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Authors: Jim Thompson

BOOK: Heed the Thunder
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“You got in mine, you son-of-a-bitch.”

“Ask Bob, by God. He’ll tell the truth.”

“Bob don’t want to have nothing to do with a bastard like you.”

They guffawed aimlessly.

“Did you steal any of the old man’s tobacco?” Ted demanded.

“Why, hell yes,” said Gus. He dug into his pocket and pulled out a handful of rough-cut tobacco, somewhat adulterated with lint and cow manure.

“Well, let’s light up. Can’t you see Bob wants a smoke?”

Gus secured three corncob-and-grapevine pipes from the rear of the bottom bureau drawer, and packed them with tobacco. Ted passed matches. They sat down in a row at the head of the bed, their backs braced against the worn mahogany, their knees drawn up. Robert puffed his pipe with solemn expertness. The boys had introduced him to smoking at their first meeting, and he had practiced at each succeeding one.

“I thought you were—was building an airplane,” he said, bringing up a topic that was much on his mind. “You said you was going to build one and take me riding in it.”

Gus looked at him blankly. “Hell, Bob, didn’t we tell you about that?”

“Huh-uh,” said Robert; then, “Hell, no.”

“We already got ’er made,” Ted explained. “We got her hid in the hay up in the barn loft. She’s a humdinger, too, ain’t she, Gus?”

“A humdinger,” Gus nodded, billowing smoke from his nostrils. “We got her made out of two-by-fours, Bob—even the wings. That way it won’t break up so easy when it hits the ground.”

“What you got for wheels?”

“We got wheels,” said Ted proudly. “I took ’em off the mower.”

“Yes, you son-of-a-bitch, and the old man hided me for it.”

“Hidin’ will make your arse grow. You ain’t as broad across the arse now as a good man is between the eyes.”

“Yah. You ought to know.”

“Yah.”

They punched each other, careful not to strike Robert.

“Well, when we goin’ to go flyin’?” he inquired.…“Huh, Gus, huh, Ted? When you goin’ to take me for a ride?”

“We got to wait a while for that,” said Gus regretfully. “You see, we ain’t been able to steal no engine for it, so we’re going to have to fly her out of the barn loft, so she’ll sail, see?”

“Uh-huh. How you going to make it—her—go out, though?”

“Well, we figured you could steer her and me and Ted would give it a good push. Get it all the way back to the end of the loft so we could go out a-hellin’. Just before we get to the door, we’ll jump in with you.”

“Oh,” said Robert, pleased. “When we going to do it?”

“That’s what I was goin’ to tell you about. We got the wings too wide to go through the door, and we got to saw ’em off some. We’ll get around to it any day, now.”

Ted got up, pulled the pot from beneath the bed, and used it. He yawned and began unbuttoning his shirt. Gus, watching him, thoughtfully, suddenly gestured with the stem of his pipe.

“Say,” he frowned, “where do you go when you have to take a dump at night?”

“I go out to the privy, nat’cherly,” said Ted.

“I see you going out to the privy! Damned if I don’t. Come on, tell me.”

Ted demurred, and Gus persisted, cursing and wheedling him alternately.

“Hell,” said Ted, “you ought to be able to guess.”

“Is it in this room?”

“Yope. Right in this room.”

“The window?”

“Hell, no. In the room, you dummy.”

Gus allowed his eyes to wander around the room, scanning the walls and woodwork. They came to rest at last on the flue, the unused outlet of which was covered with a tin oval. They remained there for a long moment. He gestured again with the pipe stem.

“In there?”

Ted nodded modestly.

“Well, I’ll be goddamned. How you get your arse up that high?”

“I don’t. I tear me a piece of paper out of my tablet. Then I drop it in.” He grinned at his brother maliciously. “All these nights when you been holding in or tramping out to the privy, I’ve been using that.”

“Yah,” said Gus, scowling at him with ill-concealed admiration and envy. “I reckon you think you’re pretty smart.”

“I’m smarter’n you are. Yah!”

“Just wait till the old woman finds out. She’ll get a whiff of it one of these days.”

“Hell, she’d think she smelled her own cooking.”

He finished undressing and stood clad only in his long red flannel underwear. He stretched, lazily.

“Let’s go to bed, huh?”

“I ain’t sleepy,” said Gus, giving him a challenging look.

“Aw, come on, goddamit. Bob, you want to go to bed, don’t you?”

“Kind of. I want a drink of water first, though.”

“Gus, go get Bob a drink of water,” “Ted, go get Bob a drink of water,” said Ted and Gus.

