Talmage Powell
A Favor for Charlie
I felt a lot better now. The cabin, set in a cleared place in the mountainside with some straggly corn growing in the rocky land around it, had been deserted. I guess the family had took a day off and gone to town in their flivver. I’d broke one of the little windows, which was barely big enough to squeeze through. I reckon it was stealing, but I helped myself to a bellyful of grub, a change of clothes — and a pistol that I stuck in the waistband of my denim pants, and a carbine that I carried in the crook of my arm. I loaded a couple pockets with live ammo. I patted the carbine barrel and decided that if they got wind I was in this neck of the hills and cornered me, they’d better come shooting.
I got out of the cabin just before nightfall. I hoped the folks that owned the place would understand, somehow. I wouldn’t have been stranded if the man I'd been traveling with hadn’t hit me in my sleep and made off with everything I had. No matter how lonesome I was, I should have knowed better than to travel with a hill renegade. I admit that I was on the renegade trail myself, but I ain’t that kind. I wouldn’t hit a man in his sleep, and I take a bath, if I have to do it in an ice-cold creek, rubbing myself down with sand.
It was pitich-black now, and I looked out over the old Smoky Mountains and they were black shadows in the night, rough, ragged shadows, reaching as far as I could see. There was no stars, and no moon, and the black, thin air was heavier than usual tonight and damp, like it was going to rain tomorrow.
I came on down the mountainside, moving through underbrush and brambles, the trees making a roof over me. It had been more than six months since I’d come down this trail. Time for a lot to happen. Time for things to cool off. I was hoping people were thinking that I’d never come back to these hills, especially Sheriff Zack Courtney. But I’d been aiming to come back the whole time, for three things. To get Lucy. To get the money. To knock my brother Charlie’s brains out.
I busted out of the timber line. The clouds parted some. Moonlight made the night a little less darker. I was at the edge of a section of low, rolling hills that stretched away in the night, sort of like a valley, with high mountains all around. I started down through a cabbage patch. Charlie and the old man had planted while I’d been gone. Just ahead of me, a rabbit went bouncing away in the night, and I heard a whippoorwill squawling off somewhere.
At the end of the cabbage rows, I squatted on my haunches and looked at the clump of trees where the house stood. I couldn’t see the house because of the night and trees, but I knew it was there. I could see a flicker of light through the trees. It gave me a terrible feeling.
I moved over the sloping land at an angle to the house. A shadow came snuffling across the yard. It was the big, red hound. He began yelping like he was glad to see me. He reared up on me, his big paws chest high, trying to lick my face. I twisted my head and cracked him on the nose. He yipped softly, jumped down, slunk a few feet, and turned to look at me. I’d hurt his feelings more than his nose, but he was quiet now. The whole night was quiet. There wasn’t any commotion at the house. After a while I went on across the hillside.
I spotted the big, rotted stump in the dark. It had once been an oak a grown man would have trouble reaching around, but lightning had hit it, and Pa had sawed it down four winters ago. Now the stump was all rotten inside, with a whole nest of ants around its dead roots. The ants didn’t bother me when I dropped on my knees and began clawing out the soft dirt and rotted wood.
I started sweating. I felt the cold of the night knifing into me. I kept digging. Before long I had scooped out a good-sized hole under the north side of the stump. I knew I was already deeper than it had been, but I didn’t find it, and kind of lost my head. I was cussing under my breath, sweat running down in my eyes, tearing at the dirt and rotted wood now like a crazy gopher.
It wasn’t there.
Then a flashlight beam pinned me to the stump. The pistol was in my waistband, the carbine laying beside me. I left my hand drift toward the carbine, easy like, and turned my head slow.
I could just make out her face over the light. It looked like she was crying, and her old, grey head was bent.
“The money ain’t there any more, Sam,” she said, so soft I could barely hear her.
I stayed on my haunches and said, “Hello, Ma.”
I listened to her holding the sobs back in her throat. Then she dropped the light and hauled me to my feet as if I was a bag of rags. She was just about chest high on me, but her arms were strong. She held me and cried for a minute, her fingernails nearly bringing blood out of my back.
“I didn’t think anybody had seen me coming to the stump,” I said.
“I heard the dog, and it came to me that it was you when nobody came to the house. I knew you’d be coming back for the money, Sam.”
I knotted my hands at my sides. “Then you knew about the money. One of you found out, saw something the last day I was here that caused you to look around — until you scratched under the stump. I thought I had hid it pretty well. I thought I was safe, and when I found out different, I didn’t have time to stick around and get the money.”
She was crying in her throat. “Sam, why has it got to be like this? Why has it got to be a trip back in the night like some hill animal? Why—”
“You know why, Ma.”
“Don’t blame Charlie, Sam.”
“What you expect me to do? I was safe. I was going to wait around until it wouldn’t look funny for me to leave. Then I was going to take my money and go. But Charlie had to get his fingers in it. He had to ask around and find I hadn’t been in town the night old man Honacker was killed. He had to keep at it until he got me in a corner. Then he stood there with his gun on me, telling me I’d killed old Ezra Honacker, asking me to turn myself in. He really preached a sermon. He was so self-righteous it made me sick. What’s he know of the way I feel? I tell you, Ma, a man has to get the things he wants one way or another. You struggle a lifetime and you see it’s all coming to nothing and you get knotted up inside with a fire burning where your brain ought to be.”
“A lifetime, Sam? What do you know of a lifetime? So young and desperate to be talking of a lifetime!”
“I had a lifetime here with you and Pa and Charlie.” It felt like I had cuckle burrs in my throat. “One lifetime with Charlie is enough! If I had been any slower slugging him that night he had me cornered, Ma, I think he’d have shot me.”
“He was thinking of your future, Sam, what it would be like if you kept running. All his life Charlie has worried about you, boy. You’ve cost him sleep. You’ve cost him money. Remember the good things he’s done for you, Sam. Like the time he rode the mule through a blizzard for a doctor for you. He was the only living thing moving in the hills that night, son. He was the only one who could have got through — and forced the doctor to come back with him.”
I swallowed a time or two. “What’d you have to come out here for, Ma? Whatever Charlie ever did for me, he undid it all when he put me on the spot for murder!”
“Murder...” her voice cracked. “It’s a harsh word for a mother to hear a son use. I’m glad Pa and Charlie went to town today. I hope they don’t come back soon.”
I was hoping that at least Charlie didn’t — but only for her sake.
She picked up the flashlight, but didn’t point it anywhere in particular, just let it make a cold, yellow spot on the ground.
“Ma, was it Charlie that found my money?”
She didn’t say anything.
“What did he do with it, Ma?”
“He gave it to Sheriff Zack Courtney, in case old Ezra Honacker had any heirs anywhere.”