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  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Notice

  Dedication

  Same Place, Same Things

  Waiting for the Evening News

  Died and Gone to Vegas

  The Courtship of Merlin LeBlanc

  Navigators of Thought

  People on the Empty Road

  The Bug Man

  Little Frogs in a Ditch

  License to Steal

  Floyd’s Girl

  Returnings

  Deputy Sid’s Gift

  Acclaim for Same Place, Same Things

  About the Author

  Copyright

  For my wife, Winborne, and our two sons, Robert and Thomas. I would also like to thank the National Endowment for the Arts. I suppose I could have thanked them first, but they haven’t ever baked me biscuits.

  Same Place, Same Things

  The pump repairman was cautious. He saw the dry rut in the lane and geared the truck down so he could take it through slow. The thin wheels of his ancient Ford bounced heavily, the road ridge scraping the axles. A few blackbirds charged out of the dead brush along the road and wheeled through the sky like a thrown handful of gravel. He wondered how far down the farm lane the woman lived. When she had called him at the tourist court, she had not been confident about giving directions, seeming unsure where her own house was. On both sides of the road, fields of strawberries baked in the sun. It had not rained, the locals told him, for seven weeks.

  Leafless branches reached out to snatch away his headlights. Billows of dust flew up behind the truck like a woman’s face powder, settling on roadside dewberry bushes that resembled thickened fountains of lava. It was an awful drought.

  After a while he arrived at a weatherboard farmhouse set behind a leaning barbed-wire fence. He pulled up and got out. No one came from the house, so he slammed the door of the truck and coughed loudly. He had been in this part of the country long enough to know that the farm people did not want you on their porches unless you were a relative or a neighbor. Now, in the Depression, life was so hard for them they trusted almost nobody. Finally he blew the truck’s horn and was rewarded with a movement at one of the windows. In half a minute a woman in a thin cotton housedress came out.

  “You the pump man?” she asked.

  “Yes, ma’am. Name’s Harry Lintel.”

  She looked him over as though he were a goat she might or might not buy. Walking to the edge of her porch, she looked back toward the field behind the house. “If you walk this trail here for a while, you’ll find my husband trying to fix the pump.” He did not like the way she made a face when she said “husband.” He was uneasy around women who did not like their men. She walked off the porch and through the fifteen feet of thistle and clover that served as a front lawn, moving carefully toward the pump repairman, who regarded her warily. Poor people made him nervous. He was poor himself, at least as far as money goes, but he was not hangdog and spiritless like many of the people he’d met in this part of the state, beaten down and ruined inside by hard times. She looked at his eyes. “How old you think I am?”

  She seemed about forty, four years younger than he was, but with farm women you could never tell. He looked at her sandy hair and gray eyes. She was thin, but something about the way she looked at him suggested toughness. “Lady, I’ve come to fix a pump. What kind do you have and what’s wrong with it?”

  “My husband, he’ll be back in a minute. He’ll know what all you need to find out. What I want to know is where you’re from. I ain’t heard nobody around here talk like you in a while.” She had her hair tied back in a loose knot and reached up to touch it delicately. This motion caught his eye. He guessed she might be closer to thirty-five.

  Harry Lintel put a hand in his right front pocket and leaned back against the door of his truck. Taking off his straw hat, he threw it over his shoulder into the front seat. “I’m from Missouri,” he said, running a hand through a clump of short, brassy hair.

  Her expression was still one of intense evaluation. “Ain’t there no pump work in Missouri?” she asked. “Or did your woman run you off?”

  “My wife died,” he said. “As for pump work, when it’s dry and the local pump repairmen can’t keep up with their work, or there ain’t any pump repairmen, I come around and take up the slack.” He looked around her at the peeling house and its broken panes patched with cardboard.

  “So why ain’t you where you belong, taking up slack?”

  He looked at her hard. That last remark showed some wit, something he had not seen in a woman for a while. “Where’s your husband, lady? I’ve got cash jobs waiting for me up Highway Fifty-one.”

  “Keep your pants on. He’ll be here, I said.” She folded her arms and came a step closer. “I’m just curious why anyone would come to this part of Louisiana from somewheres else.”

  “I follow the droughts,” he said, straightening up and walking along the fence to where it opened into a rutted drive. The woman followed him, sliding her hands down her hips to smooth her dress. “Last week I was in Texas. Was doing a good trade until an all-night rain came in from Mexico and put me out of business. Wasn’t much of a pumping situation after that, and the local repairmen could keep things going.” He looked down the path as far as he could see along the field of limp plants. “Month before that I was in north Georgia. Before that I fixed pumps over in Alabama. Those people had a time with their green peppers. Where the devil’s your old man?”

  “I never see anyone but my husband and two or three buyers that come back in here to deal with him.” She began to look at his clothes, and this made him uneasy, because he knew she saw that they were clean and not patched. He wore a khaki shirt and trousers. Perhaps no one she knew wore unpatched clothes. Her housedress looked like it had been made from a faded window curtain. “Texas,” she said. “I saw your ad in the paper and I figured you were a traveling man.”

