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Authors: Ann Hite

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BOOK: The Storycatcher
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The little barn out to the side of the house leaned worse than ever. Something about that pitiful building made me want to cry, just howl into the air, to sob for all those times gone. The swing on the front porch of the house rocked back and forth in the wind that was blowing just for me. Way up in the big oak—it took me and the twins, holding hands, to circle the trunk—sat an owl. Now, that was an omen. Owls brought messages. They wasn’t bad like lots of folks thought. They was good medicine.

Shoot, them boys was twenty, grown men, probably gone. When they was little, they was more than a handful. Mama left them with me when she worked the field with Daddy. That was a long time before I lost my whole world.

A yellow glow lit the front room. If the boys—Andy and Robert—were still home, they would be in the corner playing checkers, arguing over some move one or the other made. Mama would be nodding off to sleep as she did her best to sew on missing buttons and patch holes in the boys’ pants. Daddy would be pretending to read some old paper he picked up in Asheville while working his delivery job, if he still worked there. Farming on the mountain had turned so bad he took to hauling rock for the quarry the year I passed. Purely shamed him to work off the mountain ’cause his daddy and granddaddy farmed that piece of land. He couldn’t do much else with it. Nothing grew. Not that year, anyway. Some might
say that was a warning. I should’ve heeded it, but I was working on leaving too early in my life.

My dying nearly put Mama under the house and was one of the reasons the mountain held on to my spirit. Or maybe she understood that my story wasn’t finished.

A loud bark came from the backyard. Blue—Andy’s dog—shot around the corner and ran right at me. And then, there he was. Daddy stood in the open door staring right at me. “Who’s out there?” His voice sounded like the gravel he hauled, rough.

I couldn’t make that Faith say a word.

“I see you there. What you need, girl?”

Blue stood right at me, growling. He knew something wasn’t right.

Daddy came down the steps of the front porch.

“It’s me, Faith Dobbins, Mr. Brown,” I lied.

He stopped walking. “What you doing out this time of night? You had to cut through them woods to get to us. Is something wrong?”

Now my plan, if I ever had one, was to just look at the house and maybe catch sight of one of them. “I was walking and got turned around,” I lied again.

He kind of shook his head. “You are a strange one, just like folks say.”

This didn’t hurt my feelings a bit. “I’m not afraid of the dark.”

“Maybe you should be.” Daddy ran his hand through his hair. It looked thinner.

“Angus, who are you talking to?” My mama stepped onto the front porch. Her hair was pulled back in a perfect knot, just like always.

I couldn’t make Faith’s body take a breath. Mama.

“Pastor’s girl is out wandering around them woods.” Daddy was tired of the whole mess.

Mama walked down the steps as Daddy came back up. “Child, what in the world are you doing out here in the moonlight for? Are you charmed?” She came closer. “Hush now, Blue. Go on.” Blue looked at me one more time and ran up on the porch.

And I took that breath. “Just walking.”

She looked at me for a minute. “No girl in her right mind would be out walking in them haint woods. Pastor wouldn’t like it.”

“I don’t care what Pastor thinks.” And the words sat between us.

Little threads of hair fell here and there around her face.

“You don’t look right, Miss Faith.” Mama moved up to the pole fence that stood between us. “Is something wrong with you?”

“No, ma’am. I’m leaving here soon, and it’s likely I won’t be back.” Because something was going to happen and either way all would be finished.

“Pastor’s leaving?” That special smile she always used for Pastor, the one that said he was someone to look up to, had faded to a blank face.

“No, ma’am. Just me and Missus.”

She studied me. “You seem different.”

“I am. A girl changes once she’s not pure no more.” I was talking way too much.

Mama stepped so close to the fence she touched one of the poles. I smelled pork chops and gravy on her. “What did you come to say?”

“Arleen, she loved you a whole lot, ma’am. More than she ever told you.” And there was those words I held inside with all the hurt ’cause Mama never guessed what he did to me. Didn’t keep him from hurting me. ’Cause I thought she was supposed to always protect me and know what I never said.

Her breath caught. “I always knew she loved me. She was a good—a pure—daughter, no matter what others said. She needs to be in Heaven resting with that beautiful baby boy.”

“Yes, ma’am. I think she will be before too long.”

“I surely hope so. I’d hate to think she’s caught in them woods out there. Nothing that happened is worth being stuck.”

And she was right. “Things ain’t that simple, ma’am.”

She nodded.

“A truth has to be told and souls saved.”

She smiled. “Well, I’m proud you came here to see me. It soothes my heart.” Tears was in her eyes.

“Mine too.” I turned and walked back to the woods. She didn’t call out, but I felt her watching me leave. I was her only daughter, and she loved me with every bone of her body. And I loved her too.

Armetta Lolly

T
HAT SHELLY WAS GOING
to get herself killed, and there wasn’t no denying it. She turned her nose up at my book when some of the answers be right there if she’d just put it all together, but not Shelly. Nope. Instead, she went and built some dumb old bottle tree like a fool. That girl was dumber than I thought, but she was all I had. She had to listen before Pastor got just what he was after.

