Voodoo Heart (33 page)

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Authors: Scott Snyder

BOOK: Voodoo Heart
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The phone rang eight times before Rollie picked up.

“Hello?” he said, sounding hoarse and sleepy.

“Guess,” said John.

“Who is this?”

“It’s John. Your son.”

“John? What time is it?”

“It’s only eleven o’clock. Snap out of it and guess.”

Rollie coughed. “I don’t know. Missouri.”

“South.”

“Kansas.”

“Kansas is west. I’m in Oklahoma. It’s beautiful. I’m calling to tell you to tell Dale Morton to go fuck himself.”

“Tell who what?”

“Tell Dale Morton not to keep a job for me at Sweet Fizz. I’m not coming back.”

“I’ll tell him, if you want, John. But let’s talk about this some other time, okay? It’s too late for me right now.”

“Too late,” John said. “Right.”

“Be careful,” said Rollie. Then the line rattled and went dead.

John replaced the receiver. He considered heading to bed, but decided instead to go out to the barn and check on the plane.

Most farmers didn’t like John parking the Jenny inside their barns; the engine dripped oil, the tires left tracks. At best they allowed him to station the Jenny beside or behind their barns, to afford at least a bit of shelter from the elements. But the Calbraith brothers had insisted John use their barn to house the plane. They’d even cleared out some of the pecan barrels to make extra room.

John took the lantern down and slid open the barn door. As he stepped inside, the odor of the plane hit him: a rich mixture of petrol, doping varnish, and old leather. The scent warmed him, and he felt a sudden, deep affection for his Jenny. How beautiful she looked too, standing beneath the rafters at the back of the barn, her linen wings shining pale gold in the lantern light. John thought back to the very first time she’d taken him up, during his orientation at Fort Hawley: how frightened he’d been, clutching the cockpit rim, teeth clenched, as his flight instructor lifted off. He’d experienced a kind of primal, childlike terror, watching the Texas grassland fall away beneath the wheels. But then a transformation had occurred, and his terror had changed to pounding exhilaration, and, finally, delight. Because now, for the first time in his life, he felt entirely apart. He could see the horizon in all directions: see it as it was, a brilliant white ring encircling the world. A string had been broken—that was the sensation—and John could feel himself drifting higher, released.

“You cutting out on me?” said Helen.

John turned to find her standing in the doorway. “No,” he said. “Just partied out.”

Helen slid the barn door closed. “And here I thought you were Mr. Party,” she said. “There were at least a couple of telephone ladies at the pub, you know.”

“Ha-ha.”

She walked over to him, kicking a stray pecan ahead of her. “Someone’s in a bad mood.”

“I’m not in a bad mood. I just don’t like surprises. That’s all.”

“So,” Helen said, resting a hand on the propeller blade, “what was the surprise?”

John squinted at her, confused.

“Was it all the money we made?” she said. “The people taking us out afterward? What?”

“The wing-walking, Helen. You shouldn’t have gone out on the wing without talking to me about it first.”

“The wing-walking,” she said, nodding. “You’re right. That wasn’t polite of me.”

“Polite? You could have fallen off and gotten killed.”

“True,” she said. “But that’d be my problem, wouldn’t it? I mean, you could just go on barnstorming. Get yourself a new girl. A new Mrs. Barron.”

John pushed past her, heading for the door. “We’re a team. You should have talked to me. That’s why I’m angry.”

“Wait,” Helen said.

John yanked the door back.

“John!”

He stopped, the door open before him. “What?”

“No more surprises after today,” Helen said. “I promise. I’ll ask you first about everything.”

“Fine. Done. I’m going to bed.”

“Not yet,” Helen said.

“Helen…”

“I want to ask you something.”

John sighed and leaned against the door frame.

“Do you think I’m a coward?” Helen spun the propeller blade.

“What are you talking about?”

“A coward,” she said. “Do you think I’m a coward?”

“Of course I don’t.”

“Well,” Helen said, spinning the blade again, harder this time, “I am.”

John walked over to her. “You’re not a coward, Helen.”

Helen nodded and continued smacking the propeller through its rotation. With each slap the blade twirled faster, until John caught it.

“You walked out on the wing of a plane today. I think that qualifies as brave.”

“No, it doesn’t.”

“Yes. It does.” He bent his knees, trying to look her in the eye, but she wouldn’t let him. “Helen, you’re the bravest person I know.”

“Don’t say that!” Her voice echoed through the dark barn. She tried to push him away, but he caught her wrists. “Listen to me. I’m telling you,” she said, struggling against him. “I’m telling you…”

John pulled her to him and kissed her. He could taste salt on her lips, and beneath that, the warm sweetness of her mouth.

She broke from him. “Stop!”

“I was so scared today, Helen,” he said. “I was terrified.”

“Don’t, John,” she said.

