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Louisiana Anthology

E. W. Andrews
Without the Wind.

© E. W. Andrews
Email: ewandrewsnrg@gmail.com.
Used by permission.
All rights reserved.

Table of Contents

  1. Chapter 1: L’Homme
  2. Chapter 2: The Furnace
  3. Chapter 3: Le Reve
  4. Chapter 4: Shooters
  5. Chapter 5: The Birdhouse
  6. Chapter 6: Blades
  7. Chapter 7: Stakes
  8. Chapter 8: The Songs
  9. Chapter 9: Tables
  10. Chapter 10: The Dead
  11. Chapter 11: The River


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Prologue

Over the course of four years, America ate itself alive in a brutal civil war. By the end of the conflict, the country had become stronger through its resolve but weaker from its wounds. Eight years after the war ended, the country was bogged down in debt and maimed by the high cost of victory, corruption, and the Reconstruction.

It was during this flailing recovery that the United States found itself on the verge of a new war with Spain. On Wednesday, November 5, 1873, the American merchant ship Virginius, carrying weapons and munitions, was seized in Cuban waters by the Spanish navy at war with Cuban separatists. The ship’s captain, John Fry, and four other Americans were executed the following day, sparking outrage in America and a call for retribution.

Originally a Confederate blockade runner, the Virginius had been confiscated by the United States in 1865. Five years later, she was purchased by John F. Patterson on behalf of Cubans seeking independence from Spain. Having scrapped its own ironclads following the Civil War, the US Navy now found itself helpless as one of two ironclad warships in the Western Hemisphere sat in New York harbor under a Spanish flag. Despite unofficially supporting the Cuban cause, Secretary of State Hamilton Fish opened diplomatic back channels, seeking to avoid an expensive and potentially embarrassing war with Spain. The other ironclad warship, the newly refurbished CSS Albemarle, rechristened Le Reve, steamed west from Biloxi to the port of New Orleans under control of Cuban sympathizer, salvage merchant, and gunrunner Captain Lucius Cephus. The ship was suspected of carrying the 6.4-inch howitzer Brooke rifle that had gone missing when it was originally sunk, raised, and then ultimately sold for scrap by the Union navy. To avoid being drawn into a war with Spain, Secretary Fish ordered the ship seized and the owner duly compensated to continue unofficial support for the Cuban cause.

This is the story of the pursuit of Le Reve.




Chapter 1: L’Homme

James Phobetor lay face down in the black bayou mud. He’d festered there for hours after he had fallen, rolled over the curb, and slid down past the sidewalk, coming to rest in the gutter. He was a bedraggled, snoring corpse. Overnight, the rain had pissed down on him as it had every night that week. His broad, brown hat was a ragged extension of the canvas slicker he lived in, dragged himself around in, had survived in — and that likely would survive him. All throughout the evening and late into the night, everyone in the town of Pointe à la Hache, on their way to the saloon or the restaurant up the street, had walked past him as he sucked at the mud and sputtered the water of the ditch.

With the red sun now percolating in the east, he remained so entrenched that not a single rivulet of rainwater trembled free of the small pools collecting on the outer surface of his waxed coat. The downpour had stopped an hour before sunrise, and the morning warmth had baked him into the sandy dirt. It was in this cocoon that finally some lucency stirred. He rolled over, and a lonely, beady blue eye opened to the upside-down world before him. He crawled to his knees painfully. Staggering, he dragged himself over to the planks of the sidewalk, and with the assistance of the light post, he reached forward and pulled himself up with a grunt. The front of his dark-gray suit was crusted with sand and mud that crumbled as he straightened up, gathered his feet beneath him, and shoved off. He lumbered up the street, wobbling as the wind changed and lifted the tails of his long coat.

Phobetor stopped to rest against the wall of the post office on the corner. The breeze charged up from behind him. Rising from the river in the west, it climbed the slope of the road up from the dock and rippled through the palm trees lining the street. He struggled to find the tobacco pouch in the pocket of his coat. Eventually locating it, he managed to gather the few remaining crumbled leaves into an impoverished cigarette. Pulling his hat down against the wind, he raised his arm, ducked his head, and ignited the twist of paper he held in his lips. With a sigh of achievement, he heaved a billowy cloud of smoke and stepped away from the post office. The archaic bayou town was quiet. The sandy street was empty. The windows in the plastered white façades of the shops and their corrugated-tin roofs angled a debilitating glare at him, creating tracers in the corners of his eyes as he searched the street. The gray horse was still hitched where he had left it — in front of the red-brick courthouse that dominated the square at the end of the street.

Nauseated, he stumbled down onto the sandy road, clutching his stomach as he made his way over to the courthouse steps, where he mounted the gray horse. Pulling on the reins to turn her head, he jabbed her into a trot as he slumped over the saddle horn, riding south. He never looked up.

Beyond the white, double-galleried hotel at the end of the block, the gray horse and crumpled rider descended the street briskly. As they reached the great, parading iron struts of the bridge, she shied and halted, looking down the brackish creek to the inlet where it emptied into the broad river in the distance. The cessation of motion waking him, Phobetor stroked her neck and whispered to her. Now again, although with a cautious address, she proceeded across the wide planks of the bridge in a series of rattling, muddy clomps that reverberated through the beams. Upon reaching the other side, she turned east without his instruction. They melted into the morass of cypress and hanging moss, retreating from the heat of the sun. Absorbed in the canopy, they disappeared, the gray horse hanging her head low and slowly picking out her steps in the muddy rut along the back side of the riverbank.




Chapter 2: The Furnace

Phobetor’s hand shook as he lifted the iron skillet off the potbellied stove. His grip was weak, his palms sweaty, his skin pale. His other beggarly hand scraped the eggs over with the sheepsfoot blade of his knife. He smelled like the whiskey he was drinking. The liquor sat in the warm, half-empty ceramic jug on the table beside him. It had been nearly six hours since he had broken free of his hole in the mud on the streets of La Hache. His hunger had finally driven him from his rope bed to cook enough eggs and bacon to hold down the vomit still boiling up inside of him.

He shoveled the crackling eggs out of the skillet onto the plate, where the bacon sat dripping in grease. His coat hung from a peg on the door behind him. As the meat glazed dry, he got up and looked at the jacket. As he shook it, sandy clay fell silently from its creases. He tried to look out through the window plaqued with green mold but could see nothing. He gave up and hung his head. Dark stubble had sprouted up over his lean complexion, but his eyes were starting to clear. He pushed back his dirty brown hair, and a fine cloud of silt showered down before him. Sitting back down, he wolfed down the eggs and bacon using just the blade of the knife. At the end of it, he dry-retched and horsed into a swig, draining the jug. Wearily, he stood up and walked over to the open doorway.

The long-forgotten pear trees sparked fresh white blooms at the edge of the yard by the tack shed. His gray horse looked up at him from beside the front porch, where she stood untethered. He walked down the broken limestone steps and stood next her, fingering her mane. As he released the cinch, she sighed.

He became increasingly aware of the muffled approach of a horse on the sandy trail leading to up to the yard. The gray’s ears perked up as he ducked under her neck and continued working on the saddle. The sound of muddy hooves on the trail grew louder. He hoisted the saddle down, straining as he carried it around her and up to the top of the steps. With a final heave, he dropped it on the rail of the porch.

Just then, a soldier in an imperious blue uniform astride a buckskin mare appeared at the edge of the yard. A yellow braid coiled at his shoulder. As he tipped back his broad federal officer’s hat, he revealed a head of falling blond locks and a trim beard to match. The soldier looked over the house. An eminent ruin, it had a rusting corrugated roof that dangled over the wilted colombage walls of crumbling white plaster and decayed timbers. Broad-leaved finger vines wriggled in at every crack. Most of the windows were broken; the others were opaque with mold. The weathered gray shutters held fast. North of the dilapidated tack shed, a corroded, split-rail corral was slowly being consumed by the rising sawgrass. On the opposite side of the yard, a three-sided smithy and limestone forge stood in abysmal condition. The tongs and hammer hung orderly against the cypress walls, and the anvil sat bolted to a scarred, three-foot water-hickory stump, but weeds sprouted in the floor and the furnace sat cold, filled with a mound of wet slag.

“It’s not Versailles, James.”

“Yep. Ain’t no bourbon in it.”

The officer smiled.

“That’s the truth, James.”

The officer prodded his horse forward through the yard. His mirrored black riding boots shimmered against the side of the buckskin.

“Well, have you been working much?”

“Not since I last saw you a couple days ago, Fletcher. You still mad about that last hand?” Phobetor wiped the sweat off his face with his sleeve.

“I’m not upset, James. That was five weeks ago. It’s Easter this Sunday.”

“Like I said, it’s been a while.”

Phobetor stood leaning against the railing of the porch next to the saddle as his plethoric face beaded with sweat.

“Magnolia not enough for you? Or you come to dig up some new interests this side of the river?”

“Not really. Magnolia is fine. Our nation sees to that.”

“Nation of ours, is it?”

Phobetor’s LeMat revolver hung from a leather thong wrapped around the saddle horn. Fletcher stood up slightly in the stirrups and eyed him closely.

“You know, if you come around to resurrect a war, then you should have showed up a little earlier when I was a little more peckish…but I guess, if you want, I can still oblige you.” Phobetor’s fingers quivered.

Fletcher opened the holster to his revolver as Phobetor slid his hand in his pocket and then slowly dangled out the tobacco pouch from his fingers. The gray horse swished her tail as the two men glared holes into each other.

“You gonna fight with me, or you gonna fight with me? I didn’t come down here just for the aggravation of it, James. I want to talk about playing some cards tomorrow night.”

Phobetor listened as he fumbled the tobacco trimmings into a cigarette.

“There’s a regiment coming down the river, but it’s mainly a few officers from around Lewisburg and Baltimore. I thought we could have a little gentlemen’s game at Magnolia to welcome them in.”

“Sounds good. Shouldn’t be a problem.”

Fletcher’s hand hovered over his pistol. Phobetor lit the cigarette as he kept looking upward, eyeing Fletcher’s palm, which had come to rest on the heel of the gun.

“The problem, James, is that you’re a cheat.”

“Bullshit. How am I a cheat?”

“I’m not sure, but no one wins like you do.”

“Well, then, it’s not the same. Winning ain’t a crime. Surely you can understand that, Colonel. Show me someone who plays to lose.”

“Well, that’s the point, James. I don’t. If you turn up, I want half of what you win.” With that, Fletcher pulled a nickel quart flask from his saddlebag.

“How do ya know I’ll win?”

“I don’t. But if you’re gonna come over, plan on leaving with half. Otherwise there will be a resurrection.”

The cigarette smoke fanned up over Phobetor’s face as Fletcher took a yawning, breathless gulp from the flask. Phobetor wiped his forehead again. He walked down the stairs across the yard and stood next to the mare. He crushed out the cigarette in the sand and extended his arm, and Fletcher passed him down the flask. Phobetor nursed the whiskey like an infant. Gurgling, he reached to hand back the flask, but Fletcher picked up his reins and waved him off.

“Keep it, Sergeant. Take it out of the winnings, but remember to wear this tomorrow night.” Fletcher handed down a large paper package he’d taken from the back of his saddle.

“Actually, Colonel Davis, it’s still Colonel James Phobetor if you’re talking to me.”

“Actually, James, it’s not. Not in this army. Not tomorrow. Not ever. See you at seven.”

Phobetor dropped his head and took another drink from the flask. Fletcher Davis turned the buckskin and nudged her with his boot. Phobetor watched as Davis plodded off down the trail.

Phobetor went and sat down on the poteaux steps next to the gray horse. Pulling another robust swig from the flask, he set it down and picked up the package Davis had given him. He trembled as he bungled the twine on the package, but he eventually got it open, tearing through brown paper. The blue uniform inside was pressed neatly. There was an officer’s coat and trousers, and a crimson sash. He pulled out the double-breasted coat and stood holding it against his chest, extending the sleeve. The two rows of brass buttons down the front scintillated as they reflected the sunlight. He went back into the house.

Taking the uniform to the enormous walnut wardrobe that stood against the back wall of the house, he swung open its heavy doors. His own gray uniform hung pristinely. He hung the blue jacket on the back of the door and stowed the rest of the gear on the shelf. From the bottom of the wardrobe, he dragged out a wooden trunk. Grappling with its iron handles, he lifted it onto the table and opened the lid. Five revolvers sat in the rack, including two New Model Remingtons, another LeMat, a pearled mini-Dragoon, and a hoary Colt Walker with the initials AM engraved at the base of the barrel. A brace of Union and Confederate cavalry sabers were mounted on the underside of the lid.

Leaving the box on the table, he took the wash pan from the kitchen and carried it to the rusty spigot outside by the shed. Kicking off his boots, he stripped while it filled, and then hoisting the pan, he dumped the spring water over himself. The icy deluge scoured every pore of his frame. The long red scars across his back ached with every elevation of the tub as he repeated the process three times before dropping it again to let it refill. In the sanguine light of sunset, he looked like a skeleton wrapped in pale, wet leather, shuddering in the cold. He doubled over and retched.

