True Fires

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Authors: Susan Carol McCarthy

Tags: #Fiction

BOOK: True Fires
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For Mabel Norris Reese,
my hero

PRAISE FOR TRUE FIRES

“A vivid portrait of mid-century corruption, and of some brave enough to risk everything for justice.”

—Kirkus Reviews

“Insightful [and] fervent
. . .
Flawless dialogue, warm characters and compassionate wit all service a moving story about the powers of love and justice.”

—Publishers Weekl
y

LAY THAT TRUMPET IN OUR HANDS

Winner of the 2003 Chautauqua South Fiction Award
A
San
Diego
Magazine
Best Fiction Book of 2002
A Deadly Pleasures Best U.S. First Novel of 2002

“Reminiscent of
To Kill a Mockingbird . . .
A beautiful book about personal courage.”

—Orlando Sentinel

“The best fiction always bears a strong resemblance to real life. In
Lay That Trumpet in Our Hands,
McCarthy blends fact, memory, imagination and truth with admirable grace.”

—Washington Post

“Appealing
. . .
An engaging approach that blends power with simplicity, truth with innocence
. . .
A very respectable debut.”

—Tampa Tribune

“Poignant and disturbing.”

—St. Petersburg Times

“Poignant and beautifully written.”

—Lebanon (MO) Daily Record

“A strong debut.”

—Kirkus Reviews

“Evocative
. . .
The sincerity of her tale and its simple telling would make the book as interesting to young adult readers as it will be to those who remember or want to learn about the tangled moral questions of the ’50s.”

—Publishers Weekly

“Reminiscent of
To Kill a Mockingbird,
McCarthy’s debut novel is engrossing.
. . .
McCarthy realistically portrays race in a small Southern town, showing how good people are tainted by generations of hate without making her characters into cartoons.
. . .
Teens and adults alike will enjoy this tale of growth and triumph.”

—Library Journal

“It’s the rare book that can move me emotionally, impress me with its literary quality, and fill my heart with the hope of human trust, bravery, and dignity.
Lay That Trumpet in Our Hands
is such a book.
. . .
I can virtually guarantee you won’t be disappointed.”

—Deadly Pleasures

“In this deceptively simple tale of a girl’s maturity during evil times, McCarthy shows us something more: a community banding together under fire, and a family willing to shoulder a terrible responsibility.
Lay That Trumpet in Our Hands
is, in microcosm, what the civil rights movement meant—and means—to all the men, women, and children involved.”

—Laurie R. King,
author of
Folly

“One cannot come away from reading this book without recalling
To Kill a Mockingbird,
the 1960 novel by Harper Lee that won a Pulitzer Prize. They are both excellent books and this reviewer recommends that you read them both.”


Senior Lawyer News

“Susan Carol McCarthy in her debut novel has written a breathtaking tale based on real events.
. . .
A poignant novel of the South’s dark days.”

—Southern Scribe

“With a graceful style, McCarthy spins the tale of a murder that forever changes the tiny community in which it takes place.”

—San Diego Magazine

“Deeply moving.”

—Daily American

 

 

The outermost guard sees it first. The careful
footfall, the crack of twigs, the crush and crumbling of dry leaves. She turns and, imperceptibly
to the intruder, sends the alarm. “One comes!”

The message is passed from guard to guard,
from outer rim to inner wall, from watchful eyes
to anxious hearts. “One comes!”

Those assigned the colony’s defense ready their
weapons. The rest stand and wait, prepared to
die, if need be, rather than surrender their treasure. Sensing the alarm (“The children, are they
safe?”), She Who Decides emerges from her
chambers.

The outermost guard presses forward, peering
through the woods and sees, “It is He!”

Once again, word flies to and through the
colony. Relief spreads. He Who Provides comes.
To collect the golden tablets glistening in the sun.
They will offer no resistance so long as the children, their treasures, are safe.

