Pale Horse Coming by Stephen Hunter also By Stephen Hunter hot springs time to hunt black light dirty white boys point of impact violent screen: a critic's 13 years on the front lines of movie mayhem TARGET THE DAY BEFORE MIDNIGHT THE SPANISH GAMBIT THE SECOND SALADIN THE MASTER SNIPER TAPESTRY OF SPIES NOVEL Simon & schuster NEW YORK london toronto sydney singapore Simon & Schuster Rockefeller Center 1230 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 30020 This book is a work of fiction Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental Copyright 2001 by Stephen Hunter All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form. simon & schuster and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc Designed by Karolma Harris Manufactured in the United States of America 10 987654321 Library of Congress Catalogtng-in-Publlication Data is available. ISBN 0-684-86361-8 For information regarding special discounts for bulk purchases, please contact Simon & Schuster Special Sales at 1-800-456-6798 or bus mess simonandschuster. com At last, for Jean in mid-1947, Jefferson Barnes, the prosecuting attorney of Polk County, Arkansas, finally died. Upon that tragedy the old man fell out of one of those new golf cart things on vacation in Hot Springs, rolled down a gully screaming damnation and hellfire all the way, and broke his neck on a culvert Sam Vincent, his loyal Number 2, moved up to the big job. Then in '48, Sam was anointed by the Democratic party (there was no other in western Arkansas), which ran him on the same ticket with Harry S. Truman and Fred C. Becker. As did those worthies, he won handily. For Sam, it was the goal toward which he had been aiming for many years. He had always wanted to be a servant of the law, and now, much better, he was the law. Sam was six foot one, forty-four, with a bushy head of hair and a brusque demeanor that would not be called "lovable" for many years. He stared immoderately and did not suffer fools, idiots, Yankees, carpetbaggers, the small of spirit or the breakers of the law gladly. He wore baggy suits flecked with pipe ash, heavy glasses, and walked in a bounding swoop. He hunted in the fall, followed the St. Louis Browns during the summer, when he had time, which he hardly ever did, and tied flies, though he fished rarely enough. Otherwise, he just worked like hell. His was classic American career insanity, putting the professional so far above the personal there almost was no personal, in the process alienating wife and children with his indifference, burning out secretaries with his demands, annoying the sheriff's detectives with his directions. In what little time remained, he served on the draft board (he had won the Bronze Star during the Battle of the Bulge), traveled five states to interview promising high school seniors who had applied to his beloved Princeton, played a weekly round of golf with the county powers at the country club, and drank too much eight-year-old bourbon. He knew everybody; he was respected by everybody. He was a great man, a great American. He had the highest conviction rate of any county prosecutor in Arkansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, or Tennessee for that matter. He was not reelected. In fact, he lost in a landslide to a no' count lawyer named Febus Bookins, a genial hack who smelled of gin all the time and meant only to rob the county blind during his term of office. He called himself a reformer, and his goal was to reform his bank account into something more respectable. Sam had made one mistake, but it was a mistake which few in his home state, and in fact not many elsewhere, could ignore. In 1949, he prosecuted a man named Willis Beaudine for raping a young woman named Nadine Johnson. It was an unremarkable case, save for the fact that Willis was a white person and Nadine a Negro girl. It is true she was quite light, what some would call a "high yeller," and that she had comely ways, and was, perhaps, not normally so innocent as she looked when she appeared in court. But facts were facts, law was law. Certain evidence had been developed by Sam's former investigator, Earl Swagger, who was now a state police sergeant and was famous for the big medal he had won during the war. Earl, however, risked nothing by testifying against Willis, for Earl was known to be a prideful, bull-headed man who could not be controlled by anyone and was feared by some. Sam, on the other hand, risked everything, and lost everything, although Willis was convicted and spent six months at the Tucker Farm. As for Nadine, she moved from town because even in her own community she was considered what Negro women called a " '," and moved to St. Louis, where her appetites soon got her murdered in a case of no interest to anyone. Sam had taken his defeat bitterly. If his family thought he would see them more often, they were mistaken. Instead, he rented a small office on the town square of Blue Eye, the county seat, and commenced to spend most of his days and many of his nights there. He worked such small cases as came his way, but mainly he plotted out ways to return to office. He still hunted with Earl. His other friend was Connie Longacre, the smart Eastern woman whom the county's richest, most worthless son had brought back from his education at Annapolis in '30 and his failed naval career thereafter. Connie had soon learned how appetite-driven a man her Ranee was, and while trying to raise her own hellion son, Stephen, fell to friendship with Sam, who alone in that part of Arkansas had been to a Broadway play, had met a gal under the clock at the Biltmore, and who didn't think Henry Wallace was a pawn of the Red Kremlin. Sam was never stupid, not on a single day in his life. He understood that one thing he had to do was to regain the trust of the white people. Therefore he utterly refused to take any cases involving Negroes, even if they only revolved around one dark person suing another. There was a Negro lawyer in town, a Mr. Theopolis Simmons, who could handle such things; meanwhile, Sam worked hard, politicked aggressively, kept tabs, sucked up to the gentry who had deposed him so gently, and tried to stay focused. Then, one day in June of 1951, an unusual event occurred, though nothing in that day or the day or week before had suggested it would. Sam, alone in his office, worked through probate papers for a farmer named Lewis who had died intestate and whose estate was now being sued for back taxes by the state, which would drive his widow and four children off the property to well, to nothing. Sam would not let this happen, if only he could figure out a way to He heard the door open. In the county's employ he had always had a secretary; now, on his own, he didn't. He stood, pushed his way through the fog of dense pipe smoke, and opened the door to peer into his anteroom. An elegant gentleman had seated himself on the sofa and was paging absently through an old copy of Look magazine. "Sir, do you have an appointment?" Sam asked. The man looked up at him. He was tanned softly, as if from an expensive vacation at the beach, balding, and looked well tended, of an age that could have been anywhere between thirty and fifty. He was certainly prosperous, in a smooth-fitting blue pinstripe suit, a creamy white shirt and the black tie of a serious man. A homburg, gray pearl, lay on the seat beside him; his shined shoes were cap-toed black bluchers, possibly bespoke, and little clocks or flowers marked his socks. The shoes were shined, Sam noticed, all the way down to the sole, which was an indication that sentence. Yes, do go on, Mr. Trugood. You have my attention, without distraction." "Thank you, sir. I am charged with executing a will for a certain rather well-off late Chicagoan. He had for many years in his employ a Negro named Lincoln Tilson." Sam wrote: "Negro Lincoln Tilson" on his big yellow pad. "Lincoln was a loyal custodian of my client's properties, a handyman, a bodyguard, a gardener, a chauffeur, a man whose brightness of temperament always cheered my client, who was negotiating a business career of both great success and some notoriety." "I follow, sir," said Sam. "Five years ago, Lincoln at last slowed down. My employer settled a sum on him, a considerable sum, and bid him farewell. He even drove him to the Illinois Central terminal to catch the City of New Orleans and reverse the steps by which he arrived up North so many years ago, for Lincoln's pleasure was to return to the simpler life from which he had sprung in the South. Lincoln returned to his birthplace, a town called Thebes, in Thebes County, Mississippi." Sam wrote it down, while saying, "That is the deepest part of the deepest South, I would imagine." "It is, sir." Thebes, as a word, rang ever so slightly in Sam's imagination. He recalled that the original was a Greek town, city even, much fought over in antiquity. For some reason the number seven occurred in concert with it. "I see puzzlement, sir," said Trugood. "You are well educated and no doubt think of Seven Against Thebes, by the Greek tragedian Aeschylus. I assure you, no army led by seven heroes is necessary in this case. Mississippi's Thebes is a far distance from Aeschylus's tragic town of war. It is a backwater Negro town far up the Yaxahatchee River, which itself is a branch of the Pascagoula River. It is the site of a famous, or possibly infamous, penal farm for colored called Thebes Farm." "That's it," said Sam. "It is legendary among the Negro criminal class, with whom I had many dealings as a young prosecutor. "You don't wants to go to Thebes, they say, don't nobody never nohow come back from Thebes." Or words to that effect." "It seems they have it mixed up with Hades in their simplicity. Yes, Thebes is not a pleasant place. Nobody wants to go to Thebes." "Yet you want me to go to Thebes. That is why the fee would be so high?" "There is difficulty of travel, for one thing. You must hire a boat in Pascagoula, and the trip upriver is unpleasant. The river, I understand, is dark and deep; the swamp that lines it inhospitable. There was only one road into Thebes, through that same forbidding swamp; it was washed out some years back, and Thebes County, not exactly a county of wealth, has yet to dispatch repair." "I see." "Accommodations would be primitive." "I slept in many a barn in the late fracas in Europe, Mr. Trugood. I can sleep in a barn again; it won't hurt me." "Excellent. Now here is the gist of the task. My client's estate--as I say, considerable--is hung up in probate because Mr. Lincoln Tilson seems no longer to exist. I have attempted to communicate with Thebes County authorities, to little avail. I can reach no one but simpletons on the telephone, when the telephone is working, which is only intermittently. No letter has yet been answered. The fate of Lincoln is unknown, and a large amount of money is therefore frozen, a great disappointment to my client's greedy, worthless heirs." "I see. My task would be to locate either Lincoln or evidence of his fate. A document, that sort of thing?" "Yes. From close-mouthed Southern types. I, of course, need someone who speaks the language, or rather, the accent. They would hear the Chicago in my voice, and their faces would ossify. Their eyes would deaden. Their hearing would disintegrate. They would evolve backward instantaneously to the neolithic." "That may be so, but Southerners are also fair and honest folk, and if you don't trumpet your Northern superiority in their face and instead take the time to listen and master the slower cadences, they will usually reward you with friendship. Is there another issue here?" "There is indeed." He waved at his handsome suit, his handsome shoes, his English tie. His cufflinks were gold with a discreet sapphire, probably worth more than Sam had made in the last six months. "I am a different sort of man, and in some parts of the South--Thebes, say-that difference would not go unnoticed." "You have showy ways, but they are the ways of a man of the world." "I fear that is exactly what would offend them. And, frankly, I'm not a brave man. I'm a man of desks. The actual confrontation, the quickness of argument, the thrust of will on will: not really my cup of tea, I'm afraid. A sound man understands his limits. I was the sort of boy who never got into fights and didn't like tests of strength." "I see." "That is why I am buying your courage as well as your mind." "You overestimate me. I am quite a common man." "A decorated hero in the late war." "Nearly everybody in the war was a hero. I saw some true courage; mine was ordinary, if even that." "I think I have made a very good choice." "All right, sir." "Thank you, Mr. Vincent. This is the fee I had in mind." He wrote a figure on the back of his card, and pushed it over. It took Sam's breath away. "You are sending me to be your champion in hell, it sounds like," said Sam. "But you are paying me well for the fight." "You will earn every penny, I assure you." IT took Sam but a few days to bank the retainer, rearrange his schedule, book a ticket on the City of New Orleans, and spend an afternoon in the Fort Smith municipal library reading up on Thebes and its penal farm. What he learned appalled him. On the night before he was to leave, he finally faced the unsettled quality of his feelings. At last, he climbed into his car and drove the twelve miles east along Arkansas Route 8 toward the small town of Board Camp; turning left off the highway, he traveled a half mile of bumpy road to a surprisingly large white house on a hill that commanded the property. The house was freshly painted as was the barn behind, and someone had worked the gardens well and dutifully; it was June, and the place was ablaze with the flora chosen to flourish in the hot West Arkansas sun. A few cows grazed in the far meadows, but much of the property was still in trees, where Sam and the owner shot deer in the fall, if they didn't wander farther afield. Sam pulled up close to the house, aware that he was under observation. This was Earl's young son, Bob Lee, almost five. Bob Lee was a grave boy who had the gift of stillness when he so desired. He was a watcher, that boy. He already had made some hunting trips with them, and had a talent for blood sport, the ability to understand the messages of the land, to decipher the play of light and shadow in the woods, to smell the weather on the wind, though he was some years yet from shooting. Still, he was a steady presence on the hunt, not a wild kid. It was Sam's sworn duty as godfather to the boy to draw him into the professional world; Earl was adamant that his son would do better than he and not be a roaming Marine, a battlefield scurrier, a man killer, as Earl had been. Earl wanted something more settled for his only son, a career in the law or medicine. It was important to Earl, and when things were important to Earl, it was Earl's force of will that usually made them happen. "Howdy there, Bob Lee," called Sam. "Mr. Sam, Mr. Sam," the boy responded, from the porch where he had been sitting and looking out over the land in the twilight. "Your daddy's still on duty, I see. Is he expected back?" "Don't know, sir. Daddy comes and goes, you know." "I do know. How you got such a worker as a daddy I'll never figure, when he has such a lazy son who just sits there like a frog on a log." "I was memorizing." "It doesn't surprise me at all. Memorizing the land? The birds. The sky, the clouds." "Something like that, sir." "Oh, you are a smart one. You have received all the brains in the family, I can see that. You'll end up a rich one. Is your mama here?" "Yes, sir. I'll fetch her." The boy scooted off as Sam waited. He could have walked in himself, for he was that familiar with the Swaggers. But something in his mood kept him still and worrisome. Junie Swagger emerged. Lord, a beauty still! But Junie was, well, who knew? The childbirth had been a terrible ordeal, it was said, and Earl not around to help, at least not till the end, and so the poor girl fought her way through fifteen hours of labor on her own. She had not, it was also said, quite ever come back from that. She was somewhat dreamy, as if she didn't hear all that was said to her. Her great pleasure was those damned flowers, and she could spend hours in the hottest weather cultivating or weeding or fertilizing. It was also said that she would have no more children. Now, a little wan, she stood before him. "Why, hello, Mr. Sam. Come on in." "Well, Junie, thank you much, but I don't want you making no fuss. I have to have a chat with Earl is all. You needn't even consider this a visit, and there's no need to unlimber any hospitality." "Oh, you are so silly. You sit down, I'll git you a nice glass of lemonade. You'll stay for supper, I insist." "No, ma'am. Can't. I'm in the middle of getting ready for a business trip to New Orleans. I'm driving over to Memphis tomorrow to catch the train." "You know, Mr. Sam, Earl sometimes gets so caught up he doesn't get here ' late." "I do know. It seems a shame after all he's been through that he can't have a quieter life." Junie said nothing for a second, but her face focused with a surprising intensity, as if some spark had been struck. Then she said, "I fear he has other things on his mind. I know this Korea business has him all het up. I'm scared he'll get it in his head he has to go fight another war. He's done enough. But I can read his melancholy. It's his nature to go where there's shooting, under the impression he can help, but maybe out of some darker purpose." "Earl is a man bred for war, I agree, Junie. But I do think that he'll sit this one out on the porch. He's still in pain from wounds, and he knows what a wonderful home you've made for him and the boy." "Oh, Mr. Sam, you can be such a charmer sometimes. I don't believe a word you say, never have, never will." She laughed and her face lit up. "Now you sit here, Earl will be along shortly or not, as he sees fit. I will bring you that lemonade and that will be that." So Sam sat and watched the twilight grow across the land. He could have sat all night, but on this night Earl had decided to come home as quickly as possible, and within a few minutes Sam saw the Arkansas Highway Patrol black-and-white scuttling down the road, pulling up a screen of dust behind it. Earl had meant to asphalt that road for four years now, or at least lay some gravel, but could never quite afford to have it done. Sam had volunteered to front him the money, but Earl of course was stubborn and wanted no debts haunting him, none left for his heirs to owe if his melancholy about the true nature of the world ever proved out and he turned up shot to death in some squalid field. Earl got out of the car with a smile, for he had seen Sam from a long way off. He loved three things in the world: his family, the United States Marine Corps and Sam. "Well, Mr. Sam, why didn't you tell me you were coming? Junie, get this mart a drink of something stronger than lemonade and set an extra place." Earl lumbered up to the porch from his car. He was a big man, over six feet, and still so darkened from the Pacific sun after all these years some thought he was an Indian. He had a rumbly, slow voice famous in the county, and his close bristly hair--he'd removed the Stetson by now--was just beginning to gray. He was near forty years old, and his body was a latticework of scar tissue and jerry-built field-expedient repairs. He'd been stitched up so many times he was almost more surgical thread than human being, testimony to the fact that a war or two will write its record in a man's flesh. His hands were big, his muscles knotty from farm work on weekends and plenty of it, but his face still had the same odd calmness to it that inspired men in combat or terrified men in crime. He looked as if he could handle things. He could. "He says he won't stay," Junie cried from inside, "though Lord knows I tried. You tie him to a chair and we'll be all set." "Bob Lee's going to be disappointed if old Sam don't read him a story tonight," Earl said. "I will stay to read the story, yes, Earl." In his stentorian, courtroom voice, Sam could make a story come more alive than the radio. "And I wish this were a pure pleasure call. But I do have a matter to discuss." "Lord. Am I in some kind of trouble?" "No, sir. Maybe I am, however." It was such a reversal. In some ways, unsaid, Sam had become Earl's version of a father, his own proving to be a disappointment and his need for someone to believe in so crucial to his way of thinking. So he had informally adopted Sam in this role, worked for him for two years as an investigator before Colonel Jenks had managed at last to get Earl on the patrol. The bonds between the two men had grown strong, and Sam alone had heard Earl, who normally never discussed himself, on such topics as the war in the Pacific or the war in Hot Springs. The two sat; Junie brought her husband a glass of lemonade, and he in turn gave her the Sam Browne belt with the Colt .357, the handcuffs, the cartridge reloaders and such, which she took into the house to secure. Earl loosened his tie, set his Stetson down on an unused chair. His cowboy boots were dusty, but under the dust shined all the way down to the soles. "All right," he said. "I am all ears." Sam told him quickly about his commission to go to Thebes, Mississippi, and the tanned, smooth-talking colleague who had put it together for him, and the large retainer. "Sounds straightforward to me," said Earl. "But you have heard of the prison at Thebes." "Never from a white person. White folks prefer to believe such places don't exist. But from the Negroes, yes, occasionally." "It has an evil reputation." "It does. I once arrested a courier running too fast up 71 toward Kansas City. He had a trunkful of that juju grass them jazz boys sometimes smoke. He was terrified I's going to send him to Thebes. I thought he'd die of a heart attack he's so scared. Never saw nothing like it. It took an hour to get him settled down, and then of course another hour to make him understand this was Arkansas, not