Long Upon the Land

Home > Other > Long Upon the Land > Page 17
Long Upon the Land Page 17

by Margaret Maron


  Grateful to escape so lightly, Cal disappeared inside.

  “Alibis for what?” Robert’s voice was more belligerent this time.

  “Cal heard us talking about Daddy and what the Clarion’s been printing about Dwight not questioning him hard enough,” I said, trying to pour oil on their troubled waters.

  Dwight was more forthright. “Saturday, when I asked if any of y’all recognized Vick Earp, nobody said anything. We could’ve started questioning people and trying to find witnesses twenty-four hours earlier if you or Mr. Kezzie had said something right then, Haywood.”

  Haywood humphed and stared out into the rain, silent for once.

  “Vick Earp’s brother—Tyler Earp? He says y’all used to fight a lot when they lived out here and that there was bad blood between the Earps and the Knotts. I asked Mr. Kezzie about it and he admitted there had been run-ins between him and Joby Earp and that you boys used to get into it, too.”

  “Well, yeah,” said Robert. “No secret about that.” He gave Haywood a puzzled look. “Why didn’t you speak up?”

  “Won’t my place,” he said with a mulish look on his face. “Daddy didn’t say nothing, so I didn’t either.”

  “See, Dwight, the Earps always acted like there was something crooked about the way Daddy got their land,” Robert said. “I was real little but I remember Mr. Sammy. He used to make whiskey for Daddy, back when Daddy was still into it real big. Before Mama Sue made him quit.” He grinned. “Or Mama Sue thought he’d quit. Remember, Dwight?”

  That got an answering grin from my husband. “Don’t remember Sammy Earp or Joby either, but I do remember cutting firewood with you boys till Miss Sue caught on that we weren’t doing it for people to heat their houses with.”

  “Well, Mr. Sammy was right good-natured but he’d start drinking on a Friday night and stay drunk till Monday. He used to run a tab at the store for months at a time, then he’d cut off a piece of his land to settle up till there were just a little scrap of it left for Joby when he died. Joby was mean as a snake, though. He and Miss Earla took in Vick and Tyler but that was her, not him. Did you know he shot at Daddy one time and almost hit Mama Sue?”

  “Huh?” said Haywood. “When did that happen?”

  I was equally surprised. “You knew about that? How come I never did?”

  He gave a sheepish smile. “I guess it was like Cal just now. I heard some men at the store talking about how they had to pull Daddy offen Joby before he killed him. I spoke out of turn, just like Cal did and Daddy said I’d get a licking if I talked about it again, especially in front of Mama Sue. That was right around the time they got married and he didn’t want her to know, so I never did. It happened so long ago, I pretty much forgot about it till Vick went and got hisself killed.”

  “So when’s the last time you saw him?” Dwight asked.

  “Last fall maybe. October or November. Remember, Haywood? We was hunting rabbits out where Black Gum Branch runs into Possum Creek and Vick was there. Just setting on the tailgate of his truck looking out toward the creek and— Wait a minute! Won’t that where Daddy found him?”

  Dwight nodded.

  “Haywood asked him what he was doing there and he said it was none of our damn business and you said you’d make it our business, right, Haywood? For a minute, I thought he was gonna take us both on, but he just let loose with more cussing, got in his truck, and drove away.”

  “Spit at us first, though, and give us the finger,” said Haywood. “He was always touchy as a hornet and after they moved off to town, it was tail up, stinger out every time he saw us.”

  “Anyhow,” said Robert, “if you asked Daddy, you might as well ask us. Doris can tell you I was with her all that weekend and I reckon Bel can say the same for Haywood.”

  Haywood gave a short nod and stood up. “Rain’s slacked off enough that I reckon we won’t wash away if one of y’all’ll run us over to our trucks.”

  Normally, he’s the last one to mention leaving.

  We all stood, but when Dwight pulled out his keys, I plucked them from his hand. “I’ll take them,” I said. “Why don’t you go talk to Cal?”

