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Morning Glory

LaVyrle Spencer



  LAVYRLE SPENCER

  Morning Glory

  Prologue

  1917

  The train pulled into Whitney, Georgia, on a leaden afternoon in November. Clouds churned and the first droplets of rain pelted like thick batter onto the black leather roof of a waiting carriage. Both of its windows were covered with black. As the train clanged to a stop, one shade was stealthily lifted aside and a single eyeball peered through the slit.

  “She’s here,” a woman’s voice hissed. “Go!”

  The carriage door opened and a man stepped out. He, like the carriage, was garbed in black—suit, shoes and flat-brimmed hat worn level with the earth. He glanced neither right nor left but strode purposefully to the train steps as a young woman emerged with a baby in her arms.

  “Hello, Papa,” she said uncertainly, offering a wavering smile.

  “Bring your bastard and come with me.” He turned her roughly by an elbow and marched her back to the carriage without looking at her or the infant.

  The curtained door was thrown open the instant they reached it. The young woman lurched back protectively, drawing the baby against her shoulder. Her soft hazel eyes met the hard green ones above her, framed by a black bonnet and mourning dress.

  “Mama...”

  “Get in!”

  “Mama, I—”

  “Get in before every soul in this town sees our shame!”

  The man gave his daughter a nudge. She stumbled into the carriage, scarcely able to see through her tears. He followed quickly and grasped the reins, which were threaded through a peekhole, yielding only a murky light.

  “Hurry, Albert,” the woman ordered, sitting stiff as a grave marker, staring straight ahead.

  He whipped the horses into a trot.

  “Mama, it’s a girl. Don’t you want to see her?”

  “See her?” The woman’s mouth pursed as she continued staring straight ahead. “I’ll have to, won’t I, for the rest of my life, while people whisper about the devil’s work you’ve brought to our doorstep.”

  The young woman clutched the child tighter. It whimpered, then as a jarring crash of thunder boomed, began crying lustily.

  “Shut it up, do you hear!”

  “Her name is Eleanor, Mama and—”

  “Shut it up before everyone on the street hears!”

  But the baby howled the entire distance from the depot, along the town square and the main road leading to the south edge of town, past a row of houses to a frame one surrounded by a picket fence with morning glories climbing its front stoop. The carriage turned in, crossed a deep front yard and pulled up near the back door. The mother and child were herded inside by the black-garbed woman and immediately a dark green shade was snapped down to cover a window, followed by another and another until every window in the house was shrouded.

  The new mother was never seen leaving the house again nor were the shades ever lifted.

  CHAPTER

  1

  August 1941

  The noon whistle blew and the saws stopped whining. Will Parker stepped back, lifted his sweat-soaked hat and wiped his forehead with a sleeve. The other mill hands did the same, retreating toward the shade with voluble complaints about the heat or what kind of sandwiches their wives had packed in their lunch pails.

  Will Parker had learned well not to complain. The heat hadn’t affected him yet, and he had neither wife nor lunch pail. What he had were three stolen apples from somebody’s backyard tree—green, they were, so green he figured he’d suffer later—and a quart of buttermilk he’d found in an unguarded well.

  The men sat in the shade of the mill yard, their backs against the scaly loblolly pines, palavering while they ate. But Will Parker sat apart from the others; he was no mingler, not anymore.

  “Lord a-mighty, but it’s hot,” a man named Elroy Moody complained, swabbing his wrinkled red neck with a wrinkled red hanky.

  “And dusty,” added the one called Blaylock. He hacked twice and spit into the pine needles. “Got enough sawdust in my lungs to stuff a mattress.”

  The foreman, Harley Overmire, performing his usual noon ritual stripped to the waist, dipped his head under the pump and came up roaring to draw attention to himself. Overmire was a sawed-off runt with a broad pug nose, tiny ears and a short neck. He had a head full of close-cropped dark hair that coiled like watch springs and refused to stop growing at his neckline. Instead, it merely made the concession of thinning before continuing downward, giving him the hirsute appearance of an ape when he went shirtless. And Overmire loved to go shirtless. As if his excessive girth and body hair made up for his diminutive height, he exposed them whenever the opportunity arose.

