’s the finan­cial side of deal­ing with cus­tomers. Ever try to get fifty bucks out of the pres­i­dent of a bank? Or from some thir­ty-year old mil­lion­aire? Let me tell you, there’s a rea­son rich peo­ple are rich. I main­tain my cool, though. I’ve nev­er come to blows with a cus­tomer. If they begin to piss me off, I smile and think of some­thing else. Not a par­tic­u­lar­ly healthy habit, I know.

All this, of course, val­i­dat­ed to some extent my father’s argu­ment in the first place. But I’d hoped he would even­tu­al­ly come to under­stand that I was hap­py stay­ing small and play­ing golf, some­thing I would ask him about now if he were still alive. I wish he hadn’t exert­ed him­self so much dur­ing my move. I just wish he could be here now so we could talk some more about it; so he could see that although it’s been dif­fi­cult, it’s also been rewarding.

 

I pick up the 7‑iron now, from its rest­ing place on top of an album stack, and take a sniff of the blade. No sign of smoke, just the sweet smell of sum­mer grass. I’ve been think­ing about some­thing late­ly. Why not bring the play­ground golf course con­cept to my cur­rent neigh­bor­hood? My con­cern, of course, has been how my neigh­bors will react to this, but giv­en that my golf game is far supe­ri­or to that of my youth, I’m hop­ing my improved shot con­trol will ease their con­cerns. I now live in an exclu­sive­ly res­i­den­tial area of the city, at the inter­sec­tion of five streets, cre­at­ing a diag­o­nal span between the far­thest house from mine of about a hun­dred fifty to a hun­dred six­ty yards, the cur­rent length for my 7‑iron. This open space across pave­ment is espe­cial­ly appeal­ing because it will give me an oppor­tu­ni­ty to work on the height of my shot, which late­ly has inex­plic­a­bly flattened. 

In addi­tion to that, I’ve found it increas­ing­ly dif­fi­cult to make a con­fi­dent club selec­tion. My father, I’m sure, would sug­gest that I just keep at it. Go to the range, he’d say, and prac­tice. Even on the day he died, it’s one of the last things we talked about before I final­ly con­vinced him to go home and get some rest. When I got the call that he’d been rushed to the hos­pi­tal, I’d been putting the fin­ish­ing touch­es on orga­niz­ing my new home. This was dif­fer­ent from when my moth­er had died. Back then, I wasn’t old enough to appre­ci­ate any of it. I didn’t under­stand that my father’s griev­ing for her, despite the fact that she had left him, was an ongo­ing process that was wrapped up in every­thing he did and said. All he ever told me about her leav­ing was that she’d left to find some­thing that she hadn’t ever found with him. Know­ing the man as I did, I could see that his pen­sive demeanor might have been hard to live with. It was all in his head. As I was sit­ting next to him in the Inten­sive Care Unit, watch­ing the machines keep him alive, I thought about how he was leav­ing me, and knew for the first time how he must have felt all those years about my moth­er hav­ing left. 

He died that evening. The doc­tor said his heart gave out.

 

I prac­tice address­ing the ball now as I con­sid­er my ever-evolv­ing plan. After reflect­ing on what I thought would be my father’s advice, I approached the local pro the oth­er day at the dri­ving range and had him watch me hit a few shots.

You’re stiff on the back swing,” he said.

You would be too,” I said, “if you raked, plant­ed, seed­ed or cut fifty lawns a week dur­ing the sum­mer.” Clear­ly he was more a stu­dent of swing mechan­ics than of the men­tal game of golf, which I’m bet­ting is the real issue. This guy's got it easy, I thought, and I told him so. Out in the real golf­ing world there are greens to hit, not just ply­wood signs with num­bers paint­ed on them like at the range. Did he think Gary Player’s game got bet­ter by aim­ing at the per­son inside the lit­tle cage of the trac­tor retriev­ing balls at the range? Play­er could choose the right club at the right time every time, and always be in style. Until Tiger, golfers every­where didn’t ful­ly appre­ci­ate the com­bi­na­tion of style and sub­stance. For me, although I appre­ci­ate and admire style, I don’t have any. I can’t match a smart pair of slacks with a nice­ly fit­ting shirt. Even if I did, I don’t have the right body type to do it jus­tice. Although my shoul­ders are nice­ly square, my legs are too short. I’ve got to be a shot-mak­er. If I can’t choose the club to get home with, I’m dead.