He kissed her again. She struggled against him, trying to tear free, but he held on to her, and then, suddenly, she was kissing him back, her body pressing into his, her hands fastening behind his neck. He wanted her so badly; he couldn’t touch enough of her at once. He moved her back toward the plane, then got his blanket from storage and laid it beneath the wing. Her eyes wet, she took his hand and pulled him down with her.

Afterward, they lay curled together beneath the starboard wing. John lit the lantern, and the two of them watched it burn, the flame sending a thin stream of vapor up toward the rafters.

Helen stuck one foot out from under the blanket and warmed her toes by the lantern glass. “So, where are we off to next?”

“Wherever we want.” He kissed the top of her head. “We could head west. Take a vacation together.”

“Could we go to California?” Helen said, yawning.

A bat darted down from the loft, then disappeared again.

“Why not? We could both use tans,” John said.

Helen pulled his arms tighter around her. “You know, I’ve never seen an ocean,” she said. “Not in my whole life.”

Moments later she was asleep. John felt her ribs slowly expanding and contracting beneath his hands, and the sensation warmed him. He decided that early in the morning, before Helen woke, he’d sneak out to the main house and borrow some paint from the brothers. Then he’d creep back into the barn and—with Helen still asleep—he’d lie down beneath the port wing and paint her name across the linen surface. He imagined the lettering, bold but elegant, black against the cream-white wing:
HELEN BARRON! THE FLYING BRIDE
!!! He pictured himself a bystander to his own show, a man on the ground, shading his eyes, watching the approach of the Jenny. He felt the thrill of first reading those words printed on the bottom of the wing, then of seeing Helen standing above them, the main attraction, a pretty girl in a blue dress, head thrown back, the wind in her hair as she passed overhead.

In the morning, though, she was gone, along with her valise and John’s map of the 1919 United States. He searched the house, questioning the Calbraith brothers; he combed the town of Mooney, the stores and restaurants, the hotels. She was really gone. But that night, he could pull Helen close to him, cupping his body to hers. She let out a little moan, and he kissed her bare shoulder.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

There are many people who helped in the creation of
Voodoo Heart
. A first and special thanks has to go out to Scott Tuft, Owen King, and Eric Ozawa, who’ve helped these stories along from their most nascent and terrifying forms. Also, for their friendship, heartfelt thanks to Dante Williams, Karl Haendel, Craig Teicher, Brenda Shaughnessy, Matthew Gilgoff, Doris Cooper, and Kevin Newman.

I’ve been very lucky with teachers over the years, but I owe a singular debt of gratitude to Binnie Kirshenbaum for her wisdom, encouragement, and friendship. Thanks, too, to Alan Ziegler and the great faculty of the Columbia University Graduate Writing Department; Leslie Woodard for giving me the chance to teach writing; Dorla MacIntosh for taking me under her wing; and to my students, for the constant inspiration and ridicule.

To the editors who’ve helped make the stories what they are: Michael Ray of
Zoetrope,
Michael Koch and Heidi Marschner of
Epoch,
Hannah Tinti and Maribeth Batcha of
One-Story,
and Rob Spillman, Holly MacArthur, and Ben George of
Tin House
.

In appreciation of my champions: Jennifer Lyons, my wonderful and tireless agent; Susan Kamil, my brilliant editor, whose dedication to the craft of writing is continually humbling; and Noah Eaker, the best editorial assistant this side of the Mississippi.

A special thank you to my family: my folks, Jon and Wendy Snyder, for being almost embarrassingly supportive; to my sister and best friend, Susie Snyder; to Dana, Ed and Jessica Luck; and to my grandparents, Claire and Milton Zaret for first sparking my imagination.

My deepest love and gratitude to my wife, Jeanie Ripton, who has always believed in these stories, even when I’ve had trouble. And who makes it all worth it.

And a final thanks for guidance and inspiration to the wily spirit of Mr. Elvis Presley.

VOODOO HEART

PUBLISHING HISTORY

Published by The Dial Press

A Division of Random House, Inc.

New York, New York

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

All rights reserved

Copyright © 2006 by Scott Snyder

Chapter title drawings by the author

Man on rope illustration © Mary Evans Picture Library

Some of these stories appeared in slightly different form in the following publications: “Blue Yodel” in
Zoetrope: All-Story
, “Happy Fish, Plus Coin” in
One-Story
, “About Face” and “The Star Attraction of 1919” in
Epoch
, “Voodoo Heart” (excerpted) and “Wreck” in
Tin House
, and “Dumpster Tuesday” in
Small Spiral Notebook.

The Dial Press and Dial Press Trade Paperbacks are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc., and the colophon is a trademark of Random House, Inc.

Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2006040160

www.dialpress.com

www.voodooheart.com

eISBN: 978-0-440-33700-3

v3.0

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