Wiping the vomit from his chin, he staggered naked across the yard with the basin, sloshing water all the way back and into the house. Setting the basin by the sink, he walked across the room over to the rope bed in the corner and yanked the bed away from the wall. He lifted out the exposed floorboards. A rifle and a carbine in oilskins lay on top of an ammunition crate within the hidden space beneath. Phobetor tore off the greasy rags. The four-foot Whitworth rifle with its trim brass scope had retained its finish. The revolving Colt carbine, though, once intrepid, had suffered. Its muzzle wore a heavy frost of rust, and mold had gnawed halfway through the stock.

From the drawer at the kitchen table, he grabbed a tin box containing a set of wire brushes and a jeweler’s tray of instruments and placed them next to Davis’s flask beside him. He took a long drink and set to work on the ordnance. Within the hour, he had disassembled the entire armory right down to the springs. The cylinders lay by the frames of the revolvers in a line across the table. The Whitworth was torn to the stock, with the breech skeletonized in front of him. In the last of the fading rays of sunset, he lit the oil lamp and kitchen stove, where the greasy skillet still sat. As the waxy lard deformed in the pan, Phobetor routed the cylinders with the wire brush, swabbed the pan with a rag, and then applied the grease to all the cylinders. The thinner oily runoff was then run through the action of each revolver as it was cycled. The lock on the Whitworth received the same treatment.

By this point, Phobetor was dripping with sweat, so he paused for a few minutes to take another few pulls at the flask before examining the action of the carbine. He took it across the kitchen and placed the muzzle in the pyre of the stove before retrieving his black gun belt, holster, and riding boots from the drawer of the wardrobe. Like the guns, they too were reanimated with a varnish of grease and black powder. Still stripped to the flesh, he walked over to the basin, washed his face and hands with a rag, and advanced on the carbine again. As it clattered on the stove, its muzzle glowing, Phobetor grabbed it and a long rasp file from the drawer and took them to the porch outside.

The gray horse looked on as he located a wide crack in the limestone step outside, into which he wedged the gun’s barrel. Wrapping one hand with the oilskin and gripping the file, he braced the carbine at the stock with the other. With the barrel locked into position in the limestone, he began sawing at it beyond the loading lever. For half an hour he continued, until the file finally tore the blisters from his hand. The wall of the barrel was two-thirds severed. He painfully lurched his entire weight against it, trying to wrench the final bridge of steel apart. The barrel flexed gently against his provocation but still would not submit.

Leaving the gun wedged in the step, he went inside and returned with a lead ball in his teeth, a powder horn in his hand, and the flask under his arm. Dropping the powder horn on the porch, he sucked the flask dry and then flung it into the yard. He picked up the file once again and twisted the stock, knifing the file into the barrel again. Phobetor leaned heavily into the stock, and after six quick strokes and a groaning torque of steel, the barrel broke free under his weight, pitching him into the horse. Phobetor held on tight to the carbine and spun around to face the animal. Staggering, he ascended the fractured steps. His equilibrium somewhat regained, he now stuffed the powder into the chamber and spat the ball into his hand. Wavering at the edge of the rail, he plugged the gnawed lead ball into the cylinder and then ratcheted the lever, sealing the ball. He cranked the hammer, and the cylinder rotated. Taking aim at the glimmering flask at the edge of the light, he squeezed the trigger.

The carbine roared, spitting a flame and breaking the stock as the flask disappeared into the night. Phobetor reeled in a circle from the recoil and went sprawling out into the air. Clearing the porch, he soared over the steps and landed in a heap of grease and unburned nitrate, the carbine folded beneath him. The gray walked over and gently rolled him onto his back with her muzzle. As he lay stretched out in the sandy yard, his agonal gasps continued throughout the night, allowing him to shift just enough sour bayou air to survive again until the ritual quagmire of dawn.




Chapter 3: Le Reve

The battleship’s iron hull was graceless as it plowed the whitecaps surging through the muddy river. Its rusty soul protruded through its peeling, black marine lacquer as it rode the channel of the far bank of the Mississippi’s heaving current. The muddy water poured over the main deck as the low-slung ram broached in the afternoon tide. One hundred and sixty-five feet of ironclad ram had been reoutfitted with two shovel engines. Iron I-beam cargo decks had been constructed to suspend a hemp web of rigging, oak barrels, and pine crates lashed into two towers that straddled the bridge and twin boiler stacks. The gunports were open and filled with the gaunt, malarial faces of the crew peering out to catch a glimpse of the city. Strung between the ports was a clothesline, from which fluttered two dozen tattered shirts and a line of moldy, rotting britches.

At the bargette’s helm, Lucius Cephus worked the wheel. A caribe block of a man, he studied the waves, briefly considered what the ship could negotiate, and then resolved to swing the heap around. In the back of the bridge, he squatted low, pulled his moldy railroader’s hat down over his bushy black eyebrows, and hiked his waxed collar high against his black beard. In the distance, smoke from the ovens of Orleans Parish twisted gray threads above the levee.

With a pneumatic scream, the ironclad’s giant motor halted in a cloud of smoke and steam. Cephus’s greasy, black-olive paw expertly shifted the wheel. Like a river monster rolling from some fathomless depth, the swell boiled to a crest above the bow as it plunged just below the murk, and the ship turned to come about in the main channel. The wave surfed into the port like an earthquake, lifting the moored freight vessels above ground level and then dropping them abruptly as the tide crashed into the dock. A wide smile grew on his face as his flotage surfaced, straightened, and then drifted into the current of the nearby side channel. He watched the heads peek above the levee on the horizon behind the dock, and gradually a picket fence of gagglers formed.

With the sun burning off the last of the afternoon clouds, twenty crewmen hustled down to the deck and began casting off the ropes. Silently the booms of two ancient wooden freight cranes began rising from the dock. Beneath their monstrous swinging arms, long shadows floated across the lilliputians swarming to the boat on the wharf, catching lines cast from the crew on the deck. The Reve, its twin engines silent, slid in parallel to the dock and drifted to the moorings with a gentle stop.

The men began stripping the rigging on the elevated decks as the booms stalled in their wide arcs above them. The massive cables played out the hooks, swinging them down to the deckhands. Carefully they tussled, looped the ropes around the hooks, and jumped clear. Like the two tarsi of a giant mantis, the cranes dangled nets packed with crates over the ship and glided them down to the ropes of their guides on the dock.

The ship rocked softly as Cephus descended the steps from the bridge and made his way to the side of the boat, where he looked back to the squat, redheaded engineer peering out from the bridge. He waved, and the engineer waved back. Cephus walked down the gangway to the dock, where two soldiers in a pair of horrendously disheveled navy uniforms were waiting with a wagon. The shorter, fatter driver sat with a gob of tobacco in his cheek and a headful of black curls falling out from beneath his sweaty cap. The taller soldier stood by the side of the wagon behind a bay horse so haggard and full of mange that if not for the tail, it could have been related to him. The man sported a wild, red dust-broom mustache, and he remained leaning against the wagon, tipping his cap as Cephus approached.

The captain stopped just short of the two men. At six feet five inches, he stood before them like a mountain in his green jacket and heavy leather boots. His salty gray eyes peered out at them from under his hat as an ephemeral lull in the afternoon sun dragged on between the three of them. The mustached soldier began to speak, but Cephus brushed past him, jumped up into the wagon, and sat down on the back bench.

Standing for a second with his mouth open, his auburn mustache trembling as it filtered his hot, rank breath, the soldier turned to the driver. The driver looked at Cephus, who was staring out at the river, and then looked back at his partner and shrugged. Wiping the sweat from his mustache, the soldier climbed in and signaled the driver to drive on. The reins snapped against the wet back of the bay, and the wagon lurched as the motionless front wheels grated ten yards across the dock, accompanied by a guttural snort from the bay. Jerking the reins back, the encumbered driver wiped the tobacco juice from his chin that he had spewed out onto the front of his uniform. His partner desperately clung to his hat, and Cephus silently leaned forward into the front bench. Weaving his pythonic arm around the driver, Cephus grabbed the hand brake to release it as the two shaken soldiers repositioned themselves. The taller soldier shot the driver a glance, and they both turned to stare at Cephus. Without breaking his gaze over the river, Cephus motioned them to drive on.

The driver shrugged at his companion. With another slap of wet leather, the bay tightened and launched the wagon forward. Its rusty wheels rumbled across the pier until the wagon turned onto the cobblestones, where it filed in with the other freight carts as they funneled their way down the street and ran through the gap in the levee into the warehouse district that led into the city.




Chapter 4: Shooters

It was late afternoon, and Lucius Cephus sat alone in the back of the wagon on Canal Street outside the imposing columns of the Customs House. The heat of the day was beginning to abate. The two disheveled soldiers now reemerged from the building, climbed aboard, and drove the wagon to the far side of the boulevard. They stopped outside a raised-basement bar whose swaged-oak sign proclaimed it the Rathskeller. A pair of gangly whores adorned with crudely caked rouge and pale-blue eye shadow lounged outside. Cephus and the soldiers passed them silently as they made their way to the door. Behind their misfit, clownish makeup, the ladies seethed as they tried to follow the men into the bar and were met with the door slamming shut against them.

In the back corner of the bar, two officers, both with long, dark beards, watched Cephus as he eclipsed the light from the window in the doorway. The soldiers escorting him waited at the entrance, and Cephus made his way over to the officers, who stood to greet him. The men shook hands and then sat down at the candlelit table. The shadows of the two officers swayed along the damp limestone wall as they addressed Cephus.

“I’m General Allen Rourke. This is Major Allice. It’s a pleasure to meet you, Captain.”

“Captain Lucius Cephus, of Le Reve.”

“Great. Have a drink. What is it, Captain?”

“Gin and tonic. A little lime.”

“It’s nice to meet you. Have a seat. Hopefully this will be straightforward.”

“Good. So, how many rifles do you have in total?”

“Five hundred fifty. Enfields and Lorenzos.”

“Tell me, General Rourke. These guns are de shootas or de rotten?”

“Shooters, Captain. Every one of them.”

Cephus took his drink from the waiter and looked at the goateed officers blankly as his wandering French baritone thundered into the corner.

“I was told eight hundred.”

“The difference wasn’t in condition to sell.”

“What you want me to tell my people, use de forks and knives? A real war needs real guns. Surely you know this, General.”

Rourke leaned back and lit his pipe. Allice sucked at his whiskey and stared up at Lucius.

“Listen, we can only sell what we’ve got. The rest is basically scrapped.”

“You know, Offica Allice, I’m in de scrap business. So since I’m here, why don’t you let me make an offer on de scraps?”

Rourke sat forward.

“Captain, we’re happy to sell you the difference, but they’re being reconditioned down river. If you want ’em, you can pick ’em up. But we don’t have ’em up here.”

Smoke curled through the general’s yellow teeth as Lucius nipped at his gin.

“Seems like extra work. I was told I could get eight hundred if I came to New Orleans. Now that gonna drop de price?”

“How much would you give, Lucius?”

“Seven a half regulars, four on de scraps.”

“Eight on the regulars.”

“No, but I will do four and a half for de scraps.”

Rourke finished his drink. “That’s a hell of a salvage vessel, Lucius. Any chance we could come aboard your ship and have a look at things?”

“Sure, General. You like malaria? Only half of de crew has got de shakes now.” Cephus swirled the ice in his glass.

“What about the other half?”

“They’re in the river, General.”

Rourke cleared his throat. “No chance that other Brooke rifle is still on board?”

“No chance. Probably back east where de tore her open. Listen, I’m in de salvage business, not de mercenary business. It’s an issue of recovery.”

“It seems, then, the salvage business mustn’t be what it used to be, Captain. You know the Big Fish was interested in your Reve.”

“Well, boss, de Big Fish could’ve bought her de same as me. Now, I gave you my offa on de guns. So, let’s stick to de business we’re in today, General. Otherwise maybe I’ll steam to Natchez. They have guns, too, no?”

“That’s right. They do.”

“So seven and a half and four and a half or nothing today, then, gentlemen.”

Allice paused. “Seven and half and four and a half will do.”

Rourke nodded. Allice stood and walked over to the soldiers at the door, and then the three men walked outside. Cephus stood, took a small leather bag from his coat, and dropped it on the table next to his empty glass.

“Have dem load it tonight.”

“It’ll be loaded by eleven. They’ll have the rest at La Hache. Pick them up tomorrow night. Colonel Davis will meet you.”

Cephus nodded and walked out. Allice was walking back across the street toward him from the Customs House. The two soldiers in the wagon sat waiting. The whores were gone. Cephus climbed into the wagon and pointed up the street.

“Fauborg Marigny.”

The haggard bay horse lurched into motion, and the wagon jostled down the street. Rourke emerged from the bar to meet Allice.

“Wire Fletcher and let him know, and have the regiment head out tonight. Give him the money to cover Cephus for the weapons and the boat when you take it. Tell Davis to follow his goddam orders, or he’ll be speaking Comanche this summer.”

“Not worried about that Marabou?”

“No. He’s big, but he is in the wrong business.”

“Why not just take the boat here?”

“If he has that Brooke on that ship, he could level half this city. We would have to level the other half trying to sink it. Cephus knows that. That’s why he wanted the deal here.”

“You want to hold back the rest of the rifles in La Hache?”

