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The Choiring Of The Trees Part 9

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"I'm Viridis Chism," she said, but then she put her hand to her mouth and corrected herself. "I mean, I'm Viridis Monday. You must be Nancy Chism."

"Yes'm, that's me," Nancy acknowledged.

"I've come from Little Rock to talk to you about your son Nail."

As Nancy told it later, the good news that she'd learned to expect when she'd seen the coffee grounds on the side of her cup was simply that Viridis Monday was here. Not that she brought word of any governor's pardon or Nail's escape or even that Nail was in good health, but that Viridis Monday was here to tell what she knew, to find out what she wanted to find out, to do what she wanted: to learn everything about Nail; to convince herself of what she already believed: there was no way Nail could have done what he'd been convicted of; and then to do what she intended to do: get everybody to sign a pet.i.tion, which would go to the governor.

Viridis spent the whole day with the Chisms, not just Nancy but also Nail's father Seth, and his younger brother Luther, and Nail's older sister Irene, who had once been the wife of Sull Jerram and was, in fact, still married to him. Viridis would come back again later, several times, but this first day she would talk with the Chisms all day, or until time for school to let out, when she would come looking for me. Viridis listened to Nancy tell the whole story of Nail's life, such as it was, not very exciting or eventful or anything to brag about. In the whole house she had just a couple of photographs of Nail that she could show to Viridis, one taken by Eli Willard the year he first brought the camera to Stay More, and another one Nail had made up in Eureka Springs, the farthest he'd ever been from home until they took him off to Little Rock. The Eureka photograph was one of those trick pictures with props where you pose in front of a fake scene, and it showed Nail dressed in some Wild West costume with sheepskin chaps and a ten-gallon hat and a pair of six-shooters, standing in front of the Palace of Versailles, an incongruity that was lost on subject and photographer. But it was a good picture of Nail at the age of nineteen, handsome and sightly. Viridis asked if she could borrow the picture and have her newspaper make a copy of it, and she would return the original.



Spreading her elderberry jam on her biscuit, Viridis asked, "Did Nail ever have a girlfriend?"

Nancy Chism laughed a bit. "I have to tell ye a little story," she said, and she told about Nail's very first girlfriend, sort of. When the McCoys used to live at the next place down the road, the place where Waymon Chism lives now with his wife, there was a little girl named Dorothea Lea McCoy, about the same age as Nail, three, and sometimes when Mrs. McCoy came to visit with Nancy, she'd put "Dorthlee," as everybody called her, out in the yard to play with little Nail, under that maple tree that he thought was his own. Sometimes Dorthlee would get permission to walk up the road from her house to play with Nail under the maple even when her mother wasn't visiting Nancy. One day Dorthlee came running into the Chism house hollering, "Miz Chism, Nail's a-pickin yore flars!" and Nancy went out to discover that Nail was helping himself to the marigolds, making a bouquet. "Course I had to whup 'im fer it, for he knew better," Nancy explained to Viridis. Another time, later in the summer, Dorthlee again came running into the house, saying, "Miz Chism, Nail's a-pickin yore flars!" And once again Nancy found her son out in the flower garden, making a bouquet of zinnias. And once again she had to take the hairbrush to his backside.

Dorthlee's father decided to move to Oklahoma, where some of the good Indian lands were being opened to settlement, and the McCoys left Stay More. "Not too fur along after that," Nancy told Viridis, "in August I reckon it was, I happent to look out the winder and I seen little Nail out yonder there again in my flar gyarden. I snuck up behind 'im and susprised 'im." Nancy paused, wearing a great smile of fond reminiscence and wonder, and then she finished: "And Nail looked up at me, holdin this yere bouquet of flars, and he said, 'Miz Chism, Nail's a-pickin yore flars.'"

Viridis laughed, although a tear touched the edge of her eye, and said, "And you were so tickled you didn't punish him that time?"

"That's right. I jist busted out laughin. The funniest thing was, was the way he said it. He sounded jist exactly lak Dorthlee!"

Seth Chism too told some stories of his experience with the young Nail. One of these stories, he said, was famous all over Newton County: When Nail was just seven or eight, and hadn't yet started helping out at the still but knew where it was, he was playing out under his maple tree one day-he spent nearly all his time a-cootering around beneath that old maple out in the front yard-when a stranger rode up, a man on a big horse. Others who had seen the man said later that they couldn't tell whether or not the man was a government agent but it sure was a government horse. Anyway, he asked Nail where his daddy was, and Nail come right out and said, "Oh, Paw's down in the holler, makin whiskey." And the man asked, "Well, where's your mother?" and Nail said, "Maw's down there a-holpin him." "Sonny," said the man, "I'll give ye fifty cents if you'll tell me how to get to where your father and mother are at." Young Nail just held out his hand for the fifty cents, but the man said, "No. No. I'll give ye the money when I git back." Nail shook his head and continued holding out his hand. "You aint a-comin back," he said.