For­get my back,” I said to the pro. “Get into my head. Help me get home. I need to pick a club!”

But he was unre­lent­ing, insist­ing that if I was seri­ous about my golf game, I’d con­sid­er a career change. This, I thought, sounds too much like my father talk­ing to me about the land­scap­ing busi­ness. Although he nev­er would have sug­gest­ed that my game would improve if I changed careers. Still, it res­onat­ed with me enough that I imme­di­ate­ly ter­mi­nat­ed my rela­tion­ship with the pro. With my plan for a neigh­bor­hood golf course, I won’t need him anyway. 

The log­i­cal next step, then, is to speak with all those neigh­bors whose front yards will serve as the holes, and espe­cial­ly speak to the own­ers of the house a full 7‑iron away. There’s a young dog­wood that’s per­fect for the pin, cen­tered as it is between a dri­ve­way and a flag­stone walk­way. And, more good news: these neigh­bors are new, hav­ing moved in just last week. All I need to do, I hope, is to become friend­ly with them, and maybe offer them free lawn care. 

I’m a plan­ner by nature, and although this may seem like an over-sim­pli­fi­ca­tion for the task at hand, I’m also a firm believ­er in meet­ing things head on. I look out my sec­ond sto­ry win­dow now across the expanse of pave­ment toward the house in ques­tion, a 1920’s vil­lage colo­nial with white clap­board and new­ly installed ener­gy-effi­cient dou­ble-hung win­dows. A red SUV sits in the driveway. 

I hold the leather grip of the 7‑iron, inter­lock­ing my fin­gers as I would on the golf course, and swing the club in slow motion, imag­in­ing the ball drop­ping soft­ly onto my neighbor’s grass with­in inch­es of the dog­wood tree. This, I think, is some­thing I wish my father could be here to see.

Stuff­ing three golf balls into the pock­et of my shorts, I walk down the stairs and onto my front porch. The smell is of humid city air mixed with cut grass, as a neigh­bor down the block mows his lawn. I stand on my own grass look­ing down at my feet, still clad in work boots. Although I rent, my landlord’s allowed me to exper­i­ment on this lawn as long as I take care of it. I plant­ed creep­ing red, a fine fes­cue, before last win­ter and then tried over-seed­ing with Ken­tucky Blue­grass. The turf is per­form­ing quite well, and will make an excel­lent first tee. I con­sid­er get­ting my golf shoes out of my golf bag, but instead I drop the golf balls onto the grass and begin to take prac­tice swings in earnest. My back is sore as usu­al, and as I stop to stretch I see some­one walk­ing across the des­ig­nat­ed first green. 

He’s far enough away so I can see only that it is a man and not a woman, and that he’s dressed well, if not unusu­al­ly, for this humid sum­mer night. It being dusk, col­ors are some­times dif­fi­cult to dis­tin­guish, espe­cial­ly dark ones. I remem­ber once buy­ing what I thought was a black shirt only to find it was dark green, so I don’t want to be quick to judge. I stand com­plete­ly still, and squint. 

He walks from the SUV to the dog­wood, drag­ging some­thing behind him what appears to be a hose and sprin­kler. Good lawn care is an admirable trait in any­one, and I’m delight­ed in this case for obvi­ous rea­sons. At least as far as the lawn care goes. Grad­u­al­ly, though, it’s reg­is­ter­ing with me: not only is this guy wear­ing black, long pants and all, but he’s some­what short with short hair and an excel­lent sense of style. My back begins to feel worse as I think about short golfers in good shape and the peo­ple they resemble.

