“What’re you yellin’ about?”
“That,” he said, pointing at my leg. Then he looked at the singed grass in our yard and waved his arm at it, saying, “And that! You just about get your place burnt to ash, and you girls about get killed, and you don’t say nothin’ to me?”
Daddy came out of the house then and said, “Now, Luke, I was gonna tell ya—”
“It’s a little late. I had to go and find out from Sheriff Slater. Ran into him at the pharmacy, and he says, ‘Well then, Luke, what do you think of all that trouble out at the Lassiter place?’ And I’m left sayin’, ‘What trouble?’ like I’m some sort of stranger or somethin’.”
“We’re all fine and good,” Daddy said. “Everyone’s alive and well, and Jessie’ll be back on both feet in no time.”
“I knew that boy was trouble. I knew it!” Luke walked one way across the yard and then another, like a nervous squirrel, before he turned back to us and said, “Animals like Walt Blevins ain’t fit to live; you know that? They ain’t fit to live.”
“Seein’ as how I figured you might feel that way, I thought I’d let you know after things had calmed down a bit,” Daddy told him. “We don’t need you goin’ and gettin’ yourself in trouble by causin’ violence. The sheriff had to tell me the same thing last night.”
Luke put his head down and took a long, deep breath.
Daddy rested a hand on his shoulder. “Son, I appreciate you carin’ for my girls. I just don’t want you gettin’ in trouble over it, you hear?”
Daddy headed inside the house, and Luke came up onto the porch to sit in the rocking chair next to me. He rocked back and forth for a couple minutes before he nodded at my leg and asked, “It hurt?”
“A little.”
Then he rocked some more before saying, “Gemma okay?”
“Suppose so. She’s helpin’ Momma with supper.”
That was the way all our conversation went that night. No one said much more than five words at a time. No one ate much either, even Luke, who could usually eat more than me, Momma, and Gemma combined. It was like the events of the day before had soured everyone’s stomachs.
For me, it had started to change the way I saw life and the people in it. I’d known that some of the colored people in town had been harassed by white men who didn’t think colored people should be treated the same as white people. Gemma had a friend who didn’t have a daddy, and she had once told me that he’d been hanged for talking back to a white man. But now it was happening to me, and I had no choice but to look the evil of it full in the face. Some people were full of hate, and I was going to have to accept that for what it was.
Once I’d told my momma that I hated Buddy Pernell, and she’d taken a switch to my backside, saying, “There ain’t no worse thing to say about a body than that you hate them. It’s like tellin’ them to go to the devil.”
When I was nine, that didn’t mean much to me, because sending a mean boy to the devil didn’t seem anything but good. But once I saw the hate in Walt Blevins’s eyes and heard it in the voices of those men, I started to realize the point of Momma’s words a little more. I didn’t like the way it felt to be hated, and if being attacked by those men was anything like being sent to the devil, I didn’t want any part of that either.
A few days after that devastating night, Gemma and I were out for a walk through the backwoods on our property, the one place we knew had shelter from the scorching sun, when Buddy Pernell leapt out at us from behind a tree. We jumped a mile and screamed, setting him into a chorus of laughter. I flashed him a sore look. He was one of the last people on earth I wanted to see, and all I could think of was his drunken breath on my neck on Independence Day.
“You think you’re so funny, Buddy Pernell,” I said angrily.
“I swear you girls looked like you’d seen a ghost.”
“We don’t believe in ghosts,” I shot back.
“You’d best have if you’re goin’ walkin’ through these woods. This here’s Cy Fuller’s property you’re on now.”
“No, it ain’t. It’s my daddy’s.”
“Not if you cross over the creek there. You do that and you’re on Cy Fuller’s property. Can’t never tell when you’ll run across his ghost takin’ a stroll through these here dark woods.”
“What’re you talkin’ about Mr. Fuller’s ghost?” Gemma asked. “Man’s got to be dead before you can start makin’ up ghost stories about him.”