At noon Nancy Chism stepped on the porch to sound a dinner triangle, and the ringing of it brought Waymon Chism and his wife Faye up from the house below, and they all had dinner together. Nail's older brother, Viridis observed, didn't look much like him; he wasn't as tall, or as sinewy, and his eyes didn't have the quality that Nail's had, of seeming to understand everything at a glance with not simply intelligence but tolerance and quiet understanding. Like his parents and Irene and Luther, Waymon was eager to talk about Nail. Just a few more hours would pa.s.s before I would discover for myself what it was about Viridis Monday that could get Waymon Chism to open up and talk in a way that he wouldn't talk with strangers, let alone women: not just that he sensed she was there to help, or honestly intended to do everything she could to help; possibly she even had the power to help. In this regard she impressed Waymon in a way that Farrell Cobb had not.

But Viridis' presence in the Chism household almost started a family quarrel. If there was only one quality of Nail's that his brother Waymon possessed, it was a sense of outrage, a quick temper that bridled at injustice. The Chisms may have been lawbreakers, in that moonshining was illegal, but Seth Chism had taught his sons principles of honesty and justice from childhood. Seth had taught his boys never to start a fight but, if the other fellow started it, to finish it quickly to the other fellow's sorrow. Waymon Chism had told so many people that he intended to kill Sull Jerram if anything happened to Nail that word of this threat had reached Sull, and now Sull was threatening to kill Waymon first. This was understandable, but something n.o.body who knew Sull could understand was that Waymon intended to do the killing with his bare hands.

While Viridis was talking to Nancy Chism at the dinner table, she kept hearing mention of a gun in a conversation among Waymon, Seth, and Irene. She attempted to eavesdrop more closely, but every time she and Nancy stopped talking the others would hush.

It was Nancy who spoke up: "What's this here about a shootin arn?"

Irene started to speak, but Waymon shushed her. "No, Waymon," Irene blurted, "Maw oughta know it. Sull has got him one of these here automatic pistols, a Colt .45, and he carries it around with him. If Waymon don't keep away from him, Sull might jist use it on him."

"He'll have to draw it first," Waymon said. "He don't carry it in no hip-holster like the sherf does. If he started to pull that thang on me, I'd strangle him before he could git his finger to the right place on it."

"Son, you'd jist better git yoreself a arn," Seth said to Waymon, and the argument resumed as if Viridis were not listening to it. She sat and listened and tried to figure it out. Waymon refused to carry any weapon other than a pocketknife, which every man carried, not as a weapon but a tool, a utensil. Waymon wasn't planning to do any violence to Sull Jerram unless something happened to Nail, and now it looked as if maybe this lady Miss Monday could stop them from killing Nail.

But Waymon's parents and Irene were convinced that Sull Jerram intended to kill Waymon, not so much in actual self-defense as in prevention of Waymon's ever placing him in a position of having to defend himself. They tried to get Waymon to remember that the sheriff was on Sull's side, and in fact Sull's being county judge made him the sheriff's boss, even if they weren't such good buddies. But Waymon insisted he wasn't afraid of no sheriff neither.

After Waymon and Faye had gone home, Nancy and Irene put on their winter wraps and took Viridis out to look at the place. After a big midday dinner they needed a hike, and they walked all the way down into the holler where the big Chism still was perched beside the spring branch on a ledge beneath a bluff. It wasn't in operation at that time, but Nancy gave Viridis an explanation of how it worked, and Viridis wanted to know which part of the procedure Nail had been responsible for, and they showed her. Then Viridis wanted to see Nail's sheep pastures, and they took her to them, although they were bare of sheep and even of most gra.s.s, just patches of snow melting in the afternoon sun on the hillsides. Coming back to the house, they showed Viridis the maple tree at one corner of the front yard, its branches doing their best to wave at her because she couldn't quite hear its gentle singing. Viridis stood at the base of the tree and looked at the roots over which Nail had built highways for his toy wagons, and she could almost see his tin soldiers fighting on the parapets of the roots' knees.

Then Viridis was exposed awkwardly to her first experience of what we all of us take for granted: the traditional ritual of leave-taking and exchanging of polite, conventional invitations and counterinvitations.

Viridis said she had to find the Bourne place and talk with young Latha, as Nail had suggested.

Nancy looked properly stricken and said, "Don't be a-rushin off! Better take supper with us and stay all night."

Viridis was supposed to counter by asking Nancy to come and go home with her, but Viridis didn't know this. She just said she'd be back the next day, or soon, and she thanked Nancy for the hospitality and the generous heaping of Nail she'd served up. Nancy told her which turns to take to get to the Bourne place.

And here she came! I was just home from school and doing my ch.o.r.es, redding up the front porch with a broom, when here came that Ingledew phaeton (although I didn't know that's what it was; the last time the governor had driven it was before my time) a-turning into our yard. You could have swept me off the porch with a feather. Later, long after she'd gone, I would look at myself in the mirror with my lower jaw a-hanging open, just to see how awful I looked that way: she could probably see the bad teeth that E.H. Ingledew hadn't pulled yet. It's a wonder I had sense enough finally to close my mouth and answer her eventually, some time after she'd said, "You must be Latha."

