Rainbow's End

Rainbow's End Read Free

Book: Rainbow's End Read Free
Author: James M. Cain
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not much. The second time I had bailed it out there wasn’t much to bail, which meant it was tight and ready. So, after stripping off the tarp I had put on, I was ready to go. A johnboat is a square-ended thing the size of a soap dish, with a seat in the bow, one in the stern, and one across the middle. I got in and tilted one oar and the rifle on the seat in the bow, using the other oar as a paddle. Then I shifted the shot bag from cuddy under the front seat, to balance my weight, and cast off. The shot bag was a sixty-pound canvas bag full of buckshot to trim the boat with when I went out alone. Then I sat down on the seat in the middle, holding onto the landing. With the river being so high, the boat was less than a foot out of water, which, of course, made it handy. Then I waited, watching the sky in the east. Down below I could hear voices, yelling—Mom’s, the guy’s, the girl’s—the girl’s loudest of all. I had no idea what she was yelling about, but if she was yelling, she wasn’t dead. So far, so good.
    The sky was beginning to turn gray, so I shoved off. I shot the boat out into the stream and started to paddle. It was a left-handed way to go, but I didn’t dare row regular, on account of the noise it would make, the thump of the oars in the oarlocks. I rounded the point. Sure enough, Mom was there on the bank talking. I steered to bring the hummock, the little hill that was part of the island, between me and the guy and the girl. I feathered the oar to swing in close and let the current carry me. I came to a tree, one sticking up out of water where the river had risen around it in the spring flood we were having, and caught it. Suddenly all three voices came through, the girl yelling at Mom: “Do you want him to kill me? Is that why you dare him to do it?” And Mom yelling at her: “I’m trying to get through his head what’ll happen to him if he dares do it, that’s all I’m trying to do!” And the guy telling Mom: “OK, OK, but I goddamn well might; I might blow her head off if she don’t shut up and you don’t!”
    That made no sense at all, but I’d told Mom to keep talking, and if that was her idea of something to say, I couldn’t stop her now. I pulled the boat in a foot at a time to jam it against the tree with one end on the bank. I could just see the guy, silhouetted against the sky. I picked up the rifle and aimed it at him. “Drop that gun,” I said, very quiet-like.
    He didn’t. He whirled and shot. I heard the whack of the bullet as it cut twigs over my head.
    He cursed as the recoil lifted his gun, which was a small one. It couldn’t have been more than a cheap .32.
    I still had his head in my sights and squeezed the trigger.
    The flash lit up the island, and suddenly he wasn’t there.
    â€œOh thank God, thank the merciful God!” sobbed the girl, coming suddenly into view toward me. But after a few steps she fell and started moaning about her feet. “They’re all cut up!” she said. “The river took my shoes.”
    I tilted the rifle back in its place against the front seat, hopped ashore, and ran to her through the bushes. She was half-sitting, half-lying against a stump, her teeth chattering, and moaning. I whipped off my coat and put it on her, telling her: “Hold on to me now, give to me when I lift.” I put one arm around her back, the other under her knees, at the same time kneeling myself. Then I got to my feet and carried her to the boat. “I’m so cold, so cold, so cold,” she whispered.
    â€œTake it easy,” I said.
    I helped her to the seat in the stern. This time, instead of paddling, I set the locks in their holes and rowed. I pushed clear of the tree, backed into the current, and let it take me below the island. Then I pulled for the east bank, shooting the bow up on it right beside Mom. I jumped ashore, gave the painter a hitch

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