“You go, goddam you,” they said.

“But I got my clothes off,” said Ted. “It ain’t that I mind gettin’ you a drink, Bob,” he explained apologetically, “but it ain’t fair when he’s still dressed.”

Gus appeared to deliberate. “I’ll tell you what I’ll do with you,” he said in a man-to-man tone. “You go get the water, and then I’ll go to bed.”

“But you still got your clothes on!”

“Well, you don’t need to go downstairs. Reach out the window and get a handful of snow.”

“Why don’t you reach out?”

“Hell, what do you want for nothing? I ain’t going to do everything for you. You get the snow and I’ll get to bed.”

The argument sounded a trifle specious to Ted, but he was too weary for a prolonged discussion. He declared for perhaps the hundredth time that day that his brother was a son-of-a-bitch, stated that he was addicted to the eating of offal and the drinking of a liquid not popularly regarded as a beverage, and announced that he had been sexually intimate with skunks, all of whom had afterward died of shame. Having relieved himself of these facetiæ, he opened the window.

He cursed as an icy blast swept through the room, but he gamely unlatched the screen and reached out upon the porch roof.

On the bed, Gus winked at Bob and gathered his feet beneath him. “Lean farther out,” he called casually, “you’ll scrape up all the pigeon dew where you are there.”

“Yah,” grunted Ted, bent almost double over the window. But he leaned farther out. He stood on tiptoe, leaving his red-flanneled shanks completely off balance.

Gus sprang. He cleared the end of the bed with his leap, caught his brother by the heels, and shoved him out the window.

Ted shot down the porch roof like a toboggan. There was no danger of his being seriously injured, for a deep snowdrift lay around that part of the porch. The snowbank, of course, was none too attractive a prospect; and, like any falling person, he grabbed the first thing at hand, in this case, the gutter.

He caught it as he went over the end of the roof, turned head over heels, and hung there helplessly. And in the bedroom Gus rolled on the floor and howled.

Roaring, he staggered back to his feet as the kitchen door opened.

Mrs. Fargo emerged with her inevitable blacksnake.

“Yoooo h-ornery devil! H-up to h-mooore h-of yooor meanness, hey? Just h-ain’t satisfied h-as long h-as you got h-any hide on your h-ornery back. Well…”

She cracked the whip around his buttocks, regarding the writhing and shrieking results with pleasure. She was a master with the whip.

Now, while her son made the night hideous with his cries and contortions, she pretended to believe that he was merely singing and dancing. And she urged him on, wheezily, the whip cracking, to greater and greater efforts. There was such a nice conjunction of ability and opportunity that she might well have attained her long-sought goal of skinning him alive, for Sherman saw not the slightest reason to interfere. But Gus, perhaps bored, perhaps remorseful, took a hand.

Leaning out the window, he dislodged a large drift of snow from the roof, and sent it showering down upon his mother. And in the ensuing confusion, Ted dropped to the ground and escaped.

He was literally black-and-blue beneath the red flannels, but that was pretty much his normal state and he did not mind greatly. In fact, he even felt refreshed by the experience; the freezing air combined with the whip-encouraged circulation of his blood had dispelled his sleepiness.

Everyone had gone outside at the beginning of the excitement, and Ted, as he darted back through the kitchen, snatched up a pumpkin pie and took it with him. Upstairs again, he demanded the right to give Gus three swift kicks in the arse, and Gus acquiesced. They divided the pie, giving Bob the biggest piece, and sat down to eat merrily.

They quenched their thirst with snow from the roof, and relit the pipes. They discussed the airplane at length. At even greater length, the brothers discussed what seemed to them an insoluble biological problem connected with their mother and father and growing out of their mother’s size. Being the kindly lads they were, they did not, of course, leave their young cousin out of this last discussion. They laid the problem before him in its rawest fundamentals, answered his idiotic questions, and accepted his equally idiotic suggestions, nodding at each other gravely.

Everyone agreed that it had been one goddamned hell of a swell night.

When they went to bed, at last, Bob lay down in the middle. His head touched against their hard sprawled arms, and each brother held one of his dirty little hands clasped in his.

The wind whined and clawed against the eaves, the owls hooted warningly in the grove, and along the serried hills of sand the coyotes mourned the moon.

And they slept.