Surely I had the sense to at least nod my head before I could find my voice? Maybe not. Maybe I couldn't even find my voice, because she went on and said, "My name is Viridis Monday, and I'm from Little Rock. I work for a newspaper. We're doing a story about Nail Chism of Stay More, who has been condemned to die in the electric chair, and I was told that you could give me some information that would help us."

Still I couldn't find my voice, except to say to Rouser, our dog, "Hush, Rouser! You jist hush!" His barking soon brought my father and mother and my sisters Barb and Mandy out of the house. Paw kicked old Rouser off the porch, and that shut him up. Momma said, and I could have died of mortification, "We caint buy nothin today, thank ye."

The lady smiled. She was the most beautiful lady I'd ever seen even a picture of, and she had the nicest smile I'd ever thought a body could have, and I've been practicing it ever since. "I'm not selling anything," she said, and then she repeated word for word what she'd just said to me, and she added, "Nail Chism suggested that I might talk with your daughter Latha about the circ.u.mstances of the case. He feels that she can tell me the truth."

"Wal, come on in and set by the far," Maw invited her, and we all went into the house, into the front room that was my parents' bedroom but also served as our parlor, so to speak, because you could sit on a divan as well as the bed, and the divan was up anent the fireplace. They gave her Paw's chair, and Paw had to sit on the divan with Momma, and all three of us girls sat side by side on the edge of the bed, with me in the middle, until Momma said, "Latha, why don't ye brew us up a pot of that coffee I save for the preacher?"

And I jumped up and started for the kitchen, but the lady said, "No, thank you, please, I've been drinking coffee all day up at the Chisms'."

"Oh," Momma said. "You've done talked to them, have ye?"

"Yes," Viridis said, and she was wondering how she could politely get me alone to herself, so she added, "and I'm trying to talk to as many people as I can while I'm in Stay More. I'd like to talk with each one of you, but I'd like to talk to you one at a time, if that's all right, and I want to start with Latha."

Paw gave Momma the elbow in her ribs, and a severe look. Mandy and Barb looked at each other like they'd just remembered it was Friday and they had something to do to get ready to go into Jasper tomorrow. Momma was the last to leave the room, and said, "But don't ye be a-rushin off, ma'am. Better jist take supper with us, and stay all night." By this time Viridis was beginning to understand that that was just what everybody said, all the time, whether they wanted you to or not.

The lady did stay to supper, but only because it was already getting cold on the table before she got done talking with me and she couldn't very well walk out and leave it to get even colder after they'd waited for us. We talked from right then, when my parents and sisters went out of the parlor and left us alone, until suppertime and then some past, before Viridis finally knew what to say the third or fourth time my mother asked her to spend the night, and even then she didn't know that you're supposed to counter it by saying, Come go home with me, so she just said, finally, that she was expected back by the old woman living in Jacob Ingledew's house, where she'd left her horse, and had to return this team and buggy to Willis Ingledew's livery. We were relieved, I guess, because we wouldn't have had anyplace for the lady to sleep, although I'd have been more than pleased to fix myself a pallet on the floor and let her have my place in the bed with Mandy and Barb. That's how much I loved her, by then.

But all of that didn't come until past dark. We still had an hour or so of daylight left. After the others left us alone in the parlor, Viridis looked at me and gave me that galuptious smile again and tried to hold me with her eyes. I was still too shy to look her in the eye at first, and I reckon I must have kept pawing the rug with my feet and trying to find something to do with my hands besides sit on them. I still hadn't said a word.

"Nail thinks you believe he's innocent," she said.

Finally I had to look her in the eye to let her know that I meant this: "I don't jist believe it. I know it." That was the first thing I ever said to Viridis Monday, I want it recorded here.

"You have nice eyes," she remarked. "He said you did."

I guess I blushed furiously. "You have better'uns," I declared.

Again that smile, and I must have tried to ape it without letting her see my bad teeth again. She reached out and put her hand lightly on my arm. "You know I'm here to save him," she said.

"Here?" was all I could think to say, as if it were here in this house that he was facing that electric chair.

"Here on earth," she said.

I was brave, and I said, "I'll tell you anything you want to know."

"Would you show me the playhouse?" she asked.

I had to think about that, I'm sorry to say. Looking back, I should have just nodded my head eagerly and said, "Come on!" But I couldn't quite yet bring myself to violate so easily a solemn oath, even if I didn't care a fig for the person I'd made the oath to. So I had to think about it, for a long moment, with the clock a-ticking away on the fireboard. Finally I said, "We swore we'd never tell anybody where it is."

"I understand," she said. And another long minute went by before she said, "Well, maybe you could just describe it to me."

I stood up. "No, I'll take ye. What I swore don't matter anymore. Not to me, it don't." I fetched my wrap and told Momma we'd be back in time for supper.

We weren't. It's a good brisk hike any time of year up the mountainside to the place where that old playhouse leans up against that old ba.s.so profundo oak tree. On that late-winter afternoon we had to walk around the snowy places, and she was being extra careful not to get the hem of her fancy dress in the mud. She talked a lot, telling me every little detail of how she'd come to stay with the old woman at Jacob Ingledew's and how the old woman had let her dress in Sarah's costume from twenty years before.

