“I’ll teach him some manners! God may make the horse, but I’m the one takes off the rough edges, ain’t that right, Miz Arden?”
“That’s right,” she said.
Jupiter grunted, satisfied with the answer. He turned his attention away from Dan and stared out the window. “Sun’s comin’ up directly. Be dry and hot. Horses need extra water today, can’t work ’em too hard.”
Arden motioned the nurse aside for a moment and spoke to her, and the nurse nodded agreement and withdrew to give them privacy. Dan started to move away, too, but the old man reached out with steely fingers and caught his wrist. “Louis don’t think I’m worth a damn no more,” he confided. “You talk to Louis?”
“No, I didn’t.”
“My nephew. Put me in here. I said Louis, you gimme the money they’re chargin’ you, I’ll show you how a man can pull hisself up.”
Arden drew up a chair beside the old man and sat down. Through the window the sky was becoming streaked with pink. “You always did like to watch the sun rise, didn’t you?”
“Got to get an early start, you want to make somethin’ of you’self. Mr. Richards knows that’s gospel. Water them horses good today, yessir.”
“You want me to step outside?” Dan asked the girl. But Jupiter didn’t let go of him, and Arden shook her head. Dan frowned; he felt as if he’d walked on stage in the middle of a play without knowing the title or what the damn thing was about.
“I am so pleased,” Jupiter said, “that you both come to see me. I think a lot ’bout them days. I dream ’bout ’em. I close my eyes and I can see everythin’, just like it was. It was a golden time, that’s what I believe. A golden time.” He drew a long, ragged breath. “Well, I ain’t done yet. I may be down, but I ain’t out!”
Arden took Jupiter’s other hand. “I came to see you,” she said, “because I need your help.”
He didn’t respond for a moment, and Arden thought he hadn’t heard. But then Jupiter’s head turned and he stared quizzically at her. “My help?”
She nodded. “I’m goin’ to find the Bright Girl.”
Jupiter’s mouth slowly opened, as if he were about to speak, but nothing came out.
“I remember the stories you used to tell me,” Arden went on. “I never forgot ’em, all this time. Instead of fadin’ away, they kept gettin’ more and more real. Especially what you told me about the Bright Girl. Jupiter, I need to find her. You remember, you told me what she could do for me? You used to say she could touch my face and the mark would come off on her hands. Then she’d wash her hands with water and it’d be gone forever and ever.”
The birthmark, Dan realized she was talking about. He stared at Arden, but her whole being seemed to be focused on the old man.
“Where is she?” Arden urged.
“Where she always was,” Jupiter answered. “Where she always will be. Road runs out, meets the swamp. Bright Girl’s in there.”
“I remember you used to tell me about growin’ up in LaPierre. Is that where I need to start from?”
“LaPierre,” he repeated, and he nodded. “That’s right. Start from LaPierre. They know ’bout the Bright Girl there, they’ll tell you.”
“Beg pardon,” Dan said, “but can I ask who ya’ll are talkin’ about?”
“The Bright Girl’s a faith healer,” Arden told him. “She lives in the swamp south of where Jupiter grew up.”
It came clear to Dan. Arden was searching for a faith healer to take the birthmark off her face, and she’d come to see this old man to help point the way. Dan was tired and cranky, his joints hurt, and his head was throbbing; it frankly pissed him off that he’d taken a detour and risked traveling on the interstate because of such nonsense. “What is she, some kind of voodoo woman lights incense and throws bones around?”
“It’s not voodoo,” Arden said testily. “She’s a holy woman.”
“Holy, yes she is. Carries the lamp of God,” Jupiter said to no one in particular.
“I had you figured for a sensible person. There’s no such thing as a faith healer.” A thought struck Dan like an ax between the eyes. “Is that why Joey left you? ’Cause he figured out you were chasin’ a fairy tale?”