Mississippi, and I couldn't send him to Thebes, even if I wanted to. I sent him to Tucker, instead, where I'm sure he had no picnic. But at the trial, he seemed almost happy. Tucker was no Thebes, at least not in the Negro way of looking at things." "They live in a different universe, somehow," Sam said. "It doesn't make sense to us. It is haunted by ghosts and more attuned to the natural and more connected to the earth. Their minds work differently. You can't understand, sometimes, why they do the things they do. They are us a million years ago." "Maybe that's it," said Earl. "Though the ones I saw on Tarawa, they died and bled the same as white folks." "Here's why I'm somewhat apprehensive," Sam confessed. "I went up to Fort Smith the other day, and found out what I could find out about this place. Something's going on down there that's gotten me spooked a bit." "What could spook Sam Vincent?" "Well, sir, five years ago, according to the Standard and Poor's rating guide to the United States, in Thebes, Mississippi, there was a sawmill, a dry cleaner, a grocery and general store, a picture show, two restaurants, two bar-and-grills, a doctor, a dentist, a mayor, a sheriff, a feed store and a veterinarian." "Yes?" "Now there's nothing. All those businesses and all those professional men, they've up and gone." "All over the South, the Negroes are on the move. Mississippi is cot ton, and cotton isn't king no more. They're riding the Illinois Central up North to big jobs and happier lives." "I know, and thought the same at first. So I picked at random five towns scattered across Mississippi. And while some have had some social structure reduction and considerable population loss, they remain vibrant. So this does seem strange." Earl said nothing. Sam continued. "Then there's this business of the road. There was a highway into Thebes for many years and it too supported businesses and life. Gas stations, diners, barbecue places, that sort of thing. But some time ago, the road washed out, effectively sealing the town and that part of the swamp and the woods off from civilization, well, such civilization as they have in Mississippi. You'd think a civic structure would get busy opening that road up, for the road is the river of opportunity, especially in the poor, rural South. Yet now, all these years later, it remains washed out, and as far as I can learn, no one has made an attempt to open it. The only approach to what remains of Thebes is a long slow trip by boat up that dark river. That's not a regular business either. The prison launches make the journey for supplies on a weekly basis, and to pick up prisoners, but the place is sealed off. You don't get there easily, you don't get back easily, and everybody seems to want it that way. Now doesn't that seem strange?" "Well, sir," said Earl, "maybe it's a case of no road, no town, and that's why it's all drying up down there." "It would seem so. But the decline of Thebes had already begun three years earlier. It was as if the road was the final ribbon on the package, not what was inside the package." "Hmmm," said Earl. "If you are that worried, possibly you shouldn't go." "Well, sir, I can't not go. I have accepted a retainer and I have a professional obligation I cannot and would not evade." "Would you like me to come along, in case there's nasty surprises down there?" "No, no, Earl, of course not. I just want you to know what is going on. I have here an envelope containing my file on the case, all my findings, my plan of travel and so forth. I leave tomorrow on the ten forty five out of Memphis, and should reach New Orleans by five. I'll spend the night there, and have hired a car the next morning to take me to Pascagoula. Presumably I'll find a boatman, and I'll reach town late the day after tomorrow. If I can find a telephone, I'll call you or my wife and leave messages on a daily basis. If I can't find a telephone, well then, I shall just complete my business and come on home." "Well, let's pick a date, and if you ain't home by that time, then I'll make it my business to figure out what's happening." "Thank you, Earl. Thank you so much. You saw where I was headed." "Mr. Sam, you can count on me." "Earl, if you say something, I know it's done." "I'd bring a firearm. Not one of your hunting rifles, but a handgun. You still have an Army forty-five, I believe." "No, Earl. I am a man of reason, not guns. I'm a lawyer. The gun cannot be my way. Logic, fairness, humanity, the rule of the law above all else, those are my guidelines." "Mr. Sam, where you're going, maybe such things don't cut no ice. I'll tell you this, if I have to come, I'll be bringing a gun." "You have to do it your way, and I have to do it mine. So be it. Now let's read a story to Bob Lee." "I think he'd like that. He likes the scary ones the best." "You still have that book of Grimm's?" "His favorite." "I know there's a dark tale or two in there." "A dark tale it will be, then." Sam loved New Orleans, he was moderate and professional the night he stayed there, avoiding its temptations. He took a room in a tourist home, ate at a diner, went to sleep early after meticulously recording all his expenditures for his client. The next morning, he rendezvoused with his car and driver, and commenced the drive along the gulf coast down U.S. 90, passing quickly from Louisiana into Mississippi. It was, at first at least, a pleasant drive, with a driver named Eddie, who knew how to keep his mouth shut, and his big, comfortable Lasalle. "It's a 1940," Eddie said, "the last and the best." And that was the only thing Eddie said. Sam had removed and folded his coat, rolled up his sleeves, put his straw Panama on the seat next to him, and let the cooling air stream in through the open windows of the big black car. Of course he did not loosen his tie; after all, one did not do such things. There were limits. But he got out his pipe and lit up a bowlful, and simply watched the sights. On his right, the gulf's blue tide lapped against the white sands, and small towns fled by, each quaint and cute enough for a tourist trade that was beginning to catch hold. The small cities along the way were white, sunny places, Gulfport and Biloxi, further given over to tourists. He could see young couples on the beach, some of them beautiful some not so beautiful. Beach umbrellas furled against the gulf breezes and homes had rooms to let, many of them with free television as the signs proudly proclaimed. But beyond Biloxi, it changed. No one came here for the sun or the sand, and no beaches had been cleared. It was just mangoes and ferns and scrub pine and vegetation whose only distinguishing feature was its generic green viney quality, down to a strip of soil before the water which, Sam fancied (maybe it was his imagination) had changed in tone from carefree blue to a dirty brown. The sediment this far down floated unsettled in the water, giving it the look of an immense sewer. It smelled, also, some pungent chemical odor. Pascagoula, it turned out, was a city of industry. Paper plants dominated, and shipbuilding came second, and it was a city that had once strained mightily to produce. Now, hard times had hit it. The paper industry was down, and shipbuilding had stopped with the end of the war. It was a sad place; the boom of the war years had dried to bust, but everyone had a taste for the big, easy money of before. Again, maybe he was imagining too much, but he thought he saw despair and lassitude everywhere. The streets felt empty; signs were not freshly painted, and commerce was not active. It all baked under a hot sun, the stench from the paper mills enough to give a man a crushing headache. "Sir, do you have a particular destination? Do you want to go to a hotel?" Sam looked at his watch. It was only 11:00 a. m." and, yes, he did want to go to a hotel, have a nice lunch, lie down in a room with a strong fan or maybe some air-conditioning, take a nap. But it was not in him to do so. He was rigid about everything, but most of all about duty and obligation. "No, Eddie, I've got to push on. Uh, do you know the town?" "Not hardly, sir. I'm a N'Awleens boy. Don't like to come out to these here hot little no' count places." "Well, then, I suppose we'd best start at the town hall or the police station. I'd like to confer with officials before I venture further." "Yes, sir. B'lieve I c'n hep you there." Eddie located the single municipal building quickly enough, a town hall on one street, a police station, complete to fleets of motorcycles and squad cars parked outside, on the other. Sam chose the administrative before the enforcement. He suited up again, tightening all that could be tightened, straightening all that could be straightened, and implanting the Panama squarely up top as befit his position and dignity. Eddie left him in front of grand stairs that led to not much of a door; he climbed them and ducked between statues of Confederate heroes facing the gulf. He entered to a foyer, consulted with a clerk at a desk, got directions, entered a set of hallways to look for the city prosecutor's office. It was not at all hard to find, and he went through the opaque-glassed doors to find a waiting room with leather chairs and magazines under the rubric white only. Through a doorway that bore the sign colored only he could see another room, ruder and filled with more rickety furniture, all jammed up with pitiful Negroes. He turned to the white secretary behind a desk, whose hair was tidy but who ruled by right of a harsh face and too much makeup. He presented his card. "And, sir?" "And I wonder, ma'am, if I could have a word with Mr ..." he struggled to remember the name painted on the door, then did. "Car rut hers "What is this in reference to?" she said, with a Southern smile that meant nothing whatsoever. "Ma'am, I am a prosecutor myself, only recently retired on the basis of electoral whimsy. I wish to speak with my colleague." "You from here in Mississip?" "No, ma'am. Up a bit. Arkansas, Polk County, in the west. It's on the card." "Well, I'll see." It wasn't Carruthers who came to get him but a Mr. Redfield, an assistant city attorney, who made a show of ignoring the unfortunate Negroes in the back room and shook his hand heartily, escorting him back to a clean little office. As they walked, Sam searched his memory, and at last realized why Redfield admitted him: they'd met at some convention in Atlantic City in 1941, with a group of other prosecutors, all having a last fling before the war did with them what it did. "Glad to see you made it back, Mr. Redfield," Sam said. "Never got the chance to leave, alas," said the man, as they walked into the door of a clean little cubicle. "Four-F. Stayed here prosecuting draft dodgers while you boys had all the fun. Where'd you end up? Europe, wasn't it?" "Finally. Ended up in the artillery." "Win anything big?" "No, just did the job. Glad to be back in one piece." Redfield broke out the bourbon and poured himself and Sam a tot. Tasted fine, too. They settled into chairs, chatted somewhat aimlessly on the subject of the others in attendance of that long ago convention, who was dead, who divorced, who quit, who rich, who poor. Redfield then segued neatly into local politics and gossip, his chances for getting the big job in the next election or maybe it would be better to wait until '56, local conditions, which weren't good, except for, he laughed heartily, the coming of some Northern fool's waterproof coffin company to the South, which would put the ship carpenters to some good use until it failed, ha ha ha, or the gub'mint lost so many destroyers off Korea it needed to build some new ones. Sam didn't really care, but down South here, it was the way business was done, until finally, when a ten-second pause and a second drink announced it to be the time, he launched into particulars. He explained, concluding with his unease about the upcoming trip. "Well," said Redfield, "truth be told, I don't know much about Thebes. That's two counties up the river, and not much between but bayou and wild niggers and Choctaws living on ' and catfish, then finally your piney woods, thick as hell. Too thick for white people." "Ah, I see." "Don't know why any feller'd go up there he didn't have to." "Well, Redfield, I really don't want to. But I've accepted the job. I was hoping you'd write me a letter of introduction or give me a name of a colleague to whose good offices I could appeal." "Most counties, that'd work just fine, that'd be the way to do it. But Thebes now, Thebes is different. It's the prison farm, and that's about all. You'd have to git into our state corrections bureaucracy, and I do know those boys run their territory very tight and private-like. Don't like strangers, especially strangers from up North--" "Arkansas? Up North?" "Now, mind you, I ain't saying I'd be in agreement with that sentiment, but that would be how their minds work. I'm only clarifying here. They're a clannish bunch. They've got a system full of colored men, some of whom may be het up on juju, some on booze, some on Northern communist agitation, all that plus your natural Negro tendency toward chaos, irrationality and of' Willie thumping Willie on Saturday night just for something to do. So them boys got a whole lot on their minds, hear? I wouldn't just go poking about now." "I see," said Sam. "What I'd do, you'll pardon me for presuming, I'd just turn around, head back up North. Yes, sir. Then write that fellow in Chicago, tell him everything's fine, he don't got to worry, the death certificate be on its way. I mean, it's only probate now, isn't it? Then I'd forget all about it. Come time, he'll write some angry letters, but hell, he's a Yankee, that's all they know how to do is act all indignant." "Well, see here, Redfield, I can't do that. I took the money, I must do the work." "Oh, come on now, Vincent. Wouldn't be the first time someone took a retainer, wrote a letter, and forgot all about it. I just wouldn't be messing about in Thebes. They got their own ways of doing things up there, they don't want nobody getting in their bid ness no sir. I'd write you a letter, but to who?" "Whom," corrected Sam. "Who, whom, it don't matter. Thebes up there, up that dark river, ain't nobody up there to write to, ain't nobody up there to sit down nice and polite, sit under a fan, have a sip of rye whiskey, and palaver. They're sitting on a goddamned powder keg, what they're doing. A nigger powder keg. They got to keep it from blowing, and, way I see it, that's a hero's job." "Redfield, I have been in a variety of prisons, white and Negro both. The men who run them are many things, but heroic is about the last word I'd employ. Necessary is about as far as I'd be pleased to go." "Well, it's all clear and dandy to y'all up North, with all your answers. Down here, where it never snows and things change slow except when they change fast and ugly, it's a lot less stamped out. It can be downright messy. That's why there has to be a Thebes. The niggers have to know there's a Thebes, and by God if they get uppity, Thebes is where they'll be sent. So in its way, Thebes is more important than Jackson or Biloxi or Oxford or Pascagoula. Without Thebes, wouldn't be no Jackson or Biloxi or Oxford or Pascagoula. Without Thebes, Mississippi is the Congo and America is Africa. Thebes is what keeps the lid on. I'd hate to see you get your nose all a-twitch because you saw one guard knock a nigger down and you make a big thing over it. It just won't do. I say as one white man to another, you best stay far from Thebes. Nothing going on in Thebes you got to see or know about, you hear?" "Well, Redfield, I am sorry you see it that way. I can tell you're a man set in your ways, but I am equally set in mine. I have a job to do, that's all. I am an attorney, I took on a client, and goddammit, that is what I will do, so help me God, Thebes or no Thebes." He stood and walked out, without looking back. they drove for a while, and Eddie read Sam's gloomy mood. "Sir, any directions? I'll take you anywheres." Sam said, "I suppose we're looking for a waterfront, or a marine district or some such. I have to hire a boat and just get this done on my own." "Yes, sir. I'll try and find it for you, I surely will." It turned out Pascagoula itself had only a marine industry focused on the deep waters of the gulf; what they needed was a smaller satellite city called Moss Point, up the river a few miles, where boats ventured out into the bayous that lay to the north. Eventually, after more starting and stopping, they found a place, an old boatyard administered from a peely shed near the water. The boats were moored along docks, and they floated and bobbed on the vagaries of tide and current, bumping into one another, none of them particularly impressive craft. Sam had traveled to England on the Queen Elizabeth and across the Channel on an LST on D-Day. Even when the latter came under fire as it neared the spot to deposit him, his men and his six 105-mm howitzers on the dangerous shore, he'd felt more comfort than he did confronting this wooden fleet rotting in the sun. The boats were all some form of fishing craft, their engines inboard, their cabins low to the prow, their comforts all but absent. fishing, the sign said. And the place smelled of that commerce, with lines looped everywhere, and nets hung to dry, the sand shifty under the foot, crab husks and fish spines abandoned everywhere, the gulls flap pity-flapping overhead for a bite of flesh or cake, but otherwise still as buzzards on the wharf. Sam ducked inside to find an old boatyard salt, with bleached eyes and a face gone straight to the quality of the dried plum called a prune. "Howdy," said Sam, to no answer, but only a sullen stare. "I'd like to hire a boat." "You ain't dressed to fish." "No", not for fishing." "You just want to piddle around? See the sights?" "No, sir. Trying to get upriver to a town called Thebes." "Thebes. Don't nobody go there, except the prison supply boat once a week." "Could I hitch or hire a ride aboard it?" "Ain't likely. Them boys are coolish toward strangers. They run tight and private-like. What would be your business in Thebes?" "It's a confidential matter." "Ain't talking, huh?" "Look, I don't have to answer anybody's questions, all right? Let's just find me a boat that'll go upriver. That's your job, isn't it? You run this place? I'm not one for Mississippi lolly gagging in the hot sun when there's work to be done." "Say, you're a cuss now, ain't you? A stranger, too, from the way you talk. Well, sir, I can git you a boat and a man to take you deep into the bayou after big catfish or brown bass or whatever; I knows men who'll take you far into the gulf where the big bluefish play, and maybe you'd hook one of them and be proud to put it on your wall. Maybe you just want to be in the sun and feel it turn your pasty face a nice shade while sipping on an iced Dixie. But nobody here is going up the bayou to the Yaxahatchee and then to Thebes. Nothing up there but blue-gum niggers who'd as soon eat your liver with the spleen still attached as smile and call you sir. And if one of them blue gums takes a bite out of you, sure as winter, you goin' die before the sun sets." "I can pay." "Not the boatmen around here you can't, no sir, and that's a fact. Nobody goes up to Thebes." "Goddammit, nobody in this fool town will do what they are told to do. What is your stubbornness? Is it congenital or learned? Why such simplicity everywhere in Mississippi?" "Sir, I would not take our state's name in anger." Sam--well, he near exploded, but the old coot just looked at him, set in ancient ways, and Sam saw that screaming at a toothless geezer had no point to it, not even the simple satisfaction of making a fool uncomfortable. Instead, he turned, went back to the car. "No luck, sir?" "Not a bit of it. These Mississippians are a different breed." "They are. Must be all the swamp water they drink, and that corn liquor. Makes them stubborn and dull." "Just drive, Eddie. Drive along the bayou here. Maybe I'll notice something." The shiny Lasalle prowled among riverside shacks and cruised past the hulks of rotted boats tied up and banging against weathered docks. Overhead, the gulls pirouetted and wheeled and the hot sun beat down fiercely. Sam soon forgot he was in America. It was some strange country, particularly when the color of the people turned black, and little ragamuffin kids in tattered underwear and worn shorts raced barefoot alongside the big, slow-moving car, begging for pennies. Sam knew if he gave one a penny, he'd have to give them all a penny, so he gave none of them pennies. Then even the Negroes ran out, and they were alone; the road's cracked pavement yielded to dirt, the river disappeared behind a bank of reeds, and the whole thing seemed pointless. But it was Eddie who saw the road. "Bet there's a house there," he said. "Bet there is." "Go on down, then. Maybe there'll be a boatman." At the end of the way, he did in fact see a shack, cobbled together out of abandoned or salvaged materials, with a tar paper roof, and tires everywhere lying about. The boxy skeleton of an early '30s Nash sedan rusted away on blocks. Clam or oyster shells in the hundreds of thousands lay about like gravel. The place was rude and slatternly, but behind it a boat lay at anchor a few feet out in the wide brown river. "Hello! "Sam called. In time, an old lady leaned out, ran an eye over the man in the tan suit sitting in the backseat of the black Lasalle, then heaved up a gelatinous gob from her lungs, expelled it through a toothless mouth and grotesquely flexible lips so it flew like one of Sam's well-aimed 105s and plunked up an impact crater among the clam shells and dirt. "What you want?" she demanded. The accent was French, more or less, or rather the Cajun corruption of the French accent. "To talk to a boatman." "You come wrong place, Mister. Who told you come here?" "Madam, nobody told me to come here, I assure you. I see a boat. Therefore there is a boatman. May I speak with him, if you please." "You from revenooers?" "Of