Cover of The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store: A Novel
    Historical Fiction

    The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store: A Novel

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store: A Novel by James McBride is a compelling story set in a small, racially segregated town in the 1940s. The novel centers around a mysterious murder at a local grocery store, revealing the lives of the diverse community members who are connected by the store's role as a gathering place. Through rich characters and vivid storytelling, McBride explores themes of race, community, secrets, and the impact of history on personal lives.

    In the chap­ter “Dif­fer­ing Weights and Mea­sures” from *The Heav­en & Earth Gro­cery Store*, we meet Fat­ty, who is the pro­pri­etor of “Fatty’s Jook,” sit­u­at­ed at the end of Pigs Alley, Chick­en Hill. The estab­lish­ment, alive with cus­tomers at 2 a.m., presents a stark con­trast to Fat­ty’s trou­bled demeanor as he con­tem­plates a sig­nif­i­cant prob­lem inside—Nate Tim­blin, who is alone at a table, drink­ing heav­i­ly. Fat­ty, trou­bled by Nate’s actions, reflects on how Nate’s grow­ing intox­i­ca­tion could lead to trou­ble. Rusty, a friend, joins Fat­ty out­side as they dis­cuss Nate’s drink­ing prob­lem, hint­ing at the poten­tial chaos it could unleash.

    Fat­ty recalls a series of unfor­tu­nate events trig­gered by his reck­less friends, result­ing in his dam­aged lip and lost tooth. These led him to seek help and a fix in Philadel­phia, but upon arrival, he dis­cov­ers his cousin Gene is in dis­tress after a dis­as­trous acci­dent involv­ing a horse-pulled water pumper. Gene, once a thriv­ing busi­ness own­er, is inca­pac­i­tat­ed fol­low­ing the calami­ty, leav­ing his wife to run the dry-clean­ing busi­ness while Fat­ty reluc­tant­ly steps in to help.

    As Fat­ty runs Gene’s laun­dry, he real­izes he has a knack for man­ag­ing mul­ti­ple ven­tures, but he is still haunt­ed by mem­o­ries of Nate’s dan­ger­ous past—a past that seems to resur­face as he inter­acts with the man who is well-known in the com­mu­ni­ty for his fierce rep­u­ta­tion. Nate’s demeanor shifts, and Fat­ty becomes increas­ing­ly anx­ious as he tries to nav­i­gate a del­i­cate sit­u­a­tion with­out spark­ing Nate’s vio­lent ten­den­cies.

    The chap­ter cul­mi­nates as Fat­ty and Rusty help an ine­bri­at­ed Nate home, reflect­ing on Nate’s qui­et­ly men­ac­ing pres­ence. In a moment of chill­ing recog­ni­tion, Fat­ty real­izes that Nate’s calm demeanor con­ceals a pow­er­ful rage, lead­ing him to a deci­sion; he must fig­ure out a way to keep trou­ble at bay, empha­siz­ing the urgency of help­ing Nate before things esca­late. They dis­cuss a cryp­tic state­ment from Nate about “dif­fer­ing weights and mea­sures,” hint­ing at the deep­er impli­ca­tions of fair­ness and jus­tice that res­onate through­out their lives as they con­front their tur­bu­lent real­i­ties. The chap­ter clos­es with Fat­ty deter­mined to save Nate from him­self and the author­i­ties, allud­ing to the poten­tial reper­cus­sions that loom on the hori­zon.

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    Cover of The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store: A Novel
    Historical Fiction

    The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store: A Novel

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store: A Novel by James McBride is a compelling story set in a small, racially segregated town in the 1940s. The novel centers around a mysterious murder at a local grocery store, revealing the lives of the diverse community members who are connected by the store's role as a gathering place. Through rich characters and vivid storytelling, McBride explores themes of race, community, secrets, and the impact of history on personal lives.

    You are being pro­vid­ed with a book chap­ter by chap­ter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chap­ter. After read­ing the chap­ter, 1. short­en the chap­ter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any impor­tant nouns in the chap­ter. 3. Do not trans­late the orig­i­nal lan­guage. 4. Keep the same style as the orig­i­nal chap­ter, keep it con­sis­tent through­out the chap­ter. Your reply must com­ply with all four require­ments, or it’s invalid.
    I will pro­vide the chap­ter now.