She seemed more impressed with that oak tree than with the playhouse, which was just a pile of lumber anyhow. She stood there looking up at the tree for the longest time. I told her it was a white oak tree. It was over a hundred feet high (I'd climbed it once as far as I could go and measured it with a ball of twine), and it must have been overlooked when they cut nearly every white oak in the county to make staves for whiskey barrels...not for Chism's Dew but shipped off to the big government distillers in far places like Kentucky. I'm not even sure that tree was on land that belonged to my father, but I knew I owned that tree as much as anybody did.

"Did you know," she said quietly, looking up at the great tree, "that Nail thinks trees can sing?"

I was surprised that she would say it like that, almost as if she didn't quite believe it herself. It wasn't till later that I learned she believed it just as fiercely as he did. I was also surprised at what I said myself then: "That makes two of us."

"Oh, do you believe it too?" she said, looking at me with delight, as if somehow all this business about singing trees were more important than the question of Nail's innocence. And then she asked, "Is this tree singing right now?"

I honestly couldn't have said that it was, at least I wasn't hearing anything, but I looked at her as if she were deaf, and said, "Don't you hear it?" I was just being playful, sort of teasing, but she looked startled and then began listening. When she perked up her ears like that, I did too.

We heard it.

Yes, the tree was intoning some sorrowful, deep spiritual, and there is no mistake that what we heard was the tree, but there was another sound in there besides. We listened, and even if the tree's keening had been our imaginations, because we wanted the tree to sing, that was not the main sound we heard. Because the tree was, I keep saying, a ba.s.so profundo, and this sound was more a mezzo-soprano, and it was coming not from the tree but from inside the playhouse.

I pushed aside the old discarded quilt that served as a doorflap for the playhouse, and I looked inside. There was Rindy, kneeling, head bowed, clutching against her bosom one of our oldest discarded dolls. She was swaying slowly to and fro, rocking the headless and mouldering dollbaby and crooning a sort of lullaby to it. She was wearing an old rag of a coat, a threadbare thing that couldn't be keeping her warm. Viridis followed me into the playhouse.

"Miss Monday," I said, making the introductions, "this here is Dorinda June Whitter."

Viridis Monday stayed a whole week in Stay More. Every night, sometimes before dark if she could manage it, she would return the team and buggy to Ingledew's Livery and then cross the road to Jacob Ingledew's house and sit up until bedtime talking to the old woman. That ancient dowager would serve a fortified wine from a Spanish town called Jerez. Usually Viridis reported in detail to the woman on what she had achieved during the day, and sometimes the woman would give her advice or at least make commentary on that day's events and accomplishments. It was the old woman who (out of her experience as social secretary to the state's first lady) drafted the wording of the pet.i.tion to the governor, for Viridis to take with her on her rounds of interviewing the citizens of Stay More and some other places in Newton County, for their signatures or their X's. Surely, I thought, the woman herself would have been the first to sign the pet.i.tion, but she was not, because, you have to remember, that was still four years before suffrage, four years before that June day when Congress would give women the right to vote or even to sign effective pet.i.tions. Except for Dorinda's, all of the signatures and X's on Viridis' pet.i.tion were men's...including nine of the original twelve jurymen who had convicted Nail. If she could have found them, she would have had all twelve.

Viridis invited Dorinda and me to ride with her in the phaeton when she set off for Jasper to hunt up some of the jurymen. It was a Sunday, and sunny, the first really warm day we'd had that year, with the last of the patches of snow melting into the earth; a good day for a drive, without the road too muddy yet. Rindy and I both wore our best; hers was that same white Sears lawn dress she'd worn for the trial, which was out of season for February but all she had that would look good for going into the county seat on a Sunday. She was cheerful. I hadn't seen her so happy since this whole business had started back in June of the year before. Whatever burden of guilt had been mashing down on her was lifted by the confession she readily gave to Viridis, making a clean breast of it, exonerating poor Nail completely. She wouldn't yet give Viridis the details of just how Sull Jerram had put her up to it, but she was ready to swear that Nail had never even touched her. She was awfully sorry. She'd had no idea at all that they would take him off and put him in that electric chair and try to kill him. Why, she'd been led to believe the most they'd ever do to him was make him say he was sorry he threatened to sic the federal law on Sull and his courthouse pals.

The first to put his big John Hanc.o.c.k on Viridis' pet.i.tion was Jim Tom Duckworth, who had been Nail's lawyer before they got rid of him in favor of that Farrell Cobb, and he didn't have any bitterness for having been dismissed and was a real gentleman about it: he not only signed the pet.i.tion but wrote out an exact copy of it and put on his hat and coat and went off to get a whole bunch of signatures or X's himself. He was the one who gave Viridis the names and general addresses of the twelve jurymen. On her own it would have taken the whole week to find just those twelve, scattered as they were, but most of them lived in or near Jasper, and we spent that Sunday tracking them down. By the time Viridis had finished talking with two or three of them, the word had quickly spread and got ahead of us, and some of the jurymen we visited seemed to be expecting us. Some of them claimed they had been mistaken in the first place and had already done changed their minds long ago, and the few who hadn't, said that all they needed was to hear Rindy say that it weren't so, and here she was, to say it, if need be.

