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“Crazy,” she thought, coming suddenly awake, toying with the word’s dull echo in her head, standing over the hissing grill and staring through the grill’s blackness at the pitch-dark center of things. She thought of George Loomis, sitting alone in his unlighted, funereal old brick house on Crow Mountain, watching television in the kitchen, his eyes like a murderer’s. Henry respected George, and George had a kind of sense: He could talk to Henry if anyone could, and George could do it without making them all feel like worms. She set her lips and, as though someone else had suggested it, she nodded.

And so George Loomis sat down grinning in the armchair facing the davenport late one night and stretched out his legs, his left hand over his belly, relaxed, the empty right sleeve pinned up to the shoulder of his shirt. He smelled of whiskey. It gave her a turn, but she said nothing. She thought of her father, the car parked down in the creek below the DL&W bridge where he’d pulled to sleep it off. When he brought in the smell of whiskey with him, her mother would sometimes cry. “You never think of anybody but yourself,” she would say, “that’s truly all you think about.” And he would nod, scowling, not offended by what she said but outraged by the maudlin vulgarity of her saying anything at all. Once, long ago, he’d hit her. When Callie was little, she too would cry, and her father would wince, looking at her, and then he’d shut his eyes with disgust and sit down and cover his face with his hands and wait for them to go. His verdict was right, she knew, and she knew that all women were evil. When they were loading hay he would lift her in his arms, laughing, and would throw her up onto the load. She was terrified — the load was high and round, and she was sure she’d roll off on the other side from the force of his throw — yet she would wish he would do it again and again, hoist her up in his arms and laugh, looking at her face for just a second, and throw her up at the white clouds and the deep blue glodes between. Her mother would say, “She’ll be hit by dry lightning up there, Frank Wells. You know what happened to Covert’s boy.” “Crap,” he would say. He would lift his arms and say, “Ok, scout,” and Callie would half-slide half-jump and he would catch her. Her mother said someday he would break her leg, and Callie thought, Evil, evil! Once he had turned his back and let her fall. She was fourteen. He and the two hired men had laughed, leaning on their forks, showing their dark yellow teeth. That night she had run away, intending to drown herself, but beside the creek — Prince running up and down joyfully, yipping at shadows — she’d found herself too cowardly and base for even that; there was no hope left for her but forgiveness. It was the troopers that had found her, and when she got home her father was asleep in his chair, snoring like a horse.

George Loomis said, “How things going, boy?”

“Oh, so-so,” Henry said.

Still no relief from the heat had come. Her head ached, and their voices sounded hollow, like voices in a dream.

George Loomis looked down for perhaps a minute, then cleared his throat and looked over at little Jimmy, playing with a truck on the davenport arm. George’s hair was going prematurely gray, but across from Henry he looked like a high school boy. He had a boy’s face, a boy’s way of sitting — except for the one boot locked rigid in its iron brace. He had a look of innocence like a boy’s, too, vaguely associated in Callie’s mind with virginity.

“Sure dry,” George said.

Henry nodded. “Things burning right up.” His voice was mechanical, like his words. Even his eating looked mechanical, and George was doing nothing to help.

Callie looked toward heaven in despair.

(The Preacher would come to see Callie’s father and would go out to the barn where he was milking, and Callie would go with him to show him the way. He’d step gingerly, behind the cows, worrying about getting manure on his pointed black shoes — good honest shit, her father called it and when her father saw him he would nod politely. In front of her mother, her father would mock religious people, but he was always polite to them otherwise. He was not a cruel man — she had learned that only lately, from Henry, or rather had only lately discovered by way of Henry that that was what she’d always known. He too was like a boy, her father — in a different way from George Loomis, though. Her father was easygoing, open, free with his money, a storyteller people would listen to for hours. He didn’t believe or disbelieve in God, he said; he just didn’t like churches. He didn’t like hearing what he had to believe and what he mustn’t believe — the very word believe made him curl his lip as he would when he listened to tear-jerking poetry or talk about flowers or songs about faraway places — and above all, he said, he didn’t like grown men standing up and confessing in front of everybody, like drunks or like young lovers. But that was not what he said to the Preacher. He said, “Evening, Reverend,” and nodded, and when the Preacher talked about what a fine herd of cows he had (it had chronic mastitis and there wasn’t a cow in the barn that gave more than a gallon) he would agree. Rightly, Henry said. (That too she had always known but had realized only when he said it.) If you told the Preacher the truth he would soon have control of you, would milk you dry. The Preacher would say, “We’ve missed you lately in church, Frank,” and her father would say only, “I haven’t been going very regular, that’s true.” He hadn’t darkened those doors in fifteen years. The Preacher would talk to him sadly, man to man, high-tone Biblical language that embarrassed Callie, and after her father had heard him out he’d look thoughtful and say, “There’s a lot to what you say, Reverend.” She would want to laugh, and only later had she come to see that she’d wanted to laugh with fury. There was something vile in her father’s arrogant detachment. She wondered what her father would say if someone smarter than he was had come to talk about religion to him. Henry’s father, for instance, when he was alive, who’d read hundreds and hundreds of books. But she knew what her father would have done, of course. How could even arguments have touched him?)

All of that came back to her clearly, in the odd vagueness that had captured her mind — those nights in the barn with the milkers chugging and the Preacher straddling a spatter of manure, huge gray moths batting at the whitewash-caked bulbs, the cool sound of pigeons in the mow overhead. She stood in the living room doorway listening as if in a trance to Henry and George Loomis, and when her mind came alive again her heart sank. They were equals, they would be honest with each other; and there was nothing George could do. (I loved him though, she thought, giving way again, seeing her father in her mind as before, his eyes cocked up at the sharply protruding hipbone of the cow. She’d been older than her father all her life, and even as she’d struggled to be the boy he wished she was, because the idea of her being his daughter was for both of them unmanageable, she had known the futility of it and had forgiven him. For an instant that seemed timeless but which nevertheless passed, she did not care whether George succeeded or not.)