course not." "Polices You the polices?" "No, madam. Nor FBI nor the state in any of its manifestations." "You wait there." The door slammed. "Well," Sam said to Eddie, "it's a start. Not much of one, but who can say?" A few minutes passed. Some ruckus arose from the interior of the shack, and finally an old fellow popped out. He was nut-brown, wore dungarees and a torn, loose old undershirt and a pair of shoes that might have, years ago, been designed for tennis but were now a lace less ruin. His toes flopped out from the gap between last and sole in one of them. A few crude tattoos inked his biceps. His hair was a gray nest of tendrils, this way and that, and most, but not all, of his teeth remained. His face was a crush of fissures and arroyos from years in the sun, and from his own squinting. "You want?" he said, scowling. "The boatman. Are you the boatman?" "Nah, not no boatman. You go on, git out of here now. No boatman here." "You look like a boatman to me." "Agh. What you want?" "Lazear," cried the old lady from inside, "you talk to the guy now, you hear. He gots money." The old man squinted at him up and down. "I want to go upriver. Through the bayou, up the Pascagoula, to the Yaxahatchee. Into the piney woods. Up to the town they call Thebes." "Ah! Sir, nobody go to Thebes. Nothing there but nigs and dogs. Oooo-ee, nigs don't git you, dogs do. Dogs chew you real good. Whichever git you first, the other clean up after." "I understand there is a Negro town there and a prison farm. I have business. I wish to hire a boat." "You been ever where No one take you. So you finally come old Lazear?" "Where I've been is of no account. I need passage up, I need you to wait an hour or a day, and I need passage back, that is all. I am prepared to pay the prevailing rate plus a little extra." "Million dollars. You got million dollars for Lazear?" "Of course not. What do you usually get by day? I'll double it." "Sir," Eddie whispered, "I'd offer him a sum first and let him negotiate from that position." But Lazear quickly said, "I gits a hundred dollars a day guiding in the swamp." "I doubt he's seen a hundred dollars in his life," muttered Eddie. "Two hundred then. Two hundred there and back." "Four hundred. Two up, two back. Is tricky. Lost in the bayou, eaten by ', you know. No fun, no sir. Four." "A hundred is a month's wages. Take two hundred or I'll find another boat." "Two then. Two. You pay now, you come back tomorrow night." "I pay fifty now, I don't go anywhere, we leave now. We leave immediately." "No, sir. Long trip. Day's trip, maybe day anna half. Lazear got to load up the boat." "I am not leaving," said Sam, "now that I am here. And that is final, sir." "Oh, crazy man from the North. Crazy Northern man. You from New York or Boston, sir?" These people, thought Sam, they are so ignorant. The bayou soon swallowed them. If there was one river here, it was lost to Sam. There seemed to be dozens of them, tracks through marshy constructions of thorns or brambles, islets of gnarled green trees, thickets of vines, barricades of bristles. Though it was still light, the sense of day soon vanished. Lazear's boat crawled through this wet maze, chugging along uncertainly, its engine fighting to breathe, terrifying Sam each time it seemed to miss a beat or pause to take a gulp. "You know the way?" he heard himself say. "Well as my own hand, Mister," responded the old man, who quickly sweated through his clothes as he navigated under a faded blue ball cap that may have borne an allegiance to a big league team, though the insignia had long since disappeared. "I thought this was a river. It's a swamp." "Oh, she straightens out up ahead, you'll see. Best relax, sir. Nothing good comes of hurry in the swamp. You hurry, you be a dead fellow, sure. But it be fine; probably no snake be biting you, or no 'gator eat your hand off, but I cannot say for sure." Then his crumpled old face lit with glee and Sam realized it was a joke, that humor was a part of the man's madness. "Hope them Choctaws ain't in no drinking mood," said old Lazear over the sound of the motor. "If they be, sometimes it make them hungry and they eat a white fellow. Leave me be, I'm too tough, like an old chicken been eating bugs and grubs its whole life. But you, Mister, figure you'd taste right good to them red savages." "There isn't enough salt in Mississippi to tenderize me," Sam said. "They could chew me, but they could never swallow me. They'd choke on me." It wasn't only the weather. It was also the darkness, not of the day but of the overhanging, interlinked canopy. The leaves and vines knotted up, twisted among themselves, invented new forms. Strange vegetation grew on other strange vegetation, a riot of life forms, insensate, unknowable. The seal of the canopy had the effect of a greenhouse on the two men trapped beneath it; the heat rose even beyond the heat of Mississippi, and in no time at all Sam had sweated through his shirt and coat. Off came the coat, up went the sleeves, rolled tightly. He left his hat on, however, for its brim trapped the sweat that grew in his hairline and kept it from cascading down into his eyes. And of course he left his tie tight to his neck. There were certain concessions to the jungle one simply could not make. He settled into the rear of the boat, uncomfortable, nestled against a gunwale on a pile of ropes. Luxury was out of the question, and an inch or two of water perfumed with gasoline sloshed around the bottom of the boat as it chugged onward, radiating nauseating fumes and a slight sense of mirage. Or maybe it was his splitting headache. "Cheer up," cried old Lazear. "We got another five hours or so before true dark, then we lay up in a bay I know. You can sleep on dry ground, Lazear he sleep on the boat." "I'll stay with the boat, thanks," said Sam. He imagined himself alone in this place. Alone: dead. It followed. The old man now and then took a tot on a bottle of something, and once or twice handed it to Sam, who politely turned it down, until at last curiosity got the better of him. Argh! It was some hellish French stuff, absinthe or something, with the heat of fire and the tang of salt; it burned all the way down, and he suddenly shivered. "Ha! She got bite, no?" exclaimed Lazear. In time, the light dwindled further, until it seemed impossible to go onward. Lazear found a little cut in the land, a miniature cove, surrounded by high grass and a copse of gnarled trees of no identifiable features, and there put in. "I rustle up some grub. You eat." Sam was in fact ravenous. The scrofulous old man disappeared into the disreputable hatchway that led to the boat's forward interior and threw pots and pans around. He came up a few minutes later with white chunks of bread, a lump of butter at some indeterminate stage between liquid and solid, a warped segment of cheese, greasy, waxy rind still affixed, and a knife and fork. "Fancy food for a fancy guy, no?" "I've eaten worse," said Sam, who remembered K rations in the snow during the Bulge, when it was so cold he thought he'd die of it, and the Germans were said to be everywhere, and all he wanted to do was head back to Arkansas and practice law. Instead, he'd gathered his six 105s into a tight formation atop a low hill, dug them in, and waited for targets. A German panzer unit obliged, grinding through the gray snow and the gray fog a mile out, and Sam and his men stayed cool and blew it off the face of the earth in three minutes of concentrated fire. Only burning hulks were left. He slept in his clothes, feeling the drift of the boat against the slop of the river and the dampness of his feet where the water had at last overwhelmed the leather of his brogues, penetrating them. But it was good, dreamless sleep, for the temperature at last dropped and the air seemed cooled of the corruption that so embalmed it during the day. He awoke to the ritual of the coffee. Lazear had woken early, gone ashore, made a small fire. Now, as Sam watched, he boiled a pot of water, then moved it off the flame. With an old soup spoon he scooped coffee from an A & P bag, and spread it on the water. Next he produced a Clabber Girl baking powder tin, popped the lid and scooped out roasted and ground chicory root and again spread the material on the surface of the water until it seemed right. Then he swirled the black mix and let the grounds settle and steep. The smell of coffee and wood smoke made Sam's stomach rumble. The old man sloshed through the water and handed Sam up a tin cup of the stuff; it cut to the bone, hot, raw and powerful. The French and their coffee; they were good at it beyond arrogance. As Sam tried to focus, he found the fog was not in his mind but in the swamp. Tendrils of cottony moisture lay low on the water, curled through the trees, licked at the leaves. "How much longer?" "We hit the big river soon enough. Then we bear right where she splits, and that part takes on the name Yaxahatchee. That one's wider open so it'll go smoother. Don't you be falling in. That water deep and the current can be strong. Suck a man down, spit him back with his soul missing, his nose blue, his fingers shriveled and his false teeth out and floated off somewheres." "Sir, I have no false teeth." "Whatever you got, if you go in, the river, she take it. She's a black bitch of a river, you see. You don't be messin' ' with her, or she fuck you good." "My trust in you is absolute," Sam said. He settled back, got through a few shaky moments when the old man seemed to have trouble interesting the engine in life again, until at last it sputtered, coughed, shivered, then began to pull the boat back out from the shore. They coursed through the blackness, passing in the morning fog a I ghost town, its rickety houses moss-grown and semi fallen "What happened there?" "Oh, dey got through Indians and plague and flood okay, but then some dogs, wild dogs, tore up some kids there. Kilt three. Little girls, I think, caught ' in the open, kilt ' fast, bled ' out. The people just gave it up after that. The swamp, she be a cruel bad place." Sam looked away, trying to banish the horror of the idea of it from his mind. The girls, the dogs, the screams, the smell of blood. He shook his head. "Yah! Ha! Ain't no picnic out here, no siree. You ain't where you from, not by no long shot." At last the swamp seemed to diminish its grip on the earth. The gnarled trees, the jungly vines and dinosaur vegetation gave way to longleaf pines arrayed over ridges of land, saw grass and other green clutter, all leading to bleak shores. The river widened, deepened, turned ever blacker, grew swifter. Then it split. It broke into two forks, one headed east, the other west. Neither looked promising: highways of dark river, the texture no longer smooth as oil or glass but now ever so slightly giving evidence of disturbance, as if strong currents lurked beneath, hungry to pull a man to his death. "You hang on now, Mister, she can be rough," the old man cried, as he steered the weathered craft to the right ward of the two torrents, and took them dead up the center. They progressed steadily against a current that suggested they try elsewhere. The piney woods sealed them off from any evidence of life except the pines themselves, low, heavy with gum and tar of some sort. They were turpentine trees, bled in the fall for the chemical that oozed out of them. The weather remained malignant, even as the sun burned the last of the fog away, and if pines had ever reminded Sam of Northern glades as in Wisconsin or Minnesota, these were not such pines. They seemed to form two walls and a long, winding corridor, a madman's dream of nothingness, while above the sun scalded them and no wind dared stir. Sam glanced at his watch, feeling the itch of sweat and bites all over his skin. He even thought about loosening his tie, but he'd fought the Battle of the Bulge in a tie, so that was really only the last thing one did before accepting death. It was by now nearly 11:00 a.m. "How much further?" "Be patient, Mister. You cannot rush the river. The current's agin' us, she don't want us going there. Be glad you gots planks beneath to keep your bottom from what's under, yes sir." And so it went, seemingly endless, until at last, unbidden, as if out of a dream, Thebes revealed itself on a far shore. He wondered: Am I in Africa? For what he beheld was something out of a dream of a lost place, a place so benighted and run-down it seemed to have no right to exist in the country he knew to be America. Not even the meanest Negro shanty towns of Arkansas seemed so raw and sad. It was a collection of slatternly dogtrot cabins, tar-paper roofs scorching in the hot sun, low, rotting warehouses off to a side by docks, mud streets that were too congealed to sustain wheels of any sort, much less automobiles. The ruins of what must have been a sawmill stood isolated a bit farther down the river, most walls gone, nothing but decaying frame and un turning wheel left. It seemed somehow to have devolved, to have gone backward in time. "She ain't much. Why you want to come all this way for this place, I don't know. Merde. Do you know? Merde, shit you say in English. It's shit. A town of shit. Who could live in such a place?" As the old man's boat maneuvered toward dockage, Sam thought the place was as abandoned as the last town, where the wild dogs had killed the little girls. But at the same time, he felt the presence of eyes. A boat was so rare, he assumed, it would be remarkable to such a place. Every eye would be upon him, and indeed he felt every eye upon him, but again he saw no evidence of life. Lazear got in close, set the course, and stilled the engine. "You get up front," he commanded, and Sam did what he was told. There, on the bobbing prow, he found a coil of rope. When the boat glanced off the dock, he leaped, pulling on the rope, tightening boat to dock, then looping it to a post set aslant in the water. He glanced back, saw that the old man had gone aft to secure the stern by similar method. He walked back. "I don't know how long this will take. You stay here. You stay out of bars or whorehouses or whatever temptations they have here. I have business; if it seems to run long, I'll notify you somehow. You do not leave without me. Do you understand?" "Oh, yah, I stay forever. I got nothing to do but stay till the lawyer man gits his money." "Get me my briefcase." Lazear found it, the one pristine object aboard, and handed it over. Sam straightened and tightened his tie, pulled his coat to cure it of wrinkles, made sure his hat was set straight, and went to work. was it only a town of children? Little Negro scamps tracked him from behind the first line of buildings. He could not see them, but he heard them scurrying in the mud, and several times, drawn by flashes of movement, glanced over, but his look drove them back. And if he advanced on them, they scattered. Otherwise the town was seemingly deserted. There was no commerce, nor any sidewalk. A few storefronts were abandoned. Mostly the places were cabins, many to his eye as abandoned as the storefronts. Yet still he had a queasy feeling, a sense again of being looked at, inspected. It brought a shiver of discomfort. As he climbed the slope from the river, he at last came upon an adult woman. Her eyes were big, her face a ruin. She was swaddled in a dress of many layers and colors, all pulled into one tapestry; her hair was bandannaed tightly to her skull, and she had no teeth at all. She was a Negro mama, a formidable figure in the Negro community, Sam knew. And she didn't seem insane, but regarded him with only sullen dull hatred. "Madam, excuse me, I am looking for a county seat, a municipal building, the sheriff's department? You could possibly direct me?" She responded in a gibberish alien to his ears. Was she still African? Had she not been Americanized? "Madam, I do not understand. Could you speak more slowly?" He picked out a word or two of English in her mewl, but she grew frustrated with the stupidity on his face, and shooed him away with a dismissive, abrupt gesture, then gathered herself with dignity, pulled her shawl tight about her, and strutted away. But she stopped and turned, then pointed down an alley. She said something that he deciphered to mean: down that way. He walked down it, the mud sucking at his shoes. Here and there a door slammed shut, a window closed, people not seen clearly hastened away. He felt as if he were the plague, Mr. Death himself, with a scythe, be hooded a pale slice of darkness, and all human things fled his presence. Then he came to it, or what had been it. Fire had claimed it. A blackened stone wall still stood, but the timbers were all scorched and collapsed, and rogue bricks lay about in the weeds of what had once been a public square. No pane of glass remained in the ruin, once upon a time some kind of courthouse building after the proud fashion of the South, with offices and departments and lockups and a garage or stable out back. Scavengers had picked it clean, and moss or other forms of vegetation had begun to claim it for their own. So this was why there was no "official" Thebes County, why no letters were answered. It had burned, and perhaps with that the will that claims civilization out of nothingness was somehow finally and permanently broken. Now what? he wondered. It's all gone? It burned, most everybody left town, and only a few hopeless cases remain. Those that do must eke out a living somehow from the prison farm yet another mile or so upriver. He walked on, not out of purpose but more in the hopes of encountering an inspiration. Then, progressing a bit farther, he noticed a low, rude shack whose door was open, and from whose chimney pipe issued a trail of smoke, thin and white. Batting at a fly that suddenly buzzed close to his face, he leaned in to discover something of a public house, though a rude caricature of it. It was empty but for an old man at the bar and an old man behind the bar. No array of liquor stood behind the bartender, only a motley collection of dusty glasses. Beer signs from the twenties dustily festooned the dim room, and dead neon curled on the wall, which could be decoded, with effort, into the names of the commercial brews of many decades past. "Say there," said Sam, "I need some help. Can you direct me?" "Ain't nowheres be directin', suh," said the bartender. "Well, I'll be the judge of that. Can you guide me to what succeeded the town hall? Surely there's still some authority around. Possibly the registrar's office, the tax collector. Or a police or sheriff's station. This is the county seat, isn't it?" "Used to be. Not much here no more. Can't help none. You g'wan, git back to that boat. Ain't nuffin here you want to know about." "Surely there are sheriff's deputies." "Dey fine you iffn dey want," said the other. "Best pray they don't want you." "Well, isn't this the limit?" said Sam to nobody. "It all burned down ' fo' years back, Mister. Everybody done left." "I saw it. So now there's nothing?" "Only the Farm." "The Prison Farm, yes. I suppose I shall have to go there." "Don't nobody go there but gots to go there, suh. In chains. Thems only ones. You don't want to go there. You best be on ' your business." "Then let me ask you this," he said, and went on about Lincoln Tilson, the retired Negro whose fate he had come down to locate. But as he spoke, he began to sense that his two coconversationalists were growing extremely unhappy. They squirmed as if in minor but persistent pain, and their eyes popped about nervously, as if scanning for interlopers. "Don't know nuffin' ' dat," said the one. "Not a damn thing," chimed in the other. "So the name means nothing to you?" "No suh." "All right. Wish I could thank you for your help, but you've not been any at all. Don't you respect white people down here?" "Suh, jus' tryin' to git by." "Yes, I see." He turned and left, and began the long trek back to the boat. He knew now he had to go to the prison, where surely what records remained were kept, if they were kept at all. It seemed out of another century: the possibility that a man like Lincoln Tilson, a man of accomplishment and property, even by these standards some prosperity, could just disappear off the face of the earth, leaving no trace of paper, no police report, no death certificate, no witnesses, no anything. That was not how you did it. Sam's mind was clearly arranged. He appreciated order above all things, for order was the beginning of all things. Without elemental order there was nothing; it wasn't a civilization unless undergirded by a system of laws and records, of taxes and tabulations. This down here: it was not right. He felt some fundamental law was being flouted before his very eyes. He rounded the corner and began to head down the slope to the river. That's when he saw the dock, yet several hundred yards before him, and realized that Lazear was gone. Goddamn the man! But of course: this whole journey was a fiasco from the start, and how could he have trusted an old coot like Lazear? You'd as soon trust a snake in the grass. He walked down, hoping that perhaps Lazear had taken the craft out into the deep water for some technical reason or other. But no: the boat, the old man, both were gone. Nothing stirred, nothing moved, behind him the ghost town in the mud, before him the empty river, and nothing around for hundreds of square miles but wilderness and swamp. Sam was not the panicky sort. He simply grew grumpier and more obdurate in the face of adversity. He turned, convinced that he should find the first adult he saw and demand explanations. But to his surprise, almost as if awaiting him, the old mama lady stood nearby. How had she approached without his hearing? Was she magical? Don't be a ridiculous fool, he thought. This isn't mumbo jumbo voodoo hoodoo, it was the blasted, backwater South, up some sewer of a river, where folks had degraded out of loss of contact with an outside world. He was in no danger. Negroes did not attack white people, so he would be all right. "Madam, I have in my pocket a crisp ten-dollar