    A
    14
    Dif­fer­ing Weights and Mea­sures
    t the end of Pigs Alley in Chick­en Hill, out­side a beat­en-up old shack
    with a door sign that read “Fatty’s Jook. Cau­tion. Fun Inside,” the
    pro­pri­etor stood on the front porch, his face a reflec­tion of any­thing but fun.
    His gaze fell on a pile of fire­wood near the porch stairs. The pile, near­ly
    three feet high, was a tan­gle of bro­ken chairs, dis­card­ed wood, and tree
    branch­es used to heat the joint’s wood­stove. Fat­ty, clad in a flan­nel shirt, a
    gray vest, worn trousers, and a porkpie hat, walked down to the pile and sat
    on it, his arms crossed, lost in thought.
    It was 2 a.m. and the joint was still jump­ing inside. Nor­mal­ly, the
    scratchy juke­box squawk­ing the howls of Ersk­ine Hawkins that float­ed
    above the chortling and laugh­ing of the cus­tomers inside was good news.
    But right now, for Fat­ty, that was not good news. Not at all. There was a
    prob­lem inside. A big one.
    Nate Tim­blin was in there, sit­ting alone at one of the rick­ety tables,
    drink­ing.
    Fat­ty leaned for­ward on the wood­pile, silent­ly curs­ing his luck.
    The jook door opened. Rusty, hold­ing an open bot­tle of beer, emerged
    and sat down on the wood­pile next to Fat­ty and sipped.
    “He still at it?” Fat­ty asked.
    Rusty nod­ded.
    “What’s he drink­ing?”
    “Sip­ping that shine, Fat­ty. One glass after anoth­er, the dev­il keep­ing
    score.”
    Fat­ty sighed and stared down Pigs Alley, con­sid­er­ing the prob­lem.
    “What you so wor­ried about?” Rusty asked.
    “Nate Tim­blin run­ning boost­er down his lit­tle red lane in my joint.
    That’s what I’m wor­ried about.”
    “You should’a thought it out before you rolled that gulp sauce up here.”
    Fat­ty silent­ly agreed. Lean­ing back, he gazed out into Pigs Alley and
    mulled the issue calm­ly, like a lawyer. This was a com­pli­cat­ed prob­lem.
    “You want me to ask him to stop?” Rusty asked.
    “Do a don­key fly?” Fat­ty said.
    “Nate wouldn’t hurt nobody,” Rusty said. “I nev­er seen him mad. Ever.”
    “And you don’t wan­na.”
    “You seen him like that?”
    Fat­ty, nor­mal­ly enthu­si­as­tic, sud­den­ly grew irri­tat­ed. “Who said I did?”
    Rusty shrugged, rose, climbed the porch stairs, and went back inside.
    Fat­ty watched him go, then licked his swollen top lip, from which twelve
    stitch­es had recent­ly been removed. It was because of that bust­ed lip and
    miss­ing tooth—care of his bud­dy Big Soap—that he’d blun­dered into that
    god­damned rotgut in the first place. If Big Soap had cleaned that fire hose
    like he’d told him to, the inspec­tor wouldn’t have shak­en that peanut out of
    it. If he hadn’t shak­en the peanut out of the hose, the two of them wouldn’t
    have got­ten fired. If they hadn’t got­ten fired, he wouldn’t have let Big Soap
    have a go at his mouth. And if Big Soap wasn’t such a moron and took his
    invi­ta­tion seri­ous­ly and bust­ed his lip in two places and knocked out his
    tooth, he wouldn’t have gone to Philly and blun­dered into the moon­shine
    and this whole mess in the first place.
    “God­damnit,” he said. “I need some new friends.”
    He rubbed his jaw, try­ing to clear his thoughts. His lip had been sheared
    and his tooth was gone and he need­ed some kind of fix for both. There was
    no safe place in Pottstown to get that done. No col­ored in his right mind
    went to Doc Roberts even before that liv­ing witch got Nate’s nephew Dodo
    locked up. The emer­gency room at the Pottstown hos­pi­tal drew the cops, so
    that was out. That left the col­ored Doc Hin­son in Read­ing. But Doc Hin­son
    was one of those Book­er T. Washington–type prop­er Negroes. He wasn’t
    fond of col­oreds who ran good-time jook joints. Philly was safer. So he’d
    jumped into his car and head­ed to his cousin Gene’s house, where he’d
    walked into more cat­a­stro­phe.
