White Doves at Morning: A Dave Robicheaux Novel

White Doves at Morning: A Dave Robicheaux Novel Read Free Page A

Book: White Doves at Morning: A Dave Robicheaux Novel Read Free
Author: James Lee Burke
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Goliad Massacre during the Texas Revolution. The war he feared was now only the stuff of rumors, political posturing, and young men talking loudly of it in a saloon, but he had no doubt it was coming, like a crack in a dike that would eventually flood and destroy an entire region, beginning in Virginia or Maryland, perhaps, at a nameless crossroads or creek bed or sunken lane or stone wall meandering through a farmer's field, and as surely as he had wakened to birdsong in his mother's house that morning he would be in it, shells bursting above his head while he soiled his pants and killed others or was killed himself over an issue that had nothing to do with his life.
    He washed his face in a bowl on the dresser and threw the water out the window onto the grassy yard that sloped down to the bayou. By the drawbridge a gleaming white paddle-wheeler, its twin stacks leaking smoke into the mist, was being loaded with barrels of molasses by a dozen Negro men, all of whom had begun work before dawn, their bodies glowing with sweat and humidity in the light from the fires they had built on the bank.
    They were called wage slaves, rented out by their owner, in this case, Ira Jamison, on an hourly basis. The taskmaster, a man named Rufus Atkins, rented a room at the boardinghouse and worked the Negroes in his charge unmercifully. Willie walked out into the misty softness of the morning, into the residual smell of night-blooming flowers and bream spawning in the bayou and trees dripping with dew, and tried to occupy his mind with better things than the likes of Rufus Atkins. But when he sat on a hole in the privy and heard Rufus Atkins driving and berating his charges, he wondered if there might be an exemption in heaven for the Negro who raked a cane knife across Atkins' throat.
    When Willie walked back up the slope and encountered Atkins on his way into breakfast, he touched his straw hat, fabricated a smile and said, "Top of the morning to you, sir."
    "And to you, Mr. Willie," Rufus Atkins replied.
    Then Willie's nemesis, his inability to keep his own counsel, caught up with him.
    "If words could flay, I'd bet you could take the hide off a fellow, Mr. Atkins," he said.
    "That's right clever of you, Mr. Willie. I'm sure you must entertain your mother at great length while tidying the house and carrying out slop jars for her."
    "Tell me, sir, since you're in a mood for profaning a fine morning, would you be liking your nose broken as well?" Willie inquired.
     
    AFTER the boarders had been fed, including Rufus Atkins, Willie helped his mother clean the table and scrape the dishes into a barrel of scraps that later they would take out to their farm by Spanish Lake and feed to their hogs. His mother, Ellen Lee, had thick, round, pink arms and brown hair that was turning gray, and a small Irish mouth and a cleft in her chin.
    "Did I hear you have words with Mr. Atkins?" she asked.
    Willie seemed to study the question. "I don't rightly recall. It may have been a distortion on the wind, perhaps," he replied.
    "You're a poor excuse for a liar," she said.
    He began washing dishes in the sink. But unfortunately she was not finished.
    "The times might be good for others but not always for us. Our livery is doing poorly, Willie. We need every boarder we can get," she said.
    "Would you like me to apologize?" he asked.
    "That's up to your conscience. Remember he's a Protestant and given to their ways. We have to forgive those whom chance and accident have denied access to the Faith."  
    "You're right, Mother. There he goes now. I'll see if I can straighten things out," Willie replied, looking through the back window.
    He hurried out the door and touched Rufus Atkins on the sleeve.
    "Oh, excuse me, I didn't mean to startle you, Mr. Atkins," he said. "I just wanted to tell you I'm sorry for the sharpness of my tongue. I pray one day you find the Holy Roman Church and then die screaming for a priest."
     
    WHEN he came back into the house his mother

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