The Marble Orchard (15 page)

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Authors: Alex Taylor

BOOK: The Marble Orchard
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“Well, maybe he’ll be back around here shortly. I’d appreciate you calling me when he shows up.”

Clem took a long sip of his beer and stared at the sheriff. “What for?” he asked.

“I’d just like to talk to him. Paul’s body was found just a few miles downstream from here. I thought maybe Beam might’ve seen something strange one of these nights he was running the ferry.”

“I’ll call you if he turns up.”

Without another word, Elvis turned and walked back to the cruiser. Once seated behind the wheel, he picked his black revolver off the passenger seat and shucked it into the holster on his hip. He then took his hat off and laid it on the car’s center console. Cranking the engine, he drove up the landing ramp and passed out of the bottoms, the river winking brightly in his rearview mirror until the dust rose behind him to veil it away.

Elvis parked in front of the courthouse. He sat in his cruiser for a time, wondering if the ladies at the front desk would be able to smell the beer on his breath. Then he wondered at Clem drinking so early in the day. The man had looked worried. And then there
was the ferry, which he claimed to have run aground because of a stuck throttle. Maybe that was the truth, but Elvis had his doubts.

He searched through his glove box for a roll of Certs or a stick of Doublemint, but there was none, so he exited the cruiser and walked up the granite steps of the courthouse, breathing into a cupped hand. Walking with his head down, Elvis didn’t see the man dressed in the navy blue suit astraddle the defunct artillery gun on the courthouse lawn.

“Hot morning, ain’t it?” the man said. He dismounted the gun and walked across the grass, then up the steps.

“It is a hot one,” Elvis responded, looking the man over. His long yellow hair hung over his shoulders in loose damp strands, and the blazer he wore was smudged and dirty. Elvis caught a whiff of him; he smelled foul, as though he had been sleeping out of doors of late. “Can I help you?”

The man put his hands into his pockets and crossed his feet. “I need a spell of talk with you,” he said, smiling.

“Well, that might can be arranged. Come on in here and make an appointment with one of the secretaries.” Elvis moved to ascend the steps into the courthouse, but stopped when he realized the man wasn’t following him. “You coming inside?”

“Now see, I just don’t make appointments,” the man answered. His smile broadened and he swayed a bit lazily on his feet.

“I do,” said Elvis. “That’s the only way you get a spell of talk with me.”

The man shook his head. “What I have to say needs no appointing. I have information on a certain person of interest. A young man who’s gone missing. Goes by the name Beam Sheetmire.”

A wind ghosted out of the alleyway across the street and ruffled the lapels of the man’s suit and charmed the hair up about his head.

“I didn’t know Beam was missing,” Elvis said.

“He is.” The man nodded. “Missing and lost.”

Elvis ran a thumb along his belt. “Then I guess you’d better come inside,” he said.

“I guess I better had.”

Elvis straightened a few files on his desk and placed a rusted muskrat trap he used for a paperweight on top of them. Then he turned on an oscillating table fan, which fluttered pendular and sadly disaffirming, throwing a warm draft through the room that smelled of underarm and evergreen air freshener.

The man in the suit took a chair in front of the desk. Elvis remained standing, leaning against a filing cabinet. The man claimed his name was Browning, but Elvis figured this a lie. He’d learned long ago that most things people told him in this office were lies.

“Now see, Beam was over at Daryl’s bar yesterday afternoon,” the man began. “I know because I gave him a ride there. Picked him up on the side of the Natcher Road. He changed the tire on my rig, so I give him a ride. I thought we were being real chummy, but once we got to Daryl’s, I had to beat him with my boot.”

“Why did you do that?”

“He come at me.” The man slung the hair from his face and grinned. “Claimed I’d took some money from him, but that weren’t the case. He sure thought it was the case, though. That’s why he come at me and why I had to beat him with my boot. I guess I would’ve killed him if Daryl hadn’t stopped me. Once he got a good look at Beam he claimed he knew him and that this other fellow, man named Loat Duncan, knew him, too. And I guess they were all some mad at Beam for one reason or another and likely would have killed him themselves if this old coot with a shotgun hadn’t come in.”

