“Where you goin’?” I finally asked, after it became apparent she was not going to speak first.
“I don’t know. Just walkin’.”
“You goin’ to the creek?”
She laughed softly and said, “You’d like that, wouldn’t you, Luke? You wanna see me again, don’t you?”
My cheeks burned, and I couldn’t think of anything to say.
“Maybe later,” she said.
I wanted to ask her about Cowboy, but that subject seemed so ugly and private that I didn’t have the nerve to go near it. And I wanted to ask her how she knew that Libby Latcher was telling that Ricky was the father of her baby, but again, it was something else I just couldn’t bring up. Tally was always mysterious, always moody, and I adored her completely. Walking with her along the narrow path made me feel twenty years old.
“What did that deputy want?” she asked.
I told her everything. Stick had delivered no forbidden secrets. The Siscos were talking big, and they were crazy enough to try something. I relayed it all to Tally.
She thought about it as we walked, then asked, “Is Stick gonna arrest Hank for killin’ that boy?”
I had to be careful here. The Spruills were at war with each other, but any hint of an outside threat and they’d close ranks. “Pappy’s worried about y’all leavin’,” I said.
“What’s that gotta do with Hank?”
“If he gets arrested, then y’all might leave.”
“We ain’t leavin’, Luke. We need the money.”
We had stopped walking. She was looking at me, and I was studying my bare feet. “I think Stick wants to wait till the cotton’s in,” I said.
She absorbed this without a word, then turned and started back toward the house. I tagged along, certain I’d said too much. She said good night at the silo and disappeared into the darkness.
Hours later, when I was supposed to be asleep, I listened through the open window as the Spruills growled and snapped at each other. Hank was in the middle of every fight. I could not always hear what they were saying or bickering about, but it seemed as though each new skirmish was caused by something Hank had said or done. They were tired; he was not. They woke before sunrise and spent at least ten hours in the fields; he slept as late as he wanted, then picked cotton at a languid pace.
And evidently he was roaming at night again. Miguel was waiting by the back steps when my father and I opened the kitchen door on our way to gather eggs and milk for breakfast. He pleaded for help. The shelling had resumed; someone had bombed the barn with heavy clods of dirt until after midnight. The Mexicans were exhausted and angry, and there was about to be a fight of some variety.
This was our sole topic of conversation over breakfast, and Pappy was so angry he could barely eat. It was decided that Hank had to go, and if the rest of the Spruills left with him, then we’d somehow manage. Ten well-rested and hardworking Mexicans were far more valuable than the Spruills.
Pappy started to leave the table and go straight to the front yard with his ultimatum, but my father calmed him. They decided that we would wait until quitting time, thereby getting a full day of labor out of the Spruills. Plus they’d be less likely to break camp with darkness upon them.
I just listened. I wanted to jump in and describe my conversation with Tally, especially the part about her family needing the money. In my opinion, they wouldn’t leave at all, but would be delighted to get rid of Hank. My opinions, however, were never welcome during these tense family discussions. I chewed my biscuit and hung on every word.
“What about Stick?” Gran asked.
“What about him?” Pappy fired in her direction.
“You were gonna tell Stick when you were finished with Hank.”
Pappy took a bite of ham and thought about this.
Gran was a step ahead, but then she had the advantage of thinking without being angry. She sipped her coffee and said, “Seems to me the thing to do is tell Mr. Spruill that Stick is comin’ after Hank. Let the boy sneak away at night. He’ll be gone, that’s all that matters, and the Spruills’ll be thankful you kept him from gettin’ arrested.”
Gran’s plan made perfect sense. My mother managed a slight grin. Once again the women had analyzed a situation more quickly than the men.
Pappy didn’t say another word. My father quickly finished eating and went outside. The sun was barely above the distant trees, yet the day was already eventful.
After lunch Pappy said abruptly, “Luke, we’re goin’ to town. The trailer’s full.”
The trailer wasn’t completely full, and we never took it to the gin in the middle of the day. But I wasn’t about to object. Something was up.
There were only four trailers ahead of us when we arrived at the gin. Usually, at this time of the harvest, there would be at least ten, but then we always came after supper, when the place was crawling with farmhands. “Noon’s a good time to gin,” Pappy said.
He left the keys in the truck, and as we were walking away he said, “I need to go to the Co-op. Let’s head to Main Street.” Sounded good to me.
The town of Black Oak had three hundred people, and virtually all of them lived within five minutes of Main Street. I often thought how wonderful it would be to have a neat little house on a shady street, just a stone’s throw from Pop and Pearl’s and the Dixie theater, with no cotton anywhere in sight.
Halfway to Main, we took an abrupt turn. “Pearl wants to see you,” he said, pointing at the Watsons’ house just to our right. I’d never been in Pop and Pearl’s house, never had any reason to enter, but I’d seen it from the outside. It was one of the few houses in town with some bricks on it.
“What?” I asked, completely bewildered.
He said nothing, and I just followed.
Pearl was waiting at the door. When we entered I could smell the rich, sweet aroma of something baking, though I was too confused to realize she was preparing a treat for me. She gave me a pat on the head and winked at Pappy. In one corner of the room, Pop was bent at the waist, his back to us, fiddling with something. “Come here, Luke,” he said, without turning around.
I’d heard that they owned a television. The first one in our county had been purchased a year earlier by Mr. Harvey Gleeson, the owner of the bank, but he was a recluse, and no one had yet seen his television, as far as we knew. Several church members had kinfolks in Jonesboro who owned televisions, and whenever they went there to visit they came back and talked nonstop about this wonderful new invention. Dewayne had seen one inside a store window in Blytheville, and he’d strutted around school for an insufferable period of time.
“Sit here,” Pop said, pointing to a spot on the floor, right in front of the set. He was still adjusting knobs. “It’s the World Series,” he said. “Game three, Dodgers at Yankee Stadium.”
My heart froze; my mouth dropped open. I was too stunned to move. Three feet away was a small screen with lines dancing across it. It was in the center of a dark, wooden cabinet with the word Motorola scripted in chrome just under a row of knobs. Pop turned one of the knobs, and suddenly we heard the scratchy voice of an announcer describing a ground ball to the shortstop. Then Pop turned two knobs at once, and the picture became clear.
It was a baseball game. Live from Yankee Stadium, and we were watching it in Black Oak, Arkansas!
Chairs moved behind me, and I could feel Pappy inching closer. Pearl wasn’t much of a fan. She busied herself in the kitchen for a few minutes, then emerged with a plate of chocolate cookies and a glass of milk. I took them and thanked her. They were fresh from the oven and smelled delicious. But I couldn’t eat, not right then.