  “No, ma’am,” he said. “I’m a man who travels.” He saw she did not understand that there was a difference. She seemed desperate and bored, but many people he met were that way. Very few were curious about where he came from, however. They cared only that he was Harry Lintel, who could fix any irrigation pump or engine ever made.

  He walked into the field toward the tree line a quarter mile off, and the woman went quickly to the house. He saw a wire strung from the house into a chinaberry tree, and then through a long file of willows edging a ditch, and figured this led to an electric pump. He was almost disappointed that the woman wasn’t following him.

  As he walked, he looked around at the farm. It was typical of the worst. He came up on a Titan tractor stilted on wood blocks in the weeds, its head cracked. Behind it was a corroded disk harrow, which could still have been useful had it been taken care of. In the empty field to his right stood two cows suffering from the bloat.

  He was sweating through his shirt by the time he reached a thin stand of bramble-infested loblolly edging the field. Two hundred feet down the row of trees, a man hunched over an electric motor, his back to the repairman. Calling out to him, Lintel walked in that direction, but the other man did not respond—he was absorbed in close inspection of a belt drive, the pump repairman guessed. The farmer was sprawled on a steel grid that hung over an open well. Harry walked up and said hello, but the farmer said nothing. He seemed to be asleep, even though he was out in the sun and his un
dershirt was wet as a dishcloth. Harry stooped down and looked over the pump and the way it was installed. He saw that it was bolted to the grid without insulation. Two stray wires dangled into the well. He watched for the rise and fall of the man’s body, but the man was not breathing. Kneeling down, Harry touched the back of his knuckles to the steel grid. There was no shock, so he grabbed the man by his arms and pulled him off the motor, turning him over. He was dead, without a doubt: electrocuted. His fingers were burned, and a dark stain ran down his pants leg. He felt the man’s neck for a pulse and, finding none, sat there for a long time, studying the man’s broad, slick face, a face angry and stupid even in death. He looked around at the sorry farm as though it were responsible, then got up and walked back to the farmhouse.

  The woman was sitting in a rocker on the porch, staring off into a parched, fallow field. She looked at the repairman and smiled, just barely.

  Harry Lintel rubbed his chin. “You got a phone?”

  “Nope,” she said, smoothing her hair down with her right hand. “There’s one at the store out on Fifty-one.”

  He did not want to tell her, feeling that it would be better for someone else to break the news. “You’ve got a lady friend lives around here?”

  She looked at him sharply, her gray eyes round. “What you want to know that for?”

  “I’ve got my reasons,” he said. He began to get into his big dusty truck, trying to act as though nothing had happened. He wanted to put some distance between himself and her coming sorrow.

  “The first house where you turned in, there’s Mary. But she don’t have no phone.”

  “See you in a few minutes,” he said, cranking up the truck.

  At the highway he found Mary and told her to go back and tell the woman that her husband was dead out by the pump. The old woman simply nodded, went back into her house, and got her son to go with her. Her lack of concern bothered him. Didn’t she care about the death of her neighbor?

  At the store he called the sheriff and waited. He rode with the deputies back to the farmhouse and told them what he knew. The lawmen stood over the body, looked up at the dry sky, and told the pump repairman to go back to his business, that they would take care of everything.

  He and one of the deputies walked out of the field past the farmhouse, and he tried not to look at the porch as he passed, but he could not keep himself from listening. He heard nothing—no crying, no voices heavy with muted passion. The two women were on the porch step, talking calmly, as though they were discussing the price of berries. The widow watched him carefully as he got into the police car. He thought he detected a trace of perfume in the air and looked around inside the gritty sedan for its source.

  That day he repaired six engines, saving little farms from turning back to sand. The repairs were hard ones that no one else could manage: broken timing gears, worn-out governors, cracked water jackets. At least one person on each farm asked him if he was the one who had found the dead man, and when he admitted that he was, each sullen farmer backed off and let him work alone. Late in the afternoon he was heating an engine head in his portable forge, watching the hue of the metal so that he could judge whether the temperature was right for brazing. He waited for the right color to rise like the blush on a woman’s cheek, and when it did, he sealed a complex crack with a clean streak of molten brass. A wizened Italian farmer watched him like a chicken hawk, his arms folded across a washed-out denim shirt. “It’s no gonna work,” he said.

  But when, near dusk, Harry pulled the flywheel and the engine sprang to life with a heavy, thudding exhaust, turning up a rill of sunset-tinged water into the field, the farmer cracked a faint smile. “If you couldna fixed it, we’da run you out the parish.”

  Harry began to clean his hands with care. “Why?”

  “Stranger find a dead man, that’s bad luck.”

  “It’s better I found him than his wife, isn’t it?”

  The farmer poked a few bills at Harry, turned, and began walking toward his packing shed. “Nothin’ surprise that woman,” he said.