bill. Would that be sufficient for a night's lodging and a simple meal? Unless there's a hotel, and I suspect there's not a hotel within a thousand square miles." He held the bill out; she snatched it. He followed her. the house was no different from any other, only a bit farther into the woods. It was another dogtrot cabin, low, dusty, decrepit and tar paper roofed like the others. A few scrawny pigs grunted and shat in a pen in the front yard, and a mangy dog lay on the porch, or what passed for porch, but was just floorboards under some overhanging warped roof. The dog growled. She kicked it. "Goddamn dog!" Off it ran, squealing. It clearly wasn't her dog, only a dog she allowed to share space with her, and when feeling generous rewarded it for its companionship with a bone or something. "Ou' back. You go where de chickens be." "Why, thank you," he said, wasting a smile on her, a pointless exercise because she had no empathy in her for him, and was only interested in minimally earning that ten spot. He walked ' back, and there was a low coop, wired off from the rest of the yard, and a few chickens bobbed back and forth as they walked onward. "Home, sweet home," he said to nobody except his own ironic sense of humor, then ducked into the place. All the rooms were occupied, and the innkeeper, an orange rooster, raised a ruckus, but Sam, sensing himself to be the superior creature, stamped his foot hard, and gobble-gobbled as he did for his youngest children at Thanksgiving and the bull bird flustered noisily off in a cloud of indignant feathers and squawks. Sam took the best bedroom, that being a corner where the straw looked cleanest and driest, and sat himself down. Dark was falling. He wanted, before the light was gone, to write out an account of his day for his employer. He filled his Schaeffer from a little Scripp bottle in his briefcase. Then he set to work on his trusty yellow legal pad, soon losing contact with the real world. He didn't hear her when she entered. Ilk, "Here," she finally said. "Sompin' eat." "What? Oh, yes, of course." It was a foil pie plate, her finest china, filled with steaming white beans in some sort of gravy, and a chunk of pan bread. She had a cup of hot coffee with it and utensils that turned out to be clean and shiny. "Thank you, madam," he said. "You keep a fine homestead." "Ain't my home," she said. "Used to be. Ain't no more." "It isn't your home?" "It be the Store's." "The Store?" "The Farm Store. Onliest store dese parts. Da store own everything." "Oh, you must be mistaken. If the Store is part of the state government, it can't loan funds against property, calculate interest, and foreclose, not without court hearings and court-appointed attorneys. There are laws to prevent such things." "Da Store be the law here. Dat's all. You eat up them beans. Tomorrow you go about your bid ness I could git in trouble wif dem. Dey don't like no outsiders. You won't say I told you nuffin?" "Of course not." After that, she had nothing left to say, and he scraped the last of the beans off the plate. She took it, and left silently. He saw her heading back to her cabin, stooped and hunched, broken with woe. Lord, I cannot wait to put this place behind me. He made his plans. He'd clean up tomorrow as best he could given the circumstances, then go to the Store or the office of the Farm, where all power seemed concentrated. He would get to the bottom of this or know why. Once he'd taken off his shoes and his hat and at last his tie, and folded his jacket into a little package that would do for a pillow, it didn't take long for him to fall asleep. For all its scratchiness, the straw was warm and dry. His roommates cooed quietly on their nests, and even the rooster seemed at last to accept him; it realized he was no threat when it came to fertilizing the hens. He slept easily; he was, after all, near exhaustion. The dreams he had were dead literal, without that kind of logic-free surrealism that fills most sleepers' minds. In Sam's dreams, the world made the same sense it made in reality; the same laws, from gravity to probate, still obtained; reason trumped emotion and the steady, inexorable fairness of the system proved out in the end, as it always did. Sometimes he wished he had a livelier subconscious, but there was nothing that could be done with such a defect. He was not dreaming when they woke him. He was in dark, black nothingness; the light in his eyes had the quality of pain and confusion. He sat up, bolt awake, aware of shapes, the smell of horses, the sense of movement all ' him. Three flashlights had him nailed. "Say, what on earth is--" he began to bluster, but before he could get it out, somebody hit him with a wooden billy club across the shoulder. The pain was fearsome, and he bent double, his spirit initially shattered by it. His hand flew to the welt. "Jesus!" he screamed. "Git him, boys." "Goddamn, don't let him squirm away." "Luther, if he fights, whop him agin!" "You want another goddamn taste, Mister? By God, I will skull you next goddamn time." They were on him. He felt himself pinned, turned, then cuffed. "That's it. Bring him out now." He was dragged out. There were three deputies, husky boys, used to using muscle against flesh, who shoved him along, their lights beaming in his face, blinding him. The cuffs enraged him. He had never been handcuffed in his life. "What in God's name do you think you're doing! I am an attorney at-law, for God's sake, you have no right at all to--" Another blow lit up his other arm and he stumbled to the earth in the agony of it. "That ought to shut him up," said the man on horseback, who was in command. "Load him in the meat wagon and let's go." ilk. It smelled of pines. The odor actually was not unpleasant; it was brisk, somehow clean, and pine needles, like tufts of feathers, light brown and fluffy, lay everywhere. But it was still a prison. Sam's arms were both swollen, and when he clumsily peeled away the clothes he wore, he saw two purplish-yellow bruises inscribed diagonally across each biceps, as if laid there by an expert. One was not harder than the other. In fact, they were mirror images. No bones were broken, no skin cut, just the rotted oblong tracing exactly the impact of the billy club upon his upper arms, each delivered with the same force, at the same angle, to the same debilitating effect. Sam's arms were numb, and his hands too unfeeling to grab a thing. He could make but the crudest of movements. When he had to pee in the bucket in the corner, undoing his trouser buttons was a nightmare, but he would not let these men do it for him, if they would, which was questionable. He knew he had been beaten by an expert. Someone who had beaten men before, had thought critically about it, had done much thorough research, and knew where to hit, how to hit, how hard to hit, and what marks the blows would leave, which, after a week or so, would be nothing at all. Without photographic evidence, it would only be his word against a deputy's in some benighted Mississippi court room, in front of some hick judge who thought Arkansas was next to New York, New York, the home of communism. His head ached. His temper surged, fighting through the pain. It was some kind of cell in the woods, and he had a sensation of the piney woods outside, for he could hear the whisper of needles rustling against each other in the dull breeze. He said again to the bars and whoever lurked down the corridor, "I DEMAND to see the sheriff. You have no right or legal authority to hold me. You should be horsewhipped for your violations of the law." But no one bothered to answer, except that once a loutish deputy had slipped a tray with more beans, some slices of dry, salty ham, and a piece of buttered bread on the plate, as well as a cup of coffee. Was he in the prison? Was this Thebes, where uppity niggers were sent to rot? He didn't think so. There was instead a sense of desolation about this place, the stillness of the woods, the occasional chirping of birds. The window was too high to see out of, and he could see nothing down the hall. His arms hurt, his head hurt, his dignity hurt, but what hurt even more was his sense of the system corrupted. It cut to the core of the way his mind worked. People were not treated like this, especially people like him, which is to say white people of means and education. The system made no sense if it didn't protect him, and it needed to be adjusted. "Goddammit, you boys will pay!" he screamed, to nobody in particular, and to no sign that anybody heard him. At last--it had to be midafternoon, fourteen or fifteen full hours after his capture--two guards came for him. "You put your hands behind yourself so's we can cuff you down now," said the one. "And goddammit, be fast about it, Sheriff ain't got all day, goddammit." "Who do you think--" "I think you gimme lip, I'll lay another swat on you, Dad, and you won't like it a dad gum bit." So this was the fellow who had hit him: maybe twenty-five, blunt of nose and hair close-cropped, eyes dull as are most bullies', a lot of beef behind him, his size the source of his confidence. "G'wan, hurry, Mister, I ain't here to wait on your dad gum mood." At last Sam obliged, turning so that they could cuff him, a security measure that was, in a civilized state like Arkansas, reserved for the most violent and unpredictable of men in the penal system, known murderers and thugs who could go off on a rampage at no provocation at all. It was for dealing with berserkers. Once they had him secured, they unlocked the cell and took control of him, one on each arm, and walked him down the wood corridor, then into a small interrogation room. They sat him down, and, as per too many crime movies and more police stations than Sam cared to count, a bright light came into his eyes. The door opened. A large man entered, behind the light so that Sam could not see details, but he made out a dark uniform, black or brown, head to toe, with a beige tie tight against his bulgy neck, and a blazing silver star badge on his left breast. He wore a Sam Browne belt, shined up, and carried a heavy revolver in a flapped holster, his trousers pressed and lean, down to cowboy boots also shiny and pointed. "Samuel M. Vincent," he said, reading from what Sam saw was his own wallet. "Attorney-at-law, Blue Eye, Polk County, Arkansas. And what is your business in Thebes, Mr. Vincent?" "Sheriff, I am a former prosecuting attorney, well versed in the law and the rightful usage of force against suspects. In my state, what your men have done is clearly criminal. I would indict them on counts of assault and battery under flag of authority, sir, and I would send them away for five years, and we would see how they swagger after that. Now I " "Mr. Vincent, what is your business, sir? You are not in your state, you are in mine, and I run mine a peculiar way, according to such conditions as I must deal with. I am Sheriff Leon Gattis, and this is my county. I run it, I protect it, I make it work. Down here, sir, it is polite of an attorney to inform the po-lice he be makin' inquiries. For some reason, sir, you have seen fit not to do so, and so you have suffered some minor inconveniences of no particular import to no Mississippi judge." "I did not do so, Sheriff Gattis, because there were no deputies around. I spent most of yesterday looking for them. They prefer to work after midnight! I insist " "You hold on there, sir. You are getting on my wrong side right quick. Any nigger could have told you where we are, and if they didn't it's ' they thought you's up to no good. God bless ', they have the instinct for such judgments. So, Mr. Vincent, you're going to have to cooperate, and the sooner you do, the better. What are you doing in Thebes County? What is your business, sir?" "Good Lord. You set up a system than cannot be obeyed, then punish when one does not obey. It is--" Whap! The sheriff had not hit him, but he'd smacked his hand hard on the wooden table between them, the room echoing with reverberation from the force of the blow. "I ain't here to talk no philosophy with you. Goddamn you, sir, answer my questions or your time here will be hard. That is the way we do things here." Sam shook his head. Finally he explained: he was after a disposition or certificate in re the death of a Negro named Lincoln Tilson named in a will being probated in Cook County--that is, Chicago--Illinois. "Thought you had a Chicago look to you." "Sir, if it's your business, and it's not, I have never been in the state of Illinois and know nothing at all of it." "What I hear, up there, the Negro is king. Ride ' in fancy Cadillac cars, have white girls left and right, eat in the restaurants, a kind of jigaboo heaven, if you know what I mean." "Sir, I feel certain you exaggerate. I have been to New York, and that town, progressive though it may be, is nothing as you describe." "Maybe I do exaggerate. But, by God, that ain't goin' happen in Thebes. Down here, we got a natural order as God commands, and that's how it's goin' to be." "Sir, I feel that change will come, because change is inevit--" "So you are one of them?" "Uh--" "One of them." "I'm not clear--" "One of them. You talk like one of us, but you be one of them. Northern agitators. Communists, Jews, God knows who, what or why, but up to nothing good. Is that you, Mr. Vincent? Are you a communist or a Jew?" "I am a Democrat and a Scotch Presbyterian. You have no right to--" But the sheriff was off. "Oh, we done heard. We done been warned. We onto y'all. Y'all come down here and stir our niggers all up. You think you doin' them a favor. Yes sir, you helping them. But what you be doin' is filling their fool heads full of things that can't never be, and so you be making them more unhappy rather than less unhappy, while you be gittin' it ready to tear down what we done built down here, on nothing but sweat and blood and guts and our own dying. Oh, I know your sort, Mister. You are the pure-D devil his self only you think you doin' good." "I am a firm believer in the rules, and I--" "The rules! Mister, I got a county full of piney-woods niggers who all they want to do is fuck or fight, don't matter much to them." "Sir, I didn't say--" "Now I'll tell you what. I will make inquiries. I will git you your certificate, and my deputies will get you out of our county. Don't you never come back, you hear? That's the goddamnedest best you're gonna git down here, and I am cutting you an exclusive deal because you are white, even if I believe you be deluded close to mental instability. Thebes ain't for outsiders. You want Mississippi hospitality, you go to Biloxi, you square on that, partner?" "I see the point," said Sam. "Yes, sir, I bet you do. Boys, move Mr. Vincent to holding, where he'll be more comfortable. He's ' to leave us." sam was no longer locked up, nor did he remain handcuffed. He was free to move about the general area, but had, under orders and strict observation, to stay close to the station, as it was called, and not to go near to or rile any Negro people. They let him take a nice shower indoors, where they themselves kept clean, and he got himself back into some kind of civilized order. He was fed, and the food was better than anything he had eaten since leaving Pascagoula, beans and ham, fried potatoes, heavy chicory coffee, fresh bread. These boys here, they lived pretty good, in what was a kind of barracks in the woods, a good mile out of town, which, he now saw, was protected against attack by a stout barbed-wire fence. There was a stable here, for the deputy force seemed more like some kind of light cavalry than any law enforcement unit. The men lounged about like soldiers, keeping their uniforms sharp, riding off on patrol now and then in twos. There was a duty room with assignments and rotation, a roster board; in all, it seemed far more military than police. Finally, a rider came, and after conferring with some of the deputies, he came and got Sam, who was put back into the wagon, though this time not bound or beaten. He sat up front with the driver, who drove the team through the piney woods--Lord, they were dense, seeming to stretch out forever into the looming darkness--and then through the town, dead now as it was then. They approached the river, the big wagon and the thundering horses driving back what Negroes remained in the street. As they passed the public house, Sam felt the eyes of the two old men he'd spoken to watching him glumly. Down at the dock, a happy sight greeted Sam. It was Lazear, back from wherever, standing by his boat, whose old motor churned a steady tune. The sheriff stood there also. Sam climbed down from the wagon, on unsure legs, then caught himself. "All right, Mr. Arkansas Traveler, here is your official document. You'll see that it's right and proper." It appeared to be. Under the seal of the state of Mississippi and the state motto it was an official certificate of death for one lincoln tilson, Negro, age unknown but elderly, of Thebes, Thebes County, Mississippi, October 10th, 1950, by drowning, namely in the river Yaxahatchee. It was signed by a coroner in an illegible scrawl. "There, sir. The end of that poor man. The river can be treacherous. It takes you down and it does things to you, and out you come three days later. Poor Negro Tilson was such a victim. It's a miracle that after that time in the water, he was still identifiable." "Sheriff, who identified him?" "Now, Mr. Arkansas Traveler, we don't keep records on every dead Negro in the county. I don't recollect, nor do I recollect the exact circumstances. Nor, sir, do I fancy a chat with you on the subject, while you interrogate me and try to prove your Northern cleverness over my simplicity." "I see." "You have been given fair warning. Now you get out of our town, and don't you come back nohow. There is nothing here for you and you have done your task." Sam looked at the document; there was nothing to it to convince him that it couldn't have been fabricated in the last hour or so. But here it was: the out. The end. The finish. He had earned his retainer, and would file a complete report to his client, and what would happen next would be up to the client. "Well, Sheriff, this is not the way I do things, but I see things down here are slow to change, and it is not my charge to do that. I fear when change comes, it will be a terror for you." "It ain't never coming, not this far south. We have the guns and the will to make that prediction stick, I guarantee you. Now, sir, every second you stand there is a second you try my hospitality to an even more severe degree." Sam stepped down into Lazear's boat and didn't look back as it pulled from the shore and headed out to the center of the dark river. Sam sat in the prow of the boat, too angry to talk to Lazear, uninterested in the feeble excuses the man had thrown his way on the whys and wherefores of his seeming abandonment. He felt two powerful, conflicting emotions. The first was relief. Thebes was enchanted, somehow, by evil. Who knew what secrets lurked there, what horrors had been perpetuated under its name, who was buried where and how they had perished? It was frightening, and escaping its pressures brought a sense of complete liberation. So a part of Sam was happy. He was done, and now it was a mere progression of travel and he could return to his life, chastened, as it were, by exposure to the lurid and the raw, aware that the world in general was uninterested in his experiences and it would best be forgotten or filed away for distant future usage. But there was also a powerful, seething anger. His mind was orderly yet not overly rigid. He understood that order was a value and from order all good, great things stemmed. Yet order was only a value when it guaranteed and sustained those good, great things. When it actively opposed them, where it destroyed them, where its rigidness was so powerful and its administration so violent that it was only concerned with its own ideas, something evil happened, and it filled Sam with rage. He felt the thwack when the deputy's two expert blows had smashed his arms, and the fear when under the influence of pain all will to resist had fled him. He remembered the helplessness of being bound and forced into the wagon, the wait for the sheriff as that man took his own sweet time, the fear on the faces of the Negroes whom he ruled so absolutely, the brazenness of the phony document that had guaranteed the end of his days in Thebes. And Sam finally wondered this one last thing: Did he have the strength, the guts, the steel, to stand up to it, to oppose the ways of Thebes? He knew the answer. The answer was, No. It wasn't in him. It wasn't in anybody. You just got out and didn't look back and you went back to a better life, and soon enough the memories eroded and you won your election and you fathered your children and you won the approval of powerful men and you had a career, a set of memories, a fine tombstone, the respect of those who stayed behind when you had passed. That was enough. He sat back, having at last faced and come to terms with his own weakness. On either side of the river, the piney woods fled by, diminished by the steady chugging of Lazear's old motor, the day a bit cooler than before. Before him the river wove and bobbed, dark, calm and smooth. It was growing toward late afternoon; he assumed that in a few hours or so, when they had penetrated the great bayou, they would lay up as before, then continue in the morning. He began to calculate. They'd be in Pascagoula then by late afternoon; he'd call his wife and alert her that everything was fine. He could spend a night in a fine hotel--if there was such in Pascagoula ... wait, then, no, a better idea. He could hire a car and zip down the coast a bit, possibly to lush Biloxi, and take a room there, where surely there'd be fine hotels. Maybe he'd take a day or so; the stipend he'd earned would certainly cover it, and possibly he could even expense it, as the recovery time from his ordeal was a fair charge, was it not? He saw himself having an elegant meal under a slowly