We got lost trying to find the jury's foreman, who lived on the Little Buffalo River up on the north edge of Jasper, and while we were driving around looking for his house we came across an Oldsmobile parked broadside blocking the road. Sitting behind the steering-wheel was Sheriff Duster Snow with three of his deputies there in the vehicle with him, all four men wearing their silver stars pinned to the outside of their overcoats. The sheriff asked Viridis who she was looking for, and she told him, and he said that that individual was not available. Those were his words. Then he asked did she mind if he had a look at that piece of paper she was carrying around. She showed the pet.i.tion to him, and he studied it and looked as if he'd like to chew it up and swallow it. He kept throwing fierce looks at Rindy and me. Rindy watched me to see what sort of fierce look I was throwing back at him, and she did a fair job of imitating mine. Finally he pa.s.sed the pet.i.tion back to Viridis and bobbed his Adam's apple a few times and said, "Now lookee yere, ma'am, we caint allow no furriners a-comin in yere and a-stirrin up trouble." Viridis said she wasn't a foreigner but an American citizen, a native Arkansawyer. "You aint from Newton County," Sheriff Snow said, "and this yere aint none of yore business and hit's again the law to go stirrin up the jurymen such-a-way as this-all, and I don't aim to stand fer it. Now you better jist git yoreself on back to wharever ye came from, and stay out of this country, if ye know what's good fer ye."

Viridis simply took out her Eagle fountain pen and unscrewed the cap and held the pen out toward the automobile and said, "Would any of you gentlemen like to sign this pet.i.tion?" and one of the deputies reached out to do it before Sheriff Snow slapped his hand away.

Later, when we found that lost jury foreman on the Little Buffalo, we got an idea of why the sheriff hadn't wanted us to find him: not only was he ready to sign the pet.i.tion, but he wanted to make a confession of his own, that he had never been convinced of Nail's guilt, that he had tried to hang the jury but had voted with them only after the sheriff had threatened to run him out of the country if he didn't. Now, if Viridis would let him make a copy of that pet.i.tion, he knew a good many fellows whose signatures he could obtain. He was still afraid of the sheriff, but he'd just as soon be run out of the country as have to go on the rest of his life feeling bad about sending an innocent man to that electric chair.

By the time we'd given up trying to locate one more of the jurymen, who'd gone off visiting relatives in Western Grove, it was getting so late in the afternoon that we knew we wouldn't make it back to Stay More before dark. And we'd be sure to freeze if we tried. So Viridis decided to spend the night at the Buckhorn Hotel, an old landmark in Jasper. Rindy and I would have to miss school Monday, but we didn't care; we'd never even dreamt of staying at the Buckhorn before, and we were so excited we couldn't sleep. Viridis had to entertain us past bedtime. She drew our pictures (I've still got mine, framed, one of my prized possessions), and she told us stories and descriptions of Paris and her trip around the world.

It was way past bedtime when a knock came at the door, and Viridis opened it, and there stood Judge Sull Jerram. He didn't have any of his henchmen or cronies with him. He just pointed past Viridis...at Rindy, who was sitting on the bed, and said, "I want to talk to her." Viridis said she was sorry but he hadn't even had the courtesy to introduce himself and she wasn't in the mood to entertain strangers at this late hour. Sull looked like she had spit in his face, and he said, "Lady, they tell me yo're from Little Rock. Okay, that's where that nuthouse is, aint it? That's whar she belongs. Rindy is rampin tetched in her haid, and ary fool thing she says to ye won't be but some lie-tale she jist imagined. Now send her out here before I come in thar and git her." But Viridis stood in the doorway and told him that if Dorinda was mentally unsound it would not be wise for her to talk with a man who was both mentally deficient and irascible. From where I sat I could tell that it took Sull a while to figure out those words, and then he got even more irascible. "I swear to G.o.d, lady, I'll make ye wush ye was never born! You don't know who yo're talkin to. You might be some big somebody down thar to Little Rock, but this yere is Jasper, Newton County, by G.o.d, and I'm the by-G.o.d county jedge! Now, I got some words to say to Rindy aint nary bit of yore be-ness, and I aim to say 'em to her! Rindy! You thar now, Rindy! Gitch yore hide out chere!" Poor Dorinda was trembling something terrible and making little motions as if she were trying to obey him by getting up out of the bed, but she couldn't really move. Viridis told him to leave or she'd call the manager. "Call him, G.o.ddammit!" Sull hollered at the top of his voice. "He's a good friend of mine lak everbody else in this town! Call him and see what he does to ye! Snoopin meddler b.i.t.c.h!" Viridis put her hands up on his chest and gave him a shove that pushed him clean to the other side of the hall, and then she slammed the door and bolted it. She motioned for us to get back into the bed, and she took a step in our direction just in time to avoid the bullets that came blasting through the door. Sull fired three shots real quick that left three big holes in the door panel and broke the mirror on the dresser. Rindy screamed, and I guess I must have hollered myself. Viridis tilted the whole bed up on its side and got us down behind it, so it partly shielded us from the door. She crawled on her stomach to reach where she'd left her purse, and she opened that purse and took out her big six-shooter and c.o.c.ked it and kept it pointed toward the door. But Sull didn't fire any more shots. Some other people in the hotel down the hall must have come out to see what was happening and were yelling at him, and then a man, it must have been the owner, was yelling at him, "Jedge! Jedge, have you done gone crazy?" I couldn't hear all the words out there in the hall, but finally the man said, "Git out of here, Jedge!" and repeated it a few times. Sull stepped back to the door, and his voice came through those bullet holes: "Rindy, now you lissen a me, gal! You jist keep yore trap shut, hear me? You keep that trap shut or I've got a bullet with yore name writ all over it!" Then it got quiet. After a while there was a knock and the manager asked if everything was okay. Viridis wouldn't open the door. She asked the manager to summon the constable. The manager said there wasn't no constable, just the sheriff. "Snow?" she said, and the manager called back through the door, "Yes ma'am. Want me to git him?" "Never mind," she said, and she straightened up the bed and turned off the lamp and we tried our best to sleep.