“The extra two fifty aren’t even in La Hache. They’re already on Patterson’s second boat heading to Cayo Romano. Consider it a test run, but don’t discuss it with Davis. We’ll have them ship Cephus’s guns when you bring them back, and then you’ll take your regiment up the Red River to Fort Griffin to help Atkins. The Spanish probably won’t put a light on Patterson, but even they can’t ignore something like the Reve.”

“That ironside makes a pretty ornery-looking transport in the Gulf.”

Rourke tapped his pipe against the doorframe.

“It will for little while, but the big wheels are too fired up. The Big Fish will stick that thing in the dark. There are no funds to go picking a fight. We’re not done paying for the last war down here. It’s a damn shame. It was hard enough to sink that boat once, but if Captain Cephus doesn’t cooperate, sink it again.”




Chapter 5: The Birdhouse

The rickety wagon banked and rolled up over the stone curb as the gaslights flickered on in the Fauborg Marigny. Their amber shafts floated down Frenchmen Street all the way up from Decatur to Founders Park, where the remaining veterans staggered into the lamplight for the evening.

Cephus jumped from the wagon, gave it a smack, and walked up to the swaggering blue-and-white iron hotel frontage on the corner of Chartre, where the brass notes of the automated calliope whistled out from the blind alley at the side. He barged through the door, past the red velveteen curtain hanging over the entrance, and then stopped. A thunderhead of smoke gathered at the end of the hall, where two burly Creole men sat, quietly passing a spindly stick pipe back and forth. As Cephus came toward them through the billowing cloud, one of the bouncers rose, took off his chamber-pot hat, and opened the door in the side of hall. A bellowing calfskin drumbeat rattled up the stairs and through the floorboards of the hallway. Cephus passed him a faded folded bill.

“Busy yet?”

“Always busy. We big on Reconstruction these days.”

“Aren’t we all? Losing de war was de best thing that happened to dis town. She around?”

“She down there.”

“Any blue shirts down there?”

“You bet, Lucius. At the Birdhouse we got a new policy — big blue shirts chase the little loose skirts. Nobody lose, nobody gets hurt.”

Cephus smiled. “Anyone gonna hurt me?”

“Not if they want to see New York again, Lucius. Besides our new policy, we also still pay respect to and abide by our first and most basic policy at the Birdhouse: don’t cock your own gun, ’cause if you do, it won’t be no fun.”

In the corner, the raucous laughter of the Creole bouncer sitting in the chair turned into a fit of coughing, and his blood-choked eyes began to bulge. The doorman took the pipe from him and handed it to Cephus, who scorched a long ember through the pink resin. Stuffing another bill into the doorman’s front pocket, he handed back the pipe.

Cephus dropped down the stairs to a street-level chute spanning the alley from the hotel to an entrance into the brick warehouse next door. Outside, the automated calliope wailed as it cranked out “Zouave Cakewalk,” and the notes fused with the pulse of the drumbeat pounding through the door in the side of the warehouse. Cephus felt for the handle, and as he opened the door, a thermal belch of blood and rum blasted out with a roar from the crowd of soldiers that packed the warehouse to its walls. A forty-yard square of blue-coated troops bayed around a brick pit littered with the corpses of dead and dying dogs. Within opposite fenced corners of the pit was a pack of chained, wretched canines — this was where the dog handlers sat.

Working his way around the crowd, Cephus could see a horsish, red-tailed black mongrel being released by his handler as a trio of stocky, lock-jowled brown bulldogs emerged from the far corner. Although it was flanked easily, the mongrel wasted no time mauling the slowest of the three bulldogs, snapping its limp frame ten feet into the air. The other two bulldogs had already latched onto the mongrel’s back legs by the time the corpse of the first bulldog crashed into the first row of soldiers on the ledge of the pit. The mongrel cleverly rolled, forcing one of the remaining two bulldogs on his hock to release him. Grappling the dog at the jaw, it tore its mandible from the socket and in the process flung the animal to the brick wall, where the beast collapsed. The last of the three assailants hung on in futility near the rump of the destroyer. The red tail swished frantically as the mongrel ripped the bloody hide from the last bulldog’s wrinkled face, gimping the animal to release and wander blindly to the opposite corner, where it was let in the fence by a handler, only to be clawed apart by the remaining dogs as the crowd broke into rapturous applause.

Cephus backed away to get a drink from one of the long bars mobbed with soldiers. Constructed from stacks of rum barrels and oak planks, these bars stood along the walls, where hundreds of pilfered mirrors hung against the crumbling, red-clay brick. Creole barmen whetted the horde. In each corner of the crude stadium hung enormous, oddly matched, rose-glass Murano chandeliers. Beneath them, whole tribes of motley whores stretched out on shabby sofa loungers arranged in a series of circles. Cephus recognized two of the women as the whores he had seen earlier in the day. They looked worse than ever. The gradual decay of their makeup did little, however, to deter the drunken soldiers sitting next to them.

High above the pit, a massive bottomless birdcage was suspended on chains. A sallow whore sat on the perch, naked except for a radiant sheen of sweat and a bata drum clenched between her legs. In perpetual revolution, her flashing palms unwound a primal rhythm as the red-tailed mongrel limped back to the corner. A pair of boys cleaned the ring and dragged off the dead animals. The barman handed Cephus a short glass of rum, and he pounded it down in a single swallow. His glass was refilled, and he leaned against the bar watching a feathered troupe of dancers as they made their way through a side entrance. The sea of blue uniforms parted, and the dancers made their way straight to the pit and descended the wooden stairs. Their peacock headdresses waved as they linked arms and formed a ring that undulated to the cadence of the drum. Accelerating into a rolling conga, the feathered dancers released arms and pirouetted away from one another. A rumbling crescendo began to build from high up in the birdcage and spiraled down to the crowd as the shouts from the hollering troops intensified. In the pit, the gyrating women obliged by raising their solitary feather boas high above their heads as they danced. A voracious howl went up from the crowd, and Cephus lit a cigar he produced from inside his jacket. Over the next fifteen minutes, the routine continued through a series of progressively more erotic locomotions as the crowd vacillated between hushed disbelief and waves of brutal expletives at the completion of each outlandish movement of the cycle.

Finishing his third glass of rum, Cephus crushed out his cigar on the ground. He eased over to one of the side doors, flashed another note to the bouncers, and slipped out of the warehouse into an alley. From there, he climbed a metal staircase to the balcony of the neighboring house, which looked down on the corner of Royal and Frenchmen Streets. At the end of the gallery, clad in a cyanic-green robe and smoking a cigar, a large Creole woman with wild gray hair sat in a rocking chair. Her blue eyes gazed down at the toxic veterans as they wandered through the shadows of the palm trees in the park, straggling, hovering in and out of the aura of the lamp on the corner.

“Am I late, Madame Maymel?”

“You never have been…and probably never will be. Late ain’t your problem, Lucius.”

He walked across the porch and sat down next to her on the floor, stretching out his long, heavy legs. “You have a full house tonight, Madame.”

“Always do these days. I give the people what they want.”

“Even if it is not so agreeable for the animals?”

“Sometimes, Lucius, we do not have to agree.”

“It is true. This is de way people want it. I suppose if dogs are bred to fight, then that is what they will do. A man is bred de same.”

“And a woman? What about her?”

Lucius smiled. “Even I know not predict a woman…it is safer for us dogs to be in de pit.”

She laughed and sent a raft of smoke plunging out over the balcony. Looking down on him, she reached behind his ear and scratched his neck. Lucius leaned forward and smiled, pretending to pant like a dog as she moved her hand down his back and rubbed his spine between his shoulder blades. She sighed, paused, and drew off another long wave of smoke before picking up from the floor a bowl covered with a red tartan rag. From under the rag, Maymel pulled out a green cricket and wrapped it in her long, wrinkled fingers. Plucking off its hind leg, she put it on the cloth and dropped the cricket into the coffee can on the floor beside her. From next to the can, she lifted a bottle of absinthe and passed it over to Cephus, also handing him a glass. He poured a short one, slouched against the wall, and looked up at the pale lavender wisteria blossoms hanging over the copper roof. The absinthe seared his tongue as it trickled into the corners of his mouth. The calliope down the street was silent, and the palms across the road became still. Maymel continued to amputate the rest of the crickets’ legs until she sat with a pile of them on the cloth in her lap. The half moon had risen and was cresting into the northern horizon of the violet sky.

Lucius finished the glass and refilled it to just over the brim, forcing him to suck down the top half to avoid spilling more. He looked up at Maymel, who smiled, took his free hand, and pricked one of the veins in his wrist. She held his hand steady until the dripping blood filled a small vial. She capped it and laid it in her lap before dumping the pile of cricket legs back into the bowl on the floor along with some withered tobacco from a pouch that hung around her neck. She knocked in an ember from the cigar. It smoldered briefly and then conjured a blue flame. Carefully, she poured the blood from the vial onto the flame, which hissed, disappeared, and then reemerged. Putting the vial down, she sat back in her chair with the bowl in her lap, letting the smoke from the bowl crawl up to her face.

Lucius took off his hat, rubbed his face, and then replaced the hat. With a steady hand, he worked his way down the absinthe in his glass. The image of the moon pulsed before him, and Maymel craned her head toward the sky. The contents of the bowl smoldered for half an hour as the crickets in the coffee can scratched around on their sides. Finally the flame dwindled. She put the bowl back on the floor and began to speak in a low, sorrowful drawl.

“Lucius, do you remember when I found you stuck in de bottom of dat boat in de bottom of de river?”

“I do. Le Bete.”

“That’s right. That is the one.”

“I had crawled into a pocket of air…it was my first time in America.”

“Well, if I can find you der, I can find you anywhere.”

“I hope dat’s true. Without you, I am lost. You are my guide, my cheval.”

Maymel took the glass from the floor and poured herself a drink. Taking a gulp, she sat back in the chair and looked out at the moon.

”Well, I wish I didn’t, but now I know for sure, Lucius. You will not be back. It’s what I have seen tonight.”

“Is the cheval always right? Is it I am sailing this way, or is it de wind blowing me?”

“Lucius, as long as I have ever known you, I have never seen a wind that could move you. But it is different. You have already made all your choices.”

“Is this just de crickets chirping?”

“Well, ’tis and it ain’t, Lucius. If you don’t believe me, why did you come?”

Lucius took off his hat and rubbed his face once more. His straight black hair fell over his face, and he pushed it back.

“And you, Maymel, what happen to you?”

“I’ll be around for a while. Someone has to give de people what dey want, and it’s not all rum and feathers.”

Lucius slid his cap back on and stood up.

“I know this. I also know that de ears are the most dependable part of a whore. You will find me somehow.”

“Yo no fool, Lucius Cephus. But yo just one man. You gonna need help. You may rule de waves, but you do not rule the world. Remember that. Lucius, do you have de gun on dat boat?”

“It is der, and ready. Dey inquired about it, but dey sound afraid. If dey try anything, it would be…suicide. The ship has no match in de water. Now, could you tell me, where is de rendezvous to drop de guns?”

“Casilda. South coast. Dey will meet you in a fortnight.”

Lucius put his hand on her shoulder and smiled. He looked down to the banquette in the distance, down Royal Street, where three men had stumbled as they were chased out of a bar; they were shouting at the proprietor.

“I will be der. Tell dem, when you see dem. I have my own cirque to oversee, Madame, and de clowns are out of the wagon.”

She stood and hugged him.

“They are other horses to guide you, Captain Cephus. You will have to folla dem for advice. I done all I can.”

“This is true, Maymel, but you are my only cheval. We will meet again. No matter what the crickets say.”

Lucius turned and walked to the end of the gallery and down the iron stairs, jumping over the rail to the street below. One block down Royal Street, three men stood opposite a man who was cursing and pointing at the shortest of the men, who had a headful of red curls. Cephus recognized the red-haired man as his engineer; he was standing alongside his two lanky Haitian deckhands. Lucius made his way to the far corner of Frenchmen and Royal, where he stopped and lit another small cigar. The barman finished his torrent of abuse and walked off the street back into the restaurant, slamming the door behind him.

The engineer went over to the curb and sat down on a fruit crate. The other two men stood in the street laughing. From a pack on his shoulder, the engineer produced a concertina and began winding into a bawdy rendition of “The Blackthorne Stick” while the two other men hopped to the jig. The tune accelerated, and the dancing picked up some semblance of rhythm as the men in the street worked furiously to keep their heels above the cobbles. Abruptly, the bar door burst open and the owner barged back out, crossed the street past the dancers to where the engineer sat on the crate, and stood above him, raging diminutions. The engineer sat quietly, holding the instrument and looking at the ground. When he was done shouting, the man stomped off back toward the bar. Just as his fingers reached the latch on the door, the concertina burst into another number.

Turning from the door, the barman sprinted across the street and kicked the crate out from under the engineer. Clinging to the instrument as he hit the ground, he rolled away from his assailant, all the while speeding up the tempo of the jig. The barman chased him in a ring around the street lamp, but the engineer’s stocky legs kept up a frantic pace, and he could not be collared. The dancers lay on the pavement, gasping in hysterics. After a few quick circles, the two foes stood panting opposite each other on the curb as the last few notes of the song trickled out into the night before the box went silent. At last, the barman turned again toward the door, only to hear the concertina crank up again as he went back inside the bar.