    Gene, four years old­er and the guy from whom Fat­ty took all his cues
    when they were boys, was one of Pottstown’s great­est Negro suc­cess sto­ries
    —if you didn’t count Chu­lo Davis, the fan­tas­tic drum­mer who got shot over
    a bowl of but­ter beans while play­ing with the Harlem Ham­fats in Chica­go.
    Gene, unlike Chu­lo, set his sights on Philly, where he’d stum­bled into a
    high-soci­ety Negro girl whose father owned a thriv­ing dry-clean­ing
    busi­ness in the city’s Nice­town sec­tion. The father dropped dead of a heart
    attack soon after the two met, and Gene, a bright, enter­pris­ing soul,
    sud­den­ly found him­self full of lovelorn desire, his heart full of yearn­ing,
    over­whelmed with pro­found, rav­en­ous long­ing for a girl who was, he told
    Fat­ty, “quite the dish.” Fat­ty thought her face was sour enough to cur­dle a
    cow, but then again, Gene was ugly enough to shake the scare out of a
    thick­et, so they were quite the pair. After the two mar­ried, Gene took over
    the cleaner’s. He always enjoyed Fatty’s vis­its. They were a respite from his
    wife’s con­stant insis­tence that he pre­pare their daugh­ter for her upcom­ing
    Jack and Jill cotil­lion, where high-sid­di­ty Negroes gath­ered to tut-tut, tisk-
    tisk, and hold cheery glass­es of cheap cham­pagne in hands gnarled by years
    of yank­ing and knuck­ling tobac­co and slap­ping pigs in the mouth down
    South where most of them came from, some­thing they for­got as they were
    now enjoy­ing life in Philadel­phia try­ing hard to be white. It drove Gene
    mad, and sev­er­al times he’d asked Fat­ty, who wasn’t mar­ried, to move in
    with him, declar­ing there were women aplen­ty in Philadel­phia.
    Fat­ty ignored those entreaties, but after he got his lip bust­ed, Gene was
    the per­fect answer. His plan was to go to Gene’s house, find some­one to fix
    his mouth, hole up at Gene’s for a day or two, then get back to Pottstown as
    soon as pos­si­ble. Instead, he arrived two days after his dear cousin had
    fall­en into a dis­as­ter.
    Gene had pur­chased a horse-pulled water pumper from a local
    Philadel­phia fire com­pa­ny just down the street from his house. The pumper
    was a rel­ic, a left­over piece of junk that the fire com­pa­ny want­ed to part
    with, hav­ing moved to gas-pow­ered vehi­cles years before. Gene paid for the
    old con­trap­tion, pulled it into his back­yard with his old truck, filled the tank
    with forty gal­lons of water, then ven­tured up to a tony Chest­nut Hill horse-
    rid­ing out­fit where, in a burst of good Pottstown friend­li­ness and South­ern
    par­tial­i­ty toward white folks that the Pottstown col­ored had plen­ty of
    prac­tice with, many hav­ing spent most of their work­ing years as jan­i­tors
    and maids, he talked the white pro­pri­etor into let­ting him rent one of his
    rid­ing hors­es. The steeds of the Chest­nut Hill Rid­ing Com­pa­ny were
    mag­nif­i­cent crea­tures: retired rac­ers; gor­geous, well-bred ani­mals spared
    from the bul­let by the horse lovers of the city’s well-to-do. The proud
    crea­tures enjoyed the remain­der of their lives on easy street, trained to trot
    on a twelve-mile rid­ing path through Fair­mount Park, one of the largest city
    parks in Amer­i­ca. The Chest­nut Hill Rid­ing Com­pa­ny was an exclu­sive
    club—closed to Negroes and Jews, of course, and the idea of a Negro even
    mean­der­ing into the entrance to request to join the club and ride one of its
    pride mounts was pre­pos­ter­ous. But it just so hap­pened that on the Sun­day
    after­noon Gene arrived, the proud own­er of the insti­tu­tion, an old Quak­er
    named Thomas Stur­gis, ful­ly aware of his group’s abo­li­tion­ist his­to­ry and
    affil­i­a­tion with the Negro, had just received a let­ter from a dying fel­low
    Quak­er remind­ing him of a glo­ri­ous ser­mon about Negro self-suf­fi­cien­cy
    the two enjoyed in care of Book­er T. Wash­ing­ton, one of the Negro’s
    great­est lead­ers, who had spo­ken at their Quak­er meet­ing house some years
    before. The reminder of that great Negro leader’s words, and the thought of
    his now dying friend encour­ag­ing him to attend that stir­ring lec­ture, moved
    Stur­gis, and the old Quak­er decid­ed that here in the year 1936, sev­en­ty-one
    years after the end of the Civ­il War, which end­ed chat­tel slav­ery, it was high
    time a good Negro joined the ranks of the Chest­nut Hill Rid­ing Com­pa­ny.
