Under a Dark Summer Sky

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Under a Dark Summer Sky Page 25

by Vanessa Lafaye


  On his way through the swaying carriage, a hand grabbed Henry’s arm. “What the hell took you so long?” demanded a sunburned blond bull of a man with USMC tattooed on one bicep and a bloody rag wrapped around the other. “We had no chance out there.” The man’s face was flushed with rage as much as sun. “Sitting ducks, that’s all we were. Sitting fucking ducks.” He nodded at a sodden woman with a bedraggled dog on her lap. “Beggin’ your pardon, ma’am.” He passed a hand over his face. The atmosphere in the carriage was a strange mixture of seething resentment and relief.

  Jimmy turned around in his seat. Water dripped from the brim of his cap. “It weren’t our fault,” he said. “The crew couldn’t have worked any harder. It’s them assholes up in J’ville, left it too late to order the train, ya see?” He also nodded to the woman. “Beg pardon, ma’am.”

  Henry noticed Clarence’s distinctive cadence in Jimmy’s voice. The boy was very taken with the train and the men who made it run. He seemed to be having the time of his life. Henry had forgotten what that felt like, the thrill of adventure. And Jimmy had been a tremendous asset in the effort to free the train from the cables. The operation was considerably speeded by his youthful strength and energy. In fact, Henry wondered if they might not still be stuck were it not for Jimmy. He had whooped and hollered as they hauled on the cables under the merciless, pounding rain. After an hour of this, he and Clarence and Moses were all panting and fatigued, while Jimmy looked as fresh as when they started.

  Henry said, “Take it easy, Marine. We doin’ the best we can.” He took in the man’s bandage, his eyes wide with barely controlled fear. One of his legs shook but he seemed not to notice. Henry had never seen a marine so scared. He knew them to be the toughest sons of bitches around. “What happened to y’all?”

  The marine’s massive head hung down. “The camp killed our men when it blew apart. We had nowhere to hide. It just cut us to pieces. We expect that, in a war. We trained for it. You can attack, take the other guy out. But not here. There was no way to fight back, nothin’ we could do. Just nothin’. It ain’t right.” He wiped angrily at his eyes. “It just ain’t right.”

  “No, it ain’t,” Henry said through clenched teeth. “Someone is gonna pay when this is all over.” All he could think of was Lemuel, Sonny, Jeb, Franklin, left out there to face the same thing. Why weren’t they evacuated sooner? At least the locals had shelter, but the men had none. I should never have left.

  He stared into the blackness outside, trying to get some sense of the train’s momentum. Rain clattered against the glass. It was impossible to tell, but it felt like they were moving forward with agonizing slowness. No doubt Ken was intent on avoiding another collision. It felt like Henry’s blood could boil from the frustration of it. Although he could do nothing to stop the slaughter—neither in war nor in the storm—his men looked to him for leadership, even after all this time. And he was not there. Were it in his power, he would have jumped down onto the tracks and pushed the train all the way to Heron Key.

  “You think anyone gives a shit about us?” asked the marine. The woman with the dog just gave a tired wave of her hand at his language. “Hell, I bet those bastards in Washington are having a party—”

  Henry was thrown to his knees by the train’s sudden deceleration. Jimmy helped him up and they looked out the windows. “I think,” said Henry, “we’ve arrived.”

  Ken entered the carriage. “This is as far as we go, can’t make it to the depot. Water’s too deep ahead, already higher than I ever seen, and getting deeper. Roberts, you need to get your people on board right now. We can’t hang around.”

  “Listen,” said the marine.

  Complete silence pounded Henry’s ears. Empty not only of train noise, but of any noise at all.

  “Hey, everyone!” the marine called to his comrades. “It’s over! Come on, we’ve got to help get the rest of the men on board.” And he moved toward the carriage door.

  Henry peered at the sky and quickly moved to bar his way. The marine was easily a head taller and fifty pounds heavier, but Henry held up his hands. “No, wait, y’all got to stay here.”