  Drying himself with his shirt, Overmire sauntered across the yard to join the men. He opened his lunch pail, folded back the top of his sandwich and muttered, “Sonofabitch, she forgot the mustard again.” He slapped the sandwich together in disgust. “How many times I got to tell that woman it’s pork plain and mustard on beef!”

  “You got to train ‘er, Harley,” Blaylock teased. “Slap ‘er upside the head one time.”

  “Train her, hell. We been married seventeen years. You’d think she’d know by now I want mustard on my beef.” With his heel he ground the sandwich into the dry needles and cursed again.

  “Here, have one o’ mine,” Blaylock obliged. “Bologna and cheese today.”

  Will Parker bit into the bitter apple, felt the saliva spurt so sharply it stung his jaws. He kept his eyes off Overmire’s beef sandwich and Blaylock’s spare bologna and cheese, forcing himself to think of something else.

  The neatly mowed backyard where he’d ransacked the well. Pretty pink flowers blooming in a white enamel kettle sitting on a tree stump by the back door. The sound of a baby crying from inside the house. A clothesline with white sheets and white diapers and white dishtowels and enough blue denim britches that one pair wouldn’t be missed, and a matching number of blue cambric shirts from which he’d nobly taken the one with a hole in the elbow. And a rainbow of towels, from which he’d selected green because somewhere in the recesses of his memory was a woman with green eyes who’d once been kind to him, making him forever prefer green over all other colors.

  The green towel was wet now, wrapped around the Ball jar. He folded it aside, unscrewed the zinc lid, drank and forced himself not to grimace. The buttermilk was sickeningly sweet; even the wet towel hadn’t managed to keep it cool.

  With his head tilted back against the bole of the pine tree, Parker saw Overmire watching him with beady mustardseed eyes while stretching to his feet. The jar came down slowly. Equally as slowly, Parker backhanded his lips. Overmire strutted over and stopped beside Will’s outstretched feet, his own widespread, firmly planted, his beefy fists akimbo.

  Four days Will Parker had been here, only four this time, but he knew the look on the foreman’s face as if the words had already been spoken.

  “Parker?” Overmire said it loud, loud enough so all the others could hear.

  Will went stiff, slow-motion like, bringing his back away from the tree and setting the fruit jar down by feel.

  The foreman pushed back his straw hat, let his forehead wrinkle so all the men could see how there was nothing else he could do. “Thought you said you was from Dallas.”

  Will knew when to keep his mouth shut. He wiped all expression from his face and lifted his eyes to Overmire’s, chewing a piece of sour apple.

  “You sayin’ that’s where you’re from?”

  Will rolled to one buttock as if to rise. Overmire planted a boot on his crotch and pushed. Hard. “I’m talkin’ to you, boy!” he snapped, then let his eyes rove over his underlings to make sure none of them missed this.

  Parker flattened both palms against the earth at th
e sudden jolt of pain. “I been there,” he answered stoically.

  “Been in Huntsville, too, haven’t you, boy?”

  The strangling sense of subjugation rose like bile in Parker’s throat. Familiar. Degrading. He felt the eyes of the men measuring him above their half-formed, prepotent grins. But he’d learned not to talk back to that tone of superiority, and especially not to the word “boy.” He felt the cold sweat break out on his chest, the sense of helplessness at the term calculated to make one man look small, another powerful. With Overmire’s boot exerting pressure, Will repressed the awful need to give vent to the loathing he felt, sealing himself in the cocoon of pretended indifference.

  “They only put the tough ones in there, ain’t that right, Parker?” Overmire pushed harder but Will refused to wince. Instead, he clamped a hand on the ankle, forcing the dusty boot aside. Without removing his eyes from the foreman, Will rose, picked up his battered Stetson, whacked it on his thigh and settled the brim low over his eyes.

