Bag of Bones by Stephen King

‘Background on the area where I live,’ I said. ‘Old stories. My housekeeper got me interested.’

Then, in a lower voice: ‘Teacher’s watching. Don’t look around.’

Mattie looked startled — and, I thought, a little worried. As it turned out, she was right to be worried. In a voice that was low-pitched yet still designed to carry at least as far as the desk, she asked if she could reshelve either book for me. I gave her both. As she picked them up she said in what was almost a con’s whisper: ‘That lawyer who represented you last Friday got John a private detective. He says they may have found something interesting about the guardian ad litem.’

I walked over to the OF MAINE INTEREST shelves with her, hoping I wasn’t getting her in trouble, and asked if she knew what the something interesting might be. She shook her head, gave me a professional little librarian’s smile, and I went away.

On the ride back to the house, I tried to think about what I’d read, but there wasn’t much. Osteen was a bad writer who had taken bad pictures, and while his stories were colorful, they were also pretty thin on the ground. He mentioned Sara and the Red-Tops, all right, but he referred to them as a ‘Dixie-Land octet,’ and even I knew that wasn’t right. The Red-Tops might have played some Dixieland, but they had primarily been a blues group (Friday and Saturday nights) and a gospel group (Sunday mornings). Osteen’s two-page summary of the Red-Tops’ stay on the TR made it clear that he had heard no one else’s covers of Sara’s tunes.

He confirmed that a child had died of blood-poisoning caused by a traphold wound, a story which sounded like Brenda Meserve’s . . . but why wouldn’t it? Osteen had likely heard it from Mrs.

M.’s father or grandfather. He also said that the boy was Son Tidwell’s only child, and that the guitar-player’s real name was Reginald. The Tidwells had supposedly drifted north from the whorehouse district of New Orleans — the fabled crib-and-club streets which had been known around the turn of the century as Storyville.

There was no mention of Sara and the Red-Tops in the more formal history of Castle County, and no mention of Kenny Auster’s drownded little brother in either book. Not long before Mattie came over to speak to me, I’d had a wild idea: that Son Tidwell and Sara Tidwell were man and wife, and that the little boy (not named by Osteen) had been their son. I found the picture Lindy had mentioned and studied it closely. It showed at least a dozen black people standing in a stiff group in front of what looked like a cattle exhibition. There was an old-fashioned Ferris wheel in the background. It could well have been taken at the Fryeburg Fair, and as old and faded as it was, it had a simple, elemental power that all Osteen’s own photos put together could not match. You have seen photographs of western and Depression-era bandidos that have that same look of eerie truth —

stern faces above tight ties and collars, eyes not quite lost in the shadows of antique hatbrims.

Sara stood front and center, wearing a black dress and her guitar. She was not outright smiling in this picture, but there seemed to be a smile in her eyes, and I thought they were like the eyes in some paintings, the ones that seem to follow you wherever you move in the room. I studied the photo and thought of her almost spiteful voice in my dream: What do you want to know, sugar? I suppose I wanted to know about her and the others — who they had been, what they were to each other when they weren’t singing and playing, why they’d left, where they’d gone.

Both of her hands were clearly visible, one posed on the strings of her guitar, the other on the frets, where she had been making a G-chord on an October Fair-day in the year 1900. Her fingers were long, artistic, bare of rings. That didn’t necessarily mean that she and Son Tidwell weren’t married, of course, and even if they hadn’t been, the little boy who’d been caught in the trap could have been born on the wrong side of the blanket. Except the same ghost of a smile lurked in Son Tidwell’s eyes. The resemblance was remarkable. I had an idea that the two of them had been brother and sister, not man and wife.

I thought about these things on my way home, and I thought about cables that were felt rather than seen . . . but mostly I found myself thinking about Lindy Briggs — the way she had smiled at me, the way, a little later on, she had not smiled at her bright young librarian with the high-school certification. That worried me.

Then I got back to the house, and all I worried about was my story and the people in it — bags of bones which were putting on flesh daily.

Michael Noonan, Max Devore, and Rogette Whitmore played out their horrible little comedy scene Friday evening. Two other things which bear narrating happened before that.

The first was a call from John Storrow on Thursday night. I was sitting in front of the TV with a baseball game running soundlessly in front of me (the MUTE button with which most remote controls come equipped may be the twentieth century’s finest invention). I was thinking about Sara Tidwell and Son Tidwell and Son Tidwell’s little boy. I was thinking about Storyville, a name any writer just had to love. And in the back of my mind I was thinking about my wife, who had died pregnant.

‘Hello?’ I said.

‘Mike, I have some wonderful news,’ John said. He sounded near to bursting. ‘Romeo Bissonette may be a weird name, but there’s nothing weird about the detective-guy he found for me. His name is George Kennedy, like the actor. He’s good, and he’s fast. This guy could work in New York.’

‘If that’s the highest compliment you can think of, you need to get out of the city more.’

He went on as if he hadn’t heard. ‘Kennedy’s real job is with a security firm — the other stuff is strictly in the moonlight. Which is a great loss, believe me. He got most of this on the phone. I can’t believe it.’

‘What specifically can’t you believe?’

‘Jackpot, baby.’ Again he spoke in that tone of greedy satisfaction which I found both troubling and reassuring. ‘Elmer Durgin has done the following things since late May: paid off his car; paid off his camp in Rangely Lakes; caught up on about ninety years of child support — ‘

‘Nobody pays child support for ninety years,’ I said, but I was just running my mouth to hear it go

. . . to let off some of my own building excitement, in truth. ”T’ain’t possible, Mcgee.’

‘It is if you have seven kids,’ John said, and began howling with laughter.

I thought of the pudgy self-satisfied face, the cupid-bow mouth, the nails that looked polished and prissy. ‘He don’t,’ I said.

‘He do,’ John said, still laughing. He sounded like a complete lunatic — manic, hold the depressive. ‘He really do! Ranging in ages from f-fourteen to th-th- three! What a b-busy p-p-potent little prick he must have!’ More helpless howls. And by now I was howling right along with him —

I’d caught it like the mumps. ‘Kennedy is going to f-f-fax me p-pictures of the whole . . . fam’ . . .

damily!’ We broke up completely, laughing together long-distance. I could picture John Stor-row sitting alone in his Park Avenue office, bellowing like a lunatic and scaring the cleaning ladies.

‘That doesn’t matter, though,’ he said when he could talk coherently again. ‘You see what matters, don’t you?’

‘Yes,’ I said. ‘How could he be so stupid?’ Meaning Durgin, but also meaning Devore. John understood, I think, that we were talking about both he’s at the same time.

‘Elmer Durgin’s a little lawyer from a little township tucked away in the big woods of western Maine, that’s all. How could he know that some guardian angel would come along with the resources to smoke him out? He also bought a boat, by the way. Two weeks ago. It’s a twin outboard. A big ‘un. It’s over, Mike. The home team scores nine runs in the bottom of the ninth and the fucking pennant is ours.’

‘If you say so.’ But my hand went off on its own expedition, made a loose fist, and knocked on the good solid wood of the coffee-table.

‘And hey, the softball game wasn’t a total loss.’ John was still talking between little giggling outbursts like helium balloons.

‘No?’

‘I’m taken with her.’

‘Her?’

‘Mattie,’ he said patiently. ‘Mattie Devore.’ A pause, then: ‘Mike? Are you there?’

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