  “We’ll be fine. You could use our help. The storm’s passed.” The other veterans scuffed their boots, plainly torn between their duty and wanting to dry off in the train.

  “It’s not safe!” Henry said. “It’s not safe. If you want to save yourself and your men, you will not get off this train.”

  The locals in the carriage stayed put. The woman with the dog said, “He’s right. We’re under the eye. Only a fool would go out now.”

  “There’s worse to come,” said Henry. “Much worse, in only a few minutes. Please, wait here.” He jumped down into the black water.

  “Where you going then?” asked the marine.

  “To get my people.”

  The other man appraised Henry for a moment. “Then we’re coming too. You’re going to need help, if they’re anything like mine. As a famous marine once said, ‘Who wants to live forever?’ Come on, men, we’ve got work to do.”

  With a grin, he jumped down beside Henry and was instantly swallowed by the darkness.

  • • •

  Missy peered into the darkness ahead. The stars were almost gone, covered by rolling coils of cloud, and the wind was up again. She reckoned they still had about a mile to go, but it was slow. The ground beneath their bare feet was a treacherous maze of debris, and the water that covered the road hid chunks of wood, glass, and cement. Abe had already fallen into a deep hole and emerged with a gash across his arm. There was a lot of blood that showed shiny black against his dark skin, but he did not cry. Violet bound it with a strip torn from the hem of her dress and they carried on.

  It felt to Missy like they had been walking for hours, such was the concentration needed for each step forward, feeling with her toes for the safe place to put her feet. They were badly cut but she ignored the pain.

  The road itself had been washed away in several places, leaving fast torrents that they could only cross with their arms linked together. They were right in the middle of one such torrent, up to their waists in it, when Lionel cried out and went under. In an instant, he was gone, swept into the blackness by the white water. The others were nearly knocked off their feet but somehow managed to right themselves.

  They stood there for a few moments, clinging together and calling Lionel’s name. There was no answer.

  “Missy,” Violet asked in a trembling voice, “maybe we should turn back?”

  The wind blew harder. Only a small circle of stars remained visible in the sky. Ike held a sputtering Abe on his shoulders, clear of the rushing river that had torn the bandage from his arm. The others braced themselves as best they could against the force of the water, but it was clear that they were not able to hold their positions for much longer.

  They could not go back; there was no shelter there. They could not stay still. The only way was forward. Missy said a prayer for gentle, harmless old Lionel… He don’t deserve this. It was so utterly unfair. She didn’t deserve it either. All her life, she had done the right thing. Every time fate had slapped her in the face, she had just carried on without complaint. Lightning crackled in the clouds above, followed fast by the bass boom of thunder, like the storm was tuning up its instruments, ready to play its big final number.

  And that was when it happened. Something inside her just broke apart under the weight of fear and helplessness. She was suddenly and completely overwhelmed by a determination, hard and clear as glass, that they would make it to the station. Her grief and fear turned to anger at her powerlessness against the forces that hurt the people she cared about. She was tired of being blown around like a leaf, with no say in anything that mattered. Anger rose up her spine like a column of molten steel. Her back straightened. She was angry at the storm, for destroying her home and wreaking havoc on her town. She was angry at the small-mi
nded people who accused Henry and forced him to flee, and those who had turned them out into the storm. She had failed to stop any of it. She had failed to stop Henry leaving. She had failed to protect Nathan.

  By God, I will not fail at this.

  “We cain’t go back!” she yelled above the rush of the water and wind. “We got to keep going! Ain’t far now!”

  “You heard Missy!” said Abe. “Ain’t far now!”

  With an enormous effort of will, Missy braced her feet and pushed forward against the weight of water, pulling on Violet’s arm to bring her along. And so they began to move. Far above them, the stars disappeared.

  • • •

  At the remains of the train station, the veterans were hunkered down miserably inside the boxcars. The air was sour with their breath, from the exertion of getting everyone inside, and the fumes from their filthy, soaking clothes. Rain slanted down so heavily outside that it obscured what was left of the station. They were surrounded by a wall of water reaching up to the sky. Trent felt many pairs of hostile eyes focused on him.