  Overmire chuckled, crossed his burly arms, and fixed the ex-convict with his beady eyes. “Word came down you killed a woman in a Texas whorehouse and you’re fresh out for it. I don’t think we want your kind around here where we got wives and daughters, do we fellows?” He let his eyes flick to the men briefly.

  The fellows had quit rummaging through their lunch pails.

  “Well, you got anything to say for yourself, boy?”

  Will swallowed, felt the apple skin hitting bottom. “No, sir, except I got three and a half days’ pay comin’.”

  “Three,” Overmire corrected. “We don’t count no half days around here.”

  Will worked a piece of apple peel between his front teeth. His jaw protruded and Harley Overmire balled his fists, getting ready. But Will only stared silently from beneath the brim of his sorry-looking cowboy hat. He didn’t need to lower his eyes from Overmire’s face to know what his fists looked like.

  “Three,” Will agreed quietly. But he hurled his apple core out beneath the pines with a fierceness that made the men start their rummaging again. Then he scooped up his towel-wrapped jar and followed Overmire into the office.

  When he came back out the men were huddled around the time board. He passed among them, sealed within a bubble of dispassion, folding his nine dollars into his breast pocket, staring straight ahead, avoiding their self-righteous expressions.

  “Hey, Parker,” one of them called when he’d passed. “You might try the Widow Dinsmore’s place. She’s so hard up she’d probably even settle for a jailbird like you, ain’t that right, boys?”

  Jeering laughter followed, then a second voice. “Woman like that who’ll put her card up in a sawmill’s bound to take anything she can git.”

  And finally, a third voice. “You shoulda stepped a little harder on his balls, Harley, so the women around here could sleep better nights.”

  Will headed off through the pines. But when he saw the remains of someone’s sandwich, left amid the pine needles for the birds, hunger overcame pride. He picked it up between two fingers as if it were a cigarette, and turned with a forced looseness.

  “Anybody mind if I eat this?”

  “Hell, no,” called Overmire. “It’s on me.”

  More laughter followed, then, “Listen, Parker, y’all give crazy Elly Dinsmore a try. No tellin’ but what the two of you might hit it off right nice together. Her advertisin’ for a man and you fresh outa the pen. Could be there’s more’n a piece o’ bread in it for y’!”

  Will swung away and started walking. But he balled the bread into a hard knot and flung it back into the pine needles. Stalking away, he shut out the pain and transported himself to a place he’d never seen, where smiles were plentiful, and plates full, and people nice to one another. He no longer believed such a place existed, yet he escaped to it more and more often. When it had served its purpose he returned to reality—a dusty pine forest somewhere in northwest Georgia and a strange road ahead.

  What now? he thought. Same old bullshit wherever he went. There was no such thing as serving your time; it was never over. Aw, what the hell did he care? He had no ties in this miserable jerkwater burg. Who ever heard of Whitney, Georgia, anyway? It was nothing but a flyspeck on the map and he could as easily move on as stay.

  But a mile up the road he passed the same neatly tended farm where he’d stolen the buttermilk, towel and clothes; a sweet yearning pulled at his insides. A woman stood on the back porch, shaking a rug. Her hair was hidden by a dishtowel, knotted at the front. She was young and pretty and wore a pink apron, and the smell of something baking drifted out and made Will’s stomach rumble. She raised a hand and waved and he hid the towel on his left side, smitten with guilt. He had a wrenching urge to walk up the drive, hand her her belongings and apologize. But he reckoned he’d scare the hell out of her if he did. And besides, he could use the towel, and probably the jar, too, if he walked on to the next town. The clothes on his back were the only ones he had.

  He left the farm behind, trudging northward on a gravel road the color of fresh rust. The smell of the pines was inviting, and the look of them, all green and crisp against the red clay earth. There were so many rivers here, fast-flowing streams in a hurry to get to the sea. He’d even seen some waterfalls where the waters rushed out of the Blue Ridge foothills toward the coastal plain to the south. And orchards everywhere—peach, apple, quince and pear. Lord, what it must look like when those fruit trees bloomed. Soft pink clouds, and fragrant, too. Will had discovered within himself a deep need to experience the softer things in life since he’d gotten out of that hard place. Things he’d never noticed before—the beginning bloom on the cheek of a peach, the sun caught on a droplet of dew in a spiderweb, a pink apron on a woman with her hair tied in a clean white dishtowel.