rotating fan, amid ferns and palms; outside there'd be a sparkling beach. The meal would commence with oysters fresh from Mother Gulf, move on to fresh sea bass or trout grilled or poached in butter, all served by an elegant black gentleman in a white cotton jacket. The room would be full of beautiful people, happy people, the best kind of people that our great country could produce. What a riposte. What a recovery. Then, the next morning, on to New Orleans, refreshed and restored; from there by rail up to Memphis, the drive over to Blue Eye and home, home, home, home. Home, he thought. Home, home, home. Then he saw the body. He happened to be looking down, in the black water, and the shock was such that perhaps it was an apparition, something that his momentarily deranged mind had conjured. But he knew in the next second that no, this was reality, no haunt, no ghost, nothing from the subconscious. It was a Negro boy, a few inches under the surface, bled white by immersion, his features puffy, his body in the cruciform as if inflated, his fingers abulge, his eyes wide and empty, his mouth open black and empty, his clothes in tatters, gliding by. Then he was gone. Sam blinked, stunned. He saw something just ahead, floating, its low silhouette just breaking the surface, and as Lazear's old craft fled by, he made this victim out to be a girl child, also Negro, but facedown to spare him those open eyes staring into nothingness. He looked: on the surface of the water appeared to be the remnants of a massacre by drowning; bodies floated everywhere, as if a vessel had capsized and all perished. There had to be at least ten, drifting, riding the currents, bobbing this way and that. "Stop the boat! Goddamn you, stop the boat!" he screamed, over the beating of the engine. Lazear looked up, surprised, yanked from whatever crude reverie had occupied him. "Stop the boat, you idiot!"" Sam cried, and rushed back. Lazear didn't stop it, but reined in the throttle so that the boat merely idled, drifting. "What you say?" "There're people in the water! Look, look around, people. A Negro family, all gone, all lost, stop the boat." Lazear just shook his head. "Sir, I done top you. In de river, de currents is ugly and mean. Suck people down all de time. Send ' back bloated and dead. Nothing we can do but press on. Can't do them no good. Make a report when you gets back to civilization if it makes you feel good. I can't be wastin' no time on this." And with that he bent forward and readjusted the throttle to a steady roar and the boat lurched back into But Sam took him in two strong hands, shook him once malevolently, then almost quite literally threw him into the rear of the boat. The old man raised a hand in fear as Sam advanced upon him. "Don't hit me, sir! I didn't do nothing to them people, I swear. They's fleeing the Store, they got in trouble, and the river done et ' up, is all." Sam declared, in the full stentorian powers of his voice, "You slimy little maggot, you turn this boat around and we will recover those that we can. Then we will head back to Thebes and we will get that good for-nothing sheriff off his fat ass and all his deputies and we will come back here with full lights running. There may be a child out here, clinging to a branch or ashore in the weeds. We will save that child, or by God, we will die trying, and that is the way it'll be." Now he bent, and with one hand pulled Lazear up, and propelled him toward the boat's cockpit, and the old man hit it, and sank to the deck. "Get your ass up, and get going, sir, or I will make you wish you had never ever been born." "Yes sir, yes sir," said Lazear, pale with terror. As it turned out, Sam quickly realized there was no point in recovering any bodies. It would take too much time, and it was a job for professionals with the right equipment. He realized those bodies therefore might never be recovered. Thus, as newly proclaimed captain of Lazear's vessel by right of mutiny, he determined that the correct course of action was to return to the Thebes dock as swiftly as possible. He gave these directions to Lazear. "And if de motor burn out, what then?" "Then I will whip your scrawny ass until it bleeds. You just get us there faster than you got us here, you wretched old fool." "Yes, sir." "What did you mean when you said ' the Store." What was the meaning of that comment?" "Sir, I don't recollect saying nothing ' dat." "Listen here, you brainless idiot, you said it flat out in plain English just minutes ago. Now explain it, or once again I will shake you "I'll your teeth, all three of them, rattle like dice in a cup." Glumly Lazear looked ahead. A bitterness settled over him. He acted as though God had selected him alone to bear this monstrous cross. He sighed. Sam kicked his scrawny ass. "Does that help? Clear the memory, does it?" "You din't hear nothing from me. Dey kills me dey know I talkin' their business. Okay? Kill me dead. Kill you dead as well." "Talk, damn your soul." "The Store own everything the nigs got. Nigs take credit from the Store, fall behind, they don't get this interest thing, the Store forecloses, and then they owned by the Store. Heard the nigs talking ' it once." "Yes. And so?" "And so, dey gots to work it off. Dey works for de man. Never can leave, never can go nowhere, tell nobody, no nothing. Stay and work for food is all. "Every once a while, nigs git fed up and sneak off at night. Some make it, some don't. Dat family, dey no got no luck. The river et '. Maybe dey's better off, though." "Good Lord," said Sam, disgusted. How did they know? But they did. Somehow, in Thebes, they always knew. The old boat maneuvered its way in and Lazear lined it up just fine and laid it up next to the dock. There, Sheriff Leon Gattis and no less than four deputies, all uniformed and heavily armed, awaited. Their horses, lathered and nervous, milled behind them. Together, men and horses, they looked like some apocalyptic drawing out of Dore, along the four-horsemen-of-death motif. But Sam did not care. "Sheriff," he cried, as he climbed up, "you'd best get your boys onto the river. A Negro boat has overturned some miles down, and there yet may be survivors. You'll need powerful flashlights, for I fear the light will be gone by the time--" "Didn't you and me reach a agreement, sir? You's to leave town, and not never come back on no account. And on that bargain, you would not be prosecuted for resisting arrest or generally stirring up the population." "Sir, I am not here to quibble. People's lives may be at stake. For God's sake, time's wasting. Get those boys of yours on to the goddamn water and get them going. This is a river town, surely you have boats. This is not some paltry charge, this is a public safety emergency." "Goddammit, Mister, you must be thick of the skull or water brained or some such. Didn't know they growed such knot heads in Arkansas. Heard it was an all right place, though I can see now it produces too many of the daft persuasion." "Sheriff, I insist that--" "Mister, I am not sending boys out on that dark river to look for fleeing Negroes. The currents are tricky, the fog comes in and twists things around, and before you know it, you have white men in trouble as much as black ones." "My God, we are talking about human beings!" "If they go out there after dark, they know damned well the chance they take." "Sheriff," a merry deputy called, "bet it's Jimmy and Glory and them all." "That Jimmy, never was no good," said another. "That one always be in trouble. Lord, he done got Glory and the chilluns drowned, too." "We'll ride over and check in the morning." "Sheriff," Sam implored, "am I to understand you'll do nothing? Nothing at all. Possibly a child--" "Ain't no children out there, sir. The children are all dead. These people flee their responsibilities and they make plumb fool decisions and take terrible chances, and they pay the price, most of them do. Jimmy owed money, he should have stayed like a man and worked off his debt, ' of running off to welch on it." "Sir, I have to tell you: If I don't see evidence of public safety activity on your part, I will myself make a report to the governor of Mississippi and--" "Haw!" laughed one of the deputies, "ain't that a good one. He's gonna go to Jackson and tell old Bilbo ' a drownded nigger!" The others hooted. "Sir," the sheriff said, "tell who you wish whatever you want. In Jackson they consider that we do our job well down here. We handle the uppity niggers, or rather the prison does. We make the state run, and we do our part to keep order, and I'm a proud man because of it. Now I warned you to leave this town." "Mr. Leon," Lazear suddenly proclaimed, "don't make us leave now. I don't know de river in de dark; we end up dead as them nigs." About three different conversations seemed to explode simultaneously: the deputies continued to enjoy the humorous idea of Sam's audience at the state capital; Lazear enjoined the sheriff to let them stay the night so that he did not have to face the river in the dark; and Sam continued to demand action on the missing family. The sheriff finally reached to his holster, pulled out a big revolver, and fired a single shot to quiet them all. Its boom clapped and whanged, rolled and reverberated. Total silence followed as all looked at the large man with the revolver in hand. "Y'all, you git back on patrol," he told his deputies. "Old man, you stay here, moored to that dock. At first light, you be gone, or by God, I'll make you wish you had. And you, Mr. Lawyer, you git back on that boat, and don't you come off to step on the dirt of my county ever agin. If you do, I will personally have a knot beaten into your head that will last forever, and you can tell all your fancy Arkansas people, I got this knot in Thebes, Mississip, on account of some drownded niggers. And I don't care to speak again on this subject, no more, never." "Sheriff, you are making a big mistake." "Jed, you stay down here, make sure these two don't roam. And make sure they put off with the light. They give you any trouble, you can whip up on them any old way you want. Now I'm going home to get my supper." Jed detached himself from his chums and swaggered down. He was a big op boy, with three guns, and cords and leathers and belts everywhere. He looked just dumb enough to take all this seriously, and wouldn't be con vincible else wise He'd as soon hit you with the club he carried as listen. He spat a wad into the water, where it popped wetly as it hit. "Don't you worry, Sheriff," he said. "I'll take care of these boys, you can bet on it." sam awakened in the dark. He had reached his conclusion at last. He'd been building toward it for a long piece, fighting its implications, aware that he was troubling with the very stuff of his life, his destiny, his fate. But now he knew he could not spend his time in Blue Eye, Arkansas, pretending to represent law and order, while three hundred miles away this chancre perpetuated itself, unseen, unmolested, uncontested. He knew: Thebes must fall. Somehow, some way, it must fall. In his mind, he sketched out a plan. It was orderly and well founded, almost certain to succeed. He would have to form a committee of well regarded, unassailably moral Southern prosecutors--he knew many of them--and very carefully review and accumulate the evidence. An unassailable report had to be created. Then, carefully, copies of this document must be given to selected press, which would reveal the findings on the day that his committee presented the report to the governor of the state of Mississippi, the speaker of the house in the Mississippi state assembly, Mississippi's two senators and five congressmen, hell, maybe even, for the publicity value alone, Harry S. Damn Truman himself, or, since all this was some years off, whomsoever big wigged war general was in the White House. It had to be done square and legal, one step at a time, with an eye toward reality, so that the final product had a Tightness to it that transcended the seething angers of the South. He wanted the white Southern mill worker and small-patch farmer, the sharecropper, the feed-store clerks, the small-town politicos, the damn women (if they could control their goddamn crying!), the Mac Whatevers and the Joneses and the Whites and the O'Whomevers; a new Confederacy, if you would, of the same of' boys who marched up Peahawk Ridge or across the wide-open ground at Gettysburg behind the fool Pickett or thrashed and perished in the cornfields of bloody Antietam. They could do it, for they had it within them, if they were ably led; they and they alone could bring Thebes down and make the world a better place. But he knew this too: he had to start with a document. It was all so much palaver without a piece of evidence, a piece of paper, that made it clear as a bell's last dying ding dong this is evil. This is wrong. This must be stopped. He had to have something. He knew it, and that there was no way around it. He thought: I have to get into that store. And then he thought: that is insane. It is in a prison, it is carefully guarded, it will not give up its secrets easy, it is a mile away down a dark and windy forest road that I have never traveled and, top it all, I am no man for breaking and entering. I would get caught, and if caught I would be in deep trouble. He thought again: I need someone to help me. I need someone to take the risk, to get me a document. Then he remembered the old lady whose chicken coop he'd rented. She spoke a gibberish at first, but as he listened more carefully and got used to the rhythms and strangenesses in her words, he had begun to understand her. It was she who told him about the Store. She must understand the legal underpinnings of Thebes County, the original crime that indebted its citizens to work for little or nothing for the benefit of boss men who kept his expenses in that way to a minimum while raking off the top, whose iron system of rule by violence lined his own pockets. She must have a piece of paper. He remembered now, the weathered old face, the fierce eyes, the watchfulness; why, that old mama was the only one in the town whose spirit remained secretly intact, and Sam knew this to be in accordance with Negro ways, where authority frequently devolved on the sagacity of an old woman, who was smart and just and well-tempered by experience. Sam squinted in the dark, and saw that it was near 4:00 a.m. If he could get by that behemoth on the dock, he could get to her house by 4:30 and back again by 5:00, and then he'd have it, something upon which to build. It was how a lawyer worked: go for the paper. Get the paper. Get the evidence. If there was any evidence. He rose from his length of blanket on the prow of the boat, and carefully put on his shoes. Though it was warmish, he took his coat, which had been his pillow, and threw it on, to blot out the whiteness of his shirt. Rising craftily, he crept down the length of the boat, and stopped for just a second to listen to the easy sawing of old Lazear's aged lungs as he snoozed away in the cockpit, in some impossible position that no civilized being could find rest in. But Lazear snored as if lung-shot and producing death rattles, each a mighty shudder through bubbles of phlegm, but otherwise unwakeable. Sam made the climb to the dock and discovered that the guardian deputy, of course, had grown bored with the passing of the nighttime hours and had departed for whatever recreation he wanted, probably a willing colored gal in a crib somewhere, for all the deputies had the look of men who're whup-ass on colored in the daylight and cuddle with it in the night. Sam climbed the slope from the riverside area to what amounted to the town's main drag, not really much of either main or drag, just shuttered storefronts behind which, on either side, lay the dogtrot cabins that made up the domiciles of the place before yielding to the all encompassing piney woods. He tried to remember. This way or that? It's not that Thebes was a complex metropolitan zone, with byways and alleys that could lure a man to ruin, or at least get him lost. Still, in the dark, it seemed all different, and the vistas down the few streets were closed off to his eyes. But then he saw the public house where the two bitter old men had been and remembered ... no, he didn't get to the woman's house until after he'd been there. Why hadn't he paid attention? It hadn't seemed important then, but it surely did now. At last he thought he had it, as he projected a three-dimensional map of Thebes in his mind. He passed the public house, turned down an alley, walked amid silent cabins. Dogs scuffled and scurried, and occasionally barked, and he heard the slithery, feathery rattlings of chickens twitching in their coops. A pig or two was up, for whatever reason, maybe to shit in the mud or whatever. But of people the place fwas forlorn and empty. It was a balmy Southern night. Above, towers of stars spangled in i" the pure black sky and a zephyr whispered through the pines, bringing relief from the day's brutal heat. The smell of the pines was every\ where, bracing and pure, almost medicinal. With the squalor and the despair blocked out by the darkness, Sam could almost convince him self he was in some healthy place, some non blasphemed ground. ' And then, yes, there it was. That was hers. It was different from the" , rest, being set farther back, almost in the woods themselves. But he recognized it by its shape and location, and as his eyes adjusted, and he moved just a bit, he made out that coop out back where he'd had the (, corner suite with the chickens and the disgruntled rooster. / Sam approached stealth fully He didn't want it noted that the white i lawyer from the North had visited old granny in the night. It would do ' old granny no good at all in Thebes County, Mississippi. Of course the door was not locked. He slipped in and stood motionless for a bit, waiting for his eyes to adjust yet again, this time to the closer dark of the interior space. When at last he could pick out impediments and chart a passage in the dark--say, the doorway into the bedroom to be aimed for, the stove in the middle of the room to be avoided, the rickety furniture not to be knocked asunder--he moved quietly, and slipped into her bedchamber. He was a prince come a-calling. No, he was a soldier of the Lord, come to bring righteous vengeance and God's wrath to Sodom. No, he was a scared white man in way too deep and playing with forces he could not even begin to understand. He approached the bed, wondering how to waken her without making her scream and alerting the locals and the gendarmerie. "Madam," he whispered, in a low voice. There was no response. "Grandma? Grandma, wake up, please, it's me, Mr. Sam, come for a talk." That was louder still, but there was no response. He bent to the bed where she lay swaddled and touched her arm, gently as he could, and rocked ever so slowly, crooning, "Mama, Mama, please awaken, Mama." But Mama remained mute. He became aware of an odor, and then, through the bedclothes, his fingers sensed damp. He recoiled, but had to go forward. He turned to the candle next to the bed and found a few stick matches next to it. He struck one on the bedpost, cupping the sudden flare, and brought it to the wick, where it clung, then held fast. Again, he kept his hand cupped around it, to cut down on the light, and brought it to her, and pulled back the bedclothes. She had been smashed all to hell and gone. Her skull had the shocking aspect of deflation, for its integrity was breached mightily. Whatever oozed from it oozed black onto the bedclothes. Her eyes were distorted by the trauma done to her skull, and one had a bad eight-ball hemorrhage to it. It was too cool for the flies, but by midmorning they'd be here in waves. He had been to murder scenes too many times before, so he did not panic, but a breath of air passed with a hiss from his lips. Jesus Christ, he thought. Who could The flashlights from the window came on, several of them. Then, from the other side too. Men moved swiftly toward him, and he heard the creaking of leather boots and belts. "Mister, you in plumb bad deep dark trouble now," said Sheriff Leon Gams. "Boys, git this Yankee cuffed. We done caught us a murderer." EARL called the town up through blur by focusing his binoculars, and watched as it swarmed into clarity. What he saw was of no surprise in the piney woods, a slatternly place in the mud, with its ruined waterfront, its closed sawmill ruin off to one side, and the residential zone, its warren of jumbled cabins, and the listless people who populated it. He saw also the men on horses, six, seven, then eight of them on the big steeds, in the dark uniforms, lords and masters, rulers of all. He watched them thunder through the town when it so moved them, and could read terror in those they stopped to talk to. There were no easy encounters in Thebes; all confrontations were charged and difficult. Earl therefore set out to do what he knew he absolutely must. He set out to draw a map. He was across the river, possibly one hundred yards from the town, and he lay there, hour by hour, his binoculars focused, his handwriting steady and clear, the lines growing in his notebook. He noted also the times of the mounted patrols, the officers involved, the routes they took. He noticed the officers themselves, the fat ones, the quick ones, the mean ones. He wrote it all down. He watched early in the morning as the Negro ladies all left. These, Earl guessed, were the prison cooks and seamstresses and whatnot, who picked up after the white men who ran the prison and, Earl also knew, provided comforts as they were needed. He knew at night men on horses would stop at certain houses in the town, enter, then leave an hour or so later. He didn't care to speculate on the drama of favor and fury that took place inside the cabins; down here, it was an ancient pattern, and maybe that's why so many of the children who roamed the wild streets during the day had a yellowish cast to them. Earl's approach had been different than Sam's. Earl was