  “This is your fault,” said Tec. “You’ve known this storm was coming for days. You coulda got us out before. Two-Step was right. There ain’t no train comin’. We’re stuck here.”

  Trent took a moment to choose his words. The atmosphere was a combustible mixture of terror and anger, which could ignite at any moment. Although the accusation stung, he could see Tec’s point. It would serve no purpose to defend himself, would probably just inflame them further. And it made no difference to their situation for them to understand who was really responsible. Tec was right—they should have been evacuated sooner, and now they were stuck.

  Lemuel said, “Ain’t no good pointing fingers, Tec.” He removed the Bible from inside his shirt. Water dripped from the pages but the binding still held. “As the good book says—”

  “Shut up, Lemuel,” said Sick Bay. “Tec’s right. Since it looks like we’re all gonna die here, I vote that you go first, Trent. You are the leader, as you keep telling us.” When sober, Sick Bay’s disposition was sunny, even placid, but when drunk, he became bad-tempered and downright aggressive. He had been drinking since early that afternoon.

  Trent shifted away from the group into the corner of the boxcar. There was no mistaking Tec’s intent. The faces of the others told the same story. He could see it in their eyes: for all those times he had imposed his will on them, driving them to work harder under the awful conditions of the camp. This was probably their one and only chance for payback. And in the chaos of the storm, no one would ever know.

  “Fellas, hang on a minute,” he said, hands up ready either to placate or punch them. “You have every right to be angry. But I’m angry too. I’ve been trying—”

  Tec’s fist sent him to the floor of the boxcar. There, the heavy boots found him. The first kick went to his kidneys, the second to his stomach. He curled into a ball, hands over his face. The next kick would be to his head. What bothered him most was not the pain, as he had felt much worse, nor even the unfairness of it all. No, what bothered him most was that, for all the times he had come close to death, all the times in France when he expected to be taken, it was always in the service of some purpose, with even some dignity. Not curled up on the floor of a stinking boxcar, getting stomped to death like a cockroach by his own men.

  He looked up to see Sick Bay’s boot raised, ready to smash down on his head. In a flash, Trent realized he had only one chance, while the man’s balance was off. He flung himself at Sick Bay’s leg and bit down as hard as he could. The skin tasted salty, the blood metallic in his mouth. Sick Bay staggered with a howl to fall on his back with Trent straight on top of him, hands around his throat. It felt good—the pulse of the artery under his fingers, the springy firmness of the windpipe between his palms. Arms pulled at him but he retained his grip. Months and months of frustration congealed in his hands and he squeezed harder. Sick Bay’s face turned a satisfying shade of brownish red, like a bruised apple.

  “Fellas, listen!” Sonny cried. “Listen!”

  While they had been fighting, the rain had stopped, like someone had turned off a faucet. The wind had ceased.

  The men who had been shouting encouragement fell silent. Intent on strangling Sick Bay, Trent had not noticed the lack of noise from outside. He had no idea how long it had been since the storm finished. It felt like they had been cooped up in the boxcar for hours already. He released his hold on Sick Bay.

  “Hey,” said Sick Bay rather hoarsely, hand to his throat, “you can see the stars!”

  “Let’s go, fellas!” said Tec and jumped down onto the tracks. “It’s over!”

  The men stumbled out into the still night air, the absence of the train no longer a concern, now the storm was over. They were jubilant, smiling, arms around each other’s shoulders. They had survived the worst night of their lives.

  Tec even helped Trent up. “No hard feelings, eh?”

  Trent just shook his head in wonderment while his heartbeat returned to normal. But then the chattering mass of men shut up and parted to reveal a group of colored people approaching from the direction of the town. A woman was at the front in a torn and filthy uniform that might have once been white.

  “Can we help you?” Trent asked.

  “My name’s Missy Douglas,” she said, “and we need some place to stay.”

  He recognized the name. Roberts’s men had teased him about a girl called Missy. “Why aren’t you at the store?”