    Stur­gis had just come to this con­clu­sion that morn­ing when Gene, nat­ti­ly
    dressed in a suit, tie, bowler, and rid­ing boots (hav­ing made a habit of
    nick­ing var­i­ous “lost” cloth­ing from his dry-clean­ing cus­tomers), arrived,
    announced him­self as the own­er of his very own busi­ness, and declared
    he’d like to rent a horse. To Sturgis’s eyes, the polite young black man with
    an infec­tious smile who owned his very own dry cleaner’s was a per­fect
    exam­ple of the kind of Negro need­ed to break the ice, and Stur­gis hap­pi­ly
    acqui­esced, believ­ing that the Lord had sent him a sign. He led Gene to the
    sta­ble and point­ed to a large white horse. “Will he do?” he asked. “He’s a
    palomi­no.”
    “Any pal of Mino is a pal of mine,” Gene toot­ed, though the sight of the
    mighty stal­lion, which stood near­ly six feet tall at the shoul­ders, made him
    ner­vous. So he said, “I don’t need such a young horse. I’ll take an old­er
    one. Or even a mule. You got a mule?”
    The old Quak­er chuck­led, think­ing the fine­ly dressed Negro was jok­ing.
    “Thy four-legged crea­tures of God are bet­ter judges of thy inner soul than
    thy man crea­tures,” Stur­gis said. “Size makes no dif­fer­ence.”
    “Indeed you is right, sir,” Gene said.
    “Thy horse is often a bet­ter judge of thine char­ac­ter than thy women, or
    even thine chil­dren, who are much more adept at it than one might
    imag­ine,” Stur­gis said. “Though not as keen as a horse. A horse instant­ly
    sens­es thine nature.”
    The fact that Gene, a clever snout who nev­er fin­ished sixth grade, was
    nei­ther offend­ed nor thrown by Sturgis’s use of “thee” and “thy,” for which
    the Quak­ers were known, and even used the words him­self as he respond­ed,
    helped the mat­ter, for he had no notion of what the man was talk­ing about.
    But he sensed vic­to­ry and respond­ed, “And I sense thee’s kind­ness in the
    privy,” not real­iz­ing until he uttered the words that they were prob­a­bly an
    insult but guess­ing cor­rect­ly that the old man prob­a­bly either didn’t hear
    well or know what “privy” meant; but just to be safe, Gene quick­ly upend­ed
    the whole busi­ness by fur­ther chat­ting up his back­ground, offer­ing
    lumi­nous praise about his upbring­ing in love­ly Pottstown, Mont­gomery
    Coun­ty, which he described as a “land aplen­ty with hors­es and cows and
    mer­maids,” leav­ing out the part that he was born in Chick­en Hill and that
    the only horse he’d ever actu­al­ly touched was a nag named Sta­cy he’d led
    around for a half-blind Jew­ish rag ped­dler named Adolph whom he’d
    fleeced out of a week’s earn­ings before bolt­ing for Philly four years before.
