Blair took that in, then said,“I don’t believe he ever thought he would have to kill anyone. I just don’t.”
“Not then,” Cynthia said.
“Money changes people.” Carol stated the obvious, except that to many the obvious is overlooked. “He’d become habituated to power, to material pleasures, and he loved Little Marilyn.”
“Love or money,” Harry half-whispered.
“What?” Mrs. Hogendobber wanted to know everything.
“Love or money. That’s what people kill for… .” Harry’s voice trailed off.
“Yes, we did have that discussion once.” Mrs. Hogendobber reached for another helping of macaroni and cheese. It was sinfully tasty. “Maybe the road to Hell is paved with dollar bills.”
“If that’s the center of your life,” Blair added. “You know, I read a lot of history. I like knowing other people have been here before me. It’s a comfort. Well, anyway, Marie Antoinette and Louis the Sixteenth became better people once they fell from power, once the money was taken away.Perhaps somebody else would actually become a better person if he or shedid have money. I don’t know.”
The Reverend considered this.“I suppose some wealthy people become philanthropists, but it’s usually at the end of their lives when Heaven has not been secured as the next address.”
As the group debated and wondered about this detail or that glimpse of the man they knew as Fitz, Harry got up and put on her parka.“You all, I’ll be back in a minute. I forgot to feed the possum.”
“In another life you were Noah,” Herbie chuckled.
Mrs. Hogendobber cast the Lutheran minister a reproving glare.“Now, Reverend, you don’t believe in past lives, do you?”
Before that subject could flare up, Harry was out the back door, Mrs. Murphy and Tucker tagging along. Pewter elected to stay in the kitchen.
She slid back the barn doors just enough for her to squeeze through to switch on the lights. It was hard to believe that a few hours ago she nearly met her death in this barn, the place that always made her happy.
She shook her head as if to clear the cobwebs. Mostly she wanted to reassure herself she was alive. Mrs. Murphy led the way, and Harry crawled up the ladder, Tucker under her arm, and handed the food to Simon, who was subdued.
Mrs. Murphy rubbed against the little fellow.“You done good, Simon.”
“Mrs. Murphy, that was the worst thing I’ve ever seen. There’s something wrong with people.”
“Some of them,” the cat replied.
Harry watched the two animals and wondered at their capacity to communicate and she wondered, too, at how little we really know of the animal world. We’re so busy trying to break them, train them, get them to do our bidding, how can we truly know them? Did the masters on the plantation ever know the slaves, and does a man ever know his wife if he thinks of himself as superior—or vice versa? She sat in the hay, breathing in the scent, and a wave of such gratitude flushed through her body. She didn’t know much but she was glad to be alive.
Mrs. Murphy crawled in her lap and purred. Tucker, solemnly, leaned against Harry’s side.
The cat craned her head upward and called,“Thanks.”
The owl hooted back,“Forget it.”
Tucker observed,“I thought you didn’t like humans.”
“Don’t. I happen to like the blacksnake less than I like humans.” She spread her wings in triumph and laughed.
The cat laughed with her.“You like Harry—admit it.”
“I’ll never tell.” The owl lifted off her perch in the cupola and swept down right in front of Harry, startling her. Then she gained loft and flew out the large fan opening at the end of the barn. A night’s hunting awaited her, at least until the storm broke.
Harry backed down the ladder, Tucker under her arm. Harry stood in the center of the aisle for a moment.“I’ll never know what got into you two,” she addressed the horses, “but I’m awfully glad. Thank you.”
They looked back with their gentle brown eyes. Tomahawk stayed in one corner of his stall while Gin, sociable, hung her head over the Dutch door.
“And Mrs. Murphy, I still don’t know how the blacksnake came flying out of the loft, followed by you. I guess I’ll never know. I guess I won’t know a lot of things.”
“Put her back up in her place,” Mrs. Murphy suggested,“or she’ll freeze to death.”
“She doesn’t know what you’re talking about.” Tucker scratched at Tomahawk’s stall door and whined.“Is this the one she hid in?” the dog asked the cat.
“Under the shavings in there somewhere.” The tiger’s whiskers swept forward as she joined Tucker in clawing at the door.
She knew the snake would be there but nonetheless it always made her jump when she saw one. Harry, curious, opened the door. Now she knew why Tomahawk was in one corner of his stall. He did not like snakes and he said so.
“Here she is.” Tucker stood over the snake.
Harry saw the snake, partially covered by shavings.“Is she alive?” She knelt down and placed her hand behind the animal’s neck. Gently she lifted the snake and only then did she realize how big the reptile was. Harry suffered no special fear of snakes but it couldn’t be said that she wanted to hold one, either. Nonetheless, she felt some responsibility for this blacksnake. The animal moved a bit. Tomahawk complained, so they backed out of the stall.
Mrs. Murphy climbed up the ladder.“I’ll show you.”
Harry racked her brain to think of a warm spot. Other than the pipes under her kitchen sink, only the loft came to mind, so she climbed back up.
The cat ran to her and ran away. Harry watched with amusement. Mrs. Murphy had to perform this act four times before Harry had enough sense to follow her.
Simon grumbled as they passed him,“Don’t you put that old bitch near me.”
“Don’t be a fuss,” the cat chided. She led Harry to the snake’s nest.
“Look at that,” Harry exclaimed. She carefully placed the snake in her hibernating quarters and covered her with loose hay. “The Lord moves in mysterious ways his wonders to perform,” she said out loud. Her mother used to say that to her. The Lord performed his or her wonders today with a snake, a cat, a dog, and two horses. Harry had no idea that she’d had more animal help than that, but she did know she was here by the grace of God. Tommy Norton would have shot her as full of holes as Swiss cheese.
As she closed up the barn and walked back to the house, a few snowflakes falling, she recognized that she had no remorse for shooting that man in the kneecap. She would have killed him if it had been necessary. In that respect she realized she belonged to the animal world. Human morality often seems at a variance with Nature.
Fair Haristeen’s truck churned, sliding down the driveway. He hurriedly got out and grabbed Harry in his arms. “I just heard. Are you all right?”
“Yes.” She nodded, suddenly quite exhausted.
“Thank God, Harry, I didn’t know what you meant to me until I, until I …” He couldn’t finish his sentence. He hugged her.
She hugged him hard, then released him.“Come on. Our friends are inside. They’ll be glad to see you. Blair was shot, you know.” She talked on and felt such love for Fair, although it was no longer romantic. She wasn’t taking him back, but then he wasn’t asking her to come back. They’d sort it out in good time.
When they walked into the kitchen, a guilty, fat gray cat looked at them from the butcher block, her mouth full. She had demolished an entire ham biscuit, the incriminating crumbs still on her long whiskers.
“Pewter,” Harry said.
“I eat when I’m nervous or unhappy.” And indeed she was wretched for having missed all the action.“Of course, I eat when I’m relaxed and happy too.”