1

Outside the wall of windows, the unrelenting flatness sets Daniel’s mind to dreaming, sketching mountains, ridges, and rain gullies in the wasted space between the sparse Bermuda grass and the vast staring-down sky. Suddenly, a flare of light—blazing sun careening off polished car chrome—yanks Daniel’s eyes out the open doorway. The light glares in the face of the skinny boy on his left and the girl with the yellow hair in front of him. As the two-toned car comes to a stop in front of the school office, the skinny boy points; the girl gawks. And the two of them whisper, not to Daniel, never to him, “The Sheriff, K. A. DeLuth,” their tones at once fearful and reverential.

Haw,
Daniel scoffs inside his head,
y’all call that a Sheriff in
Floridy? Looks like he couldn’t tell a still from a smudge pot, and
wouldn’t bother dirtyin’ his boots to try. Up home, Sheriff Jim is
Pap’s fifth cousin and he’s got two stills. One to keep, he says, and one
to share, when the revenuers come through, needin’ somethin’ to bust
up. That still’s been moved around and busted up more times than
anyone can count. Sheriff Jim brags he’s got the least still still in
Avery County!

Daniel snickers at ol’ Jim’s familiar joke but stops as the skinny boy and the yellow-haired girl turn on him, their flat eyes hard with disgust.

He’s been at this school ten days now, but nonetheless, the depth of their contempt surprises him. The first two days, his fellow fifth graders had seemed entertained, charmed even, by his tales from up home in Pigeon Ridge, North Carolina.

“Pigeon Ridge? You got lots of pigeons up there?” they’d asked.

“Nary one.” He’d grin. “But we got more ravens than you kin shake a stick at. Know why the raven’s so black? Th’ Ol’ Cher’kee says he got burned black, stealing fire from heaven for the folks on Grandfather Mountain.”

Oh, they’d liked him fine then. But, the day after that, the girl with the hair as bright and shiny as a river trout turned on him, her blue eyes squinty, her nose squinched, and asked, real loud, “Don’t you have anything else to wear?” That question and his answer turned everything sideways. The grins of the others were gone. Now, their eyes either glittered with bone-naked revulsion or skittered off elsewhere as if he weren’t even there.

Daniel the Lone Ranger he’d become, laying low behind a mask of amused mockery he didn’t really feel, feeding the hungry rumble of his homesickness constant helpings of memory and imagination.

Outside, the Sheriff’s door slams shut. He’s got a fancier car
than ol’ Jim, I’ll give ’im that. And,
Daniel notes as the big man hitches up his broad belt,
an even fancier gun.

The sight of the Sheriff’s pistol with its pearly white handle sends the boy’s mind wandering. In his lap, his palms fold, one up, one down, several inches apart. In his mind, he grasps his own little bolt-action .22, its barrel ice cold as he crunches through the crisp freedom of the October woods; brown nut grass, stiff with first frost, crumbling beneath his feet. Here, sun slants bright through the half-bare hickory grove. And just there, the tail of a fat fox squirrel flickers. Daniel stops, takes aim, lets the squirrel back his way ’round the trunk into full view, then,
Bam!
Got him! Easy pickin’s for a lover of Mam’s squirrel burgoo.

Mam.
Without warning, her long skinny face rises up in front of him: grinning at a tow sack heavy with a dozen skinned pink squirrels, grimacing at the pain eating up her innards, composed peaceful-like by old Miz Sary on the pine plank she called her cooling board. This last memory of his mother, colorless except for the strange spots of rouge somebody smudged on her cheekbones, tightens the muscles around his sore heart. All at once, Mam’s pointy fingers, never still, ever impatient with any sort of dillydallying, poke him sharply in the shoulder.

“Sammy,” the harsh whisper says. Mam never called him that. “Sammy! Teacher want you, up to the front,” the grubby boy behind him says.

Dazed, Samuel Daniel Dare stands and shuffles his oversize feet between the desks toward the front. He feels, like pin-pricks, the other children’s eyes on his plaid shirttail. He drops his chin hastily, hoping they can’t see, don’t notice the backs of his big ears flushing darkly red. Their sharp laughter tells him they can, and do.