Meanwhile, the wagon had arrived at the corner. Lucius climbed aboard and sat on the front bench next to his intensely inebriated driver, who hiccuped profusely. His partner lay stretched out and moaning, his feet hanging out from the back of the wagon. Suddenly, down the street the barman reappeared, bursting through the door with a short-barreled shotgun. The two dancers stood frozen. With the gun at his side, the barman marched straight across Royal Street and proceeded to taunt the man with the concertina where he sat on the crate. Rising, the engineer set the concertina down and knelt on the bricks. The barman shouted as he lined up the shotgun to the man’s shoulders and kicked him to the ground. His friends remained motionless. Stepping back, the barman kept the barrels beaded on the engineer’s trembling red curls.

A short distance away, a silent red ember shot from where Lucius sat in the wagon at the far end of the street. Trailing a ribbon of smoke, the flame floated higher, climbing quickly and arcing just above the second story of the dormer houses, etching an iris-hued, blazing streak into the night sky. The flame grew as it descended and traveled down the empty street, where it exploded across from the restaurant. A shower of iridescent flames spread down across the pavement and leaped upon the man with the shotgun. He dropped the weapon, covered his face, and then ran screaming into the building while the other three men rolled in the filth of the street to extinguish their burning clothes. Scorched like burnt grass, the men peeled themselves up from the cobblestones.

The wagon rattled down the street toward them, and the weary bay hauling it skidded to a stop in front of the restaurant. Cephus rose before them in the wagon with the flare pistol resting on his shoulder.

“Bring de gun, and be careful with dat goddamn ting. It may kill us all.”

Their clothes still smoking, the men grabbed the gun and the concertina and then clambered into the wagon. In the weary light of dawn, the shaking driver whipped one more snort from the bay, and the wagon plowed forward. They clattered down Royal Street, made the last turn onto Esplanade, and then turned right onto Decatur, where Cephus again rose to his feet in the back of the rickety wagon. Against the gray morning breaking in the east, he could make out the plane of the river and the silhouette of Le Reve as it rocked softly in the harbor beneath the booms of the towering cranes.




Chapter 6: Blades

Thomas Sands’s withered fingers held the parchment of the deed up to his wire spectacles, which rested on the end of his hooked, white nose. Phobetor sat across the table from him in the mercantile store on the main street of La Hache.

“You serious about leavin’?”

“Serious as a butcher in a hog lot.”

“How’s your Comanche?”

“Ain’t so good. Definitely not as good as my Mexican, but it’s a damn sight better than your arithmetic. How do you figure on a hundred for my outfit?”

“Well, the wagon’s fifty. Impedimenta, another fifty. You want that animal in this deal too, James?”

“Nope. That’s all I got left. Man without a horse ain’t got much hope in this world.”

“Hope doesn’t figure into it, James. Cavalry is dead. You gotta move on. Repeating rifles killed it. Trains killed it.”

“She’s worth more than this store, Thomas. I don’t plan on requiring much to get started. Just a seat tonight will do. Can’t wait on a train, anyhow.”

“As bad up as you’ve been lately, I guess I still never thought I’d see Colonel Phobetor dolled up as a federal. Old Tom Green would turn over.”

“Probably so, God rest him. Well, if it helps, they demoted me to Sergeant.”

Sands studied the deed as Phobetor looked over the table and out the window of the dusty front room of the mercantile. Straight-handled shovels, hickory axes, and long cane knives oiled to the tang hung along the north plank wall behind the till.

“Four hundred.”

“Horseshit, Sands. It’s at least twelve hundred. The place backs up to Long Bayou. It’s got coastal access. You know this. Quit wasting my time.”

“Ideally, James, you might be right, but they’re cutting cards at nine. So I’ll give you six, but that’s it. Otherwise you’ll have to take your offer and see what you can get from those boys from Lewisburg.”

“Sands, you’re the reason we lost this war. Ransoming your own goddam people. Never mind the federals — at least you could tell who they was with.”

Sands sat took off the glasses. He placed them carefully on the table and then sat back in his chair.

“Well, that’s one way to look at it. Just because you looted that stockpile at Brashears doesn’t make you a hero. Where do you think those Yankees got all that gear? Vermont? More like Plaquemines Parish, and I haven’t seen a nickel handed over from any government since. It’s rich when you want to run your mouth. Colonel maybe, corsair definitely, worthless drunk, as sure as I am still alive and breathing. You’ll get six, and you’ll be glad of it. Maybe they won’t take it off you before they put a bullet in you tonight, but you ain’t going to win much, in case you didn’t know yet. Even if you’ve gotten a seat and a blue shirt somehow, they’re never gonna let you walk with more than your hide and that horse. I won’t give you more than six. I’m tired of donating to every fool who shows up with a gun and a license to make life worse for the rest of us. Can’t see how a man could stoop so low as to drag himself around country he cheated twice.”

“Maybe getting looted isn’t such sacrifice Tom. What you know about havin’ skin stripped off your back? Cause I can show you.”

“Just because you were in Pulaski don't make you immortal James. You switched sides soon as you could to save what was left of your hide.”

“Well sir I am alive to tell the tale. Most of them boys ain’t. I did a lot to get them fools along the Ogochee to pack it in instead of dying in a swamp for because some son of a bitch with land said they had to.”

“Everyone has a choice. You made yours. Anyway, your jaundice will not change today. I can see that here looking at you.

Sands shook his head and continued.

“You're probably right to carry on drinkin and fighting at this point. It doesn’t matter who you're shooting at these days James, someone else will come looking for you. Requital cuts deep as those blades. Everyone wants to think things end with surrender, but we are all still in this squabble. None of us started it. We are still just the flesh that hasn't been peeled.”

Phobetor sat across from Sands, shooting him a sour glare.

“You done cluckin’?”

“I am but this offer isn’t going to hang around all day waiting on a drunk, even if he does maintain a rank of some meager description.”

Phobetor stood and tapped forcefully on the table. Sands leafed through a pile of notes and slid over six moldy bills, which Phobetor stacked on the table and folded into his pocket. He walked over to the wall and took a cane splitter from where it hung on a rusty nail. Turning back toward Sands, he inspected the edge of the blade.

“If I can lead eight boys from Albuquerque between the Apache nation, across Texas, and through the bayou in a feed trough and whip the whole southern Yankee corps, then I can pretty well handle myself in a game of cards.”

Sands sighed and got up from his chair.

“I’m sure they have other interests on the east side of that river beyond you, and I doubt they asked you along for your charm. You can keep that blade. It’s on the house, but it ain’t enough to cut down a whole regiment.”

Phobetor put the knife in a canvas sheath that sat in a stack beside the till and then slid it inside his jacket. Taking out his tobacco, he rolled a cigarette on the counter. Sands put his glasses back on and walked over to the door. Lighting the cigarette, Phobetor stepped over to the shopkeeper, who stood looking out at the stream of federal troops filtering up the street. Sands turned back to Phobetor, who had extended his hand.

“It’s not gonna be all hearts for them tonight either, Tom.”

Sands shook his hand. Phobetor replaced his hat and ducked out of the shop. Down on the sandy street, the gray nervously eyed the parade of blue uniforms. Phobetor unhitched the harness to the wagon. Reaching into the back of the buckboard, he then took out the saddle from where it lay next to the hammer and tongs. The gray relaxed as he threw over the saddle, secured it, and climbed up. He turned the horse to file in with the column of soldiers.

“Has that horse got a name, James?” Sands stood in the doorway of the store, cleaning his spectacles.

“No.”

“Why not?”

“Didn’t give her one.”

“Do you think you’re really clever? Maybe I should cancel our contract.”

Phobetor kept his eyes on the column of soldiers and dragged a few clumps of dirt from the horse’s matted mane.

“Ain’t much on names. They’re bad luck.”

“How do you figure?”

“Every horse I named has died.”

“That’s hardly a surprise, considering your luck, James. How long do you reckon a horse should be expected to live, exactly?”

“Well, ain’t none of ’em died bald or toothless, and they wasn’t wrinkled, either. Fact is, of about the last dozen, I’ve had four shot from under me. Six lamed up, and I shot them myself. One drowned on me, and one got poisoned.”

“Poisoned from what?”

“Drankin’ at an alkali lake. Got the damn rigors on me, and I had to shoot him, too. So I guess, really, that’s seven lamed and shot.”

“So, you’ve shot seven of your own horses, and that’s why you won’t name them?”

“Well, I ain’t no preacher, and I wasn’t gonna hold a service. When they’re dead, I get off.”

Phobetor patted the gray’s neck. “This one’s got a tough chaw. I like that.”

Sands spat on the floorboards. “Are you an expert on tough, James?”

“I’m an expert in cards, ordnance, and horses. In that order. The first two I can fix. The third one is just knowing when you need a new one.”

Phobetor turned his horse toward the road.

“Can that Whitworth still sing, Colonel?”

Phobetor halted and turned to see Sands out on the raw plank sidewalk, pointing to the brass scope peeking out from the leather scabbard under Phobetor’s saddle.

“Sangs like a bird, Mr. Sands. If you listen for it, you can hear it a long way off.”

Phobetor turned the horse and gave it a dig, and they took off at a lope. They soon caught the column of soldiers and fell into step next to them as the troops marched to the dock to wait their turn for the slow tug ferry taking the men to the west bank, where the rest of the unit waited on the dock of the Magnolia estate.




Chapter 7: Stakes

The Creole lilies had sprouted early, and their white petals carved with fuchsia shafts dotted the two rows of yuccas that lined the red-brick path leading from the gravel circle of the drive to the titanic white columns at the front of the Magnolia house. Fletcher Davis sat smoking an orange maple pipe as he surveyed the estate from the wicker chair at the corner of the sun-washed veranda on the third-story balcony. The silty vermilion road to Magnolia stretched out straight as a shot on the chersonese as it rolled through the bright-green knee-high sprouts of the cane fields to the oscillating sawgrass riverbanks on the horizon. Like threads of twisting blue yarn spun out along the sandy delta road, the two columns of the Eighty-First Pennsylvania had been making their way from the dock along the road to the house since the better part of three in the afternoon as the ferries shuttled the unit from the east bank at La Hache. Davis had made out the diligent form of Allice from the time he’d appeared at the head of the regiment. His black walking horse flagged out as he led them along the road, stopping every fifty yards to let the column catch up, only to take off in another series of fluttering licks as he meandered up ahead to scout the ditch on each side of the road.

As the rider closed within a quarter mile of the house, Davis rose and took his pipe over to the rail. Allice arrived at the stone pillars at the head of the drive and stopped in the shade of the live oaks that guarded the final approach to the house. The troops shuffled their way onto the grounds and down the drive around the south end of the house as Allice stood along their flank in solemn inspection. Winding their way past the empty slave quarters, the head of the column halted at the far end of the field beyond the house opposite the well, the smokehouse, and a set of three white cane barns. The soldiers trickled in for an hour as the lemon sun sank behind the house and melted into the horizon as a crimson wave washed across the sky. The kerosene lamps were lit in the front rooms of the house, and the twelve-foot glass windows shed a rippling glow over the blue shutters. A dozen officers milled around the porch, laughing and smoking on the soft linen couches near the stems of the white molded laurels crowning the oak door at the front porch.

Allice came in from the gate, dismounted, and handed the reins to the attendant. He looked up to see the shadow of Davis’s silhouette, its arm extended and waving down over him in the failing light. Ignoring the brisk salutes of his officers, he marched across the porch through the doorway, where he was detained. In the foyer, servants crowded the Sylacauga hall laden with silver trays of hors d’oeuvres. Allice stepped wide of the chaos and trotted up the spiral staircase. On the second floor, another throng of waistcoated staff choked the parquet floor of the ballroom, which was littered with card tables. Steadying his saber at his hip, he scaled the last flight of stairs to the top of the atrium, where Davis stood swirling the vestiges of his cocktail in a lowball while leaning on the walnut rail post. Allice saluted him as he arrived. Davis raised his glass and then sloshed the contents.

“Major Allice?”

“Yes, Colonel. I think you received the correspondence from Rourke.”

“I did, Major, and I have some questions regarding his intentions. However, maybe we should get a few things clarified before we investigate the nature of your visit.”

“As you wish, Colonel.”

“Well, my first question is, how long have you been riding that four-legged ostrich that I saw jogging down the road?”

Allice sighed and then took off his gloves, folding them over into his belt.

“It was a gift. My brother-in-law found him after Chattanooga, saddled and wandering by the road. Looked like he hadn’t eaten in a week. He’s got a fine tilt gait, though, and it makes things easy.”

“Does he have any military inclinations, Major?”

“He’s got more stones than a powder mill, Colonel. That lick disappears when you dig in. He’ll go over a cliff if you want him to.”

Allice walked past Davis over to the white-clothed bar and dumped a handful of ice and a dark swirl of oak whiskey into a glass. After taking a sip, he went to the doorway of the balcony and looked out on the road to the dock.

“Don’t worry yourself too much about that horse. Since you’re semi-retired, why don’t you let me be the judge of any soldiering that needs to be done on this campaign? I would hate for you to have to freshen your own glass twice. Rourke wanted this to proceed as a buyout, not a personal annex.”

“He could’ve told me that himself. Did he send the funds?”