I
n her room at the hunky Jabowskis’ house far up Misery Crick, Edie Dillon lay awake, thinking. She was too cold to sleep; the hunkies had straw-ticks instead of featherbeds, and their comforters were stuffed with corn shucks. She was sick, too. For supper they had given her cabbage with sour cream and some kind of highly spiced meat. They had put nothing in her lunch all week but black bread spread with lard. But the school…she grew hot with shame and anger beneath the scanty covers. The Czerny boys had rolled her in the snow when she tried to discipline them. And the Kecklik boy had taken a ruler away from her and struck her across the shoulders with it. They meant to run her out, and their parents would do nothing. Well, she thought grimly, let ’em do their worst. They might carry her out, but they wouldn’t run her. She thought of Bobbie longingly. A little, she pitied herself. He would never know, could never realize, what she had gone through for him.…

In his room at Lincoln Fargo’s, Robert Dillon sat up on his cot and looked across at the unoccupied bed. “Mama,” he whispered hopelessly. “Mama.” In the living room the grandfather clock struck nine, only nine; then the house was silent again. The moon shone in ghostily over the fields of snow. “Papa,” he said. “Papa?” He lay back down clenching his eyes. He had tried to run away the first night. But it was too far where she was, and he did not know where to look. It was about a thousand million miles away, he guessed. Anyway, he wouldn’t cry any more; even Pa made fun of him when he cried. Then, if he cried, Mama might hear him and she would never come back. He would just have to wait and not cry. Maybe tomorrow night when he came home she would be there. Maybe. And he could tell her how they had put him in the second grade instead of the first. And she would slip him something good to eat from the pantry. And they would get on the train and go and find Papa. And he could cry, then, and it would be all right, only he wouldn’t, and he would tell her how bad everyone was and how good he was, and he would
tell…and…and.…

I
n the kitchen of his home Alfred Courtland stood up in the washtub of warm soapy water and began drying himself. He tapped his chest gingerly with the rough towel and winced at the intense itching which immediately ensued. Angrily, he looked at the ugly copper-colored patches which, of late, seemed to have gotten worse. Something would have to be done about that, he decided. It would be inviting trouble to go to that gossip, Doc Jones, and anyway he was a quack. But when he got to Omaha, whenever that might be, he would have it looked into.

Stepping out of the tub, he went to the box cupboard and took down an unlabeled can of salve. He rubbed some into his chest; then carefully washed his fingers of the ointment, a mercury compound. The itching died, seemed to submerge under the layers of his skin and smother there.

He put on his long fleece-lined underwear and donned his good broadcloth trousers.

A knock sounded on the door.

“Yes, dear?” he called.

“Can—may I come in?”

“In a moment, if you please.”

Without haste, he put on his socks and shoes and slipped into his shirt. Not until he had his collar on and his tie arranged did he notify his wife that she might come in.

Myrtle Courtland stood in the doorway letting her eyes widen with deliberate pleasure. She was the youngest of the Fargo family, excluding Grant, and she looked a great deal like him. Her chin was stronger and her mouth less pouting, but there was the same look of wavering uncertainty in her eyes.

“My, how nice you look!” she exclaimed.

“Thank you,” he said. “Were you fixing me tea before I leave?”

“Of course, dear. I’ll have a nice breakfast for you in no time.”

Courtland dumped the tub of water into the back yard and went into the living room. It was as shabby and cheap as the other three rooms. Myrtle was economical and smart about fixing things up, but there had been nothing to work on. They rented the place from Barkley for five dollars a month, furnished; he had built and furnished it during his first year in the town. The Courtlands talked of having a home of their own some day, but Myrtle had all but given up hope, and Alfred knew that it would be impossible unless…something came of that Omaha deal. There was no other house for rent in Verdon. Everyone else owned his own.

Despite their poverty, he guessed rightly that Myrtle was anything but dissatisfied with her marriage. She, of all the Fargoes, had known what she was getting, had got it, and was contented with it. On her account, he observed many of the formalities and absurdities of his earlier life which otherwise he would have dropped. To Verdon, at large, he was just an Englishman who had come to town broke and was now only a fifty-dollar-a-month bank clerk. To Verdon, it was all he could be. But here at home he was Alfred, Lord Courtland; and weary and bored as he might be with pretense, he kept it up for her sake. It was the only thing he could do for her.

She called to him and he went into the kitchen. Spontaneously, moisture came into his eyes as he looked at the table. The sight of her elegant wedding silverware, spread out in almost all its profuse and gleaming entirety for their frugal meals, always touched him. He had an impulse to clasp her in his arms and kiss her fiercely, but knew that she would prefer a less satisfying but more correct peck. He gave it to her, held her chair for her, and sat down.

“I’m afraid my sister isn’t very considerate of you,” she said, scooping delicately at her egg. “It’s—uh—beastly weather for one to take such a long drive.”