  “No room at the store,” she said without emotion, “for people…people like us.”

  He was struck by the simplicity of her words. If he had been denied shelter by a bunch of niggers, he would have taken a terrible revenge on the next one he saw. She looked exhausted to the point of collapse, but there was fire in her eyes. There was a little boy holding closed a big gash in his arm. A man with wild eyes dragged his right leg like it was broken. All were soaked through.

  “Come, sit down,” he said to her and helped her into the boxcar doorway. The others followed. The veterans stood around curiously, unsure what to make of the newcomers. Trent turned away to deal with them but she caught his sleeve.

  With great urgency, she said, “Mister, you got to get them back inside. It ain’t over. This just the eye.”

  “What do you mean?” he asked. The men had poured onto the tracks to wait for the train, scattered for maybe five hundred yards.

  “There’s worse coming—it right behind us. You got to get them inside, and fast.”

  Trent set off at a run after the men. There was little hope of persuading them to return to the smelly confines of the boxcar while the sky was clear, but he had to try. Might as well tell ketchup to get back in the bottle.

  Missy turned to find a big man with a lazy eye smiling at her. “Missy,” he said, “my name’s Sonny. I one of Henry’s boys. He talk about you all the time.”

  “Yeah, but he didn’t say how pretty you was,” said a little guy who looked about twelve except for the weary worldliness in his eyes.

  “You must be Jeb,” she said. “Henry talk about you all the time too.” Just saying his name caused a pain in her chest. More than anything in the world at that moment, she wanted to feel his arms around her and hear him say it was going to be all right. But he was somewhere else, far away and safe, somewhere the wind didn’t tear your house to pieces, somewhere bodies didn’t float down flooded streets.

  “I’m Franklin,” said a man with a crumpled hole where his eye should be. He saw her glance at the wound and covered it with his hand. “Sorry, ma’am, I lost my patch in the storm.”

  “Franklin?” called a small voice from the back of the boxcar. “That you?” Violet shuffled forward. Her dress was torn and stained, her hair a wild mess from the wind and water. One eye was swollen shut where a stone had flown into her face.

  Franklin hugged her
off her feet. “Violet!”

  She slumped into his arms.

  “Look at you,” he said. “You got one eye, like me now. Don’t matter—we got two good ones between us. That all a person needs.” He turned to Abe, who lurked behind his mother’s legs. “And who is this young man?”

  “My name’s Abe,” he said. “I hurt my arm.” The gash was long and deep and pink as a shark bite.

  “Well,” said Franklin, “let’s see about that. I ain’t no doctor, but I seen plenty of soldiers hurt worse than this.” He tore his shirt into strips to bind the wound.

  “You was a solider?” Abe asked, eyes wide.

  “Yup,” said Franklin. “We all was. Still are, come to that. There.” He pulled the bandage tight. “Now you a soldier too.”

  A whistle sounded, high and clear in the quiet air.

  Missy looked up to see the bald man’s head appear in the doorway, eyes lit with excitement. “It’s here! The train’s here!” he exclaimed. “Just like I said it would be. Come on, fellas, all aboard!”

  “We comin’, Mr. Watts,” said Jeb.

  Missy clasped his shoulder. “Please don’t go. It ain’t safe out there. The storm, it comin’ back, and—”

  Lemuel patted her with a big paw. “Don’t you worry, ma’am. We be halfway to Miami by then.”

  “Franklin,” Violet said, “listen to Missy. Please don’t go. It ain’t safe. Stay here, with us.” She put an arm around Abe’s narrow shoulders.

  “With you?” Inside the question was another question. He took a tentative step forward. “Do you mean…?”

  Violet took something from her pocket. A sandpiper, carved from driftwood. “Look. I keep this with me all the time. It make me feel safe. You…make me feel safe.”

  Jeb cuffed Franklin on the shoulder. “Yeah, best you stay here. Don’t want you crampin’ my style when we get to Miami.” And then, with a wink, he was gone, along with Sonny and Lemuel.

 

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