Mountain Magic

Chapter 30

"You"re welcome to watch. I"m doing something here to help your daddy."

"How tall are you?" Little Anse inquired him next.

"Just exactly six feet," the carpenter replied.

"Now wait, John, that"s just foolish for the lack of sense. Ain"t no mortal man on this earth exactly six feet tall."

"I"m saying what the stranger said."

"But the only one who was exactly six feet-"

"Hold your tater while I tell about it."

"I relish that song you were whistling, Mr. Carpenter," said Little Anse. "I know the words, some of them." And he sang a verse of it:

I was a powerful sinner, I sinned both night and day, Until I heard the preacher, And he taught me how to pray:

Little Anse went on with part of the chorus:

Go tell it on the mountain, Tell it on the hills and everywhere-

"Can I help you?"

"You could hand me my tools."

"I"ll be proud to."

By then they felt as good friends as if they"d been knowing each other long years. Little Anse sat by the tool chest and searched out the tools as the carpenter wanted them. There was a tale to go with each one.

Like this: "Let me have the saw."

As he used it, the carpenter would explain how, before ary man knew a saw"s use there was a saw-shape in the shark"s mouth down in the ocean sea, with teeth lined up like a saw"s teeth; which may help show why some folks claim animals were wise before folks were.

"Now give me the hammer, Little Anse."

While he pounded, the carpenter told of a nation of folks in Europe, that used to believe in somebody named Thor, who could throw his hammer across mountains and knock out thunder and lightning.

And he talked about what folks believe about wood. How some of them knock on wood, to keep off bad luck. How the ancient folks, lifetimes back, thought spirits lived in trees, good spirits in one tree and bad spirits in another. And a staff of white thorn is supposed to scare out evil.

"Are those things true, Mr. Carpenter?"

"Well, folks took them for truth once. There must be some truth in every belief, to get it started."

"An outlander stopped here once, with a prayer book. He read to me from it, about how Satan overcame because of the wood. What did he mean, Mr. Carpenter?"

"He must have meant the Tree of Knowledge in the Garden of Eden," said the carpenter. "You know how Adam and Eve ate of the tree when Satan tempted them?"

"Reckon I do," Little Anse replied him, for, with not much else to do, he"d read the Book a many times.

"There"s more to that outlander"s prayer," the carpenter added on. "If Satan overcame by the wood, he can also be overcome by the wood."

"That must mean another kind of tree, Mr. Carpenter."

"Yes, of course. Another kind."

Little Anse was as happy as a dog at a fish fry. It was like school, only in school you get wishing the bell would ring and turn you loose. Little Anse didn"t want to be anywhere but just there, handing the tools and hearing the talk.

"How come you know so much?" he asked the carpenter.

"I travel lots in my work, Little Anse. That"s a nice thing about it."

Little Anse looked over to Mr. Troy Holcomb"s. "You know," he said, "I don"t agree in my mind that Mr. Troy"s a witch." He looked again. "If he had power, he"d have long ago cured my legs. He"s a nice old man, for all he and my daddy fussed between themselves."

"You ever tell your daddy that?"

"He won"t listen. You near-about through?"

"All through, Little Anse."

It was getting on for supper time. The carpenter packed up his tools and started with Little Anse toward the house. Moving slow, the way you do with a cripple along, they hadn"t gone more than a few yards when they met Mr. Absalom.

"Finished up, are you?" asked Mr. Absalom, and looked. "Well, bless us and keep us all" he yelled.

"Don"t you call that a good bridge, daddy?" Little Anse asked.

For the carpenter had driven some posts straight up in the ditch, and spiked on others like cross timbers.

On those he"d laid a bridge floor from side to side. It wasn"t fancy, but it looked solid to last till the Day of Judgment, mending the cutoff of the path.

"I told you I wanted-" Mr. Absalom began to say.

He stopped. For Mr. Troy Holcomb came across the bridge.

Mr. Troy"s a low-built little man, with a white hangdown moustache and a face as brown as old harness leather. He came over and stopped and put out his skinny hand, and it shook like in a wind.

"Absalom," he said, choking in his throat, "you don"t know how I been wanting this chance to ask your humble pardon."

Then Mr. Absalom all of a sudden reached and took that skinny hand in his big one.

"You made me so savage mad, saying I was a witch-man," Mr. Troy said. "If you"d let me talk, I"d have told you the blight was in my downhill corn, too. It only just spared the uphill patches. You can come and look-"

"Troy, I don"t need to look," Mr. Absalom made out to reply him. "Your word"s as good to me as the yellow gold. I never rightly thought you did any witch-stuff, not even when I said it to you."

"I"m so dog-sorry I dug this ditch," Mr. Troy went on. "I hated it, right when I had the spade in my hand.

Ain"t my nature to be spiteful, Absalom."

"No, Troy, Ain"t no drop of spite blood in you."