Davis walked out on the veranda and sat back down in his chair. Allice sat on the sofa across from him.

“He did. But this whole thing needs to stay off the map. He wants it that way, and the Big Fish does, too. Understand?”

“I understand just fine. But it’s not my fault Rourke and his patron have let things get sour. Their plan for the reacquisition of this boat is not the strategy we need tonight; I can assure you.”

“Well, Colonel, why don’t you let me delineate the general’s orders before you speculate a little too much further?”

“Proceed, then, by all means, Bill.”

“It’s simple, for a change. When Cephus arrives, we have him down to the house and explain that the government is going buy him out or he’ll be arrested for trafficking. He gets paid, but that’s it. It’s the government’s boat again. He surrenders the contraband, and we offer him passage back to New Orleans.”

“What if he resists?”

“Resistance would be ridiculous. He’s getting compensation that is more than generous, considering his crime. Anyway, putting up a fight against a whole regiment would be suicide. He can buy another salvage boat. It’s an offer than defies resistance.”

“What happens to the boat?”

“Rourke will send it up the coast. They want it back in dry dock. I think they might sell it to the South Americans. The weapons are to be sent west against the Comanche and Kiowa.”

“So, we are buying back our own weapons. And the two-hundred-foot gunboat — the one that took a dozen of our own ships to sink — will be decommissioned? You know, we might need that ship if the Spanish become more aggresive.”

“That’s true, sir, but there is no cane in the barn right now, as they might say down here at Magnolia, and that’s the word from Rourke. They don’t want Cephus instigating the Cubans. Anyway, orders are orders, and you have to follow them just the same as I do.”

Davis knocked back his drink, clattering the ice against his teeth. Having drained the whiskey, he set the glass on the table.

“That’s true, but maybe I can offer you an alternate solution, one that parallels our instructions but is perhaps a little more handsome for everyone involved.”

“I’ll listen, but we have our instructions.”

“What do you know about Cephus?”

“He’s a ship wrecker, salvage mainly, Haitian…trying to move a few guns on the side. That’s about it.”

Davis rose from his seat and walked back into the house. He returned with a sidling gait that was exaggerated by the navy coat draped about his lanky frame. It swayed as he sat back down with the bottle of whiskey from the bar nestled in the chair at his side.

“Well, he wasn’t always a wrecker, because the wreckers originally started out as fishermen. Fishing in the Caribbean, especially near Haiti, lingers just enough so that a man can make a living, but nothing more. Over the last century, wrecking grew as shipping picked up. Those fishermen who had once been part-time wreckers started doing it full-time. They found out that all the obstacles they faced as fishermen generated work as wreckers. Squalls and reefs meant salvage from the floor of the ocean. Many fortunes were made. As time has gone on, though, more boats have become steamers, maps have become more precise, and the vessels have become less susceptible to those most basic elements. Slowly, over about the last ten years, the wreckers who had risen from fishermen have once again found themselves with just enough work to survive, but nothing more.”

Allice finished his glass and waved for the bottle, which Davis reluctantly surrendered.

“So they’ve switched to moving weapons?”

“Apparently yes, but remember, Bill — at base he’s a fisherman, and he’ll troll for what he can. So why not let him? Why not let Cephus throw out the nets for a little extra money tonight at the card table…and if he does, maybe we won’t have to buy back our boat. In the right type of situation, he could end up just handing it over.”

“He would never risk it. All he needs is to collect the guns and head out.”

“You never know. Cephus is already fool enough to come down here. If we spread that money out on the table and he really digs in, maybe he’ll be willing to go over the cliff, as you say in Lewisburg, apparently. Then the money doesn’t have to be surrendered to a reprobate, the boat and the weapons can be shipped out, and the world will have one more fisherman.”

“What if he doesn’t go for it?”

“Well, then we can follow orders, Major, and when you return that boat, you can ride that ostrich all the way up the Red River this summer. But if it does work out for us, you can go back to New Orleans to give Rourke the money back to return to the Big Fish. In that case, I doubt you’ll be learning much Comanche this summer.”

“What’s your end?”

“Rourke will get his money back, but he won’t be getting any extra silver from that Marabou. That stays at Magnolia.”

Allice looked into his glass and then back at the smiling countenance of Davis, whose wide, curling blond mustache shimmered in the light scattered on the porch from the doorway. Finishing his second whiskey, he put his glass on the table between them.

“Not sure if this is heresy or initiative, Colonel, but I am willing to experiment with any plan that means we don’t have to pay a thief not to behave like one. I also don’t fancy leaving my scalp on a greasy lodgepole up on the Llano this summer, either — I don’t care if it’s the Big Fish or any other big wheel giving the orders.”

“How do you intend to cut the cards tonight?”

Davis leaned back into the soft folds of the cushions. The wicker reeds creaked as he rested his arm back on the bottle.

“I have someone to take care of it. He’s the best I’ve ever seen. Couldn’t hold a thought but to drink and shuffle, but I will tell you — his routine is as smooth as a velvet glove. He’s a true blackleg. Still can’t spot how he does it.”

“You sure he’s up for it?”

“Don’t worry about him. Cheating is the only thing he’s ever done reliably. The dealers know. Phobetor will do the rest.”




Chapter 8: The Songs

The remaining embers of the cook fire smoldered behind the shoulder-high stone wall of the Magnolia cemetery. Next to a half-dug grave and a mound of dirt with a shovel in it sat Phobetor, who was gazing east over the moldy limestone wall with his Whitworth in one hand and a greasy, half-charred chicken wing dangling from the corner of his mouth. The hobbled gray horse hopped among the broken, sunken oak headstones as it wandered between the fading patches of crocuses that checkered the graves, ripping the tender shoots of fescue from the soil for its dinner. The warm spring evening set in on the estate and flushed a breeze in from the river, blowing the sawgrass on the riverbank on the horizon just enough for Phobetor to make out the shape of the gunboat as it sat idling at the dock.

Through the scope of the Whitworth, he had watched the buckboard wagon as it brought the colossal man from the boat down the road from the river, stopping at the drive to let him off at the main entrance. The lens was able to gather just enough light from the rising moon to make Davis out as he swaggered down the stairs to greet the immense figure of the man as he arrived. Tracing them through the house as they passed from window to window, Phobetor watched as they made their way to the drawing room, where they sat, smoked, and drank cognac for the better part of an hour.

He pulled back from the scope and spat the charred bones onto the ground. Walking over to the horse, he returned the rifle to its scabbard and unhobbled the horse. The ground was littered with fluttering gray-and-white pinfeathers of the chicken he had caught behind the barn and gutted in the cemetery at sunset. The sorghum in the jar sitting on the black rock of the fire ring was layered in an amber band by the coal bed. Phobetor led the gray over to the fire and picked up the jar with a rag. He supped off the thinner fraction and then raised the jar above him to coax a large dollop to the edge, where it lingered maddeningly before plopping into his mouth. As he swished the big drop around with his tongue, he lowered the jar and allowed the gray to hook its head in for a lick of the syrup. After it had lobbed in a big tongueful, Phobetor pulled the glass back, licked the edge clean, capped the lid, and threw the jar into his saddlebag.

He walked the horse out of the gate and around the cemetery in the shadow of the stone wall to a stand of rotting oaks just north of the house where the original homestead had once stood. Phobetor wrapped the rein around a low branch and then stroked the horse’s neck. Lighting a cigar, he walked over to the east side of the house and waited outside the kitchen until one of the cooks brought out a tub of dishwater to dump on the back lawn. Easing his way in through the doorway, he ghosted past the servants preparing the confit and oysters and along an oak table that ran the length of the room. Opening the door to the hallway, the line of officers was already migrating slowly to the drawing room. Phobetor grafted right along.

They filed in around the great green-silk-lined walls. Allice and Davis sat at opposite ends of an overstuffed sofa in front of the six-foot fireplace, where a sycamore limb burned brightly. Cephus, clad in an old, black velvet suit with a yellow cravat, sat in a nearby armchair. A bottle of cognac reposed on his knee, and a snifter in his right hand floated gently up to his lips from time to time. On a small elevated stage in the corner, a decrepit, white-haired Cajun man stood quietly in a white shirt and a pair of pale-blue cotton trousers, his thumbs looped under his black suspenders. Two waif minstrels sat behind him, one with a guitar and one with a fiddle. The old man tapped his boot, and then, in a high tenor, his raspy cords strained out the lonely notes that resonated through the belly of the house.

On the boat at the night
When the wind blows free
I smile at the moon
And she smiles back at me.

In a hundred years
Beneath the stars above
I will be back to this
This land I love.

As I travel south
To the Plaquemines
from La Heve down to New Orleans
This river rolls on to the sea
And like a mirror it shows
Her face to me.

In my heart
Where love sleeps tonight
My course runs true
guided by her light.
When I wake up
At the rise of dawn
Though her smile fades
The river flows,
And my boat sails on.

Pausing for a second and then wiping his forehead with a rag, the old man nodded to Cephus.

“And now, by the request tonight of our host, Colonel Davis, an encore en français.”

A cool bayou zephyr floated in through the open windows, billowing the long white curtains away from the windows and sweeping the cigar smoke across the room. The old man tapped his boot, the guitar and fiddle followed in, and once more he strained his way through the Acadian melody.

Sur les bateaux à la nuit
lorsque le vent souffle libre
Je sourire à la lune
Et elle sourit en arrière de moi.

Dans une centaine d’années sous
Les étoiles au-dessus
Je serai de retour
à cette terre j’adore.

Comme je voyage vers le sud
En direction de la Plaquemine
De La Heve jusqu’à la Nouvelle-Orléans
Cette rivière s’écoule vers la mer et, comme un miroir,
Elle montre son visage pour moi.

Dans mon cœur où l’amour dort
Ce soir mon cours exécute vrai
Guidé par sa lumière.

Lorsque je me réveille
à la montée de l’aube même si son
Sourire s’estompe cette
Rivière rouleaux
Et j’ai naviguer.

A round of applause followed, and several bottles of brandy were passed around the rows of officers lining the walls. The two waifs continued by starting up a waltz as another inferno of cigar smoke gathered. The officers laughed and passed the bottle. Phobetor snatched a half-empty glass sitting on the windowsill, loaded it to the top, and then handed the brandy along. Cephus was red-faced, glassy-eyed, and grinning as he watched the fiddler hopping around the stage as he played. Allice and Rourke were equally ennobled as they drank and slouched in the sofa. The fiddler continued and wound the strings fast to his cheek. The guitarist struggled to keep pace, and the officers began to holler and stomp. Phobetor finished his glass and watched Davis as he leaned over to hand Cephus a cigar. The waif could quiver the bow no more, so he drew off the final notes and then leaned over to take a bow. Cephus, Allice, and Davis all stood and clapped. The gallery squalled as they circulated the brandy once again. Allice and Cephus sat back down as Davis remained standing and walked, wobbling slightly, over to the fire, where he set his glass down on the mantel.

“Gentlemen, thank you for coming tonight. It is our pleasure to host our honorary guest, Captain Cephus. It takes a hell of a man to sail a ship back up from the bottom of the Roanoke…where Lieutenant Carling put her.”

A torrent of calls and applause went up from the officers. Davis waved them down, took a drink, and cleared his throat.

“Easy, men. Now, as I said, it takes a real captain to resurrect a boat like that, so let’s welcome him in with a song in memory of those who have fallen before us.”

Davis turned to the waifs, who immediately started the introduction to “Dixie’s Land.” Davis stood at the mantel and crooned a few disingenuous notes that turned into a bellow as several whistles went up from the crowd.

I wish I was in the land of cotton,
Old times they are not forgotten;
Look away! Look away! Look away! Dixie Land.

In Dixie Land where I was born,
Early on one frosty mornin’,
Look away! Look away! Look away! Dixie Land.

Then I wish I was in Dixie, hooray! hooray!
In Dixie Land I’ll take my stand
To live and die in Dixie,
Away, away, away down south in Dixie.

Stepping away from the mantel, Davis raised his glass and waved his arms, and the fiddler joined in as Allice and Cephus stood, both chiming in for the second chorus. Phobetor and the rest of the officers stood forward, lifted their drinks, and joined in for another chorus. The song finished in a clamor of laughter and the ring of brandy glasses clattering against one another. Gradually the officers dropped back against the walls. Davis and Allice returned to their seats, leaving only Cephus standing next to the mantel, the bottle of cognac in one hand and his glass in the other. Taking a sip, he rested the bottle on the mantel.

“Gentlemen, officers, and Major Allice.”

A gentle rumble went up from the crowd as Allice smiled and raised his glass toward Cephus.

“Thank you to Colonel Davis for inviting me here tonight. I tink maybe this is de best party I have been to outside of Biloxi for de Mardi Gras. For those of you that have never been der, it is like New Year Eve in de Five Points, except in Biloxi some of the women have teeth — and some of de teeth are in de front. I suppose that it is getting on in de night, and we need to be getting on to de cards. So, gentlemen, remember, vous n’avez pas besoin de services de renseignements pour avoir de la chance, mais vous n’avez pas besoin de chance ont intelligence. You don’t need intelligence to have luck, but you do need luck to have intelligence.”

The crowd howled, and Davis stood.