There's very lit­tle traf­fic in the neigh­bor­hood tonight. The sky dark­ens as the sun begins to set, so I need to act fast. Who­ev­er my new neigh­bor is, he's gone back into the house. I’ve aban­doned my orig­i­nal plan, the one that includ­ed me endear­ing myself to these new folks. A new plan begins to take shape, but before I imple­ment it, I need to be sure who I'm deal­ing with. I pick up one of the golf balls and stuff it into my back pock­et. With the Tour blade on my shoul­der, a grown-up ver­sion of that lit­tle kid who long ago toured the neigh­bor­hoods with a junior Chi Chi Rodriguez on his shoul­der, I walk the expanse of pave­ment toward the house. I silent­ly count the paces from my house to the neighbor's as I walk, three feet to a step. I'm think­ing: why not con­firm the distance? 

I keep my eyes focused on the yard in hopes of see­ing this guy again, in hopes of mak­ing a final deter­mi­na­tion that it is not Tom. 

Eighty yards so far.

Noth­ing would make me hap­pi­er than to dis­cov­er that I've made a ter­ri­ble mis­take. Chalk it up to a long day in the sun. Maybe my new neigh­bor and I will laugh about it over a beer. Anoth­er guy dressed like Gary Play­er, that's not unusu­al. Good style is always “in.”

I imag­ine any­one see­ing me now assumes I'm just tak­ing a pleas­ant stroll, maybe head­ed the sev­er­al blocks to the field down the street to prac­tice chip shots. I’ve done it before. 

One hun­dred and twen­ty-three yards.

A car dri­ves by as I get clos­er to the house. The sprin­kler pass­es back and forth on the lawn.

I'm less than a chip shot away now and I see move­ment in the house. A light is on in one of the first floor rooms. Sil­hou­ettes of a man and a woman behind a drawn cur­tain move around. The front door swings open and Tom Tay­lor walks out. He doesn't see me at first. I stop. 

One fifty-one to the curb. 

Hel­lo,” I say, and he turns. There is no recog­ni­tion in his face.

Hi.” He looks at the 7‑iron on my shoul­der. I think he’s scared. I like that.

I take the golf ball from my pock­et and toss it up and down. I con­sid­er doing a Tiger Woods, using the club head and golf ball like a pad­dle and rub­ber ball, but I'm not in the mood to show off. I don't know what to do now, but I do know I don’t want this guy as a neigh­bor, espe­cial­ly in the house that was to have been the first hole in my neigh­bor­hood golf course. And there’s no way I’m going to give him free lawn care. 

I don't say any­thing else. I turn and walk toward my house because I know what must be done. It's almost com­plete­ly dark now, so I'll need to rely on street lights and light from the sur­round­ing hous­es. When I reach my house, I lean the 7‑iron against my truck, and go to my stor­age area in the base­ment. There, beneath more clut­ter, is a three gal­lon plas­tic con­tain­er filled with used balls I've accu­mu­lat­ed over many years. I nev­er can bring myself just to throw them away. 

Call it an adren­a­line rush, I don't know, but my back doesn't both­er me as I car­ry it out of the base­ment and onto the lawn. Next, I retrieve my golf bag from the apart­ment, set it up next to me, and then tilt the con­tain­er of balls enough so that about fifty balls fall out. I’ll need all of my clubs tonight.

 

The first shot, a 7‑iron, is lost in the dark­ness. I hear it thwack against some­thing sol­id, prob­a­bly the side of a house, but cer­tain­ly not Tom's. The next shot, though, is per­fect. It's a big 7‑iron, a majes­tic 7‑iron, a Tiger 7‑iron, high and far. Although I nev­er see it in flight, from the moment I hit it I know it's on tar­get. The shat­ter­ing of glass from Tom's sec­ond sto­ry win­dow con­firms it. That’s a one-shot penal­ty, I think. But I shake that off and con­tin­ue. I prac­tice dri­ves and fair­way woods. I prac­tice draw­ing the ball with my 3‑iron, and slic­ing it with the 5‑iron. His SUV is the unfor­tu­nate recip­i­ent of an errant shot when I fal­ter a lit­tle, my 6‑iron tra­jec­to­ry flat­tens, and the ball careens off the pave­ment and into its tail­gate. The thwunk from hit­ting the roof of the house, though, is espe­cial­ly sat­is­fy­ing. Tom's yells grow loud­er now, as he stands next to the dogwood.

