The World Ends In Hickory Hollow (8 page)

Read The World Ends In Hickory Hollow Online

Authors: Ardath Mayhar

Tags: #Science Fiction/Fantasy, #armageddon

"If they're there now, and I'd say they are, being sensible people, they're going to be antsy. Go easy. Blow the horn twice before you get to the house. They know the Plymouth's horn. When you get up to their back fence, stop and get out, all of you, so they can see you're not hiding anything. They shoot pretty quick, and I don't blame them."

She stopped for a moment, resting and thinking. Then she said, "About a mile down the road from their turnoff is a cattle guard between two old chinquapin trees. You can't see the house from the road, for the
Jessups
built their house way down as close to the river as they could find high ground. Just follow their road. It's on a dump through the low places, so it doesn't get under water when the river rises. It may be that just Horace and Carrie will be there, or their kids may have come home, after the blowup. If they could. Two girls in college and a son in the insurance business in Shreveport.

"Next one is a big deal–brick pillars with a wrought-iron archway over the top.
Greenwillow
, they call the place. I doubt the Greens will be there, though. It was just their vacation home, even if it is the size of a small hotel. Anyway, I heard that they were spending the winter in Europe. If that's so, I doubt they'll ever get back, if they're still alive at all.

"Now you're almost to the end of the road. The
oiltop
ends at the edge of the Greens' property – they're the only reason the thing ever got oiled at all, actually. From there it's a muddy lane that ends in
Sim
Jackman's
woods.
Sim's
there, I'll warrant. It's possible he doesn't even know anything at all has happened. He shuts himself in down there and drinks steadily through until the weather clears in the spring. He makes moonshine, too, but his is strictly for drinking.

"And that's all. I'm tired, Lucinda. Help me to bed, please. " She closed her eyes, the purple lump an ugly splotch on her pale face.

When she was settled for the night, we sat about the fire. Zack, Mom Allie,
Suzi
, and I. We thought of tomorrow. I don't know about their feelings, but mine were filled with dread and a sick memory of Jess Sweetbrier's crushed head.

CHAPTER SEVEN

It was now the end of November. In the confusion, we had lost track of days, but as nearly as we could reckon, it was the thirtieth when we set out on our mission of rescue. It was one of those holly-berry days of dazzling sunlight and hard frost. We left the children spinning round and round in the yard, their bright jackets blurs of color. It was something cheerful to take with us on our journey.

And it was a journey, now. The violent weather of the fall had sent trees down across the road more than once, not to mention washouts and soft spots. Zack, ever practical, had brought his chain saw along, which sent us on fairly quickly. Mrs.
Yunt's
house looked as empty as it was as we crept by. Though we had secured things as well as we could, on the off chance of her return, it already looked desolate. And Grandpa
Harkrider's
place was a mess. One of his big old elms had split at its fork and crushed his front porch.

"It's funny how quickly things go when there aren't any people around who care for them," I murmured, and Zack reached over and squeezed my hand, which almost sent us sliding quietly into the ditch.

We were alone. The consensus had been that we might have a full load of passengers when we returned. We, being a pretty tough combination, were the logical ones to go. We were loaded for bear, too. In addition to my pistol, we had the .410 and my dad's deer rifle, a very old Springfield 30.06. We didn't intend to fall victim to the
Ungers
.

It was a relief to reach the hard-surfaced farm to market road . Even that, however, was littered with leaves and small branches and anonymous debris. Once, indeed, we had to edge around someone's shed roof, which had been blown over a fence and halfway across the pavement. The rest of the shed leaned awkwardly in the cow lot over the fence, its walls awry.

It was a long way around by the road, just as Lantana had said. Nearer twenty than the fifteen miles she had estimated. We reached the
oiltop
eventually, however, and turned off. We could see in the distance the house where we had found the dead calves. To our relief, there were no dead cows visible near the road, which made us think that our services had come in time for most of the herd.

The
Londowns
' house was nearer the road, readily visible, and its column of smoke rose plumb-straight into the cold, still air. I wished them luck, as we passed, feeling that such determined people were quite capable of looking after themselves. The next turnoff was Nellie's. The house was hidden behind thick privet hedges, but we could see the top of its chimney over the bushes. I watched the dash, now, and when we neared a mile, I began to look for the big hickory that marked the
Fanchers
' turnoff. It was impossible to miss. The thing must have been eight feet through at the base.

We bumped gently down the cross-laid pole drive. Obviously, nobody had driven out of it in a vehicle in weeks. Through a belt of young pines, down a slope, around an arm of the wood that thrust itself into the cleared ground, we followed the drive.

Then we saw the fence, and we stopped and honked twice. We waited for a minute, then we got out of the Plymouth and walked toward the gate, very slowly.

I could feel eyes on me. Nobody was in sight, but there was the feel of vigilance all around us, and we stopped at the gate and waited. In a bit, there was a stir of motion in the garden beyond the fence. A dark face peered from behind a row of plum trees, then a tall black man stepped forward and spoke.

"Where the Sweetbriers?" he asked in a slow, still voice. "That's their car, where are they?"

Zack moved very cautiously "Nellie is at our house," he said. "Jess is–dead. Are you Bill?"

"Dead? Really dead?" The man's eyes widened, and his color was suddenly grayish. "How?"

"The
Ungers
," Zack answered simply. "They all but killed Nellie, too. If we hadn't come down the river, looking for neighbors, she'd have died that night, I think, from the cold and loss of blood."

"Come in the house,"
Fancher
whispered, opening the gate. "We thought they were just after us because we're black. You mean they killed Jess Sweetbrier, a sweet old man like him?"