“Well said, Captain Cephus. Gentlemen, the game tonight is five-card avalanche. You get five from the dealer and can swap four. Aces up, twos down. Nothing is wild down here except the weather, and there’s no hurricane in sight. Now, that’s all it takes to be a winner, and it’s winner takes all. So, without further ado, gentlemen, let’s adjourn to the ballroom.”

He walked over to Cephus and shook his hand, and then he and Allice escorted Cephus toward the hallway. The officers followed, and Phobetor drifted along with them as they made their way down the hall and up the floating spiral staircase to the second-floor ballroom, where they all found seats. One of the waifs followed the soldiers in and seated himself in the corner at the upright piano. Cephus, Allice, and Davis sat together at the center table under the low-hanging crystal chandelier.

Phobetor sat at a table in the corner with several of the junior officers, who appeared to be unaccustomed to the spirits, which were refreshed again as they were seated. He pulled out his tobacco and rolled a cigarette in the palm of his hand. The piano player started up a riverboat trot, and the dealers all took their seats. Showing a fresh deck to the players, the dealers spread out the first hand.

Phobetor wrinkled his nose as he inhaled the smoke from the yellow cigarette and then folded without looking at his cards. The hand played out as the two young soldiers to his right attempted to drunkenly bluff each other. Phobetor downed his brandy and then called for one of the waiters, who immediately skittered over to him.

“You got any corn liquor in this hotel?”

“I’m not sure what is…uh…what that is exactly, sir.”

“Corn liquor. It’s made from, you know…a corn, exactly.”

“An acorn, sir?”

“No, butthole. Corn, as in an ear of corn.”

“Like a drink made from an ear of acorn?”

“Like you got two ears, and if you don’t use one soon and get me some goddam whiskey, I’m gonna cut one of them off and use it as an ashtray until one of these other greasy penguins can fetch me a real drank.”

“Sir…”

Phobetor reached to the handle of the saber that hung from his belt. The waiter scurried away. He turned back to the card table, where the other officers and the dealer sat frozen, staring at him as he stubbed out his cigarette. Phobetor looked around at the other soldiers, who remained paralyzed in their chairs as the smoke from their cigars aimlessly listed between them.

“Sorry, boys. It’s just that brandy make me sour. Can’t drank it all night.”

The officer to Phobetor’s right folded, and the dealer swept away the cards, reshuffled, and started the next hand. Phobetor eyed his fresh cards and lit another cigarette. The waiter returned with a glass of bourbon, delicately placing the drink next to Phobetor and then backing away. Without looking up from his hand, Phobetor held his cards and cigarette in his left hand while his right hand fished in his pocket to grab a two-dollar piece. He flipped it high into the air before the coin returned, landing flat on the silver tray with a loud smack. The waiter jumped at the sound and wobbled but managed not to tip the tray or slosh the drinks. Nervously, he looked back at Phobetor, who spoke to him without breaking his gaze over the table as he traded three cards to the dealer.

“Thanks, friend. Maybe that will help you keep your ears on a little longer.”

With that, Phobetor sat back in his chair, turned, and smiled at the waiter. Glancing around at the other young drunken soldiers, he laughed, pushed twenty dollars into the pot, and took a long gurgling drink from the hefty lowball beside him.




Chapter 9: Tables

Fletcher Davis turned back around to face the river and leaned over the rail from the second floor to look under the veranda. The officers on the front porch, having long ago fallen out of the card game, now resorted to shooting craps with the local sharecroppers, who had showed up to sell their livestock. Down off the steps in the dust and gravel, the men stood in a circle, passing a jug. Slowly, they squatted low and huddled tightly in the afternoon sun as a young boy knelt down and flung the dice to the ground. The men whooped as the dust cleared, and money traveled from palm to palm. Allice walked over to Davis’s side, observing the commotion below.

“It looks like he’ll bite. Thirty thousand is enough for me to want to try and buy back in.”

“We’ll see. Hasn’t been too hard for those boys to drop their hands. It seems like Cephus would take their money even if they weren’t lying down to him. Not sure he was born on a Sunday.”

“How much longer you reckon it will take your man to finish this?”

“Probably ten or eleven. I told Phobetor at lunch not to clean him out straight off. Cephus needs to feel like he’s got a chance, or he’ll never go all in. He’s made good progress, even if he has managed to drink most of the whiskey south of Nelson County.”

“What’s his end, anyway?”

“I told him twice the cut of the rest. Although there is the possibility that he’ll fall off his horse on the way home. In that case, it’s hard to know what’ll happen to his share.”

“In life, sometimes it’s hard to know.”

“It’s even harder to know in the afterlife. That tongue wags too much for him to cross that river again.”

Davis looked out at the Reve on the horizon, where it floated gently at the dock. Its metallic skirt glinted as it bobbed on the waves.

“That thing looks like a hatchet at the dinner table.”

“Yup, she was pretty mean. Probably decent for what Cephus needs. Shallow draft makes it nice to work the inlets. Looks like he’s made some improvements. It’s still a fortress, which is handy. He’s no fool on the water.”

“We’ll see. Nobody ever got rich defending a fortress, and it’s not every day a fisherman can make a fortune. We’ll see what kind of fool he is out of the water.”

Davis turned back to the ballroom, where the remaining players were returning from an early dinner. Cephus walked past the card tables out to the veranda, where the two officers greeted him.

“Evening, gentlemen.”

“Evening, Captain. Looks like your luck is holding out.”

“We shall see, but I cannot complain.”

Cephus reached into his suit jacket and pulled out his leather cigar wallet.

“Dominicano?”

“Yes, I think so. Much obliged.”

Cephus turned inquiringly to Allice.

“I’m all right for now. Thanks.”

Cephus walked over to the rail, looked out to the boat, and then peered down at the crowd below. He lit the cigar and held it between his teeth as he spoke. “De guns can be delivered in the morning. We’ll have my crew up here for seven, so we can ship out by noon.”

“Sounds good. Those boys want to come up for a drink tonight?”

“They’re still getting over de trip to New Orleans. Dey need some more manners before dey can enjoy such a civilized event. However, their qualities on de ship are unmatched, so I will not be too harsh. We all have our failings, no?”

“Well, sometimes it takes an army to make a soldier. These boys you’ve met here are the show horses. The workhorses we keep a little closer to the barn.”

Cephus laughed and turned back to face the ballroom, leaning his back against the rail. “I am very impressed with your officas so far, Colonel. Dey are well mannered and demonstrate a bien esprit de corps. However, I am not so sure what kind of cheval dis one is. Maybe he escaped your barn?”

Davis and Allice turned to see Phobetor enter the far side of the ballroom. He strutted in with one hand on his saber and the other wrapped around a drink. A cigarette dangled from his lips. Stubble was becoming a dark shadow, stenciling his cheeks and jaw. Two waiters chased close behind him. Both held trays, one with a bottle of bourbon and a silver ice catch, the other with a pile of tobacco and a stack of cigarettes.

Allice sighed. Davis took the cigar from his mouth and pointed to Phobetor.

“That one, Captain, is a little less cheval and a little more baudet. He is, however, a necessity.”

Cephus smiled and flagged a waiter.

“He’s a former rebel, but he’s a damn good scout and horseman.”

“Why did he switch sides?”

“Captured, threatened to be hanged for treason. He ended up scouting the Ogeechee River and helped Sherman close the door.”

Cephus took the glass of bourbon from the waiter, who had arrived with a full tray of drinks. Catching the man’s arm, Cephus nodded over to Phobetor.

“How is it dat de sergeant gets two personal valets while we have none?”

“Well, sir, it’s simple. He’s tipped for every drink and smoke he’s had so far. The boys figure they’ve made three months’ wages already. I’m trying to work out if there’s any way I can shine up those boots for him. I asked him twice already, and I’m pretty sure he’ll crack before the end of the night. Reckon I would brush his teeth if he asked for it. If you’ll excuse me now, I’ve got to spread this whiskey around the room before this next hand starts.”

The waiter scampered off. Cephus took a sip and then turned back to the officers.

“Well, gentlemen, it appears de sergeant, he is not so uncouth, and for a traitor, he’s fairly generous as well. We shall see if fortune favors de baudet. I will catch up with de both of you after de final.”

Cephus took his glass and his cigar and walked back to the center table, where his mound of notes and coins were stacked neatly. The two officers remained on the balcony finishing their drinks and cigars as the light faded in the east.

Phobetor had made his way over to his table near the wall. The remaining players returned and sat down — about half the original party was left in contention. Action resumed, and Phobetor continued his progress, working his way through the stragglers at his own table in less than an hour. Moving on with his newly aggregated team of bourbon minders, cigarette rollers, and now a valet to tend the purse, he waged his campaign steadily, hopping from table to table. He marauded his opponents with both his overall abhorrent, slanderous modus and his crippling ability to stake out big plays, where the assured grip of the loser was loosened as he inevitably produced superior straights. Paltry defensive strategies were likewise fruitless for those who resisted. Checking them down on weak bluffs, Phobetor eventually plowed through them, leaving the vanquished officers in a wake of cigarette ash, bourbon stains, and the tart, ringing anguish of his rasping expletives in their well-heeled ears.

Feeling almost undone by his formidable achievement, Phobetor briefly toyed with undercutting a few hands but in the end decided against it. Although he could easily have mucked cards since the outset, his success had pushed him just to grind out his earnings squarely. He had read the others as they tried to peg and palm their way past him. Although they carefully blistered the cards with their cigars, the dealers continuously swapped decks, obfuscating their arrangements. Phobetor was comfortable watching the illicit maneuvers and tangential play, and to some degree he found the dealers’ officiating reassuring. Despite this familiarity, though, he was no less ruthless, and by midnight he had virtually demolished all of the reserves of the more junior officers. By two in the morning, he had assimilated the rest of the winnings outside of the final circle of the most senior officers, who still sat as begrudging shills, holding out to Cephus in the middle of the room. When the straggling officers finally yielded to Phobetor, he had almost $20,000.

Phobetor walked over to the last chair under the crystal chandelier, which scattered shards of candlelight from the ceiling onto the table where Cephus sat stacking his notes and finishing off some rum that had been brought up from the cellar at Colonel Davis’s request. Phobetor’s escorts followed en masse behind him as he claimed his seat next to Cephus. A dealer sat opposite the pair of them. Davis and Allice sat behind the two men in a set of blue velour armchairs that had been retrieved from the parlor. Between them stood a small table and a half-empty bottle of cognac. The two officers steamed liquor from every pore as they laughed obtusely and smoked their cigarillos. Cephus was slightly the better for wear, but only fractionally. His broad, brown complexion glimmered with a film of sweat and determination. He staggered slightly as he rose, reaching to shake hands with Phobetor.

“I am Captain Lucius Cephus of de Reve. Congratulations on your success.”

“Thank ya, Captain. Sergeant James Phobetor, Fifth Cavalry. Congratulations to you, too, sir.”

They sat, and the dealer tossed the deck around the table.

Phobetor took a drink and looked squarely at Cephus. “What kinda boat are you sailing there exactly, Captain? I’m not real familiar with it.”

“It is an ironclad, a screw steamer, and a ram. If you stand on de balcony and look very hard, you might be able to spot it. At the moment, she is tied up at the dock.”

Phobetor took the glass of bourbon passed to him from his waiter.

“Well, that’s somethin’, ’cause I ride a blue roan that’s sitting outside tied up to an oak tree yonder. If you look real hard, ya might see her too, but it’s pretty dark out there.”

Cephus smiled as he sat back in his chair. The dealer led the hand, and Cephus opened with $500. Phobetor held a string of low, mismatched drop cards. He equaled Cephus’s wager and swapped four with the dealer. Cephus declined but raised another $500. Phobetor picked up a pair of nines and pushed $1,000 into the pot. Cephus matched the rebuke, and Phobetor took time for his attendant to place a cigarette in his mouth and then light the end with a blue-tip match. He eyed up the situation and studied Cephus’s money, which about equaled his own. Putting the cards down, he slid them back. Cephus amalgamated the money into his own pot, and Phobetor took a sip of his drink.

Behind the table, Davis filled his glass with bourbon and then attempted to do the same for Allice, but he missed and managed to pour about half of the drink into the top of Allice’s boot. This sent the two officers into an uproar as they teared up with laughter. The lonely minstrel, who was plastered in an intoxicant sleep at the piano, somehow roused at the laughter and took the initiative to strike up a little riverboat ramble on the keyboard, and slowly the room regained some energy. Phobetor and Cephus stared across the table, nursing their drinks amid the piles of money, enervated but still willing to oblige the humor of the situation as the dealer worked out the next hand.

Another fruitless string of cards plagued Phobetor before and after the turn. Cephus raised several times before Phobetor parted with about $2,000. Cephus whittled down Phobetor’s earnings until he sat with about $30,000, rubbing his arm, looking eager to finish off the evening, whereupon Phobetor abruptly jerked Cephus awake with a full house of nines and kings. The grudging ache of handing over $20,000 in one hand was not easily washed from Cephus’s face as Phobetor quietly transferred the stack of notes and coins into his own corner. His money handler stacked it evenly into two towers of $10,000 each and a heap of silver coins, which Phobetor had him place in a small linen bag next to them. Phobetor took a minute for his retainer to light another cigarette for him as he received his next hand, but in that moment, from behind his curling cigarette smoke, he could see Cephus’s eyes dilate as they locked on to some raw vein of fortune. Notwithstanding all his towering strength, he could not shield this from Phobetor. Using his bourbon glass, Phobetor pushed a $10,000 stack of notes into the center of the table. Cephus painfully deliberated and then moved $10,000 of his remaining $15,000 next to Phobetor’s stack in the center.