Neigh­bors watch the com­mo­tion from their doorsteps and yards. That last 7‑iron was pin high, ten yards right. 

I'm in a groove. 

I can feel it now, Dad.

I’m a focused shot-mak­er tonight. I could hit any tar­get: swing set, jun­gle gym, see-saw. I could be on the 12th at Augus­ta and I would have no fear. That tiny green is mine. The water haz­ard? Not even in play. I’m out­side at work and the club selec­tion is spot-on. A lit­tle to the left and I'll be home.

Rod Siino grew up in a small Rhode Island town, and now lives in Mass­a­chu­setts sur­round­ed by horse farms and trees. When he’s not writ­ing or earn­ing a liv­ing to sup­port the writ­ing addic­tion, he’s being held hostage by his 2‑year old twins, Ben­nett and Maya, who are con­vinced the world and every­one in it are here to serve their every desire with­out delay. He is con­tem­plat­ing a research project to deter­mine the valid­i­ty of this notion. Mean­while, he is work­ing to com­plete his first short sto­ry col­lec­tion. His work has appeared in Inkwell, The Prov­i­dence Jour­nal and online at Zoetrope All-Sto­ry Extra, among others.

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Quickmires, fiction by Mark Staniforth

The obit­u­ar­ies made the Quick­mires out to be good peo­ple: hard-work­ing, good-to-hon­est, God-fear­ing coun­try folk — all that shit. They spun more fine words once they were gone than the fam­i­ly ever had hurled at them as they preached their fire-and-brim­stone sto­ries of immi­nent doom in the Kwik Save car park most Sab­bath mornings.

Nine of them pegged it in the flames that Christ­mas Day night: old Artie and Missie, their three eldest — Jared, Nehemi­ah — Nemo for short — and Rachel; a cou­ple of oth­er lass­es they'd snared in from out of the dale and had always claimed to be dis­tant cousins; and a pair of blue-eyed, blond-haired bairns of no more than six months old whose names and parent­age stayed unknown.

There were those who said they had it com­ing, stack­ing up all them gas bot­tles to keep them warm at the end of the world. Oth­ers whis­pered they signed their death war­rants the day Jared Quick­mire start­ed step­ping out with the lass of the Thack­er­ays, had her bun up her hair and dress right prop­er and as good as sew up that famous filthy gob of hers for keeps.

They made the ver­dict acci­den­tal death. Those who made it so were town folks, from the same cloth as those who wrote the Quick­mires were good peo­ple. Again, there was no queue of locals ready to pro­nounce oth­er­wise: hard­ly no-one will­ing to spill their con­spir­a­cies for the TV crews who were quick to join the hunt for clues. But it's a fact plain as day that just about every­one round the place kept their own the­o­ry as to why the ver­dict was as bull­shit as the obits: some said sui­cide, oth­ers said them Thack­er­ay boys had been itch­ing for some­thing more ever since they'd head­ed up in a con­voy of four-by-fours with enough loaded shot­guns to leave noth­ing to chance, and stole back their lass from under the Quick­mires' noses.

You could say at least those who per­ished in the flames did so in the seem­ing sure knowl­edge of where they were head­ed. The whole lot of them would head down the Kwik Save, stand in a straight line behind Artie rant­i­ng out his eter­nal damna­tions. He'd rock back on his heels and punch out his words like a fly­weight box­er while the rest of them — Missie, Jared, Rachel, Nemo, some­times the younger ones wore paint­ed-on whole­some smiles and eager head nods that said Judge­ment Day was a thing to savour.

Some­times, folk would nudge up close and throw insults. The bravest would go face to face, spit back their own raw the­o­ries on evo­lu­tion. Some tossed eggs. The Quick­mires would nev­er address you direct, no mat­ter the provo­ca­tion. They'd keep preach­ing out their warn­ings while the yolks dripped down their fronts. Then soon as the church bells start­ed clang­ing, they'd pack back in their old wag­on and head back up that long, dead-end track of theirs for anoth­er week of near-on hibernating.