But of course none of us could sleep. By and by Viridis asked, "Do you know any good stories you could tell?" and I told the best ghost story I could remember, and that pa.s.sed some time. "Rindy?" Viridis said. "Do you know any stories?"

For a minute I thought she might have already fallen asleep, but she hadn't. "Could I tell a real story?" she finally asked. "Not a tellin-story, no, not a windy, but the pure fack?" We didn't tell her she couldn't, so she did. "I'll tell you'uns how it come about that Sull Jerram ruint me."

From that night on, Dorinda and I were best friends again. We hardly had time to enjoy it, though, before Viridis took her off to Little Rock. Most people thought that Viridis took Dorinda to Little Rock as a kind of "living signature" on that pet.i.tion to the governor. It looked to everybody as if all the governor would need in order to give Nail a full pardon would be a complete confession from Dorinda, in person. But a big part of the reason Viridis took her to Little Rock was to save her from Sull: Viridis was convinced that Sull would kill Dorinda to silence her if he had the chance.

When the word got around Stay More that we had spent the night at the Buckhorn and been fired upon by Sull, some people were of the mind that Viridis should have known better than to spend the night in Jasper, right in the hornet's nest, you might say. If it had been them, some people said, they would have groped in the dark on hands and knees to get back to Stay More rather than spend the night in Jasper. But the Chisms, at least, protested that Viridis had no idea what she was getting into and was smart to hole up in the Buckhorn instead of risking her neck and ours on the road after dark.

Waymon Chism was fit to be tied, and that's what they should have done to him. As soon as he heard what had happened, he disappeared. His wife Faye looked all over Stay More for him, and we heard from her how angry he was. Waymon didn't own a horse or other conveyance; remember, he'd had to rent those mules and that wagon from Willis Ingledew to go to Little Rock for Nail's body, which wasn't yet available. This time Willis said he hadn't rented any mule or horse, either one. He just disappeared, and later word came that he had been seen, on foot, walking into Jasper. It's an all-day hike if you leave early in the morning. He must have been too tired when he got there to do anything that would require physical strength, like wringing Sull's neck. Which was, apparently, what he intended to do. He had no gun. A cousin in Jasper who gave him a bed for the night said that he had tried to persuade Waymon to borrow his pistol. Waymon refused and set out from the cousin's house right after breakfast to walk the few blocks to Sull's house. The cousin stalked him, from a distance, to see what was up. It was worse than walking into the hornet's nest, except for one thing: the hornet was alone. He didn't have Waymon's sister sleeping with him anymore, he didn't have children, he didn't have an old mother to fight for her wayward son, and, best of all, he didn't have Sheriff Duster Snow and his deputies to be his bodyguards and sidekicks, not that early in the morning. All he had was his gun. And Waymon got to him before he could even remember which pocket he'd left it in, in the clothes he took off the night before. Waymon got to him before he could get dressed. Waymon got to him before he could get word to G.o.d. The cousin described it: "Ole Waymon jist kicked the door down and walked right on in thar. Purty soon he had drug that jedge out to the front porch, whar he commenced to toss him amongst the furniture and reduce it to kindlin and flinders. Sh.o.r.e, ole Sull hit him back, or tried to. Sull got in a couple of licks, one of 'em a lucky round arm swing that knocked Waymon off the porch, but Waymon jist reached back up thar and grabbed Sull by his laig and flang him out into the yard, whar he really set in to clobberin the daylights outen that feller. I swear, I don't see how Sull ever got off the ground again. He was jist laid plumb out, purt nigh boggy and half-dead, while Waymon stood thar and guv him a leetle lecture, a sermon I couldn't hear on account of I was standin behind a tree too fur off, but Waymon hollered at him fer a good little bit, and Sull jist had to lay there and listen to it. Finally Waymon turned and stomped off. He was headin the opposite way from me, was the reason he couldn't hear me when I hollered. He'd done already got too fur off and guv Sull time to git up and dash in the house for his shootin-piece and come back out and run right up behind pore Waymon, when I hollered as loud as I could, but he was too fur off from me to hear me. I reckon he did hear me, but by the time he commenced to turn around, Sull had done already shot him in the back."