“And what did this old man with the shotgun do?”

The man’s head rolled between his shoulders as if he were fighting off a fit of laughter. “Why, he plucked that Beam child off the floor and led him away into the world.”

Elvis stroked the edge of the filing cabinet. Despite the fan, a steady heat had risen in the office, and he felt the sweat dribbling down his ribs and into his pants. “And you didn’t know this man with the shotgun?” he asked.

The man shook his head. “Now see, I’m strange to this country and only passing through. Don’t know anyone. But I heard Daryl call him Pete Daugherty. All I can say beyond that is he was some peculiar.”

“How so?”

“Well, it’s some strange for a man that age to come and rescue a boy he doesn’t know.” The man leaned forward and stared up at the sheriff from beneath his eyebrows. “Don’t you think?”

Elvis took a handkerchief from his pocket. “What is odd is a man coming to me, a man I’ve never set eyes on before and who is wearing a suit telling me these things,” he said. “That’s what I think is peculiar.” He opened the filing cabinet and took out a small spritzer bottle of water and sprayed his handkerchief and then daubed it over his hands and the back of his neck.

“That’s just what I know,” the man said. “Take it for what it is worth to you.”

Elvis sat the spritzer bottle back in the cabinet and then leaned against the corner of his desk. “Why are you telling me this?” he asked. “There’s no reward.”

A sheepish grin of joy crossed the man’s face. “Say, Sheriff. A citizen has to be concerned, don’t he? If you got folks walking around not caring about the law, well, you don’t really have citizens, do you?”

“You care about the law?”

“I do.”

“I don’t believe you, Mr.
Browning
. I think there’s some other reason you’re here telling these things to me right now and I don’t think it has anything to do with the law.”

The man swiveled in his chair, which made a rusty squeak beneath him. His eyes went narrow. “Maybe not your law,” he said.

“How’s that?”

“You might find it hard to believe, but there’s an order out of your reach. You don’t figure in with it. Stand next to that law and you’d be as small as a speck of dirt under my fingernail.”

“What are you talking about?”

“I’m talking about the way you can maintain what you’ve got here.” The man waved his hand through the air. “Your little office. Your desk. Your cap pistol. You can keep all that and trickle on down to retirement and be all right. But you have to stand out of the way of the bigger rule.”

Elvis leaned over his desk. “I don’t understand anything you’re telling me right now,” he said. “Now, what you told me about Beam might be true. At least some of it. But I don’t like you. I think you should know that. I don’t like the things you say and I don’t like the way you’re sitting in my chair. I don’t like the way you smell and I don’t like the fact that you’re wearing a suit. It makes me nervous and I don’t never like to be nervous.”

“Well, what are you going to do about it, sheriff?” the man asked.

Elvis opened a desk drawer and took out a form and slapped it down. He began penning something down on the paper. “I’m going to arrest you.”

“Oh?” the man said, expectantly. “And what are you going to charge me with?”

“Misuse of public property.” Elvis pointed out the window with his pen. “That gun you were sitting on out there is a World War I monument, not a park bench. I’ll charge you with vagrancy too unless you can provide a valid address.” Elvis bent his head down and continued filling out the form. “What do you think about that?”

Only the squeak of the chair answered.

Elvis lifted his eyes. The man had disappeared.

Elvis dropped his pen and drew his revolver and ran to the doorway, but the hall was only glistening tile. He rushed down
the empty corridor, past the shocked covey of secretaries at the front desk and out the door and onto the courthouse lawn, looking everywhere for the man who called himself Browning, but he was gone. As if he never had been. A few cigarette butts and Styrofoam cups blew over the pavement. That was all.

