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For my grandmother, Therese Reeves
Alabama does not mean “Here we rest.” It never did.
—Mrs. L. B. Bush, from “A Decade of Progress in Alabama,” 1924
Kilby Prison marks the impending transfer of the State of Alabama from the rear ranks of prison management to the front ranks. Alabama is following the example of the State of New York and the State of Virginia in establishing a central distributing prison to which prisoners will be sent immediately upon their conviction, and where they will receive: first, a thorough study of their history; second, a most thorough examination, mental and physical, by trained experts; third, a thorough course of treatment to remove any remedial defects; fourth, assignment to that prison and employment for which the convict is best adapted; and fifth, a systematic course of reformatory treatment and training, in order that the prisoner may be restored to society, if possible, a self-respecting, upright, useful and productive citizen.
—Hastings H. Hart, from Social Progress of Alabama, 1922
PART I
CHAPTER 1
The electrical transformers that would one day kill George Haskin sat high on a pole about ten yards off the northeast corner of the farm where Roscoe T Martin lived with his family. There were three transformers in all, and they stepped down electricity that belonged to Alabama Power, stepped it down to run on new lines along a farm fence, then on through the woods, then straight to the farmhouse and the barn. Roscoe built the transformers himself. He built the lines. He did not have permission.
The idea for running in power arrived nearly a year before the power itself. He should’ve been eating dinner with his family, but he’d hurt his son and made his wife cry, so he was walking the cursed land his wife had forced him to. He took the path through the north corn to bring him close to the new power lines along Old Hissup Road. The corn was to his hips, still young, and the giant grasses brushed his fingers, a sickly feeling that set him shaking out his hands as if to unseat an insect. Of all the crops on his wife’s land, corn was Roscoe’s least favorite, something obscene in its size and growth, in its stalks and blades and seeds—everything too big.
His wife and son had been reading together on the sofa, an oil lamp on the tall table behind them lighting the pages. When he’d first courted the boy’s mother, Roscoe had read with her, but she shared books with their son now.
They hadn’t looked up when Roscoe came into the room.
“What are you reading?” he asked.
“A book,” his son mumbled, snuggling closer to his mother.
Roscoe peered at the cover. “Parnassus on Wheels, huh? What’s it about?”
Annoyance showed on Marie’s face. “It’s about a woman who owns a traveling bookshop. She has a brother she’s sick of caring for.” Her voice was weary, as though she were talking to a troublesome child shirking his lessons. “The brother refuses to work the farm.”
She seemed to recognize her overstep before Roscoe reacted, offering him some kind of conciliatory gesture, an uncertain stretch of her hand that he slapped away. Gerald sank deeper into her side.
“I am not the ugly one here,” Roscoe said to her. “You knew I wasn’t going to become a farmer.”
She’d reached for his arm again, but the anger came quick, the way it did, pushing him taller, shooting him toward that ceiling her daddy had plastered himself. Roscoe wrenched the book from Marie’s hands and threw it across the room, where it broke a ceramic plate that hung on the wall.
“Go upstairs, Gerald,” Marie said.
But Roscoe leaned down into his son’s face. “You reading about a lowlife like your pa? Some shiftless loaf-about who won’t work his own farm?” The boy’s eyes went wide, the whites of them showing all round, and he tucked his lips inside his mouth like a coward.
Roscoe put his hands on Gerald’s arms and lifted him away from his mother. Marie grabbed hold of Gerald’s shirt, but Roscoe had a firm grip. He held the boy in front of his face, squeezing his upper arms. He whispered, “I am smarter than you’ll ever be.”
Then Marie had appeared again in his vision, clawing at his arm and his face, screaming at Roscoe to stop, and he did—he dropped their son at his wife’s feet and slammed himself out the front door to walk the ugly fields to the power lines he loved.
A farm was no place for an electrician. He’d said it enough times, and he’d wallowed away the past year tinkering with an old mechanical thresher and reading in his late father-in-law’s library. Every day, Marie asked him what he was going to do, and every day, he said, “Anything but work this goddamned farm.”
“You came,” she replied. “You didn’t have to.”
Her resentment was as strong as his, stronger even, with what he’d just done. The boy’s arms would be bruised.
Roscoe stood under the nearest of the power lines. The air was darkening around him, and the cicadas had started their crying, wiry and metallic. If Marie’s father hadn’t died, Roscoe would still be working in the powerhouse back at Lock 12. They’d be living in the village, and he would be doing the work he loved.
Roscoe had a letter from his old foreman—his job was open for him should he wish to come back.
He was considering exactly that option when the idea for the transformers came, a vision before him—two or three of them perched on a freshly raised pole, linked up to new lines he’d twist himself. He saw light fixtures in the farmhouse, the kitchen appliances Marie had loved back in the village. And he saw the farm saved. Surely, electricity had the power to do that.