There were few dared ven­ture up the Quick­mires' lane fur­ther than the third locked gate with its daubed-on 'Keep Out' sign: a post box was propped by the side, though it was sel­dom filled. Far as folk could make out, the Quick­mires were fair­ly much self-suf­fi­cient. They plucked out veg from the shal­low moor soil and grazed a rag-tag bunch of sheep and goats. Some­times, Missie Quick­mire would ven­ture down in town and clean the Kwik Save shelves out of soup tins. She'd nod her thanks but nev­er look those who served her in the eye.

Folk had been work­ing on fig­ur­ing out the Quick­mires long before their deaths, and their deaths did not dis­cour­age them. Truth is there's only a hand­ful could pro­vide any answers, and there's not so much as a soul still draw­ing breath who'd dare con­front the Thack­er­ay broth­ers in the hunt for clues.

What­ev­er, it can be said with­out con­tra­dic­tion that Jared fair tamed that girl. Zeta was a Thack­er­ay a mile off, coarse-tongued and glin­ty-glared, and just as prone to think­ing up new ways of express­ing her fury as her good-for-noth­ing old­er broth­ers. Her scrap with big Bet­sy War­dle over some slight or oth­er was a thing of leg­end: it last­ed two whole hours and swung from the car park woods to the play­ground and up Lunns’ farm, and had them both stripped down to their bras and gouged in blood. It fin­ished when big Bet­sy War­dle col­lapsed from exhaus­tion and rather than accept­ing the win Zeta Thack­er­ay went and rolled Bet­sy War­dle right in the chick­en coup and infect­ed her up so bad she spent a week on a drip and to this day gets a thump­ing in her lug­hole that keeps her up nights.

A week or so in Jared Quickmire’s com­pa­ny and Zeta Thack­er­ay was act­ing ready to drop to her knees and beg for­give­ness. Whether it was her who set her heart on Jared or him intent on doing some con­vert­ing is not clear. What is known is that Jared always was the finest look­ing of the Quick­mires, with his shock of blond hair and eyes deep and green as moss pools, and there were plen­ty of lass­es who would hap­pi­ly have born them­selves again in his com­pa­ny. Those that saw them togeth­er spoke of Zeta Thack­er­ay fair drown­ing in them eyes of his. She took to wear­ing the same shape­less sack dress­es favoured by Missie and Rachel and washed the bleach from her hair and the coarse­ness from her mouth, moved into that Quick­mire farm­house pret­ty much lock, stock and barrel.

That was more or less that as far as Zeta was con­cerned, that is till them broth­ers of hers heard enough word of the Quick­mires’ God-weird­ing ways they took it upon them­selves to rus­tle her up a lit­tle unex­pect­ed sal­va­tion, Thack­er­ay-style. No soon­er had Zeta been hauled out than she was paired up with a squad­die from an army camp on the edge of town. They said he bagged her for half his year­ly wage and the promise he'd take her as far from Fryup as pos­si­ble and keep it that way. Some say she came out bleached of her mind and is more than like­ly see­ing out her days in some sort of padded cell, or else six foot under in the only place the Thack­er­ays could find to hide their shame.

 

Rachel was Jared's twin: like him, gold-haired and deep-eyed and the type who got plen­ty a lad in the Kwik Save audi­ence schem­ing to get under that sack-cloth.There were even boys who took to hang­ing round the Quick­mires' lane bot­tom, fig­ur­ing if Jared had took a friend for him­self it fol­lowed that Rachel might soon be on the look-out for a suit­able husband.