  “We’ll come back tomorrow to get the boat,” Robert told him.

  I kicked off my sandals and splashed barefoot across the yard to Dwight’s truck where I maneuvered them so that Haywood wound up sitting between us on the bench seat. When I got to the end of the Long Pond where their pickups were, Robert headed straight to his, gave a wave of his hand, and headed down a lane to his house. Before Haywood could follow, I put a hand on his arm.

  “What?” he said.

  “When did you last see Vick Earp?” I asked.

  “Whatcha talkin’ about, Deb’rah?” he blustered. “You heard Robert.”

  “Yeah, I heard Robert. I didn’t hear you.”

  “And you think that makes me a killer? Thank you very much, little sister.” And with that, he levered his bulk out into the rain, pulled his porkpie hat down firmly on his big square head, and stomped off to his truck.

  Did I really think Haywood could kill? No.

  Did I think he could do something stupid that would give people—people being Dwight—the wrong idea?

  Oh yes.

  CHAPTER

  16

  Children, obey your parents.

  — Ephesians 6:1

  When I got home, the dishwasher was running, the counters were tidy, and Dwight and Cal were playing cribbage at the kitchen table. Cal was half a street ahead and they were both talking trash to each other, which meant that everything was back to normal between them.

  I poured myself a cup of coffee, kibitzed for a while, then took a long soaking bath. Cal was watching a baseball game and Dwight was working on his computer when I came out, so I checked my email. Two inspirational forwards from Doris, a bawdy joke from Bel, and a reminder from Seth’s wife about a political lunch next week. Minnie’s my campaign manager and keeps tabs on whether or not I’m holding up my end. Karen had sent pictures to all of us of Adam and their two sons out in California. She tries to keep the family links strong and would love to have the boys spend some real time here on the farm. Several of us have invited them to come for extended visits but they keep finding perfectly valid reasons why they just can’t be away for more than a weekend. Karen regrets that they’ll never feel connected to their Colleton County roots but realistically, I know their roots were never here. The farm she grew up on was sold last fall when her mother died and Adam will probably sell his share of the family holdings after Daddy’s gone.

  “That’s fine with me,” Daddy says. “I ain’t gonna try to run things from the grave. His part’ll be one of the outlying farms near town. None of y’all need to worry about having a housing development plunked down at your back door, ’lessen that’s what you want.”

  Adam is Zach’s twin and the family’s success story if you count money as success. He started a company that develops computer programs and esoteric applications for the banking industry. Don’t ask me what, though. My brain went numb the time he tried to explain it. As a child, he hated the heat and dirt of farming and his one ambition was to work with computers in an air-conditioned office. Despite his BMW, his big house, and his swimming pool, Haywood, Robert, and Andrew feel a little bit sorry for him. They and their wives have visited him out there and they all came home saying it was real nice “but you couldn’t pay me to live out there. Too many people and not enough trees.”

  I looked long and hard at the pictures of Adam’s sons. Almost strangers and yet so familiar. One of them had a smile like Zach’s son, Lee, and his eyebrows could have been lifted from Haywood’s Stevie. Eyes, chins, noses—they were our eyes, chins, and noses. I sighed and printed out the pictures for Daddy.

  Rain continued through the night and even though cooler air was predicted, the front seemed to have stalled over us. Next morning found Pennsylvania enjoying cool dry air while we were subjected to more heat and still more humidity. I could almo
st feel mildew poised to attack the white posts and railings of the porch when we walked out to the garden through thick muggy air.

  Cal immediately ran over to read the rain gauge. “Four and a quarter inches,” he reported.

  A few stalks of corn had blown over and I held them straight while Dwight pulled wet dirt back over the roots with his boot and tamped it down.

  When we got to the pond to check on Cal’s fish, the rowboat was almost swamped and would need bailing before anyone could use it again. The two fish he’d caught were still swimming around in the bucket, but they were so much smaller than he’d remembered that he decided to let them grow a little longer and upended the bucket back into the water.