“Ain’t you heard?” He looked around as though he was making sure no one was listening, and then he gave us a wide, mischievous grin. “He is dead.”
“Buddy Pernell, you tell the dumbest stories a girl ever heard,” I argued.
“You think I’m lyin’? Go ask the sheriff. Better yet, head on over to Cy’s meadow and take a look at the search party they got goin’ on over there.”
Cy Fuller spent most of his time on the bottle and owned about fifteen dogs that loved to holler at night and wake me up. I didn’t like him one bit, but he had a nice little girl named Missy, who was as shy as a mouse and never said much. I suppose that’s why I thought she was nice, because I talked so much that anyone who would listen to me made me happy. I didn’t much like the idea of her losing her daddy, even if I didn’t like the man.
“You’re lyin’,” I argued. “Cy Fuller ain’t dead.”
“You ask anyone. They done found blood all over his back property, and ain’t no one seen ’im since Sunday.”
It was the mention of Sunday that got my heart racing and made my hairs stand on end. Ever since that night I’d wondered about what might have happened in the chaos that had followed those last two gunshots. In the dark, with the smoke and shouting, I couldn’t see a thing, and all I could hear was a ringing in my ears. There was no telling what I’d done. For all I knew, I was a murderer.
Daddy had scolded me when I’d mentioned that to him. “You ain’t killed no one, Jessilyn. Don’t you worry none about things like that. You did what you had to do, and you scared ’em off. Ain’t nothin’ more to it than that.”
But I hadn’t been so sure, and now, hearing about Cy Fuller, my fears started to flood back. I had no doubt that Cy Fuller could have been one of those hooded men, as I had no doubt that I could have killed him with my daddy’s rifle without knowing it. I figured it was possible that he’d struggled home from our place only to meet his death just a piece from his house.
The first thing I wanted to do was go right over to the Fullers’ property. Gemma squeezed my hand to stop me, saying, “You can’t go there. What if someone sees you?”
“I ain’t gonna do nothin’ to be seen. I just want to prove Buddy wrong, is all.” I gulped twice and kept my face turned toward Gemma so Buddy couldn’t see how scared I really was.
“What’s to see?”
“More’n you think,” Buddy said. “I’m tellin’ you, the man’s dead.”
I stared hard at Gemma and told her without words just how much I needed to go see that place for myself. She returned my gaze for several seconds before dropping her head with a sigh. “Fine,” she agreed. “But if there’s trouble, you got to promise me we’ll hightail it good and quick.”
I promised her, and the two of us followed Buddy through the woods, ducking under the brush and branches he let snap back in our faces. Gemma had a grip on my hand, and I knew if I failed to keep my promise to run from trouble she’d find some way to haul me off bodily.
When we got there, we found the place crowded with the sheriff, some of his men, and townsfolk who had volunteered to search the property.
“Told you so,” Buddy whispered, his face buried in a pine bough.
“You said he was dead,” Gemma told him. “But that looks like a searchin’ party.”
“Well, they ain’t found him yet, but you can bet he’s good enough dead. They’ll turn him up soon.” We stood in the woods, hoping for some information, but didn’t see much outside of a lot of men walking back and forth with their arms locked
together, shouting things at each other across the fields. As boring as it was, we watched with wide eyes, barely moving.
After an hour Buddy gave up watching. “I got better things to do,” he said with a yawn. “You girls stay if you want to, but I’m tellin’ you, the man’s gonna turn up dead.” He leaned down and put his lips to my ear. “They say the dead like walkin’ best at sundown,” he said in an eerie voice. “Best be gettin’ home before too long or Cy Fuller will get ya.”
I shoved at him with one hand and kept my eyes glued to the ordeal past the tree line.
“Let’s go too, Jessie,” Gemma begged when Buddy left us behind. “There ain’t nothin’ to see.”
But I ignored her. I was transfixed by the fear that those men would any minute prove me a murderer.
Gemma kept complaining at me about every five minutes until I finally gave up wearily. “Fine. Let’s go. But I ain’t never gonna be able to sleep again till I find out if I killed Cy Fuller.”