Sensing the wave of tension in the room, Allice gradually slid forward in his chair and squinted through his stuporous red eyes at the notes gathered in the middle of the table. He kicked Davis, who had once again become cataplectic in the chair next to him. Lurching forward, Davis sucked in a long, congested breath as he peered at the scene before him. The two opponents stared blankly at the money as first Phobetor and then Cephus waved off the dealer. Phobetor rubbed out his cigarette in the ashtray and then took a long quaff of whiskey, finishing his glass. Without hesitation, he moved the next stack of $10,000 into the pot and sat back in his chair. Cephus sighed, responding by entering in his last $5,000 and then looking up at the dealer. The dealer nearly choked as he eyed the sea of money on the table but artfully managed to stammer out a few words.

“You gotta match it to keep on with this, Captain Cephus. Otherwise the sergeant wins. You’re probably fifteen thousand dollars short.”

“I understand, but I will continue. You can use my boat as collateral against the rest, if dat is all right with you, Sergeant.”

Phobetor reached back for another drink from his waiter and took a sip. “Fine by me, Captain. This thang has gotta end tonight somehow. Guess pretty soon we’re gonna find out how.”

Davis and Allice leaned forward in their chairs, and the piano player stood up from his bench, craning his head for a better look. A straight flush of hearts to the queen fell from Cephus’s hand as Phobetor flopped over his pair of tens and then sat back in his chair. Cephus stood, beamed a huge grin, and then extended his hand to Phobetor, who rose to meet him.

“Congratulations, Captain, you done well.”

“You too, Sergeant. It was a formidable resistance. Allow me to send you home with a few bottles of rum from de boat.”

“Well, thanks, that’d be all right.”

Davis was lathered with sweat as he stood and went over to inspect the cards. Allice joined him, and they both fixed on Phobetor, who had collected his glass and was handing a few coins to his entourage. Without prelude, Davis screamed and reached for his revolver.

“You fucking traitor!”

As the howl went up, Phobetor turned to see Davis’s gun clear the holster. He dropped instantly below the level of the table and rolled behind Cephus. Davis drunkenly chased Phobetor with the barrel, swinging it clumsily toward Cephus, who was loading his notes into a leather satchel. Looking up from the table, Cephus saw a flash as the pistol blew a chunk of flesh off the base of his own neck. Amid all the smoke and flame of the discharge, the stature of his corpus did not shift back even a fraction as Cephus suddenly lowered his shoulder beneath the table and then pitched it onto its side. He began driving it across the dance floor, sweeping Davis, Allice, and the dealer across the ballroom until he had thrust them all the way to the entrance, where they found themselves pinned against the doors. Soldiers rushed to the doors from the hallway and began pushing from the other side as Cephus continued to squash the men under the table. Davis managed to free his arm and swing his pistol blindly around the far corner of the table. He was just about to level it at Cephus’s head when there was a blast from the far end of the room followed by a horrifying scream as Davis’s hand vaporized in a cloud of blood and bone. The broken pistol flew against the wall next to the door, and Cephus turned to see Phobetor at the far end of the dance floor returning his LeMat to its holster.

“Let’s go, Captain. Obviously they ain’t too keen on you keeping what’s yours.”

The doors began to thunder as the maul of troops pressed forward. The men beneath the table heaved with them in their thirst for air. Cephus, a dark furrow creasing his temple, remained planted with one hand on the table and one foot at its base. His neck oozed dark, venous blood that spattered down the leg of his black suit pants. He turned and gave one last shove before running across the room to where Phobetor stood on the threshold of the doorway to the veranda; he pulled the sawed-off carbine from inside the leg of his pants.

“Get down, godammit!”

Cephus dove to the parquet tiles and slid past Phobetor as he opened up a volley at the troops, who had pushed away the table and were now pouring into the room. Cut down like reeds, they screamed as Phobetor cleaned out the cylinder, dropped the carbine, and unloaded the two LeMats at the stream of soldiers caught in the bottleneck of the doorway. With the last two rounds, he managed to clip the kerosene lamp on the table at the side of the door. It released a huge, curling flame that was sucked through the back draft out into the hallway, where it blossomed, its sheer orange nebula climbing the atrium to the white molded ceiling. Chaos disseminated through the hall and down the stairs as the troops fell back to avoid the scorching flames that dripped from the ceiling and ran down the wall to the floor.

Stunned at the effectiveness of the decimation of the rallying troops, Cephus stood clutching the base of his neck as Phobetor ran past him out and across to the north end of the balcony, where he threw his leg over the rail and jumped off. Cephus chased behind him close enough to see Phobetor land on the copper roof of the kitchen and then jump down to the lawn below. Cephus lowered himself carefully down onto the kitchen roof, and by the time he had made his way down to the lawn, Phobetor had disappeared into the oak grove by the cemetery. Lucius stared into the darkness as the shouting from the house got louder. Suddenly, Phobetor returned on the gray horse. Galloping over from the northeast side the house, he pulled up and waved at Cephus, who ran over to meet him.

“If you want a ride out of here, I want half that money.”

“Are you fucking crazy? De money is mine. I am here to buy guns. We have a deal.”

“Listen, Captain — first off, I let you win. Ain’t no way in hell I was going all in with that rag hand. Second, they ain’t interested in doing business with you anyway. They’re after that goddam boat. One of them butlers heard ’em bitchin’ about it. I can git you to your boat for half that money, or I’m leavin’ fast. Now, what’s it gonna be?”

The kitchen door burst open, and men started shouting. Cephus could make out their shapes as they spread out on the lawn with their dim lanterns swinging in front of them. He looked back at Phobetor and then stuck out his giant hand. Phobetor shook it, and then he pulled him up and dug into the gray. They sprang from the north side of the house, riding fast behind the shrubs lining the drive. They watched as soldiers on the front porch spotted them and let loose a hopeless volley toward them as they appeared on the road between the oak trees at the end of the driveway.

Cephus turned to see about forty mounted soldiers break from the opposite end of the house and scramble down the drive in a frenzy of shouts, and a fresh burst of gunshots rattled out into the early morning. The silhouette of the two men on the gray horse seemed to crawl along the road against the cold, gray sky of the eastern horizon as the pack of troops closed the gap to about sixty yards. Cephus reached into his jacket and whipped out the flare pistol. He fired a round of flaming ocher into the road, and a thirty-foot spray of sparks shimmered back at the riders.

As they approached the scintillating floret of yellow flames stuck into the road, a high wail broke through the morning air, a scream that raced down from the sky as the road suddenly disintegrated in an eruption of red sand, flame, and visceral particulate. The base of the red cloud of dirt strained out from the road into a mushrooming black column sixty feet in the air and coiled into the pearl-gray sky, the reverberation of the detonation rippling down the road and blasting out all of the east windows of the house. Phobetor slowed up the horse to see what had happened.

“Where’s that comin’ from?”

Cephus pointed out to the boat, which sat three-quarters of a mile away swaying at the tail end of a long plume of smoke, its gunport near the helm wide open. The ominous figure of the Brooke rifle’s twelve-foot barrel peered out over the gunport. The clothes on the clothesline hung in ribbons of flame across the bridge. A smokestack coughed up thick black soot as the growl of the engine rumbled along the river.

Phobetor continued on at a lope until he looked back and saw the shape of a big, black walking horse with Bill Allice aboard, flying up from the ditch beside the road fifty yards behind them. A string of thirty mounted soldiers followed. Allice ground the flank of the walker with his boot and snapped off a shot from his pistol, which whistled to the left of Phobetor’s head. He smacked the leather on the gray, but the weight of two riders bogged her down, and the gap between them continued to narrow. Allice lined up a shot, sending a round into Cephus’s left shoulder. The blood splashed onto Phobetor’s face as Lucius bellowed. Keeping the gray at full tilt, Phobetor retrieved the Walker from its holster around the pommel, stood high up in his stirrups, and turned himself back toward Allice. Pulling up the iron sight beyond Cephus’s head, he thundered off a shot that creased Allice at the front of the neck near the base of his skull, clipping him so neatly it nearly decapitated him. He emptied the Walker with four more shots, walloping three more riders in the chest, and the pursuers slowed. Allice’s black walker, though, undaunted through it all, continued to gain ground as they approached the river. Its smooth gait carried Allice’s spastic corpse alongside the gray horse as a hail of eager bullets chased the riders all the way to the dock. The crew aboard Le Reve had cast off all but one line when the Brooke spat another molten flame, and a few seconds later, the Magnolia house that had stood for eighty-seven years on that plain of the river vanished in a black cloud as flames splintered its white columns out into the cane fields.

Three hundred yards up the riverbank from the Reve, two federal soldiers squatted next to a wooden box in the sawgrass and watched the two horses and three riders as all five of them soared off the end of the dock at full stretch in a cloud of smoke and sand. They watched as the black horse skipped across the deck and fell into the river on the far side of the boat. The gray horse landed and was caught by the saddle. The two men were dragged off it, and they walked to the bridge and disappeared down the hatch. The two soldiers looked at each other as soot and smoke pumped out of the stack on top of the Reve. Quickly, one man lifted the detonator box while the other wrapped the wire to the bolt and then twisted the wing nut, securing the wire’s position. Setting the box back in the grass, they looked downstream to the boat.

“Do it.”

They sank the plunger into the box, and a quarter of a second later, the end of the dock vanished as the mines sunk beneath its waterline detonated. The explosion blasted the wooden footings a hundred yards into the air as a white sheet of water consumed the black hull of the Reve, blasting it on its side. Pitched onto her starboard rail, Le Reve shuddered and listed back upright, smoke churning out of the portholes. Two seconds later, deep in her belly, the magazine exploded. The river boiled as a black wave of smoke and muddy water threw Le Reve onto her side once more, and the ship’s naked wooden hull burst into flames as the iron skin blistered and buckled. She listed for a few seconds and then succumbed to the current as her broken frame was clawed down into the muddy water and drowned once again.

The sound of the blast rolled out across the bayou as if the earth itself had severed a crack into its core. Across the river, the glass was blown out of the shop windows and was scattered in the dirt along Main Street. The only building to salvage any integrity was the courthouse. Shrapnel raked in a hail of metal and broken timbers, shredding the houses and shops. Along the riverbank, the bodies of the two soldiers in the sawgrass lay still. The detonator lay in pieces beside them. Their blue cotton uniforms were feathered with small tears where the shrapnel from the dock had pierced them, turning first red and then a softer purple as the blood leached from their wounds and settled into the fabric, where it coagulated as their bodies sank into the mud. The cane fields were silent and empty, saturated with the muddy water that had surged above the banks and meandered in trickling branches along the road toward the engulfed house, from which flames and black smoke rose into the gray sky.




Chapter 10: The Dead

Phobetor opened his eyes and looked directly into a set of large yellow teeth. The gray horse’s long red tongue reached between them to lap at his face. He lurched to get away but found himself pinned into the riverbank under the weight of a pile of corpses and wooden wreckage that had gathered in the sharp bend of the river a mile and a half downstream from the town of La Hache.

He freed his arms and pushed himself against the weight of the cold, floating body that held him against the bank. Scrambling, Phobetor clawed his way up onto the bank and rolled onto his back. The horse leaned over and licked him again. He looked at the battered gray, whose ears had been blown off and whose hair had been singed into a black mask across its face. Tossed from the deck in the initial explosion, both horse and saddle were waterlogged but still serviceable. Phobetor himself had been wriggling from a leeward porthole when Le Reve had been pitched away from the dock, launching him out deep into the current as the ship exploded.

He gasped and rolled his head, draining the water from his ears. The sound of rushing air surrounded him. He lay panting in the horse’s shadow, working through the fact that his eardrums were shattered. Phobetor looked over at the corpses in the river. Mangled together with the timbers of the ship and the dock, they had been sucked into an eddy swirling in the cutout at the bend of the river. Ten corpses bobbed together. He recognized none of them.

Phobetor reached up and grabbed the stirrup, climbed to his knees, and then rose, all his weight pulling against the swollen, creaking saddle. The river choked its banks where it turned west, and all along the east bank, bodies littered the mud-soaked sawgrass that rippled in waves as the breeze rolled up from the gulf. A black streak of smoke trailed across the afternoon sky from the plume towering above the tree line where the Magnolia house still smoldered. Phobetor reached down and felt the scope of the Whitworth where it still hung in its scabbard. He released the strap and pulled the rifle onto the saddle. It was undamaged. Propping the rifle across the saddle and looking through the scope, Phobetor quickly scanned upstream for movement.

The afternoon sun was fading quickly. No soldiers were visible along the river. He checked the breech and sheathed the gun. He felt his chest beneath his shirt and checked the LeMat that still hung from the leather thong around his neck. Phobetor mounted the gray horse, turned, and trotted back into the swamp. Riding through the growing shadows of the pines, deaf except for the sound of rushing air, Phobetor made his way north as night came down on the town of Pointe à la Hache. A hundred yards from his house and forge, he could see flames flickering between the pines and the smoke from his house climbing into the red sky.