Greg Bul­mer was the only known lad to ever speak to her: he was head­ing home from lamp­ing with a ripe hare hung round his shoul­ders and his cou­ple of lurchers slunk down by his side. He was wad­ing out through thick fog and chanced a lit­tle up the Quick­mires' lane and all of a sud­den out loomed Rachel, dressed for a sum­mer week­end despite the freeze. She said, ‘can I help you?’ and eyed Greg Bul­mer in a way that made his mutts coil up round his knees, and Greg to drop his quar­ry and not stop leg­ging it till he reached right home. He said lat­er, ‘sure as hell I’d seen a ghost that night, that I’d pick up the paper next day and find some Quick­mire tragedy, and the way things worked out, I can't help reck­on­ing it was some kind of sign.' Those who doubt­ed Greg Bulmer's sto­ry were direct­ed in his back yard, where from that day on his mutts shook and whined up each time a fresh fog fell, and nev­er did catch anoth­er hare in the rest of their sad-arsed lives.

 

Nehemi­ah — Nemo — did not share the good looks of his twin sib­lings. His eyes were mud­dy and his build was sharp and harsh. Word was Nemo was the weak link, han­kered more for good life than his God. Nemo had been more seen for a while, rac­ing his old yel­low Chevette round the lanes with its win­dows wound down and Megadeth tracks shak­ing out of the stereo, and there was plen­ty of talk he was see­ing Tara Mar­ley on the sly. It hadn't escaped notice that Nemo had gone absent from the Kwik Save parade for the cou­ple of Sab­baths before the fire all but wiped them out. Tara Mar­ley said noth­ing then and has said noth­ing since. Word was while the Quick­mire place was still smok­ing, she sat through the cop calls struck numb with either shock or secrets.

 

There was just one Quick­mire who sur­vived the flames. The fire­men in the first truck to arrive on the scene told how they almost mowed down a skin­ny young kid stood out front in the mud tracks. She wore a grub­by lit­tle smock dress and stared out big blank eyes while her sib­lings' screams lit the sky. Dinah Quick­mire was push­ing eight years old. She got shunt­ed off to some oth­er long-lost cousins while folk did their best to try to make sense of things.

For round about sev­en years the Quick­mire farm stood black and ruined and there wasn't hard­ly a soul had the nerve to go snoop­ing. Boys would hang round the lane end past sun­set and swear if the wind blew right you could still hear the screams. But over time the inter­est eased and it seemed the fire had about licked the Quick­mires clean out of history.

Then one morn­ing when the sky hung red and the rooks cawed round the bare tree­tops, Dinah Quick­mire came home. She arrived with a bunch of those so-called rela­tion folks and they set about work­ing patch­ing up the old place. They toiled all the day­light hours and kept them­selves to them­selves. They waved off offers of help from folk who sensed the chance of being cen­tre of atten­tion. Once they'd fin­ished, save the scorch marks on the brick­work, you would nev­er have known of the tragedy that once went on under that roof. Soon enough, Dinah came to tak­ing up her old man's place out­side the Kwik Save, jab­bing her Armaged­dons like the best of them. She wore shoul­der-length hair black as coal dust, and her eyes were same drown­ing type as her eldest sib­lings. There were plen­ty of boys reck­oned those Sab­bath they got a glimpse of salvation.

 

That first sum­mer home, Dinah Quick­mire took to swim­ming at the rock­pool most Sat­ur­day morn­ings. It was Ged Black­stock who caught sight of her first, as he head­ed up the lane in the hope of hook­ing rain­bows. Fact is that day he hauled in a whole lot more. Dinah's swim­suit was low-cut and gloss-white and stuck to her new-grown curves like cel­e­bra­tion cake icing. You might have thought Ged would have kept the sight for him­self, but he had the kind of gob that could keep noth­ing in for long. Soon a bunch of boys had gath­ered. They hid behind the bush­es, watched her stroke the water, shake dry in the dawn light. There was some­thing in her ways that kept them silent. Each time end­ed the same, with Dinah hook­ing back on her push-bike and head­ing back up the old track to that cursed old farm of hers.

Soon enough the tall talk start­ed and it was no sur­prise when Jim Mars­den vowed he'd be the first to tame her. Jim Mars­den had fucked just about every oth­er his-age girl round the place by the time he was fif­teen, and he reck­oned his quick wit and a bunch of Old Tes­ta­ment vers­es he'd lodged in his brain since hang­ing round Kwik Save would be enough to do the trick.

