Part 11 (1/2)
I thought of Jinx saying goodbye to Ned at the train station. Watching him until he was out of sight, then watching some more. Wondering why one had to leave while the other stayed behind.
For some reason, my face flushed, and it wasn't from the heat. ”So let me guess. Jinx skipped town. He ran away. Isn't that what people do when things get tough? They move on to the next town and leave all their troubles behind? And everyone they care about?” My words came out in such a rush I wasn't sure if I was talking about Gideon or Jinx.
”You speak of a town of immigrants. People who already left everything behind.” Miss Sadie spat. ”Yes, there is plenty of blame to go around and much of it ended up in Manifest.” Her words trailed off and she fixed her stare ahead.
Somehow, I felt we weren't talking about Gideon or or Jinx anymore, but about Miss Sadie. It was in that moment, when I saw the weight of age and pain weighing down on her, every creak of the rocking chair sounding as if it was coming from her very bones, that I had a revelation. As much as I had a need to hear her story, she had a need to tell it. It was as if the story was the only balm that provided any comfort. Jinx anymore, but about Miss Sadie. It was in that moment, when I saw the weight of age and pain weighing down on her, every creak of the rocking chair sounding as if it was coming from her very bones, that I had a revelation. As much as I had a need to hear her story, she had a need to tell it. It was as if the story was the only balm that provided any comfort.
”So what happened after Ned left?”
Miss Sadie drew a breath and seemed to hold it forever. Finally, she exhaled and her breath carried the words.
”After Ned left, the troubles we had all run away from came and found us....”
Elixir of Life
JULY 12, 1918.
Ned had been gone for months, and for Jinx the warm summer days dragged. After Ned had enlisted, he'd been able to come home once or twice a month on leave from Camp Funston, but now that he'd s.h.i.+pped out overseas, there would be no more visits until he came home for good. Most of the troops were figuring they'd be home before Christmas. Jinx wasn't so sure.
He occupied his time doing odd jobs. Shady thought Jinx needed to learn a trade, so he set about doing some welding. He was even commissioned to make a wrought iron gate. With helmet down and torch blazing, he practiced to his heart's content, welding all manner of metal objects-forks, shovels, horseshoes, even the grate off a potbelly stove-right into the gate. His highly unusual work did not spark any great demand and that was his one and only paying job.
His next a.s.signment was working chemistry boot camp at Velma T.'s house to make up for blowing out the chemistry room windows during science cla.s.s. And, of course, Sister Redempta kept after him about his studies, a.s.signing him extra reading to do over the summer to get him caught up with the rest of his cla.s.s. Still, fis.h.i.+ng was his favorite pastime and he had great luck with Ned's Wiggle King fis.h.i.+ng lure. In these long summer days, his uncle Finn, Junior Haskell, and Joplin, Missouri, all seemed like a faint memory that was no longer nipping at his heels.
”You think it's a ten-pounder, Shady?” Jinx stood in the doorway of Shady's place, holding up a catfish still dripping from the creek.
Shady wiped a wet rag across the bar top. ”If he's not, he ought to be. There's a scale in back.”
Jinx made his way through a cramped maze of tables, chairs, and empty whiskey gla.s.ses, past a frayed curtain. He found the scale, filled with stubbed-out cigar b.u.t.ts, in the back room.
”Did you have a good crowd last night?”
”It was kind of slow,” Shady said, following Jinx to the back room. ”All the Germans were having a miners' meeting at the German Fraternal Hall.”
”Miners' meeting? I'd think they'd have enough of mining when they're working. Why do they want to meet about it?”
”They're trying to get organized enough that they can have some say in their working conditions. You know, when they work, how long their s.h.i.+fts are. Anyhow, it's kind of empty here without them. And the ones that were here seemed kind of puny. Lots of aches and coughs.” He dumped the cigars onto the floor and flopped the fish onto the tray. The arrow teetered, then stopped just under ten pounds.
”Not quite.” Jinx frowned, looking at the scale.
Shady rubbed his whiskers. ”What time is it?”
”I went fis.h.i.+ng at sunup. It's probably around eight by now.”
”Well, you caught this feller before he could even have breakfast.” Shady shoved a half-eaten apple into the fish's mouth, sending the arrow over the ten-pound mark. ”Even a condemned man gets a last meal. I'd say that fish deserves nothing less.”
Jinx grinned. ”I'm pretty hungry myself.”
”You'd better get to scaling if we're going to have us some fish for breakfast.”