When that old white girl inside of Faith stood up to him, he stomped back in his study and sat around thinking on the time in Georgia that put him up on this old mountain. Bad stuff only a few knew, and they was dead. The man wasn’t a bit sorry for his actions, not one bit. Not one person on Black Mountain knew what Pastor could do, except maybe the white granny woman. She be smart, but she was headed down a long road without a map. I couldn’t talk to her. I tried. She seen me, but she wasn’t having none of it. Shelly had
to be the miracle to stop him this time. And that thought scared me to death.

He went to stare out the window into the backyard, watching that cabin.

Miss Amelia taught me how to write pretty decent. So while Pastor was away from the desk, I took me a pencil and did my best sentences. The lead broke on the pencil, and that’s when he turned back and seen my writing.

Just a little while longer and the truth be told no matter what you try.

I whispered in his ear, “We in for some dark times, Pastor.”

He gave a little shiver, wadded up the note, and threw it in the trash.

KNOWING A BAD PERSON’S THOUGHTS
is like watching a storm bearing down on the mountain. There ain’t one thing that can be done to stop the damage. All I could do was try to protect those around the terror barreling their way. I sure wished that old haint in Faith’s body would have spilled Pastor’s blood. My worries would have been finished. My story could have finally come to a rest. But I knew better than that. Some things had to happen to get my story told. That’s the part I didn’t tell Shelly about reading my book.

That dirty skunk Pastor went to stand outside Shelly’s cabin and watch them women through the window. He’d done lost his whole mind, not that he ever was in his right mind, but he had come unhinged.

“You stupid woman.” He watched Shelly’s mama the closest, like she was his worst enemy. “I gave you a home and food. Now this. You think you’re going to run over me, run the rest of my life with all your threats. You’ve taught Lydia to stand up for herself. No. I won’t put up with either of you.” The bitterness in his voice could have rotted through the wood on the porch, but them women never even heard him, didn’t sense a bit of danger.

I went through the front door of that cabin so fast I tipped a pot of chamomile sideways. Both women looked at the table. But I headed back to Shelly’s room. Dern fool was sound asleep.

“Shelly. Hey, Shelly, wake up, girl. It be important.”

She opened her eyes and gave me a hateful look. “Get on out of here.”

“You listen.”

“What you want?” she whispered.

“Get out there with your mama. Pastor done beat that wife of his, and now he’s on the porch watching them through the window. They ain’t even seen him. He’s done gone completely crazy, Shelly. Bad stuff headed this way. You can’t stop it now. It’s too late. And here you are sleeping like some doggone princess.”

Her mouth turned into a thin, straight line, but her feet hit the floor. “Nada.” She stopped cold, staring at the Missus’s face.

Her mama looked away. “Remember what we talked about, Shelly? Be ready.”

“He’s out there watching right now, Shelly. Go throw the door open.” For once the girl listened and darted across the room, opening the door.

There was a clatter, and we both seen Pastor jump off the porch.

“Pastor was looking in the window, Nada. He turned over our churn. No telling how long he’s been there.”

“You got to make your mama leave too, Shelly.” But somehow I knew Shelly’s mama couldn’t be made to do anything. “Now you understand about my book? You got to trust me and read. Will you?”

Shelly nodded, and I knew she’d read it without any more of her mess. I just hoped it wasn’t too late.

PASTOR WAS ALL STRETCHED OUT
on the grass looking at the moon like he was some boy star-watching.

“You be losing your mind,” I whispered in his ear.

He turned his head toward me. “And you’re just a ghost who can’t help anyone. You couldn’t help yourself.”

I lost all my words. Shelly stood on the porch watching me. The ghost girl was out there on the edge of the woods looking too. A spirit with a body.

PART FOUR
Heat Lightning

June 1939

“Flashes of lightning without thunder, signaling a storm is coming.”

—Amanda Parker

Maude Tuggle

T
HE NEXT MORNING
the sky looked like it would dump rain on us. I woke up thinking about what I found in the church records. There wasn’t any time like the present to go find that cemetery. Maybe there would be some answers there. I left a note in case anyone needed me and set out. There must have been something in the air, something driving me to get away from the cabin, some forewarning. The woods were like a ghost story. A cloudy white mist blanketed the area. As I moved up the path, I could see a splash of sunshine in the clearing ahead. A large old house, now covered with vines and surrounded by mountain laurel, stood alone. A ghost house. The church records indicated Ella Creek Cemetery was less than a mile behind the old Daniels place.

I almost missed the graveyard because of the years of neglect. Headstones were barely showing, and in some cases totally hidden behind the forest’s growth. The sun hit and glinted off something in the
brush. I pushed away a pile of leaves and branches. An angel appeared in graceful beauty on her side, fallen, tangled in kudzu vines, wounded. What a silly, romantic thought. The angel’s face was finely chiseled. I was content to look at her. Something in her eyes made her seem alive. Another fanciful thought. I pushed my hand into the undergrowth and touched the cold marble. Even when something rustled, I stayed put, staring at the elegant face. “Who are you?” I whispered. A shiver ran through me along with an urge to dig her out and take her home.

BOOK: The Storycatcher
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