Hal got his lucky foot, snaring the biggest rabbit around those parts, carrying that lucky hind leg across the big oceans and then back to Kentucky, and doing it all with nary a scratch.
Later, one of his two sons took off for the Korean War. Before the son left he asked to borrow his father’s lucky rabbit foot. But Hal was superstitious, partial to his old good luck charm, and selfishly said no. When his son came home in a pine box, Hal blamed himself for letting the boy go off without a charm for protection. And when the government called Hal’s other son to war, the father insisted his boy get himself his own piece of good fortune, sending him out to Ebenezer on a cold, snowy night.
Inside the cemetery, Hal’s son lost his footing, tumbling down that version of his own rabbit hole, and died when his head hit an old jagged tombstone. Months later, when old Hal was found dead outside Ebenezer graveyard from his own self-inflicted gunshot wound, most whispered that it had been Joetta’s ghost pushing him into a suitable punishment for not protecting his boys.
Patsy snuck a peek back toward Danny and Violet.
“Come on. Let’s go, Patsy.” Hollis tugged on her arm and patted the seat beside him. “Oh, c’mon, doll baby. You’re too pretty to walk home all on your lonesome. Look at your pretty dress. Why, you’ll get all dusty, and be all sad, while Danny boy and Violet are having all the fun,” he said, reaching for her books, winking.
Violet Perry leaned into Danny’s ear and whispered something. Something sweet, Patsy was sure. Because Danny smiled at whatever the shared secret was, then snugged in close to Violet’s bent ear. Then a tease sparked in Violet’s eyes, and she passed another back to his tilted head. A secret he’d never share with Patsy, and one that looked a lot like the ones he and she had split between themselves when they were last together on her darkened porch. The talk they’d shared about getting hitched one day in the not too distant future, getting out of Glass Ferry, and never ever coming back.
Anger fueled her, and a half-baked good riddance slipped off her tongue. Patsy handed Hollis her schoolbooks through the window. Grinning, he tossed them into the backseat while Patsy rushed around to the passenger side.
By the time the two reached Ebenezer Road and parked, Hollis had convinced Patsy his brother was two-timing, and sweetened the telling by offering her his flask. He’d turned on the radio, letting the Ink Spots float into the early spring air with their soft crooning of “I’ll Get By.”
For a moment she regretted climbing into that automobile, sharing that front seat with the older boy and alone, leaving with Hollis in the first place.
At first she refused him. But he wheedled and begged so sweetly for her to try a sip. “It’ll help with the female nerves some,” he promised. “My ma has a nip or two every afternoon. Never misses her four o’clock sipping.”
Cooling, Patsy tried the whiskey for the first time ever. She coughed and sputtered. Hollis patted her back. “That’s right,” he said. “Let it get down there good and warm you up from the middle. Breathe its good fire into ya.”
Surprised, she found the sensation exciting, almost enjoyable. It numbed the pains of betrayal, so she took another sip, this time more quickly. And when Hollis placed a hand on her knee and pushed up her skirts, sliding his fingers casually along her thighs, after the third, she was all in, almost, and only pretended to halfheartedly push his hand away.
She didn’t half mind him doing that. A senior boy liking her in that way, feeling her in that way, having the manly touch that his younger brother didn’t have.
Most girls swooned over Hollis too, and the boys thought he was a regular Casanova, him with his weekly paycheck and fine wheels. The looks, a reckless bang slipping over his big sleepy eyes, the always-present pout on his full lips.
Feelings welled. For a few racing heartbeats she let his hand stay. She knew she had to stop, knew she had to and right now. What if someone passed by? If Flannery changed her mind about baton practice? Or a classmate from school came snooping? What if Hollis bragged? Though she had never heard Hollis, some boys, especially the younger ones, crowed and told till the cows came home. Hollis always said to his friends that he didn’t bite the feeding hand. Still, he’d sneakily tease his pals, let them come up with a few good guesses about his latest squeeze.
“Stop now, Hollis; that’s enough. You need to take me home.” Every second that she lingered here with him half draped over her could get worse, or better, or . . .
He looked at her breasts, and on down at her legs as if he hadn’t heard a single word. “You know I’m crazy about you. Just have yourself another small nip, Patsy. Let’s have us a bit of fun, same as ol’ Danny boy.”
Danny. Revenge stoked inside her.
Hollis gently forced the cool metal flask into her hand, lightly tapped her button nose. “Come on. Take my batwing. Just one more drink, and I swear on a stack of Bibles if you still want to go, I’ll see you right home, or wherever you want to go, doll baby. Do whatever you want.”
She giggled at that and grabbed his wandering hand. It was true Flannery never missed baton practice and wouldn’t be home till six—nearly two hours from now. And since it was Friday, most kids would be meeting at Chubby’s after school. Mama had canasta club tonight and would be busy with that. “Okay, one more. But you promise, right?”
He breathed against her neck, traced a small invisible X on her breast. “I told ya already. Promise.”
She snatched up his palm, let her fingers flutter against it a few seconds before breaking away, reaching for the flask. Patsy asked him to swear again, spilling some of the booze down the front of the green-striped spring dress Mama had sewed. “Gee, Hollis, look what you made me do.” She laughed and swiped her damp breasts.
Hollis dropped his head close to her chest.
She nudged him away. “Give me something to dry this mess, or I’ll be in trouble.”
Hollis clicked the button on the glove box, and the little door swung down. “In there,” he mumbled, closing in on her neck for another snuggle.
Patsy lifted out a stained, smelly rag and saw the small gun underneath. “Sure is a fancy gun,” she said, touching its barrel, curious. “Oh, I want to hold it. Looks like the one my daddy taught us girls to shoot. He said I was a crack shot.” She stared at the black barrel, blinked, then peered at the scrawny, crude letters carved there, trying to make them out. Rubbed her blurring eyes, looked again at what someone had tried to scratch out. “Hey, this looks like—”
“Don’t touch it.” Hollis clicked the glove door shut and turned back to her, nuzzling her shoulder. “I don’t want it to get scratched. I waited a long time for my daddy to pass me his prized gun, this fine Henry pistol.”
Patsy knew Hollis was crazy about this new gun of his, and she knew it had been getting him into trouble lately. A month ago Patsy had been walking to work, hightailing it through Ebenezer, when she heard a farmer yelling at Hollis for brandishing the pistol. The old man had lit into him good for shooting off rounds from his new plaything, threatened to take Hollis’s gun away and send for the sheriff. Hollis had begged the farmer not to tell his daddy, promising to atone by painting his fence this summer.
Soon after, one of the teachers did send for Sheriff Henry, the school gossiped. Mr. Dirkson had confiscated the pistol when he caught Hollis in shop class engraving his initials on the wooden inlays in its handle with the school’s woodworking chisel. The teacher made Sheriff Henry and his missus come in for it, and the principal gave Hollis a big fat detention.
Hollis’s hands slipped over Patsy’s, pressing into her chest as she tried to clean up the spill.
Patsy batted at him lightly, then wiped the front of her dress with the stinky rag one last time. At least the smell would cover the drink. She tossed the rag onto the dash and glimpsed down at the stained boots he wore, soaked in mud and whiskey.