“Oh, Mr. Richards sir!” Jupiter’s hand squeezed Dan’s harder. “Bright Girl ain’t no fair’ tale! She’s as real as you and me! Been livin’ in that swamp long ’fore my daddy was a li’l boy, and she’ll be there long after my bones done blowed away. I seen her when I was eight year old. Here come the Bright Girl down the street!” He smiled at the memory, the warm pink light of the early sun settling into the lines of his face. “Young white girl, pretty as you please. That’s why she called bright. But she carries a lamp, too. Carries a lamp from God that burns inside her, and that’s how she gets her healin’ touch. Yessir, here come the Bright Girl down the street and a crowd of people followin’ her. She on the way to Miz Wardell’s house, Miz Wardell so sick with cancer she just lyin’ in bed, waitin’ to die. She see me standin’ there and she smile under her big purple hat and I know who she is, ’cause my mama say Bright Girl was comin’. I sing out Bright Girl! Bright Girl! and she touch my hand when I reach for her. I feel that lamp she carryin’ in her, that healin’ lamp from God.” He lifted his eyes to Dan’s face. “I never felt such light before, Mr. Richards. Never felt it since. They said the Bright Girl laid her hands on Miz Wardell and up come the black bile, all that cancer flowin’ out. Said it took two days and two nights, and when it was done the Bright Girl was so tired she had to be carried back to her boat. But Miz Wardell outlived two husbands and was dancin’ when she was ninety. And that ain’t all the Bright Girl did for people ’round LaPierre, neither. You ask ’em down there, they’ll tell you ’bout all the folks she healed of cancers, tumors, and sicknesses. So nosir, all due respect, but Bright Girl ain’t no fair’ tale ’cause I seen her with my own livin’ eyes.”
“I believe you,” Arden said. “I always did.”
“That’s the first step,” he answered. “You go to LaPierre. Go south, you’ll find her. She’ll touch your face and make things right. You won’t never see that mark no more.”
“I want things made right. More than any thin’ in this world, I do.”
“Miz Arden,” Jupiter said, “I ’member how you used to fret ’bout you’self, and how them others treated you. I ’member them names they called you, them names that made you cry. Then you’d wipe your eyes, stick your chin out again, and keep on goin’. But it seems to me you might still be cryin’ on the inside.” He looked earnestly up at Dan. “You gone take care of Miz Arden?”
“Listen,” Dan said. “I’m not who you think I am.”
“I know who you are,” Jupiter replied. “You the man God sent Miz Arden.”
“Come again?”
“That’s right. You the man God provided to take Miz Arden to the Bright Girl. You His hands, you gone have to steer her the right direction.”
Dan didn’t know what to say, but he’d had enough of this. He pulled loose from the old man’s spidery fingers. “I’ll be waitin’ outside,” he growled at Arden, and he turned toward the door.
“Good-bye!” Jupiter called after him. “You heed what I say now, hear?”
Outside, the eastern horizon was the color of burnished copper. Already the air smelled of wet, agonizing heat. Dan stalked to the station wagon, got behind the wheel, and sat there while the sweat began to bloom from his pores. Again he pondered ditching her suitcase and hitting the road, but the heat chased such thoughts away; in his present condition he wouldn’t get more than a few miles before he fell asleep at the wheel. He was nodding off when the girl opened the passenger door. “You look pretty bad,” she said. “Want me to drive?”
“No,” he said. Don’t be stupid, he told himself. Weaving all over the road was a sure way to get stopped by a police car. “Wait,” he said as she started to climb in. “Yeah, I think you’d better drive.”
They started off, Arden retracing the way t
hey’d come. To Dan’s aching bones the pitch arid sway of the station wagon’s creaking frame was pure torture. “Gonna have to pull over,” he said when they were back on Darcy Avenue. He made out a small motel coming up on the right; its sign proclaimed it the Rest Well Inn, which sounded mighty good to him. “Turn in there.”
She did as he said, and she drove up under a green awning in front of the motel’s office. A sign in the window said that all rooms were ten dollars a night, there were phones in all of them, and the cable TV was free. “You want me to check us in?”
Dan narrowed his eyes at her. “What do you mean, check us in? We ain’t a couple.”
“I meant separate rooms. I could do with some sleep, too.”
“Oh. Yeah, okay. Fine with me.”
She cut the engine and got out. “What’s your last name?”
“Huh?”
“Your last name. They’ll want it on the register.”
“Farrow,” he said. “From Shreveport, if they need that, too.”