    The deal was done, the fee was paid, and Gene mount­ed the horse and
    took off on the rid­ing trail, enjoy­ing the view atop the proud ani­mal. The
    beast knew the trail by heart and they pro­ceed­ed with­out inci­dent. When the
    trail mean­dered toward the park entrance near Nice­town, just two blocks
    from Gene’s home, Gene, in a burst of enthu­si­asm, veered the crea­ture off
    the trail, out of the park, onto the cob­ble­stone street, and into his yard. He
    hitched the horse to his new­ly pur­chased 1865 fire com­pa­ny water pumper,
    still filled with forty gal­lons of water, and attempt­ed to take a quick rock-
    around-the-block to show off the new toy to his North Philadel­phia
    neigh­bors. The poor horse, unused to the har­ness and traces of a wag­on,
    bolt­ed, career­ing wild­ly down the cob­bled street, fling­ing the pumper onto
    its side and toss­ing Gene, who cracked three ribs and punc­tured a lung. The
    horse dragged the over­turned pumper half a block before bystanders could
    cor­ral it. By the time Fat­ty arrived two days lat­er, Gene lay in a hos­pi­tal
    bed, the furi­ous Chest­nut Hill Quak­er had pressed charges, and there was no
    one left to run Gene’s dry-clean­ing busi­ness save his wife, who was too
    dis­tract­ed by cotil­lion chat­ter to man the counter of any busi­ness. She
    begged Fat­ty to stay for a cou­ple of weeks and run the dry cleaner’s until
    her broth­er could make his way up from North Car­oli­na.
    “I can’t run no cleaner’s,” Fat­ty said. “Look at this.” He point­ed at his
    mouth and miss­ing tooth. “I got to get my tooth fixed. Who’s gonna leave
    their clothes to a man with no front tooth?”
    Gene’s wife waved her hand dis­mis­sive­ly, and to Fatty’s sur­prise, her
    oinky-boinky haugh­ti­ness van­ished and she got down-home on him. “You
    ain’t got to eat the clothes, Fat­ty. Just col­lect ’em and give ’em out. I’ll get
    you a den­tist. I know a good one.”
    “Can’t you get some­body else to run things?” Fat­ty plead­ed.
    “Nobody can run a busi­ness bet­ter than you,” Gene’s wife coun­tered.
    “Gene said you can run any kind of busi­ness.”
    She had a point. In addi­tion to own­ing Chick­en Hill’s only jook joint,
    Fat­ty drove his 1928 Ford as a taxi, deliv­ered ice with his own mule and
    cart twice a week, cut back trees from neigh­bor­ing hous­es, col­lect­ed the old
    junk in town from who­ev­er want­ed it tak­en away, oper­at­ed a ham­burg­er and
    soda pop stand from the front of his jook dur­ing the day, booked a col­ored
    pho­tog­ra­ph­er out of Read­ing to shoot col­ored folks’ wed­dings, and worked
    the 3 to 11 p.m. shift at Flagg with his Ital­ian bud­dy Big Soap until he got
    them both fired. Fat­ty was a busy man.
    He explained to Gene’s wife that he had sev­er­al busi­ness­es to get back
    to. But a guar­an­tee of a week’s prof­its from Gene’s thriv­ing busi­ness moved
    him, that and the promise that her broth­er would bring up sev­er­al gal­lons of
    home­made moonshine—“the good stuff,” she said, “not that watery crap
    they make up here”—for him to take back home. That sealed the deal, not
    to men­tion her knowl­edge of moon­shine that con­vinced him she wasn’t so
    hoity-toity after all.
    Thus Fat­ty found him­self behind the counter of Gene’s Dry Cleaner’s
    and Laun­dry for two weeks before return­ing to Chick­en Hill.
    At the time, it seemed like a good deal. He got stitch­es in his lip. His
    cousin’s wife made good on her promise, sort of. She found a den­tist who
    replaced his miss­ing gold tooth with a wood­en one. And when it was all
    done, he head­ed back to Chick­en Hill, his gasp­ing 1928 Ford loaded with
    four­teen gal­lons of some of the best moon­shine he’d ever tasted—enough to
    sell well into the spring.
    It had worked out just fine until tonight, when Nate Tim­blin walked in
    and ordered a drink.
