WHERE
SOUTHERN
CROSS
THE DOG
Allen Whitley
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents are either a product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Published by Emerald Book Company
Austin, TX
Copyright ©2010 Allen Whitley
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission from the copyright holder.
Distributed by Emerald Book Company.
For ordering information or special discounts for bulk purchases, please contact Emerald Book Company at PO Box 91869, Austin, TX 78709, 512.891.6100.
Design and composition by Greenleaf Book Group LLC
Cover design by Greenleaf Book Group LLC
Cover image uses photo ©AGStockUSA / Bill Barksdale
CD compilation by Allen Whitley and Jim O’Neal, copyright 2010 by Stackhouse Recording Company and Drop Top Music. Library of Congress procedure has been followed to make good faith attempts to contact performers on this compilation by U.S. mail, using address information provided by the Library of Congress.
LCCN: 2009942927
Ebook ISBN: 978-1-934572-85-6
Ebook Edition
To those blues musicians and singers who took the hollers from the cotton fields and created America’s greatest art form, bestowed upon us the imagery of history and culture in their lyrics, and taught us how much fun we could have on a Saturday night.
For me, this work of Southern fiction would never have been complete without the complement of music. The blues is such an integral part of the spirit of Mississippi that I was bound to share its powerful message that I have been fortunate to experience.
In the back of this book you will find a CD of recordings (also available to download at www.allenwhitley.com), most of which have never been heard except by a handful of people who knew the artist. With Jim O’Neal, noted blues researcher, at the helm, we journeyed down the road of discovery and relished in the findings for this compilation. The tracks, most of which were recorded near Clarksdale, Mississippi, in the early 1940s, include prison work songs, oral history narrations, and a few songs with very little instrumental accompaniment.
Listen, at least once, knowing that you’ve heard something that is pure and newly rediscovered, and that until our voices join theirs, we will always have occasion to sing the blues.
Here is a listing of the tracks:
Lewis (Billy) Bell: “Levee Camp Holler (Got Me ‘Cused of Forgin’)” (2:23) Sherard, 1942 (AL)
Convicts, state penitentiary, Parchman: “Can’t Pick Cotton, Can’t Pull Corn” (2:25) Parchman, 1936 (JAL)
Convicts, state penitentiary, Parchman: “Dem Long Summer Days” (2:30) Parchman, 1936 (JAL)
Convicts, state penitentiary, Parchman: “If You White Folks Want to Learn to Play Poker” (2:55) Parchman, 1936 (JAL)
Jesse James Jefferson: “Walk Around” (2:33) Clarksdale, 1942 (JW)
Irene Williams: “Come On Oar” (1:50) Rome, 1940 (JAL & RTL)
Walter Whitehead: “Last Night and the Night Before” (0:21) Drew, 1940 (JAL & RTL)
Two girls [sic]: “I Met Brother Rabbit” (0:24) Greenville, 1939 (HH)
Doretha Cook and Bessie Lee Huffman: “One Year Twenty-Four Years Ago” (0:32) Greenville, 1939 (HH)
Bessie Lee Huffman: “Jump Po’ Rabbit” (0:44) Greenville, 1939 (HH)
Mrs. A. Williams [Annie Williams]: “Shout For Joy” (3:48) Friars Point, 1942 (AL)
Emma Jane Davis & Group: “Little Sally Walker” (0:36) Friars Point, 1942 (AL)
Emma Jane Davis & Group: “Shortenin’ Bread” (2:16) Friars Point, 1942 (AL)
Turner Junior Johnson: “Preacher Let Your Heart Catch on Fire” (2:50) Coahoma County, 1942 (AL)
Asa Ware: “Levee Camp Song (Before I Go)” (0:50) Hopson Plantation, 1942 (AL)
Houston Bacon [with Elias Boykin]: “Lining Track or Calling Track” (12:13) Clarksdale, 1942 (AL)
Unidentified Negro: Toast [“You Shall Be Free”] (1:29) Sherard, 1942 (AL)
Will Starks: Interview (14:04) Clarksdale, 1942 (AL)
Will Starks: “My Old Mistis Promised Me” (3:11) Clarksdale, 1942 (AL)
Will Starks: Toast [“Doodley Doo”] (1:46) Clarksdale, 1942 (AL)
The folklorists who recorded the tracks include: Alan Lomax (AL), John A. Lomax (JAL), Ruby T. Lomax (RTL), Herbert Halpert (HH), and John Work (JW).
