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Clifford D. Simak. Way Station

caught a young coon the other night. Took a lot of doing. Roy, here, had

staked out the coon-tied it to a tree. And he had Butcher on a leash. He was

letting Butcher fight the coon. Not hurting anything. He’d pull Butcher off

before any damage could be done and let them rest a while. Then he’d let

Butcher at the coon again.”

“It’s the best way in the world,” said Roy, “to get a coon dog

trained.”

“That is right,” said Hank. “That is why they caught the coon.”

“We needed it,” said Roy, “to train this Butcher pup.”

“This all is fine,” said Enoch, “and I am glad to hear it. But what has

it got to do with Lucy?”

“She interfered,” said Hank. “She tried to stop the training. She tried

to grab Butcher away from Roy, here.”

“For a dummy,” Roy said, “she is a mite too uppity.”

“You hush your mouth,” his father told him sternly, swinging around on

him.

Roy mumbled to himself, falling back a step.

Hank turned back to Enoch.

“Roy knocked her down,” he said. “He shouldn’t have done that. He

should have been more careful.”

“I didn’t mean to,” Roy said. “I just swung my arm out to keep her away

from Butcher.”

“That is right,” said Hank. “He swung a bit too hard. But there wasn’t

any call for her doing what she did. She tied Butcher up in knots so he

couldn’t fight that coon. Without laying a finger on him, mind you, she tied

him up in knots. He couldn’t move a muscle. That made Roy mad.”

He appealed to Enoch, earnestly, “Wouldn’t that have made you mad?”

“I don’t think it would,” said Enoch. “But then, I’mm not a coon-dog

man.”

Hank stared in wonder at this lack of understanding.

But he went on with his story. “Roy got real mad at her. He’d raised

that Butcher. He thought a lot of him. He wasn’t going to let no one, not

even his own sister, tie that dog in knots. So he went after her and she

tied him up in knots, just like she did to Butcher. I never seen a thing

like it in all my born days. Roy just stiffened up and then he fell down to

the ground and his legs pulled up against his belly and he wrapped his arms

around himself and he laid there on the ground, pulled into a ball. Him and

Butcher, both. But she never touched that coon. She never tied him in no

knots. Her own folks is all she touched.”

“It didn’t hurt,” said Roy. “It didn’t hurt at all.”

“I was sitting there,” said Hank, “braiding this here bull whip. Its

end had frayed and I fixed a new one on it. And I seen it all, but I didn’t

do a thing until I saw Roy there, tied up on the ground. And I figured then

it had gone far enough. I am a broad-minded man; I don’t mind a little

wart-charming and other pipling things like that. There have been a lot of

people who have been able to do that. It ain’t no disgrace at all. But this

thing of tying dogs and people into knots …”

“So you hit her with the whip,” said Enoch.

“I did my duty,” Hank told him solemnly. “I ain’t about to have no

witch in any family of mine. I hit her a couple of licks and her making that

dumb show of hers to try to get me stopped. But I had my duty and I kept on

hitting. If I did enough of it, I figured, I’d knock it out of her. That was

when she put the hex on me. Just like she did on Roy and Butcher, but in a

different way. She turned me blind-she blinded her own father! I couldn’t

see a thing. I just stumbled around the yard, yelling and clawing at my

eyes. And then they got all right again, but she was gone. I saw her running

through the woods and up the hill. So Roy and me, we took out after her…”

“And you think I have her here?” “I know you have,” said Hank.

“OK ,” said Enoch “Have a look around”

“You can bet I will,” Hank told him grimly. “Roy, take the barn. She

might be hiding there.”

Roy headed for the barn. Hank went into the shed, came out almost

immediately, strode down to the sagging chicken house.

Enoch stood and waited, the rifle cradled on his arm.

He had trouble here, he knew-more trouble than he’d ever had before.

There was no such thing as reasoning with a man of Hank Fisher’s stripe.

There was no approach, right now, that he would understand. All that he

could do, he knew, was to wait until Hank’s temper had cooled off. Then

there might be an outside chance of talking sense to him.

The two of them came back.

“She ain’t nowhere around,” said Hank. “She is in the house.”

Enoch shook his head. “There can’t anyone get into that house.”

“Roy,” said Hank, “climb them there steps and open up that door.”

Roy looked fearfully at Enoch.

“Go ahead,” said Enoch.

Roy moved forward slowly and went up the steps. He crossed the porch

and put his hand upon the front door knob and turned. He tried again. He

turned around.

“Pa,” he said, “I can’t turn it. I can’t get it open.”

Hell,” said Hank, disgusted, “you can’t do anything.” Hank took the

steps in two jumps, paced wrathfully across the porch. His hand reached out

and grasped the knob and wrenched at it powerfully. He tried again and yet

again. He turned angrily to face Enoch.

“What is going on here?” he yelled.

“I told you,” Enoch said, “that you can’t get in.”

“The hell I can’t!” roared Hank.

He tossed the whip to Roy and came down off the porch, striding over to

the woodpile that stood beside the shed. He wrenched the heavy,

double-bitted ax out of the chopping block.

“Careful with that ax,” warned Enoch. “I’ve had it for a long time and

I set a store by it.”

Hank did not answer. He went up on the porch and squared off before the

door.

“Stand off,” he said to Roy. “Give me elbow room.”

Roy backed away.

“Wait a minute,” Enoch said. “You mean to chop down that door?”

“You’re damned right I do.”

Enoch noped gravely.

“Well?” asked Hank.

“It’s all right with me if you want to try.”

Hank took his stance, gripping the handle of the ax. The steel flashed

swiftly, up over his shoulder, then down in a driven blow.

The edge of the steel struck the surface of the door and turned,

deflected by the surface, changed its course, bouncing from the door. The

blade came slicing down and back. It missed Hank’s sprapled leg by no more

than an inch and the momentum of it spun him half around.

He stood there, foolishly, arms outstretched, hands still gripping the

handle of the ax. He stared at Enoch.

“Try again,” invited Enoch.

Rage flowed over Hank. His face was flushed with anger.

“By God, I will!” he yelled.

He squared off again and this time he swung the ax, not at the door,

but at the window set beside the door.

The blade struck and there was a high singing sound as pieces of

sun-bright steel went flying through the air.

Ducking away, Hank dropped the ax. It fell to the floor of the porch

and bounced. One blade was broken, the metal sheared away in jagged breaks.

The window was intact. There was not a scratch upon it.

Hank stood there for a moment, staring at the broken ax, as if he could

not quite believe it.

Silently he stretched out his hand and Roy put the bull whip in it.

The two of them came down the stairs.

They stopped at the bottom of them and looked at Enoch. Hank’s hand

twitched on the whip.

“If I were you,” said Enoch, “I wouldn’t try it, Hank. I can move

awfully fast.”

He patted the gun butt. “I’d have the hand off you before you could

swing that whip.”

Hank breathed heavily. “There’s the devil in you, Wallace,” he said.

“And there’s the devil in her, too. You’re working together, the two of you.

Sneaking around in the woods, meeting one another.”

Enoch waited, watching the both of them.

“God help me,” cried Hank. “My own daughter is a witch!”

“I think,” said Enoch, “you should go back home. If I happen to find

Lucy, I will bring her there.”

Neither of them made a move.

“You haven’t heard the last of this,” yelled Hank. “You have my

daughter somewhere and I’ll get you for it.”

“Any time you want,” said Enoch, “but not now.” He made an imperative

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Categories: Simak, Clifford
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