Sharply, they turned the corner of Walthall Street. The wide gables of Mr. Lilly’s shingle Victorian flew towards them at a forty-five-degree angle, like a house-boat beached at a sideways tilt upon a green embankment. Harriet let the momentum whisk her through the turn, the fragrance of his climbing roses—clouds of sweetheart pink, tumbling in great drifts from his trellised porch—blowing spicy and evanescent past her as she coasted, free, for a second or two, and then pedalled furiously rounding out upon Main: a hall of mirrors, white facades and columns in the rich light, receding in long, grand perspectives towards the square—where the flimsy white lattices and pickets of bandstand and gazebo bristled in the dim, lavender distance, against the deep blue scrim of the sky—all tranquility, like a backlit stage set at the high-school play (
“—your mama—”
“—your daddy—”
“—your poor little baby that’s in the ground—”
“You mean to tell me that they’re gettin up?”
“You mean to tell me that they’ll rise again?”
As Eugene Ratliff stomped his foot, and clapped, so that a greasy hank of the gray ducktail shook loose and fell over his face, the wild-haired fellow flung his hands up and broke out in a dance. He shook all over; his white hands twitched, as if the electrical current blazing from his eyes and standing his hair on end had crackled throughout his entire body, jerking and jittering him all over the bandstand in forthright convulsions.
“—I mean to shout it like the Bible times—”
“—Shout it loud to make the Devil mad—”
The square was practically deserted. Across the street stood a couple of teenaged girls, giggling uneasily. Mrs. Mireille Abbott stood in the door of the jewelry store; over by the hardware store, a family sat in a parked car with the windows down, watching. On the little finger of the Ratliff preacher (held lifted out, slightly, from the pencil-thin microphone, as if from a teacup’s handle) a ruby-colored stone caught the setting sun and flashed deep red.
“—Here in these Last Days we’re living in—”
“—We’re preaching this Book like the Olden Days.”
Harriet saw the truck (THIS WORLD IS NOT MY HOME!)—and saw, with disappointment, that the bed was empty, except for a little vinyl-sided amplifier that looked like a cheap briefcase.
“Oh, it’s been a long time since some of you here now—”
“—read your Bible—”
“—gone to Church—”
“—got on your knees like a little child …”
With a jolt, Harriet noticed that Eugene Ratliff was looking directly at her.
“… for to be carnally minded is
“—to be vengefully minded is
“—for the Lust of the Flush is
“Flesh,” said Harriet, rather mechanically.
“What?” Hely said.
“It’s
“—for the wages of sin is
“—for the lies of the Devil are
They’d made a mistake, Harriet realized, by venturing up a little too close, but there was nothing to be done for it now. Hely stood staring with his mouth open. She nudged him in the ribs. “Come on,” she whispered.
“What?” said Hely, wiping a forearm across his sticky forehead.
Harriet cut her eyes to the side in a way that meant
“But where were the snakes?” said Hely, plaintively. “I thought you said they were in the truck.”
“They must have carried them back in the house after Mr. Dial left.”
“Come on,” said Hely. “Let’s ride over there. Hurry, before they finish.”