    Still seat­ed on the wood­pile out­side as Ersk­ine Hawkins wailed from the
    juke­box, Fat­ty glanced at the door and weighed his options. He actu­al­ly
    con­sid­ered walk­ing down the alley to Miss Chona’s store, going in the back
    door, which was unlocked—she nev­er locked it, why steal when she gave
    you what you want­ed on cred­it any­way and nev­er asked for payment—and
    using the pay phone to call the cops to bust his own joint. He worked it out
    in his head: make the call, sprint back to warn Nate and the oth­ers before
    the cops came, hide the booze in the woods behind the jook, and let the
    cops bust the place, where they’d find noth­ing and leave. But that plan had
    a big hole. He knew all four cops on the town’s police force. Two were
    drunks, eas­i­ly bought off with booze. The third, David Hynes, was a devout
    Chris­t­ian with a kind heart who looked the oth­er way unless you gave him
    lip. But the fourth, Bil­ly O’Connell, was a ras­cal who was also a lieu­tenant
    at the Empire Fire Com­pa­ny. Fat­ty had done every­thing he could to get on
    O’Connell’s good side: He got the fire com­pa­ny cheap beer at a dis­count—
    actu­al­ly stolen, but the good-heart­ed fire­men didn’t care. He fed the
    fire­house fel­las free chick­en from Rev­erend Spriggs’s annu­al din­ner sell-
    off. He’d even dragged Big Soap there and hand­ed him over, since Soap
    was strong enough to pull the wet hun­dred-foot leather fire hose to the top
    of the fire com­pa­ny tow­er to let it dry out after use. The guys at Empire
    were crazy about Big Soap. They all liked him.
    Except for Bil­ly O’Connell.
    Bil­ly O’Connell did not like Big Soap, or Fat­ty, or even his own fire­men.
    Bil­ly O’Connell liked no one. Fat­ty had nev­er met an Irish­man like him.
    That made O’Connell dan­ger­ous.
    Fat­ty leaned on the wood­pile, con­sid­er­ing the idea. It was Thurs­day.
    O’Connell was off duty today—unless he wasn’t. If one of the oth­er three
    cops had called in sick, O’Connell would be sum­moned, since the town
    always kept three cops on duty.
    He con­sid­ered the plan. Who would know if O’Connell was on duty?
    Paper would know, he thought. That woman knew every­thing. But she
    was asleep or maybe busy lov­ing up some Pull­man porter. He beat back his
    own jeal­ous feel­ings. What a song she was. If only she knew his heart. He
    closed that feel­ing off quick­ly and con­sid­ered the mat­ter again. A raid
    would bring all three cops, since any­thing on Chick­en Hill brought the
    entire force. Was O’Connell on duty or not? Was it worth it just to get Nate
    out before he did some dam­age? He thought it through. Yes! But then he
    remem­bered he’d been told that O’Connell was the cop who’d chased Dodo
    down and took him to Pennhurst. Sup­pose Nate knew that O’Connell was
    the cop who had helped Doc Roberts send Dodo off? That wouldn’t work,
    Nate being drunk and O’Connell show­ing up.
    This town, he thought grim­ly, is too damn small.
    He dis­card­ed the idea, briefly con­sid­ered a scheme to emp­ty his joint by
    walk­ing in and announc­ing that sev­er­al Negroes from Hem­lock Row, a tiny
    black neigh­bor­hood just out­side Pottstown, were head­ed over mad as hell
    with guns and base­ball bats—he’d heard some crazy fool over there named
    Son of Man was appar­ent­ly scar­ing the pants off everyone—but then diced
    the idea. The Hill Negroes might cot­ton to a good fight with the Hem­lock
    Row guys. That was no good.
    Final­ly, he decid­ed to take the direct route. He stood up, took a deep
    breath, climbed the porch steps, went back into the jook, strode to the wall,
    low­ered the vol­ume of the blast­ing juke­box, and announced, “Clos­ing ear­ly,
    y’all. I got to work tomor­row.”
    “C’mon, Fat­ty,” one of the men said. “Let Ersk­ine Hawkins fin­ish.”
    “Erskine’ll be on the box tomor­row. G’wan home now.”
    There were sev­en souls in the place, and they stalled, nurs­ing their
    drinks, until they saw Fat­ty move toward the back cor­ner table where Nate
    sat in silence, a gal­lon jug of North Car­oli­na Blood of Christ and a half-
    emp­ty glass on the table before him. That got them mov­ing. They downed
    their drinks and lum­bered toward the door, except for Rusty, who remained
    behind the bar, a makeshift piece of clap­trap wood and pine slabs.
    Fat­ty sat down and motioned at Rusty to join them. Rusty came over and
    sat as Fat­ty spoke. “Evening, Nate,” he said.
    Nate was star­ing at his glass. After a long moment, his glazed eyes
    slow­ly rolled up from the glass to lock in on Fat­ty, then slow­ly rolled back
    to the glass again.