“Back in a couple of minutes.”
Dan leaned his head back and waited. Stopping here seemed the only thing to do; he wouldn’t have driven the rest of the way to Vermilion in daylight even if he’d felt able. He was fading fast. That crazy old man, he thought. Here come the Bright Girl down the street. Laid her hands on Miz Wardell. All that cancer flowin’ out. I never felt such light before, Mr. Rich—
“Here’s your key.”
Dan got his eyes open and took the key Arden offered. The sun had gotten brighter. Arden drove them a short distance, and then somehow he was fitting the key into a door and walking into a small but clean room with beige-painted cinder-block walls. He locked the door behind him, walked right to the bed, and climbed onto it without removing his cap or shoes. If the police were to suddenly burst into the room, they would’ve had to pour him into handcuffs.
Pain was throbbing through his body. He had pushed himself too far. But there was still a distance to go, and he couldn’t give up. Get seven or eight hours of sleep, he’d feel better. Drive after dark, down into the swampland. They know ’bout the Bright Girl there. Go south, you’ll find her. You His hands, you gone have to steer her the right direction.
Crazy old man. I’m a killer, that’s what I am.
Dan turned over onto his side and curled his knees up toward his chest.
You His hands.
And with that thought he slipped away into merciful and silent darkness.
13
Satan’s Paradise
“YOU KNOW ELVIS, ALMOST gave up singin’ when he was a young boy. Signed on as a truck driver, and that’s what he figured on bein’. Did I tell you I used to be a truck driver?”
“Yes, Eisley,” Flint said wearily. “Two hours ago.”
“Well, what I was meanin’ is that you never know where you’re goin’ in this life. Elvis thought he was gonna be a truck driver, and look where he went. Same with me. Only I guess I ain’t got to where I’m goin’ yet.”
“Um,” Flint said, and he let his eyes slide shut again.
The sun was hot enough to make a shadow sweat. The Eldorado’s windows were down but the air was still, not a whisper of a breeze. The car was parked on a side road under the shade of weeping willow trees, otherwise they couldn’t have stayed in it as they had for almost twelve hours. Even so, Flint had been forced to take off his coat and unbutton his shirt, and Clint’s arm dangled from its root just below the conjunction of Flint’s rib cage, the hand clenching every so often as if in lethargic protest of the heat. The reflexes of Clint’s hand had kept Mama entertained for a while, but now she lay asleep in the backseat, her pink tongue flopped out and a little puddle of drool forming on the black vinyl.
There was one cracked and potholed highway from Houma to Vermilion, no other road in or out. It had brought Flint and Pelvis along its winding spine south through the bayou country in the predawn darkness, and though they hadn’t been able to see much but the occasional glimmer of an early morning fisherman’s lamp upon the water, they could smell the swamp itself, a heavy, pungent odor of intermingled sweet blossoms and sickly wet decay. They had crossed a long, concrete bridge and come through the town of Vermilion, which was a shuttered cluster of ramshackle stores and clapboard houses. Three miles past the bridge, on the left, was a dirt road that led through a forest of stunted pines and needle-tipped palmettos to a gray-painted cabin with a screened-in porch. The cabin had been dark, Lambert’s car nowhere around. While Pelvis and Mama had peed in the woods, Flint had walked behind the cabin and found a pier that went out over a lake, but because of the darkness he couldn’t tell how large or small the lake was. A boathouse stood nearby, its doors secured by a padlock. Lambert might or might not be on his way here, Flint decided, but it was fairly certain he hadn’t shown up yet. Which was for the best, because Pelvis let out a loud yelp when a palmetto pricked him in a tender spot and then Mama started rapid-firing those high-pitched yips and yaps that made Flint’s skin crawl.
They’d driven back to Vermilion and Flint had used the phone booth in front of a bait-and-tackle shop. He’d called Smoates’s answering service and been told by the operator on duty that the light was still green, which meant that so far as Smoates knew, Lambert hadn’t been caught. Flint had found a dirt side road about fifty yards south of the turnoff to the cabin that he could back the Cadillac onto and still have a view through the woods. It was here that they’d been sitting since four o’clock, alternately keeping watch, sleeping, or eating the glazed doughnuts, Oreo cookies, Slim Jims, and other deadly snacks from Eisley’s grocery sack. They had stopped at a gas station just south of Lafayette to fill up and get something to drink, and there Flint had bought a plastic jug of water while Pelvis had opened his wallet for a six-pack of canned Yoo-Hoos.