One morn­ing, while Dinah was stroking through the lake's far reach­es, Jim Mars­den stripped down to his box­ers and wad­ed right on out. He flashed a thumbs-up and gasped as he sunk in the cold. The ear­ly sun dap­pled the lake sur­face. Jim Mars­den swam slow out of ear-shot, kept a safe dis­tance from Dinah who flipped to back-stroke and car­ried on seem­ing­ly unawares. She reached the edge of the lake as usu­al, shook out and pulled up a tow­el over her shone-up skin. Jim Mars­den shiv­ered out all bug-eyed soon after, made out he'd snared him­self a good thing. When Dinah set back off up the Quick­mire lane, leav­ing drip-tracks like a kind of lure, Jim Mars­den ducked up after her, haul­ing Ged with him for proof.

 

Two weeks lat­er, that same lane was trod down with traf­fic as the whole place lent a hand to the Mars­dens and Black­stocks try­ing to hunt out their boys. They hacked back the gorse and poked round the lake side while a pair of cop divers did their best to dredge the murk. The cops were quick to fence off the farm­house on account of those who claimed they knew full well the answer to the boys' fate lay behind those Quick­mire doors. The cops drove Dinah and the rest of them out in a blacked-up van while a Thack­er­ay-led mob roared and hollered. They kept them in two days for ques­tions, and good as stripped the place back to its old knock-down self. There were plen­ty of rumours over what they found. There was talk they'd start­ed hoard­ing the gas tanks again, and their clos­est out­house was back full of food tins to last at least six months. There were bags of cash and piles of guns, and a pack of cyanide pills on stand­by in case Judge­ment Day got a lit­tle too hot. There were a pair of blue-eyed, blond-haired bairns in the cel­lar, with snow-white skin as they'd nev­er seen day­light. There was all that shit and more. But what they sure didn't find was any shred of sug­ges­tion that Jim Mars­den and Ged Black­stock had ever made it that far.

 

Eight months lat­er the cops shelved the case. There were enough had start­ed to reck­on Jim Mars­den and Ged Black­stock had cooked the whole thing up as a means for get­ting away. It was a just about believ­able sto­ry where Jim Mars­den was con­cerned. He'd been boast­ing over screw­ing a girl from a tough part of town, the kind of girl whose folks made the Thack­er­ays out like guardian angels. Jim Mars­den had been work­ing dou­ble shifts at the butcher's, and some claimed he'd spoke of sav­ing his cash for a one-way tick­et out of the place before the girl in ques­tion start­ed to show. They reck­oned he'd come to realise that only sup­posed death was ever going to be good enough for the fam­i­ly in ques­tion to stop from sniff­ing him out.

Ged Black­stock was a dif­fer­ent sto­ry. His folks were fifth gen­er­a­tion Fryup farm­ers and the whole bunch of them had rarely ever been known to ven­ture beyond Fryup lim­its. Ged had shown no incli­na­tion to be dif­fer­ent, and his hedge-hair and scrawny stick-out frame had pret­ty much made up his mind to show no incli­na­tion where girls were con­cerned. Some said his trout poach­ing trips were just a front, that he'd grown sick of the whole farm­ing busi­ness and couldn't face telling his old man he wasn't up with the first-born tra­di­tion, but some­how it didn't ring true.

 

The Mars­dens and Black­stocks are just about the only ones who still hold out hope of some­thing. Each anniver­sary, they paste posters and launch TV appeals. They've paid for the lake to be dredged up twice more. There's been folk head­ed out of the for­est with tales of wild-haired tramps, and more than twice the Kwik Save store room's been bur­gled of long-life food tins. They've even had a medi­um head in the Quick­mire house, which is back to derelict. They say he head­ed out with noth­ing but a snow-white swim­suit to show. It's prob­a­bly bull­shit, but that's what they say.

Mark Stan­i­forth is a writer and jour­nal­ist from North York­shire, Eng­land. His e‑book of short sto­ries, Fryup­dale, is avail­able via Smash­words. He blogs ran­dom book reviews at Eleuthero­pho­bia. He likes box­ing, cur­ry and every­thing writ­ten by Don­ald Ray Pollock.

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