  He reached the edge of Whitney, scarcely more than a widening in the pines, a mere slip of a town dozing in the afternoon sun with little more moving than the flies about the tips of the chicory blossoms. He passed an ice house on the outskirts, a tiny railroad depot painted the color of a turnip, a wooden platform stacked with empty chicken crates, the smell of their former occupants rejuvenated by the hot sun. There was a deserted house overgrown with morning glory vines behind a seedy picket fence, then a row of occupied houses, some of red brick, others of Savannah gray, but all with verandas and rocking chairs out front, telling how many people lived in each. He came to a school building closed for the summer, and finally a town square typical of most in the south, dominated by a Baptist church and the town hall, with other businesses scattered around, interspersed by vacant lots—a drugstore, grocery, cafe, hardware, a blacksmith shop in front of which stood a brand-new gas pump topped by a white glass eagle.

  He stopped before the office of the town newspaper, absently gazing at his reflection in the window. He fingered the few precious bills in his pocket, turned and glanced across the square at Vickery’s Cafe, pulled his hat brim down lower and strode in that direction.

  The square held a patch of green grass and a bandstand wreathed by black iron benches. In the cool splash of shade beneath an enormous magnolia tree two old men sat, whittling. They glanced up as he passed. One of them nodded, spat, then returned to his whittling.

  The screen door on Vickery’s Cafe had a wide red and white tin band advertising Coca-Cola. The metal was warm beneath Will’s hands and the door spring sang out as he entered the place. He paused a moment to let his eyes adjust to the dimness. At a long counter, two men turned, regarded him indolently without removing their elbows from beside their coffee cups. A buxom young woman ambled the length of the counter and drawled, “Howdy. What can I do for y’, honey?”

  Will trained his eyes on her face to keep them off the row of plates behind the counter where cherry and apple pie winked an invitation.

  “Wondered if you got a local paper I could look at.”

  She smiled dryly and cocked one thin-plucked eyebrow, glanced at the lump of wet green terrycloth he held against his
thigh, then reached beneath the counter to dig one out. Will knew perfectly well she’d seen him pause before the newspaper office across the street, then walk over here instead.

  “Much obliged,” he said as he took it.

  She propped the heel of one hand on a round hip and ran her eyes over the length of him while chewing gum lazily, making it snap.

  “You new around these parts?”

  “Yes, ma’am.”

  “You the new one out at the sawmill?”

  Will had to force his hands not to grip the folded paper. All he wanted was to read it and get the hell out of here. But the two at the counter were still staring over their shoulders. He felt their speculative gazes and gave the waitress a curt nod.

  “Be okay if I set down a spell and look at this?”

  “Sure thing, help yourself. Can I get ya a cup of coffee or anything?”

  “No, ma’am, I’ll just...” With the paper he gestured toward the row of high-backed booths, turned and folded his lanky frame into one of them. From the corner of his eye he saw the waitress produce a compact and begin to paint her lips. He buried his face in the Whitney Register. Headlines about the war in Europe; disclosure of a secret meeting between President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, who’d drafted something called the Atlantic Charter; Joe DiMaggio playing another in his long string of safe-hit games; Citizen Kane, starring Orson Welles, showing at someplace called The Gem; the announcement of a garden party coming up on Monday; an advertisement for automobile repair beside another for harness repair; the funeral announcement of someone named Idamae Dell Randolph, born 1879 in Burnt Corn, Alabama, died in the home of her daughter, Elsie Randolph Blythe on August 8, 1941. The want ads were simple enough to locate in the eight-page edition: a roving lawyer would be in town the first and third Mondays of each month and could be found in Room 6 of the Town Hall; someone had a good used daybed for sale; someone wanted a husband...

  A husband?

  Will’s eyes backtracked and read the whole ad, the same one she’d tacked up on the time board at the mill.