"Beat him to death," I said, as I entered the kitchen of the big gray house. I found myself facing a tail young woman who held a shotgun pointed at my midriff.

"They're all right, Annie," her husband called from behind us. She slowly lowered the gun barrel, but her expression was watchful. I could see no trace of the many children that Nellie had mentioned, but I felt that the older of them were probably in strategic locations, most likely with weapons. These people had learned caution in a tough school.

It took a while to fill them in on the state of things along the river. They had their few head of cattle penned between their barn and the road, fearing panthers more than any unlikely wanderer, so they had no need to go down to the water except in summer. No well-worn trail marked a way up to their house from the wild woods along the river. So it was that the
Ungers
had come at them along the road, to which they had likely made their way from the Sweetbriers'. It had never occurred to the
Fanchers
that the river was the direction from which they made their destructive way.

That made us uneasy.. If the road had led them to the
Fanchers
, it would lead them to the
Jessups
, possibly the Greens, and inevitably to
Sim
Jackman
. Though the
Fanchers
had been armed and on guard, it was unlikely that the others might be.

"I'm
goin
' with you," Bill told us, when we rose to pursue our investigations. "These folks along here have been right with us. They stood by us when we talked to the Law about Claude Barron's threats and stunts. They came by now and again to see how we were. We're not real close, 'cause say what you will, we're black and they're white, but we've been good neighbors, just the same. If they're in trouble, I'm
goin
' to be there to help '
em
out."

Annie nodded, her smoky eyes still and reserved. "We're okay, the kids and I. We all know what we're doing. You just be careful, Old Son. " The note in her voice said many things that her closed face hid..

As we made our way from the garden, Bill raised his hand. A thin boy appeared from behind a shed, leaned his shotgun against the building, and approached us.

"Tony, you take care of your mom and the young ones, you hear?" his father told him. The boy, not more than eleven, if that, was serious but not at all nervous. He nodded, quietly, then gave me a shy grin as he turned to resume whatever chore his father had interrupted.

The mile to the
Jessups
' cattle guard went quickly, for along this stretch the road lay between cleared fields, and no timber was down. The chinquapin trees curved gracefully over the drive, backed by thickets of huckleberry and haw, and we went down the road looking at every turn to see the house appear, but it was a good quarter of a mile before that happened.

It was a sprawling structure of fieldstone that rose from its ridge with the authority of something that belonged just there and
noplace
else. I knew without asking that the
Jessups
had built it themselves ... probably grubbing the stone out of their own high-ground fields. There was smoke rising from the chimney.

The last part of the drive lay over an embankment. It was obvious that the wet fall had put the river up well into the low ground that it spanned, for there were wet patches still shining with water, and swirled debris patterned the slope of the ridge.

As we came into the open, we honked the horn, feeling that in this new world it was the fair–and safe–thing to do. Warning strangers of your approach was getting to be an ingrained habit. It was just as well that we did. A shot was fired across our bows as we crawled up the slope onto the embankment.

We stopped promptly and opened the doors. Zack and Bill got out, and I scooted across and stood beside them. We held our hands away from our sides, so they could see that we weren't holding weapons.

"Is that Bill
Fancher
?" came a booming voice from the shelter of a hedge.

"Sure is, Mr. Jessup," Bill answered. "These here is the
Hardemans
from upriver. They've come all the way round by the road to see if the folks along here are all right. The
Ungers
got Jess Sweetbrier a couple of days ago. If the
Hardemans
hadn't come down the river checking on livestock,
Nellie'd
have died, too."

There was a short silence. I had the feeling that a conference was going on, and evidently I was correct, for a woman's voice called, "Come on over–on foot. We don't want to seem inhospitable, but you know we've got to be careful."

"No problem," Bill called, and we went, single file, across the driveway and up the rise to the house.

Carrie Jessup was sixtyish, small and strong-looking, with wrinkles at the corners of her eyes that would have been deep with laughter in normal circumstances. Her husband, Horace, was tall and slender, with the innocently wondering eyes of a professor of philosophy or medieval literature. His hand, when I shook it, was another matter. Calloused to the point of
horniess
, it could have crushed my bones without effort.

Before we could speak, he said, in that incongruously booming voice, now damped to a rumble, "It's good of you to trouble yourselves about us. We've had problems,
I'Il
admit. And poor
Sim
Jackman
from down the road–he's all but dead. Crawled up here through the woods and fields, after those devil women got through with him ... and his winter's cache of liquor. If he lives, it's not impossible that he'll be a teetotaler."

As he spoke, I turned my eyes to Mrs. Jessup, and I saw a slow tear creep from behind her glasses. She said nothing, but she turned away as if to look back the way we had come.

"Is that all the trouble you've had?" I asked him.

"No," he said, and his head tilted forward as if the weight of the words to come were too much for his thin neck. "No. They came at us ... when was it, Mama? Three or four nights ago. They shot Grace ... " His voice wavered away into a basso groan.

"Our oldest girl. She got here just after the blowup. Was on her way the night before it happened and was well away from Houston. She'd flunked out of school. Thank God. Laura was already here for the same reason. Thank the Lord we raised dumb kids. Our boy–we don't know. Anyway, the
Ungers
sent a little girl up the trail from the river. She was crying and taking on, all ragged and scratched and thin as a starved cat. There's no way we could have kept that child locked out. No way."

She fell silent, and Horace took up the tale. "We got her inside and gave her some warm milk, washed her up some, and were trying to find out who she was and what had happened to her when she pulled a big old
hogleg
pistol out of the little bundle she had with her – not more than nine! – and told me to open the door. I started for her. No infant is going to give me orders, gun or no. She'd have killed me, but Grace tackled her from the side and got hit instead. She's in the house, now, unconscious. We don't know ..."

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