"But you built this bridge, Absalom, to show you never favored my cutting you off from me-"

Mr. Troy stopped talking, and wiped his brown face with the hand Mr. Absalom didn"t have hold of.

"Troy," said Mr. Absalom, "I"m just as glad as you are about all this. But don"t credit me with that bridge-idea. This carpenter here, he thought it up."

"And now I"ll be going," spoke up the carpenter in his gentle way.

They both looked on him. He"d hoisted his tool chest up on his shoulder again, and he smiled at them, and down at Little Anse. He put his hand on Little Anse"s head, just half a second long.

"Fling away those crutches," he said. "You don"t need them now."

All at once, Little Anse flung the crutches away, left and right. He stood up straight and strong. Fast as any boy ever ran on this earth, he ran to his daddy.

The carpenter was gone. The place he"d been at was empty.

But, looking where he"d been, they weren"t frightened, the way they"d be at a haunt or devil-thing.

Because they all of a sudden all three knew Who the carpenter was and how He"s always with us, the way He promised in the far-back times; and how He"ll do ary sort of job, if it can bring peace on earth and good will to men, among nations or just among neighbors.

It was Little Anse who remembered the whole chorus of the song- "Shoo, John, I know that song! We sung it last night at church for Christmas Eve!"

"I know it too, John!"

"Me! Me too!"

"All right then, why don"t you children join in and help me sing it?"

Go tell it on the mountain, Tell it on the hills and everywhere, Go tell it on the mountain That Jesus Christ was born!

Old Devlins Was A-Waiting

Manly Wade Wellman

All day I"d climbed through mountain country. Past Rebel Creek I"d climbed, and through Lost Cove, and up and down the slopes of Crouch and Hog Ham and Skeleton Ridge, and finally as the sun hunted the world"s edge, I looked over a high saddleback and down on Flornoy College.

Flornoy"s up in the hills, plain and poor, but it does good teaching. Country boys who mightn"t get past common school else can come and work off the most part of their board and keep and learning. I saw a couple of brick buildings, a row of cottages, and barns for the college farm in the bottom below, with then a paved road to Hilberstown maybe eight, nine miles down valley. Climbing down was another sight farther, and longer work than you"d think, and when I got to the level it was past sundown and the night showed its stars to me.

Coming into the back of the college grounds, I saw a light somewhere this side of the buildings, and then I heard two voices quarreling at each other.

"You leave my lantern be," bade one voice, deep and hacked.

"I wasn"t going to blow it out, Moon-Eye," the other voice laughed, but sharp and mean. "I just joggled up against it."

"Look out I don"t joggle up against you, Rixon Pengraft."

"Maybe you"re bigger than I am, but there"s such a thing as the difference between a big man and a little one."

Then I was close and saw them, and they saw me. Scholars at Flornoy, I reckoned by the light of the old lantern one of them toted. He was tall, taller than I am, with broad, hunched shoulders, and in the lantern-shine his face looked good in a long, big-nosed way. The other fellow was plumpy-soft, and smoked a cigar that made an orangey coal in the night.

The cigar-smoking one turned toward where I came along with my silver-strung guitar in one hand and my possible-sack in the other.

"What you doing around here," he said to me. Didn"t ask it, said it.

"I"m looking for Professor Deal," I replied him. "Any objections?"

He grinned his teeth white around the cigar. The lantern-shine flickered on them. "None I know of. Go on looking."

He turned and moved off in the night. The fellow with the lantern watched him go, then spoke to me.

"I"ll take you to Professor Deal"s. My name"s Anderson Newlands. Folks call me Moon-Eye."

"Folks call me John," I said. "What does Moon-Eye mean?"

He smiled, tight, over the lantern glow. "It"s hard for me to see in the night-time, John. I was in the Korean war, I got wounded and had a fever, and my eyes began to trouble me. They"re getting better, but I need a lantern any night but when it"s full moon."

We walked along. "Was that Rixon Pengraft fellow trying to give you a hard time?" I asked.

"Trying, maybe. He-well, he wants something I"m not really keeping away from him, he just thinks I am."

That"s all Moon-Eye Newlands said about it, and I didn"t inquire him what he meant. He went on: "I don"t want any fuss with Rixon, but if he"s bound to have one with me-" Again he stopped his talk.

"Yonder"s Professor Deal"s house, the one with the porch. I"m due there some later tonight, after supper."

He headed off with his lantern, toward the brick building where the scholars slept. On the porch, Professor Deal came out and made me welcome. He"s president of Flornoy, strong-built, middling tall, with white hair and a round hard chin like a water-washed rock.

"Haven"t seen you since the State Fair," he boomed out, loud enough to talk to the seventy, eighty Flornoy scholars all at once. "Come in the house, John, Mrs. Deal"s nearly ready with supper. I want you to meet Dr. McCoy."

I came inside and rested my guitar and possible-sack by the door. "Is he a medicine doctor or a teacher doctor?" I asked.

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