  * * *

  It was eight-thirty when he got back to the Bell Pepper Tourist Court, a collection of six pink stucco cabins with a large oval window embedded in each. The office, which also contained a small café, was open, but he was too tired to eat. He sat on his jittery bed, staring across the highway to the railroad, where a local passenger train trundled by, its whistle singing for a crossing. Beyond this was yet another truck farm, maybe twelve acres punctuated by a tin-roof shack. He wondered how many other women were stuck back in the woods living without husbands. The widow of the electrocuted man didn’t even have children to take her mind off her loneliness. He had that. He had gotten married when he was seventeen and had raised two daughters and a son. He was now forty-four and on his own, his wife having died five years before. The small Missouri town he was raised in couldn’t keep him provided with work, so he had struck out, roaming the South and the Southwest, looking for machines that nobody else could repair.

  He stared through an oval window at his truck. At least he could move around and meet different people, being either sorry to leave them or glad to get away, depending. He gazed fondly at the Ford, its stake body loaded with blacksmith’s tongs, welding tools, a portable forge, and boxes of parts, wrenches, sockets, coal, hardies, gasket material, all covered with a green tarp slung over the wooden sides. It could take him anywhere, and with his tools he could fix anything but the weather.

  * * *

  The next morning at dawn he headed out for the first job of the day, noticing that the early sky was like a piece of sheet metal heated to a blue-gray color. He pulled up to a farmhouse and a small man wearing a ponderous mustache came out from around back, cursing. Harry Lintel threw his hat into the truck and ran his hands through his hair. He had never seen people who disliked strangers so much. The little farmer spat on the Ford’s tire and told him to drive into the field behind the farmhouse. “My McCormick won’t throw no spark,” he said.

  Harry turned to get under way, but over the Ford’s hood he saw, two hundred yards off, the back of a woman’s head moving above the weeds in an idle field. “Who’s that?” he asked, pointing two fields over.

  The farmer craned his neck but could not recognize the figure, who disappeared behind a brier patch between two farms. “I don’t know,” the farmer said, scratching his three-day beard, “but a woman what walk around like that with nothing better to do is thinking up trouble.” He pointed to Harry. “When a woman thinks too long, look out! Now, get to work, you.”

  The day turned hot as a furnace and his skin flamed with sweat. By noon he had worked on three machines within a half mile of one another. From little farms up and down Highway 51 he could hear the thud and pop of pump engines. He was in a field of berries finishing up with a balky International, when he saw a woman walking along the railroad embankment with a basket in the crook of her right arm. It was the wife of the dead farmer. He waited until she was several rows away and then looked up at her. She met his gaze head-on, her eyes the color of dull nickel. He admitted to himself then and there that it scared him, the way she looked at him. Harry Lintel could figure out any machine on earth, but with women, he wished for an instruction manual.

  She walked up to him and set the basket on top of his wrenches. “You ready to eat?”

  He wiped his hands on a kerosene-soaked rag. “Where’d you come from?”

  “It’s not far from my place,” she said. He noticed that she was wearing a new cotton dress, which seemed to have been snagged in a few places by briers. She knelt down and opened the basket, pulling out a baby quilt and sandwiches. He sat on the parched grass next to her in a spot of shade thrown by a willow.

  “I’m sorry about your man,” he said. “I should have told you myself.”

  Her hands moved busily in the basket. “That woman and I get along all right. You did as good as you could.” They ate in silence for a while. From the distance came the deep mu
sic of a big Illinois Central freight engine, its whistle filling the afternoon, swaying up and down a scale of frantic notes. The Crimson Flyer thundered north, trailing a hundred refrigerated cars of berries, the work of an entire year for many local farmers. “That train’s off its time,” she said. “Seems like everything’s off schedule lately.” She took a bite of ham sandwich and chewed absently.

  “I asked the boys that own this engine about your man. They didn’t want to talk about him.” He took a bite of sandwich and tried not to make a face. It was dry, and the ham tasted like it had been in the icebox too long. He wondered if she had fed her husband any better.

  “He was from New Orleans, not from around here. Nobody liked him much, because of his berries. He tried to ship bad Klondykes once, and the men at the loading dock broke his leg.”

  The pump man shook his head. “Breaking a farmer’s leg’s kind of rough treatment.”

  “He deserved it,” she said matter-of-factly. “Shipping bad berries gives the local farmers a bad name.” She looked at her sandwich as though she had seen it for the first time, and threw it into the basket. “He was too damned lazy to pick early enough to ship on time.”

  He was afraid she was going to cry, but her face remained as dry as the gravel road that ran along the track. He began to wonder what she had done about her husband. “What about the services for your old man?”

  “Mary’s pickers helped me put him in this morning after the coroner came out and give us the okay.”

  So that’s it, he thought. Half your life working in the sun and then your woman plants you in back of the toolshed like a dog. He was tempted to toss his sandwich, but he was hungrier than he had been in weeks, so he bit at it again. The woman put her eyes all over him, and he knew what she was doing. He began to compare himself to her husband. He was bigger. People told him frequently that he had a pleasant face, which he figured was their way of telling him he wasn’t outright ugly.