“Jessie, you ain’t killed Cy Fuller,” Gemma said, whispering that terrible word.
“How do you know?”
“I know ’cause I know.” She stood there staring at me with her hands on her hips like my momma would do, and I could tell she expected that her words should be the end of my worrying.
I nodded to make her think I agreed, but I didn’t. And as we walked back home, I figured she knew I didn’t, but she didn’t say anything. Neither of us said a word that whole time, and I went straight to my room and stayed there. I’d told Gemma to tell Momma I wasn’t feeling good, and when she told me she wasn’t going to lie for me, I said, “It ain’t lyin’. I feel sick in my gut.”
“Luke’s gonna be here,” she tried. “Ain’t that a reason to come on down?”
“I can’t look at him now. He ain’t never gonna love a murderer.”
Gemma marched out of the room in a huff. I had an awful feeling I wouldn’t be eating for a while.
The days that followed were a misery. Rumors were all around town about what happened to Cy Fuller, and everyone had their own theory about it. Some people were saying he’d been shot over his moonshine business; others said he’d been beat up over some gambling debts. The method of death changed with each story, but the idea that he was dead never changed. Everyone assumed the same thing—that he’d been killed and dragged away to a hasty grave somewhere in the acres of woods around his house.
Because of that, Cy’s property continued to swarm with men and dogs, a sort of makeshift hunting party, except they were hunting for a corpse. Sheriff Slater had his team out there for four days before he gave up. He stopped by our place at the end of his search and had a talk with Daddy. I watched them from my bedroom window, unable to hear a word, but I had a pretty good idea what they were saying.
The feeling around our house was that we were thinking the same thing, but no one wanted to say a word about it. I knew I didn’t want to. I moped around feeling like the loneliest person in the world. After all, I was the only person I knew of who thought she might have killed a man.
That week, Daddy hired a new hand, figuring that he needed to be around the house more to keep an eye on things. Jeb Carter seemed a good sort, kind of quiet and shy, and he mostly kept to himself. I liked him a lot from the start. Just the way he smiled at me made me trust him. We had some other farmhands, but none of them paid much attention to the family. They only worked for us. But Jeb . . . he was different. He and I seemed to have something that made us like each other.
“What’re you doin’?” I asked him on his second day as he sat on a tree stump taking a midday break. “Whittlin’?”
“Makin’ me a bird call.”
“What for?”
“Like watchin’ birds.”
“Oh.” I sat down on the grass and picked a leftover dandelion, blowing the white tufts into the breeze. I looked at Jeb with one eyebrow cocked, wondering at his short way with words. He never seemed to speak full sentences. “Which birds you like?”
“All kinds.”
I blew another dandelion and asked, “You like workin’ the farm?”
“Just like workin’. Don’t matter what kind.”
“You like workin’?” I asked in surprise. “What kind of person likes workin’? Most people only do it ’cause they have to.”
“Workin’ keeps the mind busy.”
“So you like keepin’ your mind busy?”
“A busy mind,” he said with a short nod, “quiets bad memories.”
I wanted more than anything to ask him what his bad memories were, but I could see by his face that he didn’t want to talk anymore, so I just sat there watching him whittle. After several minutes of silence, I got up and brushed the dried grass from my backside. “Guess I’ll see you later.”
Jeb reached his dirty hand out and handed me the bird call.
“Want me to keep it for you till you’re done workin’?” I asked.
“Want you to keep it for good.”
“Keep it? I thought you were makin’ it for yourself ’cause you like birds.”
“I’ll make another one.”
I studied it for a minute before asking, “You sure?”
“I’m sure.” Then he walked off without another word, grabbing his gloves on his way.
I called after him, “Thank you!” but he kept walking without turning around.
Those were the kinds of things Jeb did all the time, I would find. He liked helping people, but he didn’t like getting attention for it. So I’d always just accept his kindness, give him a quiet thank-you, and leave.