“Beastly,” he agreed gravely. “But what can one do?”

“Nothing, I suppose. After all, where one’s own sister—one’s own sister-in-law—is involved, one must make sacrifices.”

“Exactly. One must, despite the inconvenience it causes one.”

She shot a quick glance at him which was almost suspicious, but there was nothing in his expression to indicate that he might have been mocking her.

“Well, it does seem, though,” she said, “that Edie could handle her own difficulties. It isn’t very nice of her to go complaining to the family and dragging you into it.”

“Oh, she didn’t,” said Courtland. “I thought I’d explained how it was. Old Jabowski let out something about it when he was at the blacksmith shop, and of course we heard about it inside of an hour. Barkley would have gone himself, but”—he smiled wryly—“it would be a little out of place for Barkley to go calling on a bunch of hunkies.”

“I don’t see why either of you should do anything,” said Myrtle.

Courtland’s thin arched eyebrows shot up. He appeared to be on the point of saying something; then he shrugged as if dispelling an unpleasant thought, and readdressed himself to his eggs.

Myrtle lowered her eyes uncomfortably. “I’m afraid I sound as though I’m not interested in Edie’s welfare.…I didn’t mean it that way.”

“Naturally, you didn’t,” said Alfred.

“I was only thinking of you. It seemed to me that some closer member of the family—”

“Some closer member of the family must not even hear of it,” said Courtland firmly. “That’s exactly what Barkley wants to avoid. He hasn’t even told Bella for fear she would repeat it to Grant. I don’t believe that he himself would do anything, but—oh, pardon me, dear—”

“That’s quite all right, dear.” She gave him a smile of understanding and forgiveness. “I know Grant.”

“Well, you know what would happen if Sherman or your father got hold of the story. You know what they would do if they heard that a bunch of filthy bohunks had mauled Edie. There’d be murder.” He shrugged deprecatingly. “Not that we care about the hunkies, but we don’t want the family involved in murder. And, of course, the bank doesn’t want to lose any customers. That last is Bark’s big worry.”

He glanced at his watch, his one really valuable possession, and stood up.

“I’ll have to run. I should have been on my way before.”

“You’ll be back tonight?”

“Oh, certainly.”

She followed him into the living room and helped him on with the greatcoat made of a cow’s hide. He tied a scarf around his head and jammed his hat on over it. His cap with earmuffs would have been more comfortable, but comfort was a minor consideration today. He needed to look a part that he knew well—the part of a lord administering to the peasantry.

On the point of leaving, he went into the bedroom with the excuse of obtaining a clean handkerchief, and dug up his quirt, a relic of palmier days. He made a coil of the oiled leather and shoved it deep into his pocket.

He pecked at Myrtle again and departed.

She watched him go, disconsolately. Then, a polite frown on her deliberately well-bred face, she went into the kitchen and examined the box of mercury salve. It was almost gone again, and he had received it less than a month ago. It came from some place back East, and it cost ten dollars a box. She had never been so indelicate, of course, as to press him for its reason; and, anyway, she believed she knew. He had dropped a vague hint or two, and her ignorance had supplied the rest. She believed it was for some normal function of men, parallel to, but considerably more painful than, a woman’s menses. She guessed that it probably had something to do with their coition—something perfectly all right, of course.

The housework of her little establishment was done in an hour, and she picked up a book and tried to read. Most of their surplus cash went for books and the salve. After a few minutes she laid the book down and sat looking drearily out the window. Being entertained by other people involved entertaining them, so she seldom went visiting. She had no money to go shopping with, and she could not go alone to town anyway. She thought of Bobbie and smiled, and wished that he wasn’t in school. If he were with her, they would play games together—nice, sedate, refined games, of course—and then they would have tea together, and she would show him how little English gentlemen acted.

Bobbie was really an awful good—an excellent child.

Edie did not know how to bring him up.

She wondered what was wrong with her that she had no children.

It wouldn’t cost much more to have a child. Just one. If Edie could have one, why couldn’t she? If Edie could have a child, with her husband gone off goodness knew where, why couldn’t…

She wondered what was wrong with her.

Impulsively, she jumped up and drew the shades. And she turned back to the cooling shabby room with a strange light in her self-doubting eyes. She smiled with gentle firmness at the shiny spring-punctured sofa.

“Come, young Alfred,” she cooed.

“Certainly, Mother, dear. Is it time for our Conrad?”

“In a few minutes. I’m giving you such a marvelous tea. Crumpets, and strawberry jam, and—and—fresh kippers!”

“But how splendid, Mother!”