XII

FRIDAY

Clem sat at the kitchen table paring bits of tar from beneath his fingernails with a hawkbill knife. He didn’t stop when Derna walked through the back door, her shoes sighing crisply over the unswept linoleum, her form shifting through the window light to flick an ashy scatter of shadow over him as she pulled a chair out for herself and sat down. She placed her purse on the table top and folded her hands in her lap, and yet he still continued working the knife under his fingernails, drawing the blade beneath them carefully and then rubbing it clean on his Wranglers.

“I want to know why you sent Beam off the way you did,” she said, suddenly.

Clem’s knife went on, his eyes steady on his work. “And I want to know where it is you been going in my truck these past couple days,” he said.

The cords of Derna’s throat tightened and she swallowed. “I’ve been looking for him,” she said.

Clem finished with the knife and raked a few dried crumbs of tar from the table into the floor. He looked at Derna. “Ain’t had no luck, have you?”

“Where is he?”

“I don’t know.”

“Yes you do.”

“No. I don’t. I only sent him off. I didn’t give him no directions other than to get away from here.”

Derna placed her hands on the table, pressing her fingertips into the bright Formica until her knuckles whitened. “Why
would you do such a thing?”

Clem leaned toward her. “Out on the river,” he said. “He killed Paul. He didn’t know who he was, but he did it and that’s why I sent him off.”

Derna felt the room flow away from her as if she’d suddenly dropped through a trap in the floor.

“Paul tried to take the till and Beam hit him with a wrench and killed him,” said Clem. “So I give him a change of clothes and showed him the highway. It was the best thing I knew to do. It didn’t matter if it was self-defense because Loat will still be looking to kill him.”

Derna shook her head. “You’re lying,” she said.

“No, Derna. I ain’t.”

“No. There’s no reason why Paul would be at the ferry.”

Clem sighed and drew a hand over the tabletop. “I don’t know why it come to happen. I don’t know why or how anything ever came to happen in life. But I’m telling you the truth. Paul showed up to the ferry and Beam killed him.”

Derna stood up and walked over to the kitchen sink. She looked out the window at the locust trees along the river as they trembled in the wind, the muddy water below them raked and riffled by the breeze.

“He didn’t know who he was,” said Clem. “Beam didn’t know it was Paul he’d killed and I didn’t tell him. I think the whole thing was just a bad accident. I don’t know if that helps or not, but that’s the way it happened.”

“You shouldn’t have sent Beam away,” Derna said.

“I wanted to help him. It’s the one thing I could do that might.”

“If you’d wanted to help him, you should have sent him away years ago.”

“You don’t need to say that, Derna.”

“No, but I do say it and you shouldn’t be surprised.” She turned quickly from the window, a black streak of hair leaping
across her forehead so she appeared as a consecrated penitent. “My oldest is dead and you tell me you’ve sent my youngest off for killing him. You think I’m just going to sit back and keep all the blame for myself? I can’t do that. I won’t do that.”

Clem’s eyes tightened. “You’re riding me,” he snarled, whipping a hand through the air.

“I want you to go find him,” she implored.

“Beam’s not even mine. Mine ain’t never drawed breath one in this world. But you want me to go out and stick my neck on the chopping block for him. Ain’t that pretty?”

Derna stared sharply at Clem, who sat hunched over the table, taking long heavy gusts of breath.

“Shit,” he finally said after a few moments, raking his chair back suddenly from the table. “Go out and find him? That’s what you want me to do?”

Derna nodded.

“If Loat don’t kill him, they’ll put him in prison,” said Clem.

“Not forever. Not if it’s like you really say. Not if it was all just a bad accident. He’ll get out if that’s true.”

Clem said nothing, gazing off into the white haze of the room. He felt diminished, his form reduced to the mere jack-scrabble of denim and hearsay, a rumor of a man who had loved a woman with all the sad implacable wrong of his heart, who had loved her even though she had been a whore and had borne the children of other men.

When he put his eyes on her again, she saw his great vault of sorrow, and knew he would do what she asked.

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