no lawyer like Sam; he presumed, as Sam had not, the existence of no set rules of order and regulation, no rational system that would entertain inquiry with fairness and due deliberation and cough up, ultimately, a response, rational and complete. Earl was a policeman, but not really; he was still a Marine in his mind, and any territory was enemy territory until he knew otherwise. He acted deliberately and decisively. For example, on the day that he and Sam agreed upon as the last day by which Sam could be expected back, Earl called Sam's wife and made his inquiry. "No, Earl, I haven't heard a thing. I've begun to worry. Should I contact the authorities?" Earl thought not, for who knew by what compass the authorities in swamp-water Mississippi steered? "Did he tell you so?" "He said no such thing about it." "Then, Mary, I'd wait. You know how Sam hates a fuss." "Earl, it's been long enough. What he had to do oughtn't to have taken this long." "Well, Ma'am, these little towns, you just can't tell how they operate. As I understand, it's swamp country and communication might be tricky." He then called Sam's other closest friend, Connie Longacre. Earl knew the two had a private relationship, though its nature was neither clear to him nor curious to him. "Miss. Connie?" "Earl, have you heard from Sam? I've begun to worry." "No, Ma'am. I thought possibly you had. You know how that man enjoys a good talk." "Not a word, Earl, strange on its face for Sam. Earl, what should--" "I will do something." "Earl, I--" "Miss. Connie, I will." Then Earl made another phone call. It was to Colonel Jenks, the commandant of the Arkansas Highway Patrol and his mentor beyond Sam. "Earl, yes?" "Colonel, sir, I've some leave time due. It's been on five years straight. Got a private situation I need to deal with. Would certainly appreciate it if you could help." The colonel loved Earl, as did most who knew him, the others being those who only feared him. He knew that if Earl had a situation, Earl would need the time to deal with it. Earl didn't request things lightly; he was the kind of fool for duty that commanding officers have relied upon for thousands of war-filled years. "Earl, I'll notify personnel. We'll see to it the county is covered." "Yes, sir. Much obliged." "Earl, you've earned it, you know you have." It was true. Earl's record was embarrassingly without blemish. His problem: he worked too hard, he cared too much, he was too fair and too meticulous in his planning and deportment. It was as if the goddamned medal he had won demanded of him that he be perfect the day long, and by God, perfect the day long he would be, and he would die before letting it down, though of course he never, ever, to any man or woman, talked of it. As for Earl, the next part was the difficulty, with Junie. Yet it turned out easier than he expected. He told her he'd be going off for a bit, and he watched as her face fell. "You're going to that war," she said. "You are a fool for war. You cannot stay out of it." "No, ma'am," he said, "I am not. They do not care for me; I'm too used-up for them these days." Then he told her he was only going to Mississippi, and only for a few days, and only to look after Sam, who might be in some trouble. "Sam? In trouble? Why Earl, Sam could talk the devil himself out of hell." "I know. But maybe Sam run up against something meaner than the devil. Don't you worry none." He knew he had won; her deeper terror was the anguish he felt about being over here while the Marines were over there, in Korea. She knew he had been writing letters to congressmen and the com mandant, and she worried that sooner or later one would be fool enough to let him back in, despite the wounds he'd picked up in the big war. So in a way she was relieved that it was only Mississippi. That done, a few travel arrangements needed to be made, and finally he had one last call, though he made it from a pay phone. He called a colleague named Wilbur Forebush, by rank a lieutenant in the Arkansas State Police and by authority director of undercover work, which was becoming necessary, as the crime tendencies grew more sophisticated. He and Wilbur had shared a pleasant few Saturdays in a duck blind over flooded rice fields these past several years. He explained what he wanted but not why. But Wilbur trusted him. "All right, but Earl, if you git in a jam now, you call me. I will come quick for you." "I appreciate it. I just don't want no tracks back to my family, when I don't know what's cooking." "So I understand. I'll have it couriered down to you. Tomorrow morning okay?" "That's fine." What arrived was a pouch containing a driver's license, seemingly authentic, in the name of, as it turned out, one Jack Bogash, of Little Rock. Other authenticating documents included a social security card, a heavy equipment operator's license, and others. There was no Bo gash, of course. The documents were high-grade fakes, meant for undercover officers in tough circumstances, and would pass scrutiny in every crime lab except the FBI's. Earl then took the bus to Pascagoula, his belongings, including a45 from the old days, in a pack under a sleeping roll, and a Winchester '95 carbine in a scabbard. He dressed in hunter's rough clothes and high boots, and wore a fedora. No one thought the rifle odd at all, for rifles rode in pickups and saddle scabbards everywhere in the South. On the ride down he studied what maps were available, the best a big color thing that was included in the WPA's 1938 Guide to the Magnolia State. He scanned it carefully, looking to learn the land and the foliage, committing it carefully to memory. He did not stop in Pascagoula, but went farther up the river still by bus until he was the only white person left aboard, to an old, nearly dead lumber town called Benndale close to Greene County. There he picked up some supplies at the general store, then went looking for a hunting guide. Of course it wasn't hunting season. Hell, he knew that, he was scouting for some rich fellows and wanted to find a place where he could take a deer lease, bring these boys in the fall, git them all fat bucks, pass some green around, and, dammit, everybody'd be better off. He was directed, eventually, to a hard scrabble op boy named Mctye, who volunteered to canoe him up the Pascagoula, then up the Leaf. Earl said that sounded fine. The trip through the bayou was without incident, but then Earl changed plans on the old fella. Instead of heading up the Leaf, he decided to have the boy put him off there, at the juncture of the three rivers, Leaf, Yaxahatchee and Pascagoula. He'd work up the Leaf on foot, looking for a sign, scaling out the terrain. The oldster would come pick him up a week hence. "Mister, this here's dangerous territory," said the scrunched-up old man, Mctye. "There's bogs and hollows, and hellholes, where the land has fallen and the trees are so thick you maybe get in, but you ain't getting out. Tricky currents in the water. No one's quite clear on who's hereabouts. Might still be some Indians, might be blue-gum niggers whose bite'll kill you. We got us a dog problem, too. Feral dogs, big as wolves, they travel in packs and can chew a man to bone meal right fast. They got a prison farm thirty to forty miles away, and they didn't plan to build it there ' the territory was easy traveling." "Well, sir, I am in no hurry to git close to a prison one way or the other. But I am an experienced woods fellow and believe I can hold my own. I ain't doing my job if I'm just looking at the ground from a canoe. Want to find and map the hellholes, see where I'd put up stands, where the deer paths are, where I might expect some heavy bucks, if this state done growed '. "She does, I'll tell you, eight-points and more, big '. So I can see I'll not be telling you what's for. I can see you're a hardhead. Okay, son, the funeral they be holding be for you, not me. You want to leave me word for your next of kin?" "Yes sir, Mr. Mctye," said Earl, and wrote out an address for Jack Bogash in Little Rock. "I will leave this here with you. You come back in a week. If I am here, so much the better. If I am not, then possibly I've left in another direction. Don't you worry none either way, until maybe some weeks hence, if my widow calls the state po-lice. Then you tell ' where I started in, and if they can find the body, so much the better." "Sir, I hope you know your stuff." "Mister, I do too. But this is what a feller has to do these days to earn a living, and if this pays out, I'll be a happy dog." The old man spat into the river, left Earl off on the shore of the Leaf, turned around, and in smooth strokes propelled his way back until a bend at last obscured him. Alone now in the dark cathedral of the swamp, Earl wasted no time. He unlimbered the rifle, fed four .30-'06 150-gram cartridges into the magazine which, by the peculiarity of the gun, was not a tube under the barrel but a complicated internal spring-loaded well that took some care in the proper fitting of the shells, and jacked the lever to feed a cartridge to the chamber. That done, he lowered the hammer. Next, compass: he shot an azimuth due east, meaning to carry him across the promontory between the upper-Y configuration of Leaf and Yaxahatchee and in seven or eight hours good traveling, locate up on the Yax yet still twenty or so miles downriver from Thebes. This he did, the pack on his back, a canteen on his belt, the .45 still secured. Though not in combat shape, Earl lived a vigorous life and his body was entirely comfortable in the state of extra effort. He didn't feel now as if he were in Japanese territory, so he moved quickly, without a mind toward invisibility, on as straight a line as he could manage. The woods, once the waters had receded, were firm and piney, and it didn't take long for the heat to soak his shirt and the brim of his fedora. He kept his pace up steady for a good five hours, avoiding hellholes, always returning to his original due east heading. He finally took a quick break for tuna from a can (buried afterward) and a few swigs of water. Then onward. He reached the Yax by dusk, just where it began to widen and straighten for its last twenty-mile plunge through the piney wilderness to Thebes. He spent two hours with his good knife hewing pine boughs, then stripping them, working until well after dark, assembling a raft. He slept without a fire, sitting up in his bag, the rifle across his knees, his eyes watching, never asleep enough to be unconscious but nevertheless nourishing his energy. Breakfast, before dawn, was another can of tuna fish, followed by a can of cold tomato soup, the cans again buried. By the duck hunter's hour, he was on his fragile craft, poling his way along the shore, never venturing to the center, ready to dip into shore at the first sign of disturbance. He reached what he felt must be Thebes well before dark, having pulled off the river only once, when the powerful churning of engines far off indicated a heavy craft; it was the weekly Mississippi Bureau of Prisons boat, a steam-driven thirty-five-footer, with its supplies and its cargo of human woe, a few more unfortunates destined for the penal farm. He studied the craft through his binoculars, noting nothing peculiar about it except a large white box with an odd insignia of red triangles arranged around a red dot, where a red cross would be if the box contained medical supplies. He'd never seen such a thing; he recorded it in his notebook, and having done so, promptly consigned it to his subconscious, forgetting it totally at his functional brain level. Earl laid up across from the town, watching and waiting. It became clear soon enough that there had to be some sort of station on that side of the river, near enough to the town for the officers to run their patrols, and they were aggressive enough and changed horses enough to suggest that they were close by. And Earl could guess where it would be. To the northwest, equidistant between the town and the still unseen Thebes Penal Farm for Colored. Earl knew it was there; he could tell by the barking of the dogs. THE dogs. At least they weren't free-roaming. Instead, they were kenneled at the back of the wire compound, and the deputies were so complacent that they didn't patrol the perimeter with them or any such thing, or keep a night watch, or any true security measures. That's how atop the world they felt. The deputies were like kings of everything, these boys, atop their horses, with their chained dogs, easy, confident masters of the universe of piney woods and bayou and cowed Negroes. Earl studied the kennels: there he saw blue-tick hounds, low, slobbery, sinewy barking and sniffing machines. There were twenty or so of them, and they gamboled and played in their pen, but if they were put on his trail, he knew they'd be remorseless. It was the dog way. Earl feared dogs. On Tarawa, the Twenty-eighth Marine War-Dog teams had sent their animals into blown-out bunkers in search of live Japs. The dogs' noses were so much finer than humans', they could pick out the smell of the living from the dead, and when they found a wounded man, they'd tear him up bad, usually to death. They'd drag them out of the bunkers or pillboxes, swarming and yapping and biting, and you could see the Jap, bled out, sometimes concussed, the poor man fighting against them on some kind of general principle of survival but without much energy. As much as Earl hated the Japanese, he hadn't enjoyed seeing that; the packs of dogs ripping at the wounded man, usually by this time awash in blood that made the dogs even more insane. Meanwhile, their handlers, by nature brutal, urged s the animals on, laughing at the spectacle. The dogs snapped and , chewed, or they hung on and shook and twisted and pulled. No man J not even a Jap soldier, should die like that, torn to pieces by dogs as iji sport. Earl bet that after the war, those dogs had been destroyed. You couldn't have a dog like that in a civilian world, a dog encouraged to the furthest extremes of its savagery. Yes, they were our dogs, but still: he shuddered. Some things were too much. These dogs looked the same. They were beautiful and sleek, but they'd been corrupted by men and nourished toward specialized forms of violence. In a way, they represented all the evil that men could wreak on the world, impressed upon the innocence of a dumb, brute animal. He saw that in the kennel where it was the rule of the pack, a rough-and-tumble world of tooth and fang. A big blue seemed to run the place, and he kept the young dogs away with the strength of glare and intensity. Just like in the human world. That's why Earl never wanted any part of a pack. Meanwhile, an old man who worked the dogs looked more dog than human; he was more an ambassador to the dog world from the human race than a full human himself. The other deputies kept apart from him. He'd be the master of hounds; he'd be the one tracking Earl if it came to that. Earl found the compound at dawn by simply following the horse tracks. It was a rude building, made of logs, more cavalry outpost than anything. For these boys practiced their trade from horseback, and held their whole operation together from a horse, with a dog or two on ) chains. So: a kennel, a stable, and a main house, all log, all secure behind a high barbed-wire fence in the piney woods. And of course, no Negroes allowed near. Maybe the dogs had been trained to smell Negroes. The main house had the lock-up attached; that's where Sam had to be, or else he was up the road in the penal farm itself, and if he was there, there'd be no getting him out without a division of Marines. Earl watched from deep in the trees, saw well-fed, confident men locked in routine. Patrols, lots of organized activity. Boss man was a big fellow he heard someone call Sheriff Leon, to whom all others deferred. He was sure Sam was here, because Sheriff Leon checked in to the lockup, and it seemed to be the point of a lot of energy. Earl knew he had to get in. He studied on the place, trying to figure out a way. It had to do with the wind, he knew. The wind might carry his scent. If the dogs picked it up, they'd throw up a fit; that might agitate the deputies, and once agitated, they might begin to nose around. They'd let the dogs out to hunt him, and the dogs would find him, and that would be that. He'd be taken and he'd be in with Sam. What good would that do? Earl patiently charted the breezes on the first night. He learned it was most still between 5:00 a.m. and 6:00, just before the dawn. He knew he had to come in on the other side of the compound from the dogs, and that he had to move slowly. If he sweated, the dogs would smell it; their noses were so much better, and they were creatures of pattern, used to things being just so and prone to acting up when they weren't. At the same time as he exhibited a hunter's patience, Earl was himself becoming increasingly disturbed. It's one thing when deputies live with families, and go on duty and off, and when off go back to a civilian world, be with their kids and wives, go to church or the movies. But these boys weren't like that. Instead, they were kept living out here in the woods, isolated, in uniforms that sparked fear and mystery, behind wire and protected by dogs. They were more like a conquering army in an occupied territory than police officers. And they were young, too. Somehow, they were paid enough to put up with the dormitory-style living far off in the woods, and the constant discipline of the military. So there was some money behind this, certainly more than could be justified by the paltry ruin that was Thebes County, a town locked in mud living off a penal installation upriver still a mile or so. Earl didn't like it. The dogs, the horses, the guns, the fear of the townspeople, Sam locked up way out here. He didn't like it one bit. earl scrubbed himself in a cold-water stream until he shivered, then put on the last of his clean underwear. He would sweat some, though it was cold, but still he'd leave less man smell that way. He slithered to the wire at 4:30, and watched. In the lock-up, a candle burned, meaning someone had night duty, but Earl bet he was asleep. The big log house was before him, between him and the dogs. Earl had patted dark mud against his face, as he'd done in the Marines with burnt cork, and stripped to his dungarees and a dark shirt. Getting through the fence was tough, and the barbs cut him in a dozen places, shallowly, but enough to sting like hell and leave a tiny blood track. Easier to simply cut the wire; but if he cut it they'd notice it the next day. Earl lay inside the wire, waiting. He was unarmed, except for a K-bar knife, black-bladed and leather-gripped, which he might use in a pinch on a dog. But no dogs howled or barked, no one called. He lay still for the longest time. Then he stood, and walked. He walked nonchalantly. He didn't sneak or dash or evade. If anyone should see him from the house, he looked like he belonged. He walked across the yard to the house, waiting every second for a challenge, but it never came. These boys felt secure in their place. He skittered around the house to the lock-up, and peeked in; he could see a deputy asleep at the desk, the fire in the stove having burned low, and beyond three cells in the back, two open, one locked. That's where Sam would be. But Earl didn't enter. Instead, he crawled around, past the door to the back, then found purchase at a window and gutter and swung his way up, as silently as he could. Again, no challenge came. He eased to his haunches, then to his feet, and staying at the edges eased around until he thought he was over the locked cell. Going prone again, he pulled the knife, and quickly set at cutting through the roof. He figured--rightly--that the roof would be the weakest part, unreachable as it was to the prisoners. It was old, rotted wood, the shingles soft, the tar holding them down softer, and digging assiduously, he quickly opened a seam in the roof, chopped through the wood, and at last got a bit of an opening. He could see down at Sam, sleeping restlessly on his cot. Earl just loosed a gob of spit. It wasn't a nice thing to do, but it hit the man in the face, to the effect of minor irritation. Another followed, and the man awakened. "Shhhhhh!" Earl commanded. "Mr. Sam, you keep it down." Sam blinked, unbelieving. He looked around, dumbfounded. "Earl, is that--" "Shhhh!" Sam was silent, and at last looked up. He saw the gap in the rotted wood and an eye behind it that could only be Earl's. Quickly he rose, to close the distance between them. He stood on the cot, craning upward, until his mouth was but a foot or so from Earl. "Good God, how did you find me?" "It don't matter. What is happening?" "Oh, Lord. These boys have me buffaloed on some fool charge of murder that wouldn't stand up for one second in a real court of law or even a grand jury room. What they're planning, I do not know, Earl, I want you to contact our congressman and then work through the--" "Shhhh!" commanded Earl again. "No, I have thought this out, and I know exactly how to proceed. Listen to me carefully." "Mr. Sam, you listen to me carefully. I have eyeballed this setup, and you are in shit up to your nose." "Earl, you must contact Congressman Etheridge, Governor Decker, Governor Bilbo of Mississippi, and then--" "I will do no such thing. That would get you killed right fast. What I have to do is get you out." "Earl, no! If I escape, I break the law. Then I am no better than--" "And if you don't escape you are dead. Then you are no better than the worms that are eating at you and having a fine picnic at it, I might add. Mr. Sam, look hard at the cards you have been dealt: these boys will kill you. They have to. They're working up a plan even now: accident, drowning in the river, fall, quicksand, I don't know. It'll be crude but legal and you will be long gone to the next world. I guarantee you that." "Earl, there are laws and--" "Not out here there ain't. Now you listen. I can get you out. But you have to be ready, you understand? I have to set