Stricken by a sudden feeling of disloyalty, she dropped the game and began another: the game of how-lucky-I-am.

She thought of how good-looking, how brilliant, how refined Alfred was. She remembered that he always helped her to food before he helped himself; his way of over-quickly satisfying his appetite when there was little food. And he was always interested in what she had to say. He didn’t scoff and jeer like Pa and Sherman did whenever Josephine or Ma said anything.

She let her mind go back to that night when he had first come to Verdon. He had looked so sweet, so nice, coming down the road, binoculars swung over his shoulders and an expensive tooled-leather bag in each hand. And, yes, the poor dear had been hugging a sack of groceries under one arm and a frying pan under the other. The town loafers had been responsible for that. They had said, “Why, sure, stranger. Just step out here anywheres and stake you out a claim. Go out here to Link Fargo’s place. He’s got more land than he knows what to do with, and he’ll give you some. But take your own grub along. Link don’t eat nothin’ but b’ar meat.”

So he had come to the gate, looking so cute and ridiculous, and asked Pa if he would mind giving him a few hundred acres. And Pa had said he’d give him a thousand if he wanted it, but it’d be smart for him to walk on up into the sand-hills where there was still lots of gold left.

Alfred had set down all his bags and stuff, so that he could tip his hat and thank Pa properly, and then had started picking them up again. But every time he got hold of part of them, he would drop something.

And, then, she had come out and told him the truth. And he had smiled so nicely, even laughed, and not shown at all how disappointed he was. And Pa had laughed and said he’d been a bigger damned fool himself lots of times, and asked Alfred to come on in and stay for supper.

And…

Myrtle jumped up and ran into the kitchen. She jerked a lid off the stove and saw that the fire was almost out. Snatching up the coal hod, she tore out the back door to the shed adjoining the privy. She filled the hod, frowning at the scanty stock that remained. They were always out of something, it seemed. But usually it was coal. And she tried to be so careful, too. They didn’t have a heater, only the kitchen range, and she was always letting the fire go out in that, so hard did she try to economize. Some days she did let it go out, going to bed with her clothes on to keep warm.

Back inside the house she turned the damper on the stove and shoved a few stingy pieces of coal onto the scuttle. She raised it regretfully, hating to release the penny or two it represented.

Perhaps it would be a good idea to go to bed today. Alfred wouldn’t be home until late. She could get up around five and have the house warm and dinner ready in plenty of time.

She put the lid back on the stove and let the coal slide back into the hod. She poured water into the basin on the washstand, washed the traces of coal dust from her hands, and went into the bedroom. She put on her coat, a long black tailored affair which extended to her ankles, and turned down the bed.

Then, with a little moan, she turned away from it. Not today. She couldn’t stand it today.

Almost grimly she took her ostrich-plumed hat from the closet, jammed it on her head, and fixed it there by a large hatpin with a rhinestone-studded head. She hurried out the front door and down the walk before she could change her mind.

Bella and she had a lot in common. Their menfolk were both bankers, and she wasn’t a whole lot older than Bella. They could talk about the same things and laugh at the people of this poor funny little town. Bella liked her—more than she liked any of the other women, anyway—and she would not return the visit. Bella never went visiting. She said she thought it was silly—a lot of stupid old hens chasing back and forth to each others’ houses. She didn’t mean her, Myrtle, naturally, because she wasn’t old and they
were
cousins and Barkley didn’t come out to lunch, so it would be all right.

It had better be all right! If it wasn’t, she’d tell Grant, and Grant would listen to her when he wouldn’t to anyone else, and how would Miss Bella Barkley like that?

Turning in at the gate of the brown two-story Barkley home, Myrtle saw that the shades were all drawn, and her nose elevated itself an inch or two. Bella was always making fun of the way people gawked when they passed her home. (As if she had so much anyone wanted to see!) She had even called out to old Mrs. Purnell one day and asked her if she wouldn’t like to stand up to the window.

Myrtle sniffed, silently deciding to keep her own shades drawn.

Her feet made no noise on the snow as she crossed the porch, and her knock broke the silence without warning.

There was no answer to her summons, but she heard a telltale scurrying from the inside. Determinedly, she knocked again. Probably still lying around undressed and here it was almost noon! She’d like to catch her that way, just once, just to see what excuse she would give.

She knocked.

She called, simperingly. “Bella? It’s just me—I.”

Embarrassed, she beat a steady tattoo on the door. Bella was inside and she knew she was there. She couldn’t very well go away now without seeing her and telling her that she had just stopped by on her way some place, just to say hello, and she could really only stay a few minutes.

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