  Dwight checked his watch. “Time to get moving, buddy.”

  “Okay,” Cal said, casting a wistful eye at the boat.

  I followed them back to the house, watched them leave, and then got dressed for court, wishing all the while that Dwight and I could forget about work and spend the day out on the pond fishing with Cal.

  The morning session brought a couple of cases of domestic violence. Both women had fresh bruises and cuts and were there to seek restraining orders against the men, but while the white woman came across as timorous and defeated, her black counterpoint was boiling mad.

  “I been subjugated, dominated, intimidated, and humiliated but if he ever raises his hand to me again, he’s gonna be castrated. I put up with his mess when he was drinking, but a dry drunk that’s this flat-out mean? No, ma’am, I’m not taking it any longer.”

  At the afternoon break, I found Dwight seated at the desk in my office. “Any chance you’ll finish early this afternoon?” he asked.

  “I have an emancipation petition and a couple of divorces,” I said. “Why?”

  “I need to get Vick Earp’s truck back to his widow and since we live out that way, I thought I could drive his truck, you could drive mine and then ride in with me tomorrow.”

  “Okay,” I said.

  He stood up to go, then paused and very deliberately closed my office door. “Remember the first time I came up here to your office after you said you’d marry me?”

  I smiled. Did I remember? Oh yes.

  I went into his arms and this kiss was just as wonderful as that one. He took his time, slow and thorough, and I felt myself melting into the smell of him, the taste of him. “We’ve got to stop meeting like this less often,” I murmured as his hand caressed my body and sent my pulse racing.

  He laughed and kissed me again. “Feel free to text me any time.”

  Back in the courtroom, I took care of all the routine proceedings first, mostly a matter of approving arrangements worked out by the parties involved, signing orders, and setting new court dates for continuances.

  Then came the juvenile petition for emancipation of one Eva Jones, age fifteen, white, bright, and much taken with her own importance. She stated that she had been forced to live with her father and stepmother and she wanted to be emancipated so that she could live where she wanted.

  The father was there in court to oppose her petition.

  I let Miss Jones speak first.

  “My mom’s remarried to a drug addict and she kicked me out of the house because she’s jealous of me. Thinks I flirt with her loser husband. She’s an alcoholic and we fight all the time, but my stepmother hates me, too, and she makes me share a room with her ten-year-old daughter. I get good grades in school and I work twenty hours a week so I can pretty much support myself until I finish high school.”

  And just where did she plan to live until then?

  “My boyfriend’s mom says I can live with them,” she said cheerfully, pointing to the woman who sat on the front row behind her next to a young man with those Justin Bieber eyes that young girls seem to find so sexy. “He’s totally responsible, too. He’s got his GED, he works full-time, and he’s never missed a single support payment.”

  “Support payment?” I asked.

  “Yeah, he had a baby with his ex-girlfriend.”

  “Are you having sex with him?”

  “We’re going to get married as soon as I’m emancipated, but I’m using birth control. No babies for me till I graduate from college.”

  I hardly knew where to begin. “You’re a minor, Miss Jones. Do you realize that he could be arrested for statutory rape?”

  Behind her that young man’s eyes widened with apprehension.

  “Rape?” She was indignant. “How is it rape if I want it, too? I told you. We’re going to get married.”

  I looked at her lawyer, not the brightest star in our district’s judicial sky. “Mr. Whitbread, why is she here in my court taking up our time?”

  “I’ve been hired to advise her, Your Honor, and she’s a very determined young lady.”

  “Who hired you?”

  “Miss Jones.”

  I turned back to the petitioner. “Where did you get the money to hire an attorney, Miss Jones?”

  “My boyfriend’s mother lent it to me. I’m going to pay her back when I get my inheritance.”

  “Inheritance?”

  “Yes, ma’am. My grandfather left me fifteen thousand dollars to go to college but I can’t get it till then.” She paused and looked at me speculatively. “Or if I’m emancipated, maybe I could get it right away?”