dog traps and figure us a course and cache goods along the way. I need something from you, your undershirt with a lot of stink on it." "That I have." "Good. You drop it out the window. Two nights from now, at two a.m. I will come git you. You will be awakened by distractions, which I ain't yet figured. Fires, explosions, something like that. Then I will kill that big blue boss hound and the hound master and I will come git you." "Earl, you cannot kill anything. Not a dog, not a man." "Either would kill you in a second." "Earl, I have done nothing. If you kill, we've moved beyond a limit. There's no getting back. I could not forgive myself for pushing you to that situation. You of all men should not be made an outlaw. I would rather be sunk in the river than be the ruination of you." ' "You are a stubborn old piece of buffalo meat." "Earl, swear to me. No killing. No matter what these boys have done. They cannot be killed, for that makes us them sure enough." Earl shook his head. Sam was set in his ways. "Throw that shirt out, Mr. Sam. I will see you two nights off, at two. And then you and I will go on a little walk in the piney woods and go home and fall off the wagon with a big laugh." earl got back into the deep trees just before dawn broke and stole a few hours of sleep. Some internal alarm awoke him, and maybe the sleep was pointless, for he never quite relaxed enough to let it take a good grip of him. But he awoke, washed again in the cold water, fighting a shiver that came through the dense heat of the place, and then set to thinking. He thought about direction, and looked through his effects until he found that goddamned 1938 WPA Guide to the Magnolia State, God bless them commies or whoever done the work, they done a good job. Besides the big map, he found on page eighty-three a nice map marked "Transportation." Squinting hard, he found what he needed, a rail line running north-south more or less, as it wended from Pascagoula to Hattiesburg, a spur of the Alabama and Great Southern. That's where they'd head, and hope to snag a train as it came by. Earl knew it would be a close-run thing. The dogs would be on them almost immediately, and he had to throw the dogs off the track as many times as he could. The straighter the dogs tracked them, the worse off they'd be. They might never make the railway, or they might get there but no trains would come. Fortunately the land was too fore sty for horsemen; the deputies would have to pursue on foot, and as horsemen they'd be slow and reluctant on their own two legs. They'd tire long before the dogs, but the dogs would drive them on, and that nameless hound master and of course that Sheriff Leon, who'd have all his pride on the line. He wondered if they'd have time to involve the prison security people. In a way, he hoped so, for that would take more time in the organizing, and time was precious for him. He maneuvered his way through the trees until he picked his positions: where he'd enter the compound, how he'd move, how he'd get Sam out, which way they'd move, what their landmarks would be as they moved into the woods. He used his compass to orient himself, and when he reached a stream, he cached his pack, his rifle and his pistol, to be picked up on the outward trek. That rifle might be the smartest thing he'd brought, for with it he could kill the dogs that the boys sent after him. Night came, and he penetrated the prison compound again. He went first to the stable and worked his way among the shifting, seething, beautiful animals. In a tack room, he found what he needed most of all: rope. Good, strong four-ply rope, which anyone who administered horses would pack. Next he worked around back to the shed that housed the generator. The boys shut it down at night. He slipped in and found several twenty-five-gallon cans for the gasoline. He looked about until he found the gallon cans by which the tank would be filled and took three of them, loading them to the brim and screwing the caps down tight. Three gallons of gasoline. Fella could do a lot with that. That done, he again slipped out before the dawn, to get some sleep. He had another hard day tomorrow. And after that, the days got harder still. the sheriff came by at 3:00 p.m. "Well, sir," he said, "at last I've got some news for you." "Well, that's wonderful," Sam replied. "And I have some news for you. Not only will I file formal complaints, Sheriff, with the state police and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, I will sue you and your men in a civil court of law. It'll be a great pleasure not merely to send you behind bars for a very long time, but to leave you destitute and without hope for gainful employment for the rest of your life. Possibly you can replace some of the Negro washerwomen at the prison farm when you get out." "Sir, you have got a vicious tongue, I do believe I ain't never met a man with a golden voice and a poison tongue combined like you. You surely wouldn't fit in down here in Mississippi." "When I am done with you, Sheriff, you will rue the day not that I set foot in this state, but that you did, goddammit all to hell." "We shall see about that one. As for tomorry, you'll be moved downriver and sent to a small town called Lucedale. That's where we'll present our findings to the judge of the Third Circuit, and he will determine whether or not we have the evidence to try you on a charge of murder." "You know I could not have committed that crime. There is no physical evidence, there was no blood anywhere on my person, I left no fingerprints. A coroner would have concluded that the woman's death was well in advance of my arrival." "Well, maybe so, maybe not. Fact is, Vincent, you was found in a dead woman's house by my deputies and no one else was. Maybe you couldn't stand visiting a Niggertown without cashing in on some cheap cooze and thought that old gal be accommodatin'. But she wouldn't He with you, and so you done pole axed her head in. Seen it before. Now, if you's a local, we might just say, Old Vincent, he got to thinking with his little head ' of his big one, and let it go at that. Them kind of things will happen. But you's a big outside agitator so the rules are much different this time." "This is ridiculous. Any prosecutor would scoff at that. Did you interview other witnesses, did you develop a timeline, did you quarantine the crime scene, did you investigate her standing in the community, her kinship relations, those who might hate and fear her? No, you just arrested--" But Sam quit. He suddenly knew what this was all about. It was as Earl had said. Tomorrow, on the boat, he'd be drowned. The river would eat him, as it had eaten the Negro family. This story, it was all to get him quieted. "You'll have your day in court," said Sheriff Leon, with a smile. "You'll git your chance to call an attorney. We'll git all this straightened out, once and for all. It's all gonna be all right, and justice will be paid out, as it always is in Thebes County." No moon, not much breeze. The dogs were quiet, and in Thebes, Mississippi, it seemed to be just another night in a long summer of nights, each the same. But Earl crouched inside the wire at the sheriff's compound, checking his watch. He was not dressed seasonably, but rather for war: heavy dark hunting pants, boots, a dark navy sweater, a watch cap, his face muted by mud. The K-bar knife was sheathed at his hip. His Hamilton was upside down on his wrist so that the radium dial would not show. By his reckoning, in exactly one minute a Molotov cocktail of gasoline and powdered soap would detonate when its cigarette fuse burned into the soaked rag in its nozzle in an outbuilding in Thebes less than a half mile away. That fire would spread through the abandoned building and lead to powder fuses, which in turn would track to firecrackers Earl had constructed from the powder of .45 shells. For a few brief seconds it would sound like a gunfight had broken out in all its fury in Thebes, The building would burn; a few more shots would ring out through the night as the flames ate the wood. He expected the boys would be up in seconds. Whatever else they were, they were well-drilled troops, and that sheriff expected them to react fast. They'd be saddled up and out to fight the invaders in a matter of minutes. That's when Earl would kick his way into the lockup and conk whomsoever there he found, and liberate Sam. They'd be off. But the time of freedom to move was short and chancy, and he knew he had to get as good a lead on the dogs as possible. He checked his watch again, thinking briefly how many other times over the years he had checked his watch in dark places, waiting for a certain time to arrive, a certain signal to be given, and somebody's idea of what was necessary to begin. But this time, at least, it was his own idea of necessary, and he would save the man whom he loved most in this world or life itself would not be worth continuing. That is how his mind worked, and that is the only way it worked. It felt no deviation, no consideration of other possibilities, no reluctance, no doubt, no temptation to a softer course, and if there was fear it was buried under a willed aggression that was his one gift in the world. He had committed to Sam. In a youth he cared not to remember, it was Sam who offered the only tenderness in an unpleasant world, far more than Earl's own father, a sheriff who enforced the will of God and the righteous Baptist Bible with a razor strop many times a week to Earl, his brother and his mother. But Sam was a good man who'd even once upbraided the father for his readiness to punish. The years passed, Earl's in the Marine Corps, and then he came back from the war and got himself in another one, in Hot Springs, and again almost got himself killed. Sam came to him a second time and said, "Now, Earl, I do have a job open. I need an investigator in Polk. Don't pay much, but you'll be in the public safety sector and I will be making calls on your behalf. I want you working for me, young man. I don't want nothing bad happening to you." So they worked together for a number of years, and Earl finally began to understand that in some way--no book would ever say this, but he felt it and knew it to be so, whatever the books might say--Sam was the father he'd always wanted. He couldn't put this in words, of course, for words were tricky things and never meant exactly what they said, or worse, never said exactly what they said, or worse, never said exactly what was meant. But Sam was steady and fair and honest and as hard a worker as Earl had ever seen, and it was Sam who got Earl a bank loan so that he could fix up his father's old place, and it was Sam who treated Earl's boy more like a grandson than an employee's son, and it was Sam who loved that boy, Bob Lee, and made the boy feel connected to family. So now: we do it, goddammit, without looking back, we do this thing. He looked again at his watch. Yes, any minute now and From far off the blast erupted. It wasn't a blast so much as evidence of a huge force being released. A glow rose up through the trees, and seconds later the crackers popped--Earl had set up twenty-five of them from thirty cartridges, the bullets painfully pried out of shells, then resealed with mud. They went off, powder and primer detonating simultaneously, and it sounded like the Dalton gang had decided to rob two banks in a town that had none. Earl watched as the big log house stirred, and lamps were lit all around it. Someone fired up the generator, and then a man, then another, then three or four clambered out to see the ruckus. Someone started clanging on a big gong, and for a little bit it looked almost humorous --the term Chinese fire drill came to Earl's mind--as the boys, then the sheriff, tried to figure out what was going on. A night patroller came thundering up the road and roared into the compound, gathered his sweated horse to a halt, and started screaming. "Sutler's Store is burning and men is shooting the place up. Don't know what it is, maybe the niggers are getting a revolt going." " Y'all git a-goin'," screamed the sheriff. "You got to stop these goddamn things early else they git wild and big on you. G'wan, git out there, you bastards!" The horsemen saddled and mounted, and played with guns for a bit--revolvers loaded, shells inserted into shotgun tubes, levers thrown, hammers drawn back--and then, without much chatter, the unit roared out the gate, pulling up a screen of dust from the road. Earl had placed himself at an angle to the house such that the fewest of the windows opened onto him. At the same time, he knew he couldn't slouch or scurry. Now he arose and walked purposefully forward, presuming that in the general melee no one would be focused enough to notice, or that no one would notice that as he walked, he had Sam's old undershirt knotted around the ankle of one leg. He made it. He slid around the back of the house as another group of outriders, this time led by the sheriff himself, hurried off. Possibly the place was deserted by now; possibly it wasn't. Quickly, he found the shed that contained the generator, which was plugging away and coughing up smoke as its gasoline engine drove its gears. He crouched to it and unscrewed the cap to the tank. He untied the bunched undershirt from his leg, rolled it thin and fed one end of the tube of cloth down into the gas. He wedged the shirt into the nozzle of the tank, knowing full well that the gasoline would diffuse upward until it had saturated the shirt. Except that he took out a Lucky Strike cut in half already, lit it, took a deep puff, and wedged it into the bunched cotton. It would burn down as the fuel spread up; in two minutes (he'd timed it with the other half of the cigarette), when they met, the tank would be lit off and the boys would then have two fires to think about, one that was burning up their own goods. He left the shed, slipped along the house and into the lock-up. He tried to ease his way in, but an old guard was standing up, looking in the direction of the fire, fingering a large double-barreled sawed-off. The man smoked a cigar, shifted weight from one foot to the other uneasily, wiped his dry lips, scanned the horizon, and generated unease in all the ways a man can generate unease. Earl removed his K-bar, feeling its familiar heft and weight, the worn smoothness of the leather grip. He knew exactly the length of the blade and what it was capable of. Swiftly he walked to the old man, gripping the knife handle. Earl struck, and he went down. Earl hit him with the metal cap at the end of the grip, right where the jaw meets the skull, an inch below and an inch on the diagonal from the ear. It was the haymaker. It conked the old boy so solid his lights went out before he hit the ground, and the shotgun clattered away into the dust. He'd be gone cold for a good five minutes. Earl stepped in, grabbed the keys off the desk, and went back and unlocked Sam, who had dressed silently, even to the point of tightening his tie. His eyes bulged with anticipation or fear, and he was already breathing hard and shallow. "Let's go," Earl hissed, and the two of them scurried out the door. But before Sam could lurch himself off into the night, Earl had him under control. "We goin' run out the front, trying to step in the tracks cut up by the horses. Step in horse shit if you see any. You got me?" "How can I see? I can't see the--" Whoomph! It wasn't a blast so much as an unleashing; a blade of light ruptured up the shank of the dark sky, spreading illumination as it rose. When it rose high enough, it fragmented, sending flowers of devouring flame off in a thousand directions. Enough landed upon the house to catch its roof ablaze, and in this comforting glow, Earl and Sam found the cut and shit-caked tracks of the angry horses, and dashed out the front gate. "Off here," he yelled. They left the road and headed to the trees. It was a maze of interlocking pines, a complete bafflement in the dark. But Earl found an incline just where he knew it to be, and climbed a small hill, and at the top, oriented toward the east, found a brief interruption of meadow, and then another wall of trees. Where he thought it should be, he stopped, then snapped on, ever so briefly, his flashlight, until the beam disclosed a loop of rope around the trunk of a pine. He went to it, and with his K-bar cut it free and stuffed it into his belt. "This way, you stay with me, goddammit. We got some hard travel ahead. We got twenty miles to go in about ten hours. You up to it? "Cause if you ain't, I can't carry you, Mr. Sam." "I will run till I die, Earl. You are a great man. You are a great American." "That I doubt. But I do mean to get you clear of here, goddammit, so let's go." And off they went into the woods, stopping every one hundred yards or so for Earl to find and cut a rope necklace from a pine trunk. they got the fire out by dawn, but already the dogs had found the scent. "He won't git far," Pepper told Sheriff Leon. "My pups got him lined up right fine. They'll be nipping at him by noon, Sheriff, and by four you can put him back in the cuffs and I can kick his ass for the knot he done give me." Pepper was the conked one. The left side of his head was swollen like a softball. He had a headache, and he'd swallowed a plug of Brown's Mule when he'd been hit. That was the worst, for he'd puked brown slop for an hour and it had emptied him of hunger for the '; so he had two grudges going, one for the knot on the skull, the other for the wasted plug. "Yes sir, the pups be on his Arkansas behind." But the sheriff was not so convinced. He knew there had to be a second man and that the second man had to be mighty smart. Already the sheriff found himself behind the eight ball. The fire in town proved to be nothing but an old building burning and some kind of firecracker put together from some .45 shells. It was clever. This feller'd thought hard to come up with that one. Meanwhile, as all the sheriff's deputies are hiding behind trees and looking for targets at what's nothing but burning lumber, whoever he is is back in the compound, jury-rigging a bomb out of the generator and freeing up that goddamned Arkansas lawyer. He should have killed the dogs, though, the sheriff thought. He should have slipped in there and cut twenty dog throats. Why didn't he kill the dogs? "Okay," he said. "Y'all got your sleeping packs? This may be a long 'un." His deputies by now had switched to hiking boots, for there were no horse trails in the deep woods, and they all carried packs. It was the drill. They'd hunted men before. They also all had rifles. "Sheriff, you want I should go on up to the Farm and tell Warden and Bigboy we gots a runner. They's got them good hounds, too." "Hell, they hounds ain't no better ' my hounds," Pepper put in. "My pups out track them mangy Farm mutts any day of the week, including Sunday and Armistice Day. Yes sir, my hounds the best hounds." Pepper's hound pride meant little to the sheriff, and he considered telling Warden and Bigboy and getting the guards in on the hunt. Some of them were essentially professional man hunters as they'd run many a nigger to ground their own self over the years. But again: that meant notification and coordination, it meant trying to rendezvous in deep, twisting piney roads and nobody had radios or anything, and it could just mess it up bad. Sometimes too many on a manhunt got in their own way and ended up chasing each the other. "Naw, it's only one man, maybe two. Running through woods they don't know, toward what they ain't sure. We knows our land, and them dogs old Pepper has are good enough. You boys, let's git her going. And, let me say this again, man fleeing justice who done lit up a municipal building is a desperate man. No limit likely on what he's willing to do to taste some free cooze and a jar of lightning down the road. So if you git him in your sights, you jack. Okay? Understood? You shoot him dead. This boy's had the smell of mischief on him from the git-go, and his wagon should be fixed. Let's move it out." With Pepper's six best hounds straining against their chains, driven almost insane by the thickness of the Sam-smell clinging to the earth, they set out, the dogs snuffling furiously at what they believed to be Sara's path out of the compound, around the back of the house and crosswise to the wire, where he'd obviously slid underneath. The sheriff commanded the wire cut, for now that he'd started he didn't feel like backtracking to the gate, then circling around again to this spot. One by one his men slipped through, and then he followed. "Cut the dogs free, Sheriff?" "Cut ', Pepper. Let ' hunt." So Pepper clicked to his animals in some strange dog tongue he knew, and the old blue, the master of the pack, fought through his instincts and settled. Soon the others followed. Pepper passed among them, freeing each, and though each had instincts that commanded onward, they had had their obedience beaten into them by Pepper's brutality, and so they knew they risked a thumping if they disobeyed, no matter how their loins ached to. Finally Pepper said, "Go/" and the six took off like nags from a gate, yelping their excitement as they gobbled up the Samness of the track, and plunged, muscles working, jowls slobbering, toward the woods. "Oh, they got it rich," Pepper said. "Watch them pups hunt. They are hunters and they got locked in on that of" boy. Going to bring in the meat." The dogs plunged ahead, almost in formation, so strong was the Sam-smell, and for just a second the sheriff allowed himself a whisper of pleasure. They had it so strong. They were so sure. It was going to be easy. But then the pack seemed to explode. Each dog picked a different direction. One raced into brambles, another circled back around, two more began barking at a tree, and the last two simply stood stock-still and began to whimper. They'd stopped before they'd even got going. "What's happening? They lose it?" "Goddamn," said old Pepper. "Goddamn him, that goddamned tricky bastard." "What happened?" "He done laid a false scent. He