Devil's Dream

Devil's Dream by Madison Smartt Bell Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Devil's Dream by Madison Smartt Bell Read Free Book Online
Authors: Madison Smartt Bell
him, and his shadow must have fallen into the interior. Benjamin charged the door from the inside, with such dire purpose that Forrest had to steel himself not to skip back. The whole door jumped in its hinges when the big man struck it with his palms.
    For a second, they were nose-to-nose, with those few stripes of iron between them. Then Benjamin blew a gust of air through his nostrils, turned and went back to his stool. He lowered over something on his knees, ignoring Forrest. By damn, but this one washardheaded! A whisper of wood came away from a chunk of cedar he held braced in one of his hands. In the other, a sliver of blade caught a gleam of the moon. What was he shaping? Something round—a bedpost knob, or a darning egg.
    Forrest turned away from the door. Aunt Sarah stood by the iron pump now, her matchstick figure upright and still. Forrest crossed the yard toward her and sat down on the edge of the cistern.
    A tin cup hung from a horn of the faucet. Aunt Sarah pumped it full of water, took one sip and passed the cup to Forrest, who drank about half and returned it to her. Aunt Sarah took another swallow and dashed what remained into the yard. She hung the cup back in its place. Forrest sensed her light weight settling on the step above him. The shadow of her kerchiefed head fell over his bare shoulders.
    “You aim to tell me what he’s doen with a knife?” he said.
    “It settles him some to whittle,” Aunt Sarah said.
    Forrest snorted, much as Ben had done. “Don’t seem to settle him enough,” he said. “Somebody’s apt to find that twixt their ribs, afore we’re through.”
    Silence obtained. In a tree somewhere beyond the palings, a mockingbird whistled the first notes of a popular air, then gave it up.
    “I shore could use a carpenter, don’t ye know,” Forrest said. “But I do believe he’s too peevish to work.”
    Moonlight pooled around them in the yard. A little gray mouse stepped over the sill of Aunt Sarah’s cabin and looked at them for a moment and then went back inside.
    “He ain’t naturally mean like that,” Aunt Sarah said.
    Forrest waited. The water stain on the dirt of the yard was fading as it dried.
    “Don’t know what turned his heart bad, do you?”
    Forrest’s chuckle was inaudible, even to himself. “No, Auntie, I don’t know,” he said. “But I reckon I must be fixen to find out.”
    T HE SACK OF COINS from his last gambling spree was hid beneath a fireplace tile. It wasn’t that they didn’t use the bank, but this gold was special, something apart, and Mary Ann had planted it there like a charm.
    “I need a piece of money,” Forrest told her, looking toward the fireplace from where he sat at the table with his bacon, biscuit and coffee. If you pressed on the right top corner of the tile it would rock up on the other side and you could slip a knife blade into the crack and lift the whole thing out. Mary Ann might think he didn’t know that but he did. He couldn’t have said why he needed the money to come out of that hidey-hole, when he could have got it somewhere else and not said anything about it. She asked him only with her glance.
    “I need to buy a black gal,” Forrest said.
    “You what?” Mary Ann had stood up sharply, tall as she could draw herself.
    “Wait a minute,” Forrest said. “Not for me.”
    She stared at him, both eyebrows high. I must want her to know, he thought. What I’m doen, and why.
    Mary Ann took her fists off her hips. She opened her hands and looked at her palms, then back at him.
    “All right,” she said. “I’m listening.”
    H E WENT ALONE on a fast saddle horse, because he didn’t know just where he was going or how long it might take to get there. All he had to look for the girl with was her first name and an anecdote. Turned out she had been sold twice, first to a broker and then to a place called Coldwater Plantation, a couple of miles north of Hernando. He knew the owner, a little bit, but that didn’t help

Similar Books

The Scarlet Letterman

Cara Lockwood

Fever Dream

Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child

The Great Shelby Holmes

Elizabeth Eulberg

The New Uncanny

Etgar Keret, Ramsey Campbell, Hanif Kureishi, Christopher Priest, Jane Rogers, A.S. Byatt, Matthew Holness, Adam Marek

Figures in Silk

Vanora Bennett

Ashes of the Realm - Greyson's Revenge

Saxon Andrew, Derek Chido