    It was just a moment, that look from Nate, but that was enough. Fat­ty
    found him­self star­ing at the floor, the hairs on the back of his neck stand­ing
    on end. God­damn, he thought, what have I done? When Fat­ty was nine­teen,
    he’d served two years at Grater­ford Prison for a mishap he pre­ferred to
    for­get, and after fight­ing his way to bet­ter food and treat­ment, he’d
    mis­tak­en­ly insult­ed an old pris­on­er named Dirt, a leader in his block who
    was serv­ing a life sen­tence for three mur­ders. Dirt was, at first glance, a
    but­ter­fly: a thin, frail-look­ing elder­ly man with thick glass­es and small
    shoul­ders, where­as Fat­ty was a stout, spir­it­ed youth, wide around the
    shoul­ders. Fat­ty didn’t think much of the insult until a cou­ple of days lat­er.
    He was sit­ting at a cafe­te­ria table when Dirt, seat­ed at anoth­er table, got up,
    stretched leisure­ly, strolled over to Fatty’s table hold­ing a fork, and calm­ly
    gouged out the eye of the man sit­ting direct­ly across from Fat­ty. He did it
    with the seren­i­ty of a house­wife nurs­ing a baby.
    Fat­ty was sit­ting close enough to hear the squish of the fork land­ing in
    the poor fella’s eye, and he nev­er for­got the calm in Dirt’s eyes as Dirt put
    the fork to work, the poor fella’s eye­ball pop­ping out and rolling across the
    floor like a mar­ble. It was a clean, clear oper­a­tion. The sense of pur­pose
    shook him. The minute Dirt emerged on the block from solitary—and Fat­ty
    not­ed that it was a short stay, anoth­er nod to the lit­tle man’s pull and pow­er
    —he near­ly fell over him­self get­ting to Dirt’s cell to apol­o­gize for his slight
    trans­gres­sion. The old­er man was sur­pris­ing­ly gra­cious.
    He asked, “You come from Pottstown?”
    “I do.”
    “Then you know Nate.”
    “Ain’t but one Nate in Pottstown. Every­body knows Nate. He’s mar­ried
    to one of my cousins. We’re all relat­ed out there in some form or fash­ion.”
    “Nate was here some years back,” Dirt said.
    Fat­ty was sur­prised. “He nev­er men­tioned that to me,” Fat­ty said. “He’s
    a lot old­er. Lis­ten, Dirt, I wan­na say I’m sor—”
    Dirt raised a hand and cut him off. “I took that fella’s eye out because he
    took some­thing that belonged to me. But if Nate were to take some­thing
    that belonged to me, I wouldn’t twitch a mus­cle. I wouldn’t cross Nate
    Tim­blin for all the cheese and crack­ers in the world.”
    “Old Nate? We talk­ing about the same Nate? Nate Tim­blin?”
    “That ain’t the name he had in here, son. Ask around.”
    And Fat­ty did. He learned from the oth­er old­er pris­on­ers that the Nate he
    knew—trusty, calm Nate, the old man who came to Pottstown from the
    South and worked for Mr. Moshe at the All-Amer­i­can Dance Hall and
    The­ater, who fol­lowed his wife, Addie, around like a pup­py, who took his
    deaf nephew Dodo hunting—was not the same Nate Tim­blin who served
    time in Grater­ford Prison. Rather, he was a sto­ry, a wisp, a leg­end, a force, a
    fright. Why he was in no one seemed to know, but there were rum­blings
    and they were not good. No one seemed to care much about the where or
    why except for one mat­ter: Nate’s name was sure­ly not Nate Tim­blin. The
    pris­on­ers called him Love. “Nate Love,” they said, “not Tim­blin. Love’s his
    name. Nate Love. We don’t know no Tim­blin. We seen it on his paper­work.
    Love. That’s his fam­i­ly name, son. Nate Love, said to be from down South
    Car­oli­na way. The Low Coun­try they call it. As good a man as you’ll ever
    meet; as kind a soul that has ever walked round these prison walls. But God
    help you if Nate Love calls his fam­i­ly name on you, son. If he starts in on
    you that way, you’re flower of the week.”
    When Fat­ty learned this, he returned to Dirt’s cell and asked, “Did you
    know Nate well?”
    “I knew him very well,” the old man said.
    “What’d he do to get here?”