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I HAVE MANY PEOPLE TO THANK FOR ASSISTING ME along a journey where the lessons were discovered during the voyage, not at the destination.
First, thanks to the following people who provided resources, information, connections, and such: Dean Blackwood, who always took my calls and provided names and contacts of people who were invaluable to the project. Ed Komara, a wonderful resource at The State University of New York at Potsdam who was instrumental in recommending Eric Sackheim’s The Blues Line: Blues Lyrics from Leadbelly to Muddy Waters and Michael Taft’s Talkin’ to Myself: Blues Lyrics, 1921–1942. I took the chapter-opening epigraphs mainly from these two sources, attributing some lyrics to the actual writer and other lyrics to the artist who recorded the song. Ed Young, founder of AGStockUSA, Inc., and photographer Bill Barksdale, who provided what turned out to be an incomparable cover photo. Jeff Sayers, Mississippi born and raised, who reestablished distant relationships for my benefit.
A special thanks to Jim O’Neal, founder of Living Blues magazine, who was responsible for finding the wonderful music, narrations, and work songs accompanying this book. Without the music, this project is only half done.
A big round of thanks to the Greenleaf Book Group’s production and consultation team: Matthew Donnelley, Neil Gonzalez, Justin Branch, Alan Grimes, Chris McRay, Theresa Reding, and Katie Steigman, who brought the concept to Greenleaf. Their professionalism was refreshing and much appreciated.
Special thanks to my editors, each of whom provided unique perspectives and worked tirelessly to help me craft what I meant and not what I wrote: Mindy Reed, Jerry Davis, Susan Figliulo, Jay Hodges, and Linda O’Doughda, my sponsor into the mutual admiration society.
Thanks to Kevin Chapman, astute attorney, rancher, and friend, who provided insights and guidance into the intricacies of legal procedure and kept me within the confines of reasonable legal behavior.
I’d like to express a sincere indebtedness to Don and Marcus Brown, who reduced my degrees of separation from Katie, someone who understood and cared about my vision.
Writing is a terribly selfish pursuit. Alone and away from distractions, the cocooned author creates an imagined world that plays out all around him and temporarily substitutes for the real one. There are no actual casualties of the flesh, but there are sacrifices all must bear. Time spent mulling over fabricated lives is never recovered, and those lost moments of connection and closeness are forever abandoned. Once again, my selfishness has stolen what cannot be reclaimed. No penance to amend the sin of forsaking. To those I’ve neglected—loving wife, faithful daughters, supportive mother, and generous father: Kathi, Kara, Emma, Arline, and George—I can only offer my sincerest gratitude and love.
CHAPTER 1
No power on earth dares to make war upon it.
Cotton is king!
—Senator Hammond of South Carolina, 1858
THE ROAD—A COMMON MIXTURE OF PACKED REDDISH clay,
pebbles, and stones, dry and sharp—stretched out in front of Travis Montgomery for what seemed like a hundred miles. The breeze stirred gently that afternoon in mid-August, 1938, just enough to lift the top layer of dust off the road and into Travis’s face. The grit stuck to his skin and intensified his thirst as the blistering sun beat down on him.
An old farmhand had once told Travis that when he was thirsty, he should place a pebble or a piece of clay in his mouth, like chewin’ tobacco, until his craving subsided. Travis had tried it several times, but having swallowed a small wad of clay on the last try, he decided to forego the practice. Now he stared at a pebble in the road and tried to imagine it quenching his thirst. Remembering his resolution, however, he stepped squarely on it as he continued his journey.