  I spent the next ten minutes trying to explain the law to Miss Jones.

  “You can’t get emancipated just because you don’t want to obey your parents or share a bedroom with your stepsister or because you want to have sex with someone who’s obligated to support another woman’s child until that child is eighteen. As for your inheritance, depending on your grandfather’s will, you may not be able to spend that fifteen thousand on anything except college.”

  “That’s not fair!” she exclaimed.

  “When you’re fifteen, life seldom is,” I said bluntly. “I suggest that you make peace with your father and stepmother, finish high school, go to college, and find someone to marry who hasn’t already made half his life choices by fathering a child while he’s still living at home with his mother. Your petition for emancipation is denied.”

  Furious, the girl whirled away from her seat and stomped out of the courtroom, followed by Sexy Eyes and his mother.

  “Thank you, Your Honor,” said her father.

  “Good luck,” I told him and turned to the two divorces.

  The first was simple and uncontested. All the formalities had been taken care of and both parties had signed all the necessary forms. All they needed was my signature.

  The second had a property issue they hadn’t yet settled. It had been to mediation and was now back to me. The Bumgardners were mid-forties and childless. He was an accountant, she taught high school math. They’d already had their ED hearing in which their marital possessions had been, in layman’s terms, equitably divided between them. That had been accomplished without major arguments or delays. Now it was just a matter of who would get custody of their dog, a two-year-old King Charles spaniel named Bertie.

  They had not brought Bertie to court, but they had brought pictures and for the record, yes, he was adorable. He had been bought with their joint credit card and the credit card bill paid for from their joint bank account. I did not sense any anger between the two humans, just a strong attachment to the animal. Neither disputed the other’s affection for the dog or claimed that it liked one of them better than the other, but Mrs. Bumgardner argued that she was the one who had found him at a reputable kennel, that she walked him most of the time, and, since she was retaining the Colleton County house with its large yard, that it would be less traumatic for Bertie to live with her rather than in her ex-husband’s Raleigh apartment.

  Mr. Bumgardner argued that he was the one who had driven to Tennessee to fetch the dog from the kennel and that the only reason she walked him more was because her teaching schedule gave her the summer off and allowed her to get home earlier every afternoon during the school year. “I take him out ever
y morning and I give him his evening walk if she hasn’t already done it. Bertie’s an indoor dog, Your Honor. We’ve never let him out in the yard alone. Besides, my apartment’s next to a park with a fenced-in dog area if he wants to run off the leash. And yes, she got the house, but she’s been talking about moving to Virginia and that will be just as traumatic for him.”

  “Is this true?” I asked.

  “I haven’t made up my mind, Your Honor,” she said. “But Virginia pays its teachers a lot better than North Carolina does. Better than South Carolina and Georgia, too, for that matter.”

  That made me wince. Our state used to lead the area in education. Now we’re ranked forty-eighth in the nation for per capita public school spending. Virginia beats us by miles. And it isn’t just education but the court system as well. We’re understaffed and underfunded and we took more deep cuts this past year.

  “I can sympathize, Mrs. Bumgardner,” I said now, “but if I decide on joint custody, how would you get Bertie back here when it’s Mr. Bumgardner’s turn?”

  In the end, I gave them joint custody. Every Friday afternoon, whoever had Bertie would take him to a shopping mall in Garner, halfway between their two abodes, to make the exchange at six o’clock. “If you want to agree on a different time, fine, but repeated failure to get there within the agreed-upon hour will be grounds for the other to come back to court. If one of you moves out of the area, we can revisit the schedule. Maybe extend the time to two or three months.”

  After a few months of this, one of them might cave and buy another dog, but I didn’t count on it.

  In dividing up possessions in a divorce, there are various categories. Among them are items that both agree are marital and belong to both of them, items that clearly belong to one or the other exclusively, items of disputed ownership, items of value, items of no value, and items that neither spouse wants. I once handled a divorce in which both spouses listed their special needs child in that last category.

 

‹ Prev