2

Sheriff K. A. DeLuth grabs his hat off the other seat then pauses to center his belt buckle between the stiff parallel creases in his shirt and pants legs. “A fine figure of a man,” the President of the Ladies’ Auxiliary called him, meaning his six-foot, six-inch height which, with his hat on (an authentic Texan ten-gallon, a gift from the Governor) and the heels of his size-thirteen boots, grows to damn near seven feet tall.

SHERIFF K. A. DeLUTH. The gold letters on his car door glint his arrival. To the voters who will, no doubt, reelect him next month for an unprecedented third term, the ballot reads Sheriff Kyle Ambrose (K. A.) DeLuth, Incumbent. But among his powerful friends, the citrus growers and cattlemen who own and run this county, and among those who dare cross them, he’s Kick Ass. The Honorable Sheriff Kick Ass DeLuth. He nods, relishing the feel of his hat on his head, the velvety smooth rim of the brim.
At your service.

This place hasn’t changed a bit,
he thinks, ducking his head to enter the school office.
Same damn chairs, same old prune face behind the counter, must be—what? seventy-something by now.

“Good afternoon, young lady,” he says, turning on the charm, removing his hat in a practiced arc.

“Kyle DeLuth! Last time I saw you in here, you were on the receiving end of a rather large piece of pine!” Miss May White’s attempted grin cross-stitches the folds of her ancient face. “You sure have done well for yourself.”

“Thank you, Miss May. And you haven’t changed a bit. Boss man in?”

“In for you, I’ll bet. Ed
ward,
” she calls loudly into the open door six feet away, “you here for Kyle DeLuth?”

“Ol’ K.A.? ’S long as he’s not here for me, I am.” Ed Cantrell calls, waving him in with a smile.

DeLuth passes through the swinging half door next to the counter, drops his big hat in the center of Miss May’s desk, and extends his right hand to grip the principal’s squat little paw.

“Missed you at Rotary today,” the Sheriff says, settling into one of the uncomfortably small wooden chairs in front of the principal’s desk, adjusting the crease in his crossed pants leg.

“Damn district reports, due end of the week,” Cantrell says and shakes his bald head at the paperwork blanketing his desk. “What can I do you for?” he asks quickly.

The Sheriff notes the hint of anxiousness in Cantrell’s voice, views it as the respect that he considers his due.

“Sat next to Clive Cunningham at lunch. You got the last of his kids here in the fifth grade, sweet little thing named Caroline, pick of ol’ Clive’s litter?”

“Sure do. ‘A’ student, too.” Cantrell says it a little too heartily, clearly curious why a man of Clive Cunningham’s status would involve the Sheriff in a school problem.

“Well, Caroline’s come home complaining about some boy in her class. New kid, name of Dare? Not that he’s bothered her or anything, but seems he’s a little on the too-tan side. Clive’s driven by the playground, given him the once-over, thinks he might be some sort of high-toned mule-otto, tryin’ to pass for white.”

Cantrell’s big chair squeaks as he shifts his bulk forward, alert now. “I know the boy you mean. He and his little sister are new—week ago Monday, October sixth. But they got redheaded cousins who’ve been here a year already.”

“Well,”—DeLuth stretches a foot to admire the mirror-sharp sheen on his boot toe—“with all this nonsense coming out of the Supreme Court, and you know better ’n I do the Governor’ll close the schools before he’ll integrate, we got to keep an eye out for any sort of left-wing foolishness. I told Clive I’d check this kid out myself, that is,”—DeLuth pauses to make sure Cantrell realizes he’s being thrown a bone—“if it’s all right with you.”

“Of course.” The principal nods hastily. “He’s in Sarah Burch’s room. Want me to call him out?” He’s already swiveling toward the P.A. system on the table beside his desk.

The Sheriff shakes his head, rising up and out of the too-small chair. “You got your hands full here, Ed. I’ll just stroll over there, take a look-see and be on my way. Fifth grade still where it used to be? And the sister’s in—what? First grade? Second?”

“Second,” Cantrell says, standing awkwardly. “Sure you don’t want me to come?”

“Naw, probably nothing anyway,” DeLuth says, waving him back into his seat.

“Haven’t changed a bit,” he winks at Miss May as he swings his hat off the rack behind her desk.

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