    Dirt shrugged. “It ain’t what he’s done to get here, son. It’s what’s inside
    him. Call it a curse or a dev­il­ment. What­ev­er it is, it lives in some peo­ple.
    There’s not many types like ’em in this world. But Nate’s one of ’em. He
    got that thing in him, son, deep inside. It’s too bad real­ly, on account of he’s
    a good man, my kind of man. But a man can’t con­trol what’s in him once
    it’s turned loose no more than you or I can hold on to a bag of gro­ceries if
    we was to get hit by a bus. Some things is just there, wait­ing to get turned
    loose. That’s the way it is. You wan­na keep clear of that side of him, son. If
    you thick enough to turn that dev­il loose in him, you in deep water.”
    Fat­ty, seat­ed at the rick­ety table across from Nate, felt his mouth go dry.
    He swal­lowed his spit as he watched Nate stare at his half-emp­ty glass of
    moon­shine. Nate’s eyes glowed eeri­ly. Fat­ty saw it then. Saw what the men
    saw. Nate Love, beam­ing in from anoth­er world, his eyes calm and intense,
    brim­ming with cal­ci­fied white-hot rage. Fat­ty felt as if he were look­ing at a
    vol­cano cov­ered by a clear lake. He resist­ed the urge to leap to his feet and
    run out into the night. He silent­ly cursed him­self, cursed Big Soap for
    screw­ing up back at the Flagg fac­to­ry, cursed his cousin Gene and Gene’s
    wife and Gene’s wife’s broth­er, too, who gave him the North Car­oli­na
    Blood of Christ moon­shine, and then last­ly cursed him­self.
    “I should’a nev­er brought that shine up here,” he said aloud.
    Nate ignored him and sat, not mov­ing, his long fin­gers still cradling the
    glass. Fat­ty glanced at Rusty, who was shak­en, too. Rusty was a big man,
    strong and wide and young, and Fat­ty was no small man him­self. But at the
    moment, see­ing the fear climb into young Rusty’s face and feel­ing his own
    fright paw­ing at him, he knew that even if both of them pounced on Nate, it
    would be like try­ing to douse a house fire with a glass of water.
    Fat­ty decid­ed to say noth­ing else. It was Rusty who spoke. He point­ed at
    Nate’s half-emp­ty glass. “How’s that com­ing, Nate?”
    Silence.
    “You all right?”
    Nate didn’t respond, his eyes unwa­ver­ing, star­ing at the glass.
    Final­ly, Fat­ty found his voice. “Nate … I got to close soon.”
    Nate’s eyes slow­ly moved from the glass to Fatty’s face and Fat­ty looked
    away. Christ, he thought. I done it.
    Fat­ty glanced at Rusty, who, thank God, broke the ice in the odd­est way.
    Young Rusty was tired. He leaned on the table, plac­ing his hands on his
    face and rub­bing his eyes. There was an inno­cence to Rusty that seemed to
    pull fresh air into any room he walked into. Every­one on the Hill loved
    Rusty, who would do any­thing for any­one. The sim­ple yawn, his weari­ness,
    seemed to yank a bit of ten­sion from the room. It thinned it out just a lit­tle,
    and Fat­ty decid­ed to keep qui­et for a change. He was glad he did, for Rusty
    pulled his hands from his face and con­tin­ued.
    “I don’t like what hap­pened either, Nate. It’s not right. Dodo didn’t do
    noth­ing wrong. Doc Roberts … he’s just no good.”
    Nate’s eyes moved to Rusty. The calm rage in his eyes that burned so
    bright­ly that look­ing into them was like star­ing at the sun locked in on
    Rusty’s inno­cent face and the rag­ing glow dimmed a bit. Rusty start­ed to
    say some­thing else but clammed up, final­ly sput­ter­ing, “Maybe there’s a
    way to get out of it.”
    “That’s right,” Fat­ty chirped. “I know a few peo­ple over there at
    Pennhurst.”
    Nate looked at him, and Fat­ty felt as if an elec­tric buzzing in the room
    had low­ered. The sharp edge of the man’s rage dulled, the ener­gy of hate in
    the force that sat before him eased as Nate fin­gered his glass, mov­ing his
    hands for the first time. Then Fat­ty saw his lips move and heard, as if in a
    dream, Nate mum­ble some­thing.

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