Exhaustion finally sent him back toward the house, and in the midst of the cornfield he recognized exactly how electricity could save Marie’s land. He would electrify that damn thresher—wasn’t that what he was already trying to do?—and he’d have that great machine do the work of the men Marie hired every season with money they didn’t have. The thresher would run for free on their pirated power, and the farm would see a profit, as it had only in the legends of Marie’s childhood.
He chewed on the idea for a month before taking it to Wilson.
MARIE was on the front porch, drinking coffee and reading the almanac. She’d barely spoken to Roscoe since their fight before his walk in the corn, and she refused to acknowledge him when he came through the screen door.
The day was mild and green, everything growing in the April sun.
“Do you know where I can find Wilson?” Roscoe asked.
Marie didn’t look up.
“Marie, do you know where Wilson is?”
She kept her eyes down. “He’s working.”
Roscoe wished he could tell her instead, that she were the person he’d go to with news or ideas. He wished for an invitation on her face, something welcoming, even just the hint of a smile. Marie, he wanted to say, I have something for you to liken to your birds. Marie was a birder—a thing he’d loved about her from the start—always catching a tune, a pattern, an errant flit of blue in the holly, and she defined people and ideas by the birds they typified. She’d called him a cedar waxwing early in their courtship, the two of them walking along the Coosa River. The waxwing is known for its bandit eyes and tips of yellow and orange. “Look,” she’d said. “See that? They’re eating the dried berries.” She pointed out the birds’ haphazard flig
ht, wheeling and turning over the water. “They’re drunk as beggars up there. The berries are all fermented now.” She’d paused. “You’re a waxwing. All this electricity getting you drunk.” Later, she admitted that they were her favorite, these drunken birds, and Roscoe had taken it as a compliment that was both rough and tender.
Roscoe couldn’t remember the last time Marie had pointed out a waxwing. He couldn’t remember the last time anything had been tender between them.
“Where is Wilson working?” he asked.
“North field. He’s mending rails on the far fence line. He could use your help.” She was looking at her book again, her features cast in their resident fatigue, and Roscoe left her without saying good-bye. They were long past greetings and farewells.
The paint on the rungs of the porch steps was chipped and flaking, and Roscoe kicked bits free as he walked down. The steps had been white once, as the house had been white, but everything was gray now, the exposed boards and the remaining paint dulled by age. Roscoe glanced back at his wife, sitting under the roof of the porch, and he saw the sadness in her surroundings, the great failing of her father’s house and land. Creepers had taken over the chimneys and lattice of the porch. The brick underneath crumbled in places, the mortar giving way to the vines. This was no longer the home of Marie’s childhood, and Roscoe could understand—right here, for just this moment—his wife’s disappointment. She had come here to save the place, to return it to the glory it had known under her father’s care, but there had been no improvements since their arrival. They weren’t even holding steady. Their yields and income continued to decline, the house to deteriorate, the land to fail them.
At one time in their lives Roscoe would have told her these thoughts, a time when his compassion would have helped.
He left Marie in her crumbling house and took a trail through a thicket of woods, veering right at its fork. Left led to a cottage where Wilson lived with his family. Right led to the cornfield, ending at the furrows.
Roscoe made so much noise that Wilson had his eyes on him before he’d fully cleared the crops.
“What brings you out here, Ross?”
Roscoe leaned his weight against the new rail Wilson had just hung. “I’m thinking about a project. Could use your help.”
Wilson laughed the way he did over cards the nights Roscoe could convince him to play or over the fishing lines they strung out into the pond, begging for catfish or bass or bluegill. His was a light laugh, a whistle of breath through his nose.
“Can’t imagine this project’s got much to do with the farm.” Wilson hammered a nail into a thick branch, recently cut, leaking sap.
“I figured out how to save the place.” Roscoe believed it. And not just the place, but his life with Marie. The thought raised a yearning in his gut. He could fix things. He could make them right again.
“The place don’t need saving, Ross.”
These were Marie’s words, and she spread them like the words of God. She had everyone, temporary hands included, thinking the place needed nothing more than its people. She was wrong. Her father had been wrong, too.
“I want to run lines in. Here along the edge of the field. It’s the perfect spot. I can tap that pole right past the corner.”
Wilson finished up with a second nail and jiggled the new timber, testing its strength. The wood didn’t budge. “Those lines are bound for the city, Ross. What makes you think they’d run a line in here?”
“I wouldn’t ask them.”
Wilson laughed again and moved down a fence post. The next top rail was rotted through, broken in its middle. “You talking about stealing?”
Now, Roscoe laughed. “There’s already so much current lost in line transmission—what we would take is nothing in comparison. A drop of water from a lake, Wilson. Nothing missed.”
Wilson pried at the nails anchoring the rotted wood. “How are you going to tap those lines without killing yourself?”
“We’d knock out the power first, and anyway, I’ve been doing this kind of thing a long time.”
Wilson looked at him. “Even if you could make it work, what’s electricity going to do for the farm?”