I especially enjoyed my visits with Jeb because we didn’t have many visitors anymore, and life on the farm was getting good and boring. Daddy told us it would last for only a little while longer. He thought once some time had passed, people would get used to us having Gemma, and life would get easier. But from what I’d seen recently, it seemed that hard hearts had long memories.
For the first time in my life, I wasn’t so sure my daddy was right.
Luke didn’t trust Jeb from the start, I could tell. After our trouble with the Klan, he started hanging around our house every day after work, and he’d watch Jeb from the porch with a suspicious eye.
“What you got against Jeb?” I asked him one day.
“Ain’t got nothin’ against him.”
I hopped onto the porch rail and tucked my knees under my chin. “You’re lyin’. You watch him like Duke watches a squirrel.”
“You imagine things,” Luke told me around the piece of tall grass he was chewing thoughtfully, but his eyes never left Jeb.
“Then how come you can’t look at me instead of Jeb?”
He just kept rocking in his chair, stewing.
“I said why can’t you stop watchin’ Jeb? You listenin’ to me?”
Luke stopped rocking, pulled the grass from his mouth, and looked at me with extra-wide eyes. “There! I’m lookin’ at you. You happy now?”
I rolled my eyes and hopped down from the rail.
“Where you goin’?” Luke asked as I walked down the steps.
“To talk to Jeb.”
“What for?”
“’Cause I like him, that’s what for. What’re you so worked up about?” I asked wryly, my eyes squinted to avoid the late afternoon sun. “You ain’t got nothin’ against him, remember?”
Luke sighed loudly enough for the neighbors to hear and got out of the rickety rocking chair so hard it slid back against the house.
“Where you goin’?” I asked.
“With you.”
“I ain’t goin’ into town or nothin’. I’m just walkin’ over to the meadow.”
“So?”
“So you don’t need to follow me everywhere.” I watched as his mouth curved down into a frown, and I hoped my argument didn’t really change his mind. I may have talked like he was being ridiculous, but I wanted him to come with me all the same. I wanted him going everywhere with me.
To my pleasure, he
threw the piece of grass to the ground and said, “Ain’t no law against a man walkin’ through meadows, is there?”
I shrugged like I didn’t care, but there was a mile-wide smile on my face when I turned back around.
Jeb was busy sharpening some tools when we came upon him, but he stopped and looked up at us. “Hey there, Miss Jessilyn. . . . Talley,” he said to Luke with a nod. “Doin’ fine?”
“Gettin’ by,” Luke replied curtly.
“I’m doin’ just fine too,” I said quickly to talk over Luke’s harsh tone. “You look hot there, Jeb. You need some lemonade or somethin’?”
“Naw, I done got me a big old jug of water over there by the shed. That’ll do me just fine.”
Luke sauntered around the shed, studying the area like a detective, taking time now and again to peer sideways at Jeb.
Jeb watched him for a minute until I asked him, “Ain’t you ’bout done with work today? It’s gettin’ late.”
“I wanted to get these tools taken care of tonight so I can use them in the mornin’. Like to get started right off tomorrow.” He wiped his hands on an old rag and then wiped his forehead with it too. “Guess I’m through now.”
I glanced over my shoulder as a shadow came up behind me and saw Luke strutting toward us with his hands on his hips. “You been rummagin’ in that shed there?” he asked Jeb.
“Just gettin’ out the tools I needed to work on.”
“Uh-huh.” Luke eyed those tools and kept nodding methodically. “You know anythin’ about that hole under the shed, Jeb?”
“Hole?” I asked. “What hole?”
“There’s a big ol’ hole there,” he said, pointing toward the far end of the shed.
I went over and stuck my right foot down into it, wiggling my toes around. “Must’ve been Duke lookin’ for somethin’ again.”
“Don’t know,” Luke said. “Maybe a person’s been diggin’ there.”
“Diggin’ for what?” I spluttered. “Last I heard we ain’t got treasure buried on Lassiter property.”
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