Travis looked at the fields bordering both sides of the road, where row upon row of white-tipped cotton plants grew. To the twenty-one-year-old who had never left Mississippi, the patchwork landscape of brown and white looked like pictures he had seen of springtime in New England, when retreating snow exposed the earth and rock below. The bulbous plants swayed gently, reminding Travis first of legions of soldiers marching in a parade, and then of jaunty white pom-poms waved by fans at a football game.
What lay before Travis was more than just a crop or a commodity; it was treasure, cared for and cultivated more tenderly than many of the people who lived within a three hundred-mile radius of this very spot. This crop was considered God’s greatest creation, and the Lord himself had granted a select few the divine right to cultivate it as they saw fit, often at the expense of all others. Deep down in the Mississippi Delta, this was King Cotton.
In his mind’s eye, Travis visualized his journey across the rectangular state: it bordered the Gulf of Mexico at its southern edge, Louisiana and Arkansas to the west, Alabama to the east, and Tennessee to the north. He could see the foothills in north central Mississippi dwindling, like a roller coaster easing into the end of its run, into the productive and provocative Mississippi Delta. Dark, rich land once covered with thick forests was cleared when the earliest settlers—his forebears—realized the farming potential of the New World’s earth. Each time the Mississippi River had overflowed its banks, it deposited yet another layer of soil throughout the Delta, increasing the land’s fruitfulness. Twenty years after the War Between the States ended, the Mississippi’s waters were at last tamed by levees—long mounds of dirt piled high upon the riverbanks—in hopes that they would impose some genteel Southern manners upon the unruly river. The Delta became an agricultural holy land, a fertile mecca stretching to the horizon.
Geographers, historians, and cartographers might delineate the Delta as the oval-shape “island,” 250 miles long, between Memphis and Vicksburg. But Travis knew what book learning could never impart: The Delta didn’t exist merely in geography, an area defined by landmass within natural borders. No, the Delta existed somewhere a little more obscure. More than a place, the Delta was a spirit.
For the past four years, Travis had been attending Millsaps College in Jackson, about 150 miles south of Clarksdale, a town founded in 1848 and nestled near the head of the Sunflower River’s deeper waters. Each time he returned home, the serenity of the Delta overcame him anew. Even with his eyes closed he was always able to tell that he was home.
The sun was beginning its descent when Travis heard the familiar rumble of a truck carrying cotton pickers headed north toward Clarksdale. Travis stuck out his thumb, hoping for a ride. The truck’s brakes squealed; it slowed to a stop, and Travis ran up along the driver’s side and put a foot on the running board.
“Headed to town?” Travis asked.
“Yeah, boy,” the driver said, never taking his eyes off the road before him. A cigarette dangled from his lips, and he pulled it out and flicked it past Travis’s head. “But you’re going in back, with the darkies.”
Travis clenched his fist and felt his nails dig into his palm. He wiped the stinging sweat from his eyes and looked past the driver. Another man sat motionless in the front seat. They could have made room, but Travis wasn’t going to argue. He smiled his appreciation and climbed onto the truck’s bed.
The pickers moved only slightly as he settled on the outer edge, facing the passenger’s side. His right leg hung off the back and his right arm crossed his body to grab a slat for support. His other leg was tightly bent, his knee jammed under his chin. He didn’t have to sit in this contorted position, hanging off the end of a truck barreling down the road. He could have, if he liked, forcibly made room for himself anywhere, with no worry of retribution. But he didn’t.
The passengers were quiet, exhausted after a day spent picking cotton, and Travis tried to avoid meeting their tired eyes. Their shirts clung to their bodies like skin, sweat still oozing from their pores. Some dozed; others stared aimlessly into the darkening sky. The backbreaking work of picking cotton every day for several months every year would silence anyone. The monotonous task pared a person’s acuity, robbing life of the vitality that God bestowed upon it.
“Hard day?” Travis said.
“Every day’s hard, suh,” one of the men said.
The drone of the engine and the bumpy ride lulled them into a semiconscious state; a quick meal and sleep was on everyone’s mind. The darkness that immediately precedes the dawn would come too soon.
