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“How many men are left?”
“The big one named Grill dropped dead of who knows what. He was pretty old for a Cloat, maybe forty-eight. Box and Babe are still alive, so far as I know. Percy died a couple of years ago.”
“Percy?”
“They say he was covered head to toe with syphilitic chancres and took five howling months to die. His woman came up from the island later and told me about it before she left for Memphis. She seemed very sick herself. That was five years ago.” He looked at the ceiling. “Maybe six.”
“I see.”
“You’re going?”
“Yes.”
“Throw away that shoulder holster. Wear the pistol in the hollow of your back between your drawers and your trousers.”
Sam swallowed the last of his buttermilk. “Can you tell me how to get in there?”
Soner chewed his toast and thought. “Well, you’ll have to take my horse.”
Chapter Thirty-eight
BY SEVEN O’CLOCK he was on the constable’s mare riding back to where he had seen the relics of a cypress dock. He took the trail leading east onto the island, and within an hour, he was lost. The terrain was lumps of river sand sprouting trash forest. He rode in and out of old scours filled with dead water and up hogbacks topped by patches of poison oak ru
The man was mumbling, sitting where a front porch had been, the old frowning roof held up over him by one two-by-four. Sam stopped in plain sight. The man looked over at him and his mouth fell open a bit. “It don’t mean,” he said.
Sam looked around at the other houses, then turned back. “I came here to ask a few questions. Are you named Cloat?”
The man’s hands were in his lap, swollen and furry. The crotch of his overalls had split open and spilled him out onto the caned seat. His graying beard was braided and ran down onto his left thigh like a greasy snake. One overalls strap was missing and he wore no shirt, his skin botched and sun cratered, his eyes ru
Sam could smell him over the rot of his garbage, a fecal putrescence that caused him to step back.
A woman who seemed half-Indian, half-Negro lurched out of the doorway and stared at him in amazement. “Who the fuck you?”
He sca
She nodded the words into her head one at a time as if translating them into Cherokee or whatever language she was born under. “He Cloat. No speak right. What you talk?”
He gestured behind him. “This bunch rode down into Louisiana in 1895 and shot up a family.”
“What that?”
“What’s what?”
“Eighteen ninety-five. That wagon?”
He tried to imagine how she thought, and after a while he said, “It was twenty-seven winters ago. Killed my family.”
She pointed to the ground. “Make winter mark.”
He bent down and with a stick made twenty-seven scratches in a bare stretch of dirt. “This long ago.” He looked up.
The woman added ten marks with a dark forefinger and clawed a line under them. “He this many. No kill no one yet ten winter.”
“But he is a Cloat?”
“Babe. Babe Cloat. You go see Box.” A hand rose out of the folds of her dust-caked skirt and she pointed to a mildew-blackened dwelling across two hundred feet of weeds.
“How many men live back in here?”
“Ask Box.”
“I’m asking you.”
Her eyes were on him, a
“That’s all?”
“Babe, Box, Box daddy.”
He surveyed the houses, the weather-crippled sheds out back. “What happened to everybody?”
The woman mashed a nostril with a thumb and blew out a slug of snot. “What?”
He waved an arm. “Where are all the Cloats?”
She nodded. “Die, rot. Some rot, then die.”
He watched her go up to Babe Cloat and hand him a potato, which he drew to his face and gnawed as would a squirrel.
A headache rose up in the back of his skull as he walked across the compound. He was hot, angry, and wanted out of the sun but stopped when he saw a long rifle barrel slide over a front windowsill. “Are you Box Cloat?” he called.
A wheezy voice came from the window. “Before I kill you, tell me what the hell you think you doin’ back in here.”
The rusty octagon barrel swung slightly in the window. He hoped the shot, if and when it came, would only wound him. “If you’re Box Cloat come out and talk to me, damn it. I might not do a thing to you.”
He heard the hammer drop on the rifle, snap, and a raspy string of cursing and knew at once the man had pulled the trigger on an empty chamber and was fumbling with the action to throw a live round under the firing pin, so he pulled his.45 and put two blasts through the front wall above the window. He ran at the door, throwing himself against it, and it flew apart like a chickenyard gate as he fell into the room five feet from a tall man with enormous eyebrows trying to lever a jammed rifle. Sam aimed and hollered for him to drop the gun, and it hit the floor.
His heart was squeezing blood like a fist, and he stood up quickly, holding the pistol out at the other man’s head. “Are you a Cloat?”
The man was frozen, staring walleyed in Sam’s direction and trying hard to focus. “You a Lobdell, ain’t you. You not lookin’ for me, you want Clamp and he died three year ago.”
“Are you Box Cloat?”
“Yeah. You a Bledsoe?”
“No.”
Box tilted his head to the left. “Then you a Clemmons or Terra-nova? Maybe Walting, or a Mills? Say, you ain’t no Levers, are you?…A Smollet?” He continued down a staccato list of twenty names, his hands rising higher above his brushy head before Sam stopped him.
“Shut up. You got a lot of people mad with you, don’t you?”
Box gasped. “You not a Kathell, is you? God lands, not no Kathell,” he whined, looking away. “Listen, them little girls was a accident. We thought they was somebody else’s.”
Sam raised the pistol thinking of how he could kill him and people would care more for the corpse of a mole rotting in its burrow. His eyes narrowed for a moment, along with his conscience. Living in the present is so easy. You just do a thing and not think about what could happen the next day, or how you might view your own actions in ten years. At last, he said, “Sit on the floor. How old are you?”
Box squatted in the floury dust of his room. “Forty-some-odd.”
“What do you know of Jimmy Cloat?”
“Uncle Jimmy? He been dead and gone a long time, feller.”
“Who killed him?”
Box closed one eye. “One of them Frenchies down south.”
“Did you pay ’em back for it?”
Box went through another spasm of focusing, trying to see who was holding the big pistol at his head. “I don’t know nothing about it.”