“I swear,” Pelvis said between sips from the last can, “that’s an amazin’ thing.”
Flint remained silent; he was wise to Eisley’s methods of drawing him into pointless talk.
“I swear it is,” Pelvis tried again. “That little fella inside you, I mean. You know, I went to a freak show one time and saw a two-headed bull, but you take the cake.”
Flint pressed his lips together tightly.
“Yessir.” Slllurrrrp went the final swallow of the Yoo-Hoo. “People’d pay to see you, they surely would. I know I would. I mean, if I couldn’t see you for free. Make you some money that way. You ever want to give up bounty-huntin’ and go into show business, I’ll tell you everythin’ you need to —”
“Shut — your — mouth.” Flint had whispered it, and instantly he regretted it because Eisley had worn him down yet again.
Pelvis dug down into the bottom of the sack and came up with the last three Oreos. Three bites and they were history. He wiped his lips with the back of his hand. “Really, now. You ever think about show business? All jokin’ aside. You could get to be famous.”
Flint opened his eyes and stared into Pelvis’s sweat-beaded face. “For your information,” he said coldly, “I grew up in the carnival life. I had a stomach full of ‘show business,’ so just drop it, understand?”
“You was with the carnival? You mean a freak show, is that right?”
Flint lifted a hand to his face and pressed index finger and thumb against his temples. “Oh, Jesus, what have I done to deserve this?”
“I’m int’rested. Really I am. I never met nobody was a real live freak before.”
“Don’t use that word.”
“What word?”
“Freak!” Flint snapped, and Mama jumped up, growling. “Don’t use that word!”
“Why not? Nothin’ to be ’shamed of, is it?” Pelvis looked honestly puzzled. “I reckon there’s worse words, don’t you think?”
“Eisley, you kill me, you know that?” Flint summoned up a tight smile, but his eyes were fierce. “I’ve never met anybody so … so dense before in my entire life.”
“Dense,” Pelvis repeated. He nodded thoughtfully. “How do y
ou mean that, exactly?”
“Thick-skulled! Stupid! How do you think I mean it?” Flint’s smile had vanished. “Hell, what’s wrong with you? Have you been in solitary confinement for the last five or six years? Can’t you just shut your mouth and keep it shut for two minutes?”
“Course I can,” Pelvis said petulantly. “Anybody can do that if they want to.”
“Do it, then! Two minutes of silence!”
Pelvis clamped his mouth shut and stared straight ahead. Mama yawned and settled down to sleep again. “Whose watch we usin’ to time this by?” Pelvis asked.
“Mine! I’ll time it on my watch! Startin’ right now!”
Pelvis grunted and rummaged down in the sack, but there was nothing left but wrappers. He upturned the last Yoo-Hoo can to try to catch a drop or two on his tongue, then he crumpled the can in a fist. “Kinda silly, I think.”
“There you go!” Flint rasped. “You couldn’t last fifteen seconds!”
“I’m not talkin’ to you! Can’t a man speak what’s on his mind? I swear, Mr. Murtaugh, you’re tryin’ your very best to be hard to get along with!”
“I don’t want you to get along with me, Eisley!” Flint said. “I want you to sit there and zipper your mouth! You and that damn mutt have already messed things up once, you’re not gonna get a chance to do it again!”
“Don’t blame that on Mama and me, now! We didn’t have nothin’ to do with it!”
Flint gripped the steering wheel with both hands, red splotches on his cheeks. Clint’s hand rose up and clutched at the air before it fell back down again. “Just be quiet and leave me alone. Can you do that?”
“Sure I can. Ain’t like I’m dense or any thin’.”
“Good.” Flint closed his eyes once more and leaned his head back.
Maybe ten seconds later Pelvis said, “Mr. Murtaugh?”
Flint’s eyes were red-rimmed when he turned them on Eisley, his teeth gritting behind his lips.
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