The bullet entered Waymon low in the backbone. Sull's second shot missed, and by then Waymon had turned and grabbed the automatic by the barrel and yanked it right out of Sull's hand and then hammered him atop his head with the b.u.t.t of it, nearly fracturing Sull's skull. By the time the cousin reached them, they were both unconscious. He ran for a doctor. The doctor summoned another doctor. They tended to Sull first, because he was the county judge, the leading citizen of Jasper, well known to them both. After they had revived Sull, and Sull was busy telling his friend Sheriff Snow how he had shot Waymon in clear self-defense, the doctors decided to carry Waymon into one of the doctors' houses, where they operated. Between the two of them, after several hours of cutting and gouging, they managed to get the lead bullet out without completely ruining Waymon's spine. But they had to keep Waymon there in Jasper for the rest of the week and more.

Folks in Stay More were just about ready to declare war on Jasper. The Ingledews themselves were furious, and before you get an Ingledew riled up, you'd better have kinfolks two counties over who can keep you awhile. John Ingledew, our leading citizen, the same man who ten years before had a.s.sembled the lynch mob that took care of that desperado Ike Whitter, and who owned one of the two automobiles of Stay More (his brother Willis owned the other), was in favor of organizing the men of Stay More into an army, marching into Jasper, and taking control of the county government and law enforcement in a coup d'etat. It was the time of year when most men didn't have anything to do anyway: too early to plow, nothing to raise except Cain, and the chess-players around the stove in Willis' store imagined they knew a way to capture the sheriff and checkmate the county judge.

One morning when Viridis was just a day short of one full week in Newton County, and had just about finished collecting all the signatures she could get for her pet.i.tion, she was standing on the porch of the old woman's house, with her sketchbook held in one arm and her drawing-pencil in the other hand, making a picture of the scene of activity on the storeporch across the road: the men of Stay More a.s.sembling, each with his best firearm, rifle, or shotgun, and even a flintlock or two, and the storeporch filling up with men, their wagons parked in the road and the yard, or the horses and mules tethered to trees and the porch posts. I was watching Viridis make her drawing, amazed that she could "freeze" that bustling motion of all the men and animals. Dorinda and the old woman were with me, the three of us silently admiring the drawing that Viridis was making. Viridis stopped drawing when she heard the noise; we stopped looking at her drawing and turned our ears toward the north, and the men around the storeporch stopped in their tracks too and listened. The noise grew to a roar, and we could see the cloud of February dust before we could see the vehicles coming into view, down the road from the north, with all the town's dogs chasing them: the first car was Sheriff Snow's Oldsmobile with deputies standing shoulder to shoulder on the running-board, followed by Sull Jerram's Ford so loaded that feet were hanging out the doors, followed by a third car bringing that circuit judge, Lincoln Villines, who had sentenced Nail to the chair. As soon as the first car came to a stop in the middle of the road in front of Willis Ingledew's store, all of the deputies jumped down and pointed their rifles and shotguns at the men of Stay More, who, we were told later, were kept from firing at the intruders only by the presence of us four females in the line of fire across the road.

The men of Stay More had to lay down their arms. Then the two judges, county and circuit, followed by the sheriff and his men, mounted the storeporch and took a commanding position in its center. Sull's head was so wrapped up with bandages that his hat would barely stay on. We four females stood on the old woman's porch and watched and waited. Sull looked around him as if he owned not just the store but the whole town, and then he held up his arms for silence and began to speak.

"Gentlemen," Judge Jerram said, "lend me yore ears. It's a right smart of pleasure fer me to come back home to Stay More on sech a fine mornin and see all you'unses once again. Sounds lak I'm a-startin one of my campaign sermons, don't it? I aint, though. No, friends, the 'lection aint till November, and I spect I'll be back here again afore then, but I sh.o.r.e do hope I don't never have to come back before campaign time in the fall." Judge Jerram paused and looked around to see if everybody got his meaning: that only two things would ever bring him to Stay More: one, campaigning for reelection, and two, restoring law and order. "Do I make myself real clear? You over there, John Ingledew, do you understand me? All you Ingledews! Now, I got jist as much respect for a Ingledew as I got for ary man, and I don't stand second to none when it comes to reverence and esteem for the Ingledews, but I am a-standin here to remind you that Stay More is still part of Newton County, and I am still in charge of Newton County!" Out of the corner of my eye I noticed that Viridis was drawing again, and I stopped watching Sull act big and started watching her sketch him: she was doing him in his most grandiloquent oratorical pose, with one hand pointed heavenward and the other to the turf of Stay More, and his face twisted into an unctuous parody of a country politician. He went on, "Do I make myself real clear? You can vote against me come autumn if you so desire, and I'll be out in the cold a year from now, but meantimes I have been elected to run this yere county and I aim to run this yere county, and these men..." (his hand indicated the sheriff and his deputies and even the circuit judge) "...these men are my duly sworn confederates and partners, and we have all got to work together and stand shoulder to shoulder and be in cohorts together! I will not brook no insurgence! Hear me? If ary man but raise ary finger to stand in my way, I will leave no stone unturned to flush him out! In the parlous state of affairs that this yere vale of tears has done come to, I stand here proud afore ye and I do solemnly tell ye: walk the strait and narrow path or I will bar the door! Now, does ary of you'unses not know what I'm a-sayin?"