Roscoe pounded his hands down on the solid rail in front of him, so good was the idea. “I’ve figured out how to convert a fuel-powered thresher to run off electricity. Think of it—all the shucking and picking we’d be rid of. We could get more fields of peanuts in. And then have the machine do the bulk of the labor. I know it’d make this place profitable, Wilson. I know it.”
Wilson looked off into the neighboring property, its grasses grown tall while its resident cows worked the other side of the land. He had to be imagining the thresher. Roscoe willed it into his friend’s mind, the giant machine squatting in the shop, churning out ears all plucked from their stalks, ready for market. See it, Wilson.
Wilson shook his head. “The farm don’t need electricity, Ross. It needs more hands.”
“Goddamn it, Wilson. That’s Marie’s pitch, and even I know we can’t afford more hands. Growing up here doesn’t make her an expert. You know that. Hell, you were here when she was a schoolgirl up in her father’s library reading all day, and then gone to the university the first chance she got. She’s a goddamned teacher, not a farmer.”
“It’s her land, Ross.”
“It’s mine, too.”
Wilson shook his head again. “You gonna pull boss ranks on me, now?”
Roscoe kicked at the bunched grass near a fence post. He wasn’t Wilson’s boss. Marie wasn’t either. Wilson had lived on this property since he was a boy, and he’d helped Marie’s father tend it all through her childhood. He was the boss of the place, if anyone was, Roscoe coming to him for permission, a subordinate with a revolutionary idea. Just give me a chance, boss! Let me try.
“I’m not your goddamned boss. I’m an electrician, and if I’m going to stay here, I have to do something that’s mine.” Roscoe leaned his elbows on the rail. “I know how little I’ve done around here this past year. This is what I can do.”
Wilson kept working.
“I got word from my old foreman at the powerhouse. Says there’s a spot for me. Open door. If I don’t do this, I think I’ll have to go.”
“You wouldn’t leave Marie and Gerald.”
“I would.” Saying it, Roscoe fully understood its truth. If this didn’t work—the transformers, the lines, the thresher—he would go back to that village at the Lock 12 dam on the banks of the Coosa River where he’d first met Marie. He’d move back into the single-employee apartment house and walk down the clay road to the dam each morning, all those wires and conduits awaiting him, all those new lines to run. He would leave his wife and son to get back to the drive and purpose of that work. He would.
Wilson set his pry bar into the gap between pole and crossbeam to wrench the broken rail loose. Roscoe watched, half hoping Wilson would refuse his proposal. He could walk back to the house and pack a small bag, kiss his son on the top of his head and Marie once more on her dry lips, and then start south. He would walk the whole way and never grow tired.
“What’s my part?” Wilson asked.
“I’d need your help raising the poles and getting the lines strung.”
“That’s all?”
“That’s all.”
Roscoe saw himself walking through fields like this neighboring one, down lanes chalky with red dust, past farms worse off than Marie’s.
“Is Marie gonna know about this?”
Roscoe saw himself turning around, walking back up those porch steps, gathering Marie into his arms. “She will know we have power.”
“But she won’t know how we’re gettin’ it.”
“It will come from the power company, as far as she knows, and that will be enough.”
“You gonna fake the bills?”
“If I have to. Ala
bama Power will bring in their own lines in the next five years or so. It’ll work itself out.”
“So I’ve only gotta lie to your wife for five years.”
“Tops.”
“What about Moa?”
Roscoe hadn’t thought about Moa, though he should’ve. She had a place in every plan that unfolded on the farm. Moa was Wilson’s wife, and she was the land’s matriarch, her presence both firm and embracing. She was only eight years older than Marie, but when Marie’s mother had passed away, Moa had taken up the role. She was tall and slender and coffee colored, much lighter than Wilson, and she rolled her hair under on each side in a shape like a wave. Roscoe knew she kept a soft spot for him, defending him most chances she got, but he knew, too, that she’d never lie to Marie. He didn’t think Wilson could lie to Moa either. Their relationship was built of evening walks to the pond, their three children back at the house with Gerald. They were easy with one another, quick with smiles and gentle chiding.
“Would you be able to keep it from her?” Roscoe asked.
Wilson pried at the wood, the nail whining as it let go. “It’d probably be better if she didn’t know. Should something go poorly, it’d be good she not be a part of it.”
“Nothing will go poorly.”
Wilson shook his head and lifted the old rail, tossing it into the neighbors’ grasses. “Here”—he lifted up the new one—“think you can hold an end for me?”
It was the first farmwork Roscoe had helped Wilson with, and he didn’t mind taking it on. He told himself he didn’t need to go back to the powerhouse at Lock 12. He didn’t need to leave. He would stay here and make this land successful. He would have his work back, a job of currents and wires, forces and reactions, and the farm would grow so strong that it could run itself. Marie could return to teaching, if she chose. She could set up a small school on the land, use the books in her father’s library. They would reclaim something in their marriage, and Roscoe would figure out how to know his son. They would be all right.
Work Like Any Other Page 1