brings the dogs here where he's smeared up ever-thing with Arkansas scent. He must have had some clothes or something, and he riled up a big scent trap here, and my pups is all messed up in their heads. It ain't that there's no scent, it's that there's too goddamned many scents." The sheriff felt the frustration rising in him like a column of steam, pressure increasing, heat rising, pain swelling. "Goddamn him! Goddamn him all to hell." "That goddamn lawyer is smart," said Opic Brown, one of the younger fellows. "Lawyer nothing. Some other bird's in on this one, don't you see. He been watching us and thinking this thing through a while. Who else set that fire last night, God himself?" "No, sir." "Pepper, what we do?" "Well, sir, got to start over. Got to run a perimeter until my pups can find the true scent, then we be off." The sheriff knew this would take hours: he and his party and the dogs inscribing a large, slow circle around the compound until one of the dogs came up with a Sam-smell unaffiliated with this riot of Sam smell here. Then the hunt would begin in earnest. "We'll get him, Sheriff," Opic cried. "Goddamn, I know we will!" they ran out of loops of rope too early. "Goddammit," said Earl. "What?" "We're ahead of schedule." It was still dark in the woods. Around them loomed the shapes of trees rearing up, which men with undisciplined imaginations might have seen as monsters assaulting them, or foreshadowings of impending doom. But Sam didn't have enough imagination to let run wild, and Earl was too locked into the absolutely necessary. Though a flicker of dawn showed behind them, the sun was still more than half an hour away. "That's good, isn't it?" said Sam, breathing hard. "Nah, it's bad. Means we just sit here till it's light enough to take a compass reading, goddammit." "You can't--" "No, sir. Can't see far enough to set a compass reading, shoot an azimuth. Got to sit here till I can make out a landmark half a mile ahead." "We're hours ahead of them, and they can't bring any horses in here." "You'd be surprised how hard men can move when they're motivated. And that sheriff's got plenty of motivation. He's been humiliated in his own little world, and he don't want that getting out, ' everything he has is based on the idea that he is the toughest, smartest, meanest sumbitch in the territory. Seen it in my father, same goddamn mule-pride craziness. He will come after us both barrels, and now we're stuck just sitting here for a half an hour. How you holding up?" "Ah. Okay. I've got a blister on my foot." "Got bandages and some aspirin at my goods cache, but that's still a few miles ahead. That'll be some help." "Good. I didn't wear the right shoes for a hike." They both looked at Sam's leather brogues from Brooks Brothers in St. Louis, a smooth, beautiful shoe in rich mahogany, a successful man's shoe, and so out of place in the woods it was almost laughable. "You just keep on pumping," Earl said. "You do that, I'll have you home to your kids in two days." "The hell with my kids. I just want to see Connie Longacre." "She is some gal " "Earl, an experience like this, gets a man to thinking, and I " "Save it, Mr. Sam. Not for now. Save your breath. You'll need every little bitty piece of it before this here thing is run out." In twenty minutes Earl found just enough light to shoot his azimuth to a terrain feature, and they were off again, and an hour after that found Earl's goods cached out of sight behind a log, in some high, dry grass. Earl unscrewed his canteen and Sam took a good long draft. Earl got clean, dry socks out of his pack, and a bandage, and Sam took off his shoes, threw away the socks, bandaged his foot and pulled on the dry socks, which, being thicker, fit not quite so well in the tight, sodden shoes. "That's okay," said Earl, "they'll loosen, you'll be fine." Then he reached further into his pack and pulled out a .45 automatic, which had been worked on a few years back: it had a larger than usual rear sight welded to the receiver and some kind of shelf on the safety. "Here. This is for you." "Earl, I can't accept that. I cannot kill to get away. That invalidates anything I have ever stood for, which is the law." "Mr. Sam," said Earl, as he reached further into the dry grass to pull out his Winchester '95 carbine, "do you see much in the way of law out here? We are on our own, and no law's going to help us." "Earl, I know you to be a moral man, a decent man, a good man. They say you are the best policeman in the state, and I know in the war you done fine work for our side. But I must say it amazes me how quickly and well you convert to the other side. It's as if your great gifts for action, well-conceived thought, for capability beyond all men, could go either way. I hope your boy grows up to be the straight and narrow you, and if you have another son, I hope he doesn't grow up to walk the crooked, violent road." "Are you ready?" Earl said, returning the un taken pistol to his pack. "Earl, you cannot kill with that rifle. Kill a man and you have crossed over." "I will not kill except to save you, Mr. Sam. Except a dog. I may have to kill a goddamned dog or two. That I will not enjoy, but if it has to happen, it will." And that was when they heard, far off and scratchy, the sound of the hounds. "My, my," said Earl. "I do believe they are still in the hunt." The dogs had something. "The pups got '. Yes sir, got one of ' treed." The pitch of their barking changed. It was not the unfocused yipping of the tracking animals who made noise to keep themselves amused and because it was their way. It was focused, ferocious, and " intense. As they came into a clearing, they all saw them gathered. "Yes sir, by God, got a one of ' treed, you can see, ha, goin' to git that ".umbitch, yes, sir, oh, them wunnerful doggies!" cried Pepper, his throat phlegmy with glee. The hounds circled a large pine, three on point, the other two trying to leap up the trunk, snarling fiercely. Only the big blue was apart, as if not sanctioning this development. "Okay, fellows," yelled the sheriff, "now you git around ' and be care--" One shot sent a Winchester bullet blowing through the clusters of pine needles, and then they all opened up, shot after shot after shot laying into the tree, puffing it with green haze as the bullets ripped through. Dust and pulverized bark rose from the tree, a limb hit precisely tumbled off under its own weight. "Cease fire, goddammit!" yelled Sheriff Leon, and one by one the men stopped firing. "Take cover, and keep the tree covered, goddammit. Just wait and see what you bagged." The men scurried to cover, and the dogs, who had scattered at the first reports, reassembled under the tree and recommenced trying to leap and nip at it. The sheriff waited another three minutes, then slowly drew his Smith .38/44 Heavy-Duty. "Y'all cover me." "Yes, sir." "Opic, you don't be shootin' me, you hear?" "Yes, sir," replied Opic. The sheriff slid on the angle toward the tree, and as a veteran of several gun battles--he'd worked on the New Orleans police force before being cashiered for corruption back in 1932, at which time he'd started his new career as a prison guard at Thebes, which led ultimately to this position--he knew what he was doing. Keeping the gun out before him aggressively, his finger caressing the trigger, he at last ducked under the skirt of boughs and pointed upward to see what he could see. "Well," he finally said, when he emerged, "why'n't you boys come see what you have killed." The deputies raced to the tree. About ten feet up, hanging on a sheared-off limb and surrounded by the pock and puncture marks of too many rifle bullets, they could see two black socks hanging limply. "You killed that lawyer's socks," said the sheriff. "Pity he ain't in them." "THEY are truly a disciplined bunch," said Sam, when a mile or so behind them the firing eventually stopped. "You were right. They attacked my socks. They were fancy socks, too. I don't suppose I'll ever get them back." "You never know," said Earl. "These backwoods fellows, they don't like to waste a thing. Probably someone named Billy or Ray Ed or something is trying ' on right now. You could come down in ten years or so when everybody's forgot all about this, and probably find them on his feet on Sunday at the meeting." The pines showed no particular tendency toward abatement, though now and then they'd come to a logged out area, which upset Earl; he would not let them pass through the open land, because a rifleman who got there before they cleared its bare spaces might get a good, clean shot off, and one was all it took. "On the other hand," Sam had argued, "we can make better time, because the ground is less cluttered with these goddamned vines and weeds and things. We can advance our lead and--" "But they can make better time too. They're following our smell. We go ', they go '. That's it. Either that, or you figure out a way to stop smelling. When you get that one done, you let me know." "Should have known I couldn't outthink Earl Swagger on some tactics issue," said Sam. "I got a bagful of tricks," said Earl. "Only goddamned thing I know at all in this world." But he hadn't sprung his best trick yet. He'd been looking for just such an opportunity, which demanded the congruence of stout trees, not pines, but the occasional oaks that sprung up helter-skelter in the woods. He needed a dead one, with a nice spike of splintered trunk atop it. And at last, on the far side of a gentle hill, he found it. "Okay," he said. "You take a rest." "Earl," said Sam, his face a shine with sweat, "you know those boys can't be that far behind." "I got a little something here. This one's real pretty." Earl knelt and reached into his pack. He came out with a big coil of rope. He diddled with it, until at last he'd fashioned a cowboy's lariat with its expandable loop just perfect for bringing down running steers from close-by horseback. "We used to see them Western-type movies in the Pacific when we wasn't kinin' Japs. You know, with that feller John Wayne, you seen any of them?" "Yes, Earl, of course I've seen Westerns. But what on earth--" "Oh, you just watch me now." Earl swung the looped rope overhead, building up a nice rhythm and swoop, then let the thing fly and it soared the thirty feet or so to the spike and missed. "Goddamn," he barked. "I'll go--" "No. You stay where you are." Instead of retrieval, Earl snapped the rope back slowly so that it wouldn't catch on anything. Then he began again, flinging the rope across and This time he got it right, and the loop settled over the spiked trunk and slipped down. "There we go." With that he went to another oak, this one alive, pulled himself up a bit, got to the second branch, pulled the rope tight but not too tight, so that it had some spring to it, and secured it by a peculiar knot to the trunk. He scurried down. "Now you come on." "What are you up to, Earl, this is the craziest--" "You just come with me." They forged ahead another hundred yards. "That's fine. That's right good. Now come on." They backtracked to the tree. "Now sir, you git up that tree and you hand-over-hand across to the other tree." "Earl, I don't see--" "It's the scent. It's low to the ground. Them dogs can only smell what's on the goddamned ground. That's why they got to keep their noses in the mud. So we going across, we ain't touching no ground, and when we get across, we head off from over there. They go right on by and a hundred yards up so where we stopped, they run out of trail. It'll take ' an hour of scouting to find us again." Sam looked at Earl. "Sir," he finally said, "if you weren't on the side of the law, you would make a very cunning criminal. You have it in your bones, no doubt about it." "goddammit!" screamed the sheriff. "Damn," said Pepper. "Ain't seen a thing like it never. Trail just stops. Did they fly out by spaceship?" "Maybe it was one of them heliochopters," a deputy said. "Seen it in the newsreel. Them things can land straight down." "Don't be no fool, Skeeter," said the sheriff. "Ain't no helicopters in Thebes County. They backtracked and someplace back they managed to jump trail. Don't know how they done it, but this fellow running this thing, he's as smart as they come." "Sheriff, ain't nobody got this far before." The sheriff knew that to be the case. It clouded his brow with darkness. Usually the runners headed the other direction, because for them the river meant freedom; there was something in the Negro head, something ancient and unperturbable, that connected crossing a river with freedom. The sheriff didn't understand it, but he knew that the colored went east, to the bayou, and because they thought the dogs couldn't track through water, but the dogs were really good and didn't lose a scent easy, and the runners left enough about on weeds and vines and wet logs and leaves for the dogs to stay with, and the swamp slowed them down and sometimes killed them, sparing the sheriff and his boys the trouble. Nothing personal: it was just that a running nigger was a guilty nigger, whatever the infraction might be, and a bullet was as easy a solution to the case as time in the Farm, and it meant a good deal less paperwork for everybody. But this goddamn white boy had been smart. He'd gone out through the piney woods, which meant he had a compass and was good in the wild, and he'd thought hard about beating the dogs. He'd worked it out real solid. No, nobody had gotten that far before. "So, we got to circle until we pick up that scent again, is that right?" he demanded. "Yes, sir," said Pepper. "Tell you what," said the sheriff, thinking into the problem. "You put them dogs back on chains. I want two teams of three dogs each. You run one team, Opic'll run the other. Instead of one big circle, we'll each take a half. Whichever team picks up the scent first, whether it's one or tother, you fire a shot. Then you mark it. You see. You mark it with a handkerchief or something, Opic, you can figure out to do it, right?" "Yes sir, b'lieve I can," said Opic. "Yes. And the first team goes on after them boys, and the second team cuts cross the circle, finds the mark, and it commences after the first team. That seems like it could save us a mess of time, don't it?" "Yes, it do," said Pepper. "Sheriff, you one right smart man." "Okay, let's get her done. I figured out where they're headed, by the way." "Where, Sheriff?" "Track. The Alabama and Great Southern track cuts across the woods another six, seven miles out. So they goin' to catch a train ride, they think. You boys best catch ', you hear? We don't want nobody gitting out to tell fantastical stories about Thebes County now, do we?" "How much further, Earl?" said Sam. The ordeal was wearing on the older man. He'd twisted his ankle back there a ways, and now hobbled painfully onward. The going wasn't easy, for vines and sawtooth clotted the passageways between the trees and palmettos with sharp leaves that cut at them like cutlasses. Worse, every now and then they'd come upon a trail, and the easy passage, beckoning them onward, tempted their spirits away from Earl's compass plot sorely and broke their hearts when they had to find the discipline to say no to its comely ways. "We're getting close," said Earl, lying. He knew they weren't "close," only "closer." But no longer did they hear the barking of the dogs, and now it was just the two of them alone in the dark woods. "I am running low on steam." "I am, too, Mr. Sam. Neither of us banked on this. But by now them boys is goddamned good and mad, so we'd best keep going. If they catch up to us, there be all kinds of hell to pay." "I'm only thinking we've done beat them. That trick of yours buffaloed them good. We could take a rest, maybe." "Mr. Sam, that earned us an hour. But the deputies is younger and stronger and well motivated. They will not be stopping, no sir. They will keep on coming, I guarantee it. Best thing is, don't think about other stuff. Keep your mind hard." "I suppose you are right on that one. I--oh, shit." "Goddammit," said Earl. Far back, they heard a shot. It was the bitch Lucy who picked it up, and the sheriff's team, with Opic on the dogs, who got it. Lucy began to shiver and whine; she leaped up, her wet tongue licking at Opic. "Goddamn mutt," he said, pushing her back. "No, she's got it," said the sheriff. "She wants her reward. Opic, give her a kiss." "Ain't kissing no dog." "Yes you is, Opic. Seen goddamn old Pepper do it. Get to it." As Opic bent and faked love to the squirming, prideful hound, the sheriff turned and drew his Heavy-Duty and fired a shot. "Okay, boys," he said. "Let me tell you how we goin' do this thang. That track can't be more that three miles ahead. So now it's a goddamned race, and I am too much a old man. I will slow you down. Opic, you and Skeeter take off them packs. We will leave the packs here. I just want you with your rifles running after them dogs. The dogs will show the way. They hunt good. They'll hunt ' down, you hear? I will wait here for them other fellas. When they arrive, we'll run them dogs too, and they will follow along right quick, I do believe. But you our best chance. You get to them boys and you shoot ' dead. I don't want no confusion here now, you understand. Your job is to bring ' back dead and not alive, so that no one ask no questions, not now, not never. Got it, fellas?" Both men were hunters; both men appreciated the opportunity that had been presented them; both men looked upon it as the greatest of fun. "Now you go, dammit. I will wait for tot hers Opic set the hounds free, and they bounded off. Packless, but carrying their Winchesters with the glee of men about to have some fun, the young deputies took up the chase. "Docs," said Sam. "Oh, Christ, dogs." "Ain't as many of them," said Earl. "He done split up his team, and only a few marked us." "Can we make it?" "We got to pick up the pace. We can't tarry. Sorry, Mr. Sam, but it's going to be a running thing now." "Then," said Sam, "I will give it my best effort." They accelerated their movements, bucking ahead with more abandon now. Sam did something unprecedented as testament to the seriousness of his situation: he actually loosened his tie. "Hope no supreme court justices see you with that tie all reckless like that," said Earl. "You could git in trouble with your career if that happens." "Don't you tell a soul now, Earl. This one's between you and me, and as soon as we catch that train, the tie comes up again. You never can tell who you may run into hoboing on a freight." Earl appreciated that Sam could still joke a bit. When a man's sense of humor went, it meant he was near going under. In the war, he'd always looked for a chance to make his boys smile at some fool thing or other. It made ' that much looser and gave ', however tiny, just that much more chance. The land began an incline, howsoever gentle, and the height worked against them as well. Soon both were bent double, puffing hard, feeling the sweat leak off them, lost in the intensity of the ordeal. Earl had plotted onto a lone pine a half mile ahead. They increased their pace, achieving almost a jog, just the steady, easy lope of men at urgent extension, pushing themselves ever onward, trying to ignore the multitude of discomforts that built toward pain as they rushed along, their minds tunneling through everything toward the possibility of escape. Earl had pieces of metal scattered through his body, most of it Japanese shrapnel. Now and then a piece worked loose and nudged a nerve or something and sent a searing pain up to his brain. He'd been shot in the war a whole bunch of times, treated roughly by combat as combat will do to a man. He thought he was beyond the rough stuff, and he wasn't. Still, he clung desperately to the rifle. It was an old gun bought secondhand from a retiring trooper, what you call a trunk gun. It rode in the cruiser, wrapped in a blanket, picking up nicks and scratches over the years. But if a trooper ever needed something heavy to plow through the bones of a wounded animal or a barricaded robber, the heavy old Government .30 Model of '06 bullet would do the trick, and Earl knew he had but a hammer snick to accomplish before he fired the first of five packed in there. He hoped he didn't have to shoot. But he knew if he did, he would. It was his way. They reached the crest of the hill. "Lookie, goddamn," cried Opic. "Seen '. They just ahead." His eyes were good. They'd picked up on a flash of movement a quarter mile down the slope from them, nothing demonstrably human but nevertheless clearly the flash of something moving urgently. "Them dogs be on ' soon," Skeeter declared. "Tear ' up real damn good. Then we pop '. Like bear hunting'. Hunt bears with dogs. Dogs drive ' back, tire ' out, bleed ', y'all git close and you can pot yourself a bearskin rug for the winter." "You ain't never hunted no bears, Opic." "Well, that's right, goddammit. My people wasn't bear-hunting people. But that's how it be done, by Christ, that I know. You ain't never hunted no bears neither." "There, goddammit," Skeeter yelled. "Seen ' too. Let's git them old boys. Whooooie, goin' to be fun a-coming!" "Fun a-coming!" yelled Opic. The two lanky youths gathered themselves heroically, and once again started loping through the pines toward the last view they'd had of the fleeing men. The track was easy. The running dogs chewed up the soft pine needles where they galloped, and three of them left a big enough sign for an idiot. On the balls of their feet, Opic and Skeeter danced forward. The prospect of action, of success, of getting home after all this shit lightened their steps and their spirits. Their natural hunter's exuberance amplified the chemicals in their blood, and they soared ahead. sam stumbled and fell, caught himself, and kneeled, chest heaving, face wet with sweat. "Earl, I'm about finished. I think I'm going to have a goddamn heart attack! You go on. You git. You leave me here. You done your best. I just wasn't up to this goddamn thing." "Mr. Sam--" "No, Earl. I formally relieve you of any obligation to me. It's the '