The truck chugged along, halting often, slowly unraveling its tangle of riders. They jumped from the truck bed, the driver barely stopping, until only Travis was left.
Night had fallen by the time they reached the edge of town. Travis hopped down, waved an arm in thanks, and walked the last quarter-mile home. He crept in the front door and immediately made his way to the kitchen after a wave of hunger overcame him. He didn’t bother to turn on the lights; after living in the same house most of his life, he could walk around with his eyes closed. He prowled the counter, searching for one of his mother’s freshly baked cakes or pies and didn’t notice the figure sitting at the kitchen table.
“Well?”
Travis jumped and took a step back. “Gee, Dad, I thought everyone had gone to bed early,” he said, his voice slightly shaky.
“No, everyone’s not asleep,” Bill Montgomery said.
“All done. I got everything packed up and sent. I’m officially a graduate even though it took an extra summer to do it.”
“It was nice they let you go through ceremonies in the spring. Anyone ask you what your plans were?”
“No, sir. I think most everyone was ready for a quick break before fall classes begin. Campus was quiet.”
Mr. Montgomery rose and stepped to the sink. He washed the remaining milk out of his glass, dried it with a towel, and placed it in a cabinet. “Well, I’m going to bed. See you in the morning?” he said, cinching up the belt to his robe.
“You’ll see me tomorrow, sometime. Good night, Dad.”
Travis listened to the creaks of the old stairway as his father climbed the stairs. He looked around for something to nibble on, then realized his exhaustion trumped his hunger. He didn’t have the energy to make a sandwich or even to pour a glass of milk. He tiptoed upstairs and stopped in the bathroom to wash off the parts of Mississippi he had brought home with him. Then he went to his bedroom, undressed, and slid into bed. He stared at the ceiling, muttered the prayer he had said every night since he could remember, and reflected on the day—especially the field workers. Picking, eating, sleeping. He’d been around them all his life but still couldn’t imagine how they could go through that routine, day in and day out.
His body felt heavy, and Travis sank further into the soft mattress. His mind blurred. With a last gust of breath, he slept.
CHAPTER 2
Graveyard going to be my bed.
—Red Nelson
AS THE SUN CREPT OVER THE HORIZON THE NEXT morning, Sheriff Frank Collins turned his county police car off the road onto a dirt path heading toward the Sunflower, the small river that ran through Clarksdale and continued south, eventually
meeting up with the Yazoo River northeast of Vicksburg. He drove straight for 150 yards, and then he veered left off the path into a pasture and drove parallel to the bank.
He continued on for another 30 yards before stopping the car. He stared at an oak in the distance. The surrounding grass had grown several inches high and started to turn a dingy brown because of the lack of rain. He turned off the ignition, squeezed his robust torso out of the car, and leaned against the roof.
Collins removed his thick-rimmed glasses and reached into his shirt pocket for a cigarette. “This doesn’t look good,” he mumbled, striking a match and inhaling.
The sheriff lumbered over to the tree. The sweet smells of late summer hanging in the air took him back to his youth in the Delta. Here at the river, just yards away, he had spent endless days as a child, swimming and playing. Today’s Clarksdale was different, and like the rest of the South, it was changing. The Great War, the colored migration to the North, the Depression, and the New Deal. People liked to believe that the sovereignty of the Old South was a constant, but in truth, the only real constant was turmoil and change.
As he approached the oak, the air began to thicken with the acrid stench of melted flesh and gasoline. When he was about five yards from the tree, Collins could see a half-burned, mutilated body lying on the newly charred dirt. He took a step back, looked away, and gagged into his handkerchief. He spit to get the taste out of his mouth.
He walked back to the car and radioed the office.
Barely fifteen minutes later, Bill Montgomery, the county coroner, was standing next to the sheriff, looking down at the horrific sight.
“Kind of warm out for a suit,” Collins said.
“A little,” Montgomery agreed, removing his brown coat and placing it neatly on the grass. “How’d you hear about it?”
“Same as before. Edna told Betty, and Betty told me at breakfast.”
Where Southern Cross the Dog Page 1