A voice called from the front, ”Anybody here?”
Shady peeked out from behind the curtain. ”It's Sheriff Dean,” he whispered to Jinx.
Jinx looked toward the back door, ready to bolt. He'd been able to avoid Sheriff Dean all these months, and even though he seemed to have evaded his past, he didn't want a face-to-face encounter now. Jinx's reaction did not slip past Shady. ”Be right with you,” Shady called. Then he whispered to Jinx, ”He's coming for his complimentary libations.” That meant his illegal alcohol.
Jinx stood still. Shady had never asked any questions about Jinx's dealings before he'd come to Manifest. But Shady wasn't blind and it was painfully obvious that Jinx got nervous anytime Sheriff Dean was within a stone's throw.
”Son, if I was you, I'd stay here and keep that catfish out of sight or he's liable to requisition all ten pounds of it.”
Jinx nodded. He stayed behind the curtain and peeked out.
”How do, Sheriff Dean?” Shady hoisted up four jugs full of whiskey and placed them on the bar. ”There you go. Your twice-monthly requisition, right on schedule.”
”That it?” Sheriff Dean inquired skeptically.
”Every last drop,” Shady answered, his eyes not meeting the sheriff's.
Jinx had seen Shady play enough poker hands to know that his friend had no knack for bluffing. There was more alcohol somewhere.
Sheriff Dean poured himself a shot and took a drink. It hit him like a fireball and he gave a wheezy cough. ”What'd you put in that? Gasoline?”
”The corn was a little green,” Shady said apologetically.
”Truth is,” Sheriff Dean said, his eyes still watering from the whiskey, ”I already got a fire in my belly. There was some trouble over at the Missionary Baptist Tent Revival in Joplin back in October. One fellow ended up dead.”
Jinx caught his breath and felt his knees get weak.
”That must've been some revival,” Shady said over his shoulder as he took the jugs two at a time out to the sheriff's truck.
”Yeah, well, he didn't die of praying,” Sheriff Dean said when Shady resumed his place at the bar. ”He was stabbed. There's two fellas they're looking for. One older, one younger.”
”Is that right? Well, October was some time ago. I'm sure those fellas are long gone. I'll bet you're relieved that's out of your jurisdiction.” Shady took up his rag and wiped the bar top to a s.h.i.+ne. ”I guess the Missouri boys'll have to deal with it.”
The sheriff hoisted his belly sideways to show off his gun. ”If only that were true, Shady. Thing is, one of those Missouri boys, the one that's sheriff in Joplin, also happens to be my wife's brother, Leonard Nagelman. Seems as though the whole affair had died down but now he's got it in his head those fugitives stayed around here. Somebody thinks he saw the older one a few miles from here, near Scammon or Weir. Recognized him from the revival. 'Keep an eye out,' he says. Knowing Leonard, he'll be sniffing around here till he finds someone he can string up, if you know what I mean.” He raised an eyebrow. ”I'd prefer that he stay on his side of the state line.”
The sheriff started opening cabinets. ”Man like yourself, with such a fine establishment, I bet you hear a lot of talk in a place like this,” he said, stepping past the curtain into the back room. His gaze went past the coat hook holding Shady's raincoat, not noticing the two bare feet sticking out below.
He poked and prodded a bit around the back room, looking in the cookstove and under the table. Just as he was leaving, his foot b.u.mped against the washtub, which gave a not-so-hollow sound. He kicked it over, revealing a jug of whiskey.
Sheriff Dean heaved a sigh. ”You been holding out on me, Shady. And I thought we had an agreement. Now, I'm going to need double the amount by tomorrow, or I'll shut you down.”
”Be reasonable, Sheriff. I can't make that kind of liquor by tomorrow. It takes over a week to make a quality batch of deep shaft.”
Sheriff Dean caught sight of Jinx's trout still tipping the scale at ten pounds. He yanked the apple from the fish's mouth and tossed it to Shady. The scale pointer sagged below the ten-pound mark. ”Looks like liquor's not the only thing you been cheating on.” He slapped the fish onto the table and, in one clean stroke of the hatchet, lopped off its head. ”There's one thing I'd think you'd know about me by now, Shady.” He wrapped the catfish in a piece of newspaper and tucked it under his arm. ”I always find what I'm looking for.” He hefted up the jug in the crook of his finger. ”I'll be by tomorrow. And you'll keep an ear out for any news on those two runaways?”