Skirting east to Long Bayou, he stopped and dismounted, pulling out the Whitworth. Through the fading light, he could make out the shapes of soldiers as they moved away from the house and into the yard. The house was engulfed in flames, and as the men backed away, the frame shifted and the roof collapsed. Looking over the ruins, he could see a Thomas Sands kneeling in the courtyard before a row of soldiers. An officer stepped forward, a white sling looped over his shoulder. He put a pistol to Sands’ forehead and fired. Sands crumpled to the ground in a drifting cloud of blackpowder smoke. The officer holstered the gun, took off his hat, wiped the blood from his face with a handkerchief, tipped his hat back and pushed back his long blond hair. Phobetor could make out the solemn features of Fletcher Davis as he looked at Sands’ body. Davis pushed the dead man over with his boot before returning to the soldiers, who had reformed their column. In the twilight of the evening, with the red sun fading behind the troops, James Phobetor stood in the knee-deep black water of Long Bayou and watched through the scope as a hundred yards away Davis was helped onto his horse and then led the march at the head of the column back to La Hache.

Phobetor sheathed the rifle, hobbled the gray in the shallow water, and then stalked his way through the pine trees up behind the rubble of the house. The forge was burned down to the ground, and the anvil had been ripped from the water-hickory stump. He walked through the yard and stood in front of the dead man. Sands corpse was riddled with rifle fire, and a scroll of paper was stuffed in its mouth. Phobetor leaned over and extracted the document. He unrolled it, and even through the watermarks of blood and saliva, he recognized his own signature at the bottom of the deed to the property.

He stood for a minute in his world of rushing air, smoke, and burning embers and then began to weep into his hands. He sat down in the yard next to the body for half an hour, watching the burning walls of the cabin slough and fall into the pile of smoking rubble, before finally collecting himself and getting back up. Dragging Sands’s body across the yard in front of the forge, Phobetor grabbed a broken shovel from the weeds and tried to dig a shallow grave in the yard, but six inches down into the mud he was thwarted by layers of roots, gnarled and so thick they replaced the soil itself. The blade of the broken shovel would not divide them. He placed the corpse into the lowly pit and covered it with the slag from the furnace. Phobetor took the cane splitter from inside his coat and hacked out a crude relief of a cross in the water hickory stump at the head of the grave. He walked back through the darkness and unhobbled his horse. Moving five hundred yards along the bayside, he led her by the rein to a skiff inside a partially sunken cabin at the north end of his property. There was a long rope attached to the bow, and Phobetor hitched it to the pommel of the saddle. They dragged the skiff through the soft moss as he rode through the pine groves to a mile upstream from La Hache, where he hitched the horse to a bald cypress that stood a few yards from a stream that drained back west into the river.

Phobetor, Whitworth in hand, climbed into the skiff and slipped into the stream, making his way out into the slow, high tidal current, hardly having to paddle at all to land himself opposite the town of La Hache and a few hundred yards from the crater where the Magnolia dock had stood only a day ago. Working his way through a ditch along the field and then through a thicket north of the house, he was able to slink into the cemetery. Phobetor slipped over the wall and crept along the ground with the Whitworth slung over his back. He followed the graves until he reached the last one at the southwest corner.

Placing the rifle next to him against the fieldstone wall, he began to pull up the soft ground of a freshly dug grave with his bare hands. The warm, sandy soil became cooler as he dug deeper, until finally he hit the wooden casket. Phobetor excavated the perimeter of the lid at the head of the box. He stood up and pulled it open. The linen bag from the card game sat on top of a partially decayed corpse — where he had left it before fleeing with Cephus the night before. Phobetor pulled the bag off the corpse, whose hair had grown long but whose face had shrunken and melted off at the front of the skull. He set the bag by the rifle and leaned against the wall. His shirt was drenched in sweat, and blood and fragments of dirt and decaying flesh that had stuck to the bag when he’d pulled it from the grave also clung to it. He wiped his face on the sleeve of his jacket.

As he sat, half-deaf, half-drowned, alone in the graveyard, he heard screams floating softly from behind the ruins of the Magnolia house. Phobetor rose to his knees and peered above the wall. South of him, he could see the columns of the Magnolia house broken down to their bases and standing alone against the empty moon. Red embers flickered amid the rubble at the foundation, and he could smell the stench — like the waves of acrid smoke festering from a battleground where flesh has melted and burned. East of him, he could see the fires of the army camp, and he carefully traced the screaming to a glowing tent surrounded by soldiers.

Phobetor brought up the rifle. Through the scope, he studied the dirty faces of the troops who smoked and loitered near the entrance of the tent. The crowd of men suddenly parted, and a man supported on either side was helped out to a chair in front of the fire. They removed his hat, and Phobetor could see that it was Fletcher Davis, his face pale and sweaty. With his one good arm, he held up a bottle of whiskey and took a long drink. The troops brought out a small table from the tent and set it next to Davis. The surgeon unwound the bandages from around his left hand. Phobetor could see the army doctor washing the bone saw in a pan at the table.

Without warning, Phobetor suddenly became aware of someone standing behind him. Footsteps from the far side of the cemetery became louder. He held his bead on Davis through the scope as he reached into his jacket and felt for the LeMat revolver hanging from the thong around his neck. Slowly pulling the pistol to his side, Phobetor softly let down the hammer on the Whitworth as the sound of footsteps and heavy breathing came closer. Still holding the rifle, Phobetor spun around to one knee and looked straight into the black eyes of Bill Allice’s Tennessee Walker standing four feet away from him. Allice’s body hung down to the ground, its foot caught in the stirrup, dragging along behind the walker. The head was still attached by just a few of the strap muscles. Phobetor reached up and grabbed the rein, whispering softly to the animal. Its flanks were lathered in sweat, and the saddle was caked with blood. Phobetor put the LeMat away and moved to the side of the big walker. He shifted the skirt and then shoved the saddle forward. The walker heaved as Phobetor grabbed the leather billet, tightened the cinch, and then picked up the Whitworth rifle.




Chapter 11: The River

Fletcher Davis sat on a wooden chair next to the fire. His men surrounded him, watching the sweat roll off his pallid face. His swollen left hand was black and had two small macerated stumps where his thumb and index finger had once been. Davis lifted the bottle of whiskey and sucked down the last of it. He threw it down, shattering the bottle on the ground next to him. The army surgeon had just pulled the saw from the fire and was cooling it in a pan just outside the tent. He now wiped his hands on his apron and took the saw from the pan. Two soldiers strapped Davis’s arm to the edge of the table with a belt. The black hand dangled in front of the fire. Davis looked up at the surgeon, who reached over and pinned Davis’s arm to the table. Another soldier held the black hand by the remaining fingers, stretching out the wrist beyond the edge of the table. Davis wiped the sweat from his face with a handkerchief and stared into the fire.

“Get on with it, Doc.”

The surgeon moved quickly, sawing through the wrist in three strokes. Davis held his breath and clenched his teeth as the mangled hand came off. The surgeon immediately applied a tourniquet and bandaged Davis’s arm. Davis let out a cry and wiped away the tears streaming from the corners of his eyes. His shirt was saturated with sweat. The surgeon helped place his arm back in the sling, and Davis sat in the chair for a minute, catching his breath before standing and addressing the men.

“Thank you, Doctor. I will see to it that — ”

Davis’s face suddenly went white as a bullet ripped through his chest and the report of the rifle broke the silence of the night. He collapsed into the side of the tent as the soldiers dove for cover. The shot scattered their horses, but the soldiers fanned out and caught them. Mounting quickly, they lit out along the road toward the cemetery, from where they discerned the shot had been fired. Some three hundred yards ahead of them, the silhouette of a horse and rider tore across the cane field. The troops rode in parallel along the west side the plantation, but the horse was too swift and broke east along the road to the river. They cut back toward the river and gave chase for two miles until they finally closed to forty yards and shot the man from the horse. His body fell along the bank of the river, and the horse slowed to a stop. One of the men recognized the big black walker as Allice’s mount. They caught the animal and led it back to the river where the body had fallen. Two of the troopers dismounted and walked along the riverbank until they found the body and hauled it up to the road. The head had been severed at the base of the neck by several shots, so they looked for a name on the sleeve of the jacket. One of the men lit a match and held it close to the dead man’s arm. The embroidery read J. Phobetor.

The men laughed as one of the officers joked, “Gonna be hard to resurrect his career this time. He should’ve stuck to cards.”

Two and a half miles upriver, Phobetor, clad in Bill Allice’s uniform jacket, rowed his skiff across the black waters of the lower Mississippi, which shimmered beneath the waning April moon. He made his way back up the stream to the bald cypress where he had hitched the beleaguered gray horse. Putting the bag of coins into the saddlebag, he checked his weapons and remounted. The pair tracked the stream back to the river and cut north, following a trail buried in the sawgrass along the river just out of sight of the road.

After three hours of riding, Phobetor stopped and hobbled his horse in the reeds. He unsaddled and spread out his gear. Unfurling his soggy bedroll, he laid it down on the soft ground and, as the sun began to break, spread out the tobacco and papers next to him. He stretched out on the bedroll and drifted to sleep. He slept all morning, but he was in a delirium the whole time, shaking and sweating. His mind swept back to the cemetery where he had hacked off Allice’s head from his body and thrown it into the coffin. It was only now as he stood with looking down into the grave where Allice’s head rolled up next to the head of the other corpse. It was then that he recognized the corpse, and the decaying face of Thomas Sands. The skin of Sands face crumbled as it tried to speak, but could not find a voice. Each time the face began to speak, Phobetor could not understand the gutteral sounds. He asked Sands to repeat himself, and the face groaned louder, but Phobetor still could not comprehend him. Finally, Sands began to writhe, letting out a horrible gasping wail, and then suddenly the face and the grave disintegrated before him, and the sound faded, and there was nothing but darkness and the sound of crickets, which grew louder and louder until he suddenly awoke. His eardrums had sealed, and he could hear his horse’s heavy breathing.

The gray stared down at him with its blackened, earless face. Phobetor was covered in sweat, and he ripped off the jacket that he had taken from Allice’s corpse. He got to his feet, rolled a cigarette, and walked over to the river, where he stripped off his shirt and pants, put down the cigarrete, and slid down the grass bank into the shallows. Phobetor stood in the brown water and washed his face and chest. Dunking his head underwater, he scrubbed his hair. When he reemerged, he waded over and leaned against the grassy bank, where he lit a spindly cigarette. He smoked and sighed and watched the brown water as it rolled past him.

Gradually the sound of singing drifted up the river from the south. Then the singing stopped. He slid the leather thong attached to the LeMat back around his neck. Twenty yards off the bank, a flatboat barge came into sight, being pushed along by two enormous black men sliding poles along the side of the boat. Dead bodies were strung out in a row along the deck. At the back of the boat, a large black woman in a black dress with a black hood knelt beside one of the bodies. Her wild gray hair floated in the breeze as it projected from the hood. The old Cajun man who had sung on stage at Magnolia worked at the tiller. Phobetor could hear the woman weeping as she tended to the body of a large black man stripped of his clothes. He recognized him as Cephus. She washed his face, stood, and laid a white sheet across his body before going back and kneeling near his head. As they passed him, the woman looked up at Phobetor, her pale-blue eyes staring out from beneath her hood. She watched him as he stood quietly in the murky water up to his hips, smoking a cigarette with the pistol slung around his neck and hanging just above the water. His red, flayed scars were stark against his glistening, pale skin. Phobetor watched them as the flatboat continued upriver. The two giant men poling the boat up the river began to sing, their voices in a low pulsing bass as the barge moved upstream and disappeared around the bend.

Washin’ away, washin’ away,
When da flood comes, we’ll all be washin’ away.
Sun don’t shine through da bald sap trees ’um
Nobody knows what nobody sees ’um.
Da wind blows up beyond the black wall reef.
But they shoulders don’t work in a boilin’ grief.
Stand ’um, stand ’um when da clouds come down,
Dat water grows up from dat ground.
But they soul donta float,
They soul donta swim.
They gotta empty ole heart.
They won’t bleed ’um again.
Sun come up
Won’t feed ’um again.

Phobetor stood silently for a minute and finished his cigarette. He climbed the bank and walked naked back to where he had left the gray horse hobbled in the reeds. He put on his shirt, boots, and holster but tied the trousers and jacket to the saddle to dry. It was late spring and almost noon, and it was already hot along the river. He walked around to the gray horse, looked at her burned-out ears, and rubbed her charred face, whispering softly to her as he checked the Whitworth in the scabbard alongside the saddle. Rolling another cigarette from the moldy tobacco, he lit it. Phobetor jumped up into the saddle and gave the gray a kick. She snorted and swung her head between a clump of the sulfur-rinsed bulrushes before breaking into a trot as they disappeared along the trail buried in the sawgrass.



Text prepared by:



Source

Andrews, E. W. Without the Wind. Louisiana Anthology. 23 Nov. 2016. Web. 23 Nov. 2016. <http:// www2.latech. edu/ ~bmagee/ louisiana_ anthology/ texts/ wieman/ wieman--without_ the_wind.html>. © E. W. Andrews. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

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