Judge Jerram waited a long minute for anyone to answer his rhetorical question, but no one did. All of the Stay Morons just looked sad and beaten, or sad and sullen, one. Later the men around the stove in Willis' store remarked that Sull Jerram could have recited the Gettysburg address and it wouldn't have been any different; it wasn't what he said that mattered, or even how he said it, but the fact that he had come out here to Stay More with all those men behind him just to say something and let us know that he was still the boss.

When the speech was over, Sull Jerram and Sheriff Snow came walking right down into the crowd, through it, and across the road to where we were standing, and Sheriff Snow said to Rindy, "Now, little lady, you'd better jist come along with us." He and Sull and a deputy came up onto the porch of Jacob Ingledew's house.

Poor Rindy got herself behind Viridis and the old woman, as if they could protect her, and Viridis tried to. "Are you arresting her?" she asked. "What's the charge?"

Sheriff Snow attempted a smile. "No, ma'am, I wouldn't call it a arrest exactly. We'd jist lak to have us a little talk with her."

"If she's not under arrest, she's not required to go with you if she doesn't want to," Viridis said.

The sheriff exchanged looks with Sull, and Sull said, "Ma'am, you are re-quired to answer one question: how long are you stayin in this yere town?"

"I'm not required to answer anything for you, mister," she said to Sull.

"No?" he said. "I'll give ye a secont chance. You can answer this or face the consequences: how long are you plannin to stay?" Viridis just coldly looked him in the eye and did not answer. "Okay," he said to Sheriff Snow, "you kin arrest her."

"You're under arrest, ma'am," the sheriff said to Viridis.

"You can't do this," she said. "What are you arresting me for?"

"Obstructin justice," he said, and took her arm and tried to lead her down from the porch.

The old woman placed herself in front of the sheriff and slapped his face. "You had better arrest me too, Mister Snow," she said to him when he had recovered.

He held his sore jaw. "Who the heck are you?" he asked.

"If failure to answer questions is obstructing justice, then arrest me too," the old woman said.

"I jist might," the sheriff said. "You caint go around hittin on the high sherf of Newton County!"

"I can't?" the old woman said. She slapped him again, harder, on the other cheek.

For a second it looked as if Duster Snow might haul off and hit her back, but he got his emotions under control, at the expense of a beet-red face, and said, "All right, dammit, you're under arrest too." But Judge Lincoln Villines came up on the porch and whispered something into Sheriff Snow's ear. The sheriff looked at the old woman and then up at the porch ceiling over his head, and spoke as if addressing it: "So you live here in Governor Ingledew's house?"

Viridis still had her sketchbook open and was doing a trio of quick portraits: Sull, the sheriff, and Judge Villines, grouped together like a pack of rats, each of them rendered unflatteringly, almost in caricature. When I failed to suppress a giggle, Sull stepped around to take a look at what she was doing.

She had done him first, in a few quick lines that perfectly expressed the coa.r.s.e bl.u.s.ter and bullying of the man, with those bandages around his head making him look like a clown, but perhaps he was too stupid to realize how unflattering the interpretation was, and his first response was c.o.c.ky: "Hey! That's me!" But then he changed his tone and demanded, "What are you drawin me fer?" Viridis ignored his question and went on finishing her quick sketches of the sheriff and the judge. Judge Villines seemed addled; he seemed to be aware that his portrait was being done, but he couldn't decide whether to protest or pose, though he inclined to the latter, trying to get his best profile into position and his nose tilted properly. Sheriff Snow had dropped his mouth open, and Viridis decided that he looked more characteristic that way, and she quickly redrew his face with a slack-jawed expression.

"Hey, yo're under arrest, ma'am," the sheriff reminded her. "You caint go makin pitchers of people when yo're arrested."

"Indeed, what air ye doing?" Judge Villines timidly inquired. And then he requested, "May I see?" She turned the sketchbook so he could see it. "Wal, I doggies!" he exclaimed. "That's sh.o.r.e a clever resemblance of ole Duster! Looks jist lak 'im. Don't it, boys? And I sh.o.r.e wush Mary Jane could see this yere one of me." He looked beseechingly at Viridis, and said, "I don't suspose you could be persuaded to part with it?"

"No," she said. "This is for the front page of the Gazette."

"The Gazette?!" the men said in unison, and Judge Villines wanted a clarification: "The Arkansas Gazette?"

Viridis nodded and resumed putting the finishing touches on Judge Villines, who was busy whispering in the ear of Judge Jerram.

Sull gave Villines a grudging look, as if the circuit judge had made an unpleasant suggestion, and then Sull glowered at Viridis and pretended politeness: "Did ye take the trouble to record my speech, ma'am, ye prob'ly wrote down that I didn't say nary a word about the Chism be-ness. I jist came out here peaceable to say hidy to my friends and cool down the ruckus. I don't have no personal involvement in the Chism be-ness."

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