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Chapter 77
 Les Gibbons exclaimed, pounding the floor beside him with a beer bottle. “ ’N’ if we’re lucky they’ll rip out the whole rat’s nest of the motherjumpers as they go stampedin’ past!” “And we can drop a few blasting sticks amongst the booms to give them a good start.” Evenwrite could feel his heart beginning to hammer. “Attaboy! Now we’re pickin’ cotton!” “Maybe even let a stick or two drop right in the mill.” Yessir, this was the way to get things done, old-fashioned or no! “Now we’re talkin’!” Gibbons struck the floor again. “Awright then, we gonna talk sic ’em or we gonna do sic ’em?” “Do, goddammit’hell! Jus’ like commandos. Let’s go, let’s go!” They managed to get one boom opened before the slippery, lurching logs spilled Evenwrite and two other men into the freezing black water. These three unfortunate commandos were swept off into the dark and, after a moment, could be heard cursing and shouting from a flooded clump of bam trees where they clung, too far from solid land to risk swimming, too cold to wait for one of the others to drive into town for a motorboat. There was no choice but go into the mill and phone for help from the nearest boat. “What’ll we tell him?” Howie Evans whispered as he stood, humpbacked and cold, dialing the flashlit wall phone in the mill. “Tell him we need help quick to keep three men from perishing!” “But I mean...what about the logs?” Howie whispered, holding his hand over the mouthpiece of the phone. “McElroy is out there now wiring the cut back together. In the dark maybe he won’t notice a few logs missin’.” Hank arrived, as eager to help as ever. With his flash he and Joe Ben found the three men in the leafless thicket of bam saplings. The bony saplings rattled and clattered as the current swept through their skinny trunks, making them appear as cold and miserable as the shivering men who clung to them. They all three were prepared to start talking as soon as the boat achieved the security of solid land; each had created his own elaborate and logical-sounding reason for being out so late, so far from town, and so near the property of their enemy, but when Hank didn’t ask for reasons, did not even seem inclined to ask for their reasons, they wisely chose to keep silent, realizing that any alibi or excuse they offered would be received probably without question, maybe even without comment, and certainly without belief. “You boys looks a little wasted, Floyd. ...I tell you, come on here in the mill an’ we can get some coffee going.” “No.” Evenwrite declined. “No thanks. We got to—” “I’d offer you some hard stuff if I had some. Seems a shame. Joby, we ain’t got any brandy or bourbon, do we?” “I’m afraid not. Not here. Some at the house, though, if you’d care—” “That’s okay. We got to be going.” “That’s too bad. I hate to be a bad host. But say, I tell ya what: you come back tomorrow night an’ we’ll see if we can’t be better prepared.” The three men stood in a line, waiting the way children wait before the principal’s desk. “N-n-no, thanks, Hank,” Les chattered. “Uh—uh—we wouldn’t want to put you out.” “Les, by god, you should be gettin’ accustomed to this water.” “Yeah. Ain’t that the truth, Hank. Well, by gosh, I don’t have to tell you how obliged. Anyhow. I guess we ought to be goin’.” “Who’s out there on the road in the car? Some others? Floyd, you’ll tell ’em, won’t you, that I’m sorry I wasn’t better prepared. Will you tell ’em that? And tell ’em we’ll sure see to getting in some brandy or the like for the future.” All the next day Floyd spent in the bathtub, and used the whole new bottle of Vick’s. It was Thursday before he made another attempt to dissuade Hank. Alone this time, he drove up to Scaler’s bridge and parked his car out of sight up a back road; while the government men were talking with John Stamper in the little shack, he slipped out on the blind side with a hammer and a bag of tenpenny spikes. He managed to get four of the spikes driven out of sight beneath the bark of the logs before the sound of the shack door opening ran him back to the bushes. He waited there in the rain, shivering and chewing at his lip, until the truck went back up and returned with a new load; then he popped out again to plant a few more spikes. He knew he might have to mine hundreds of logs in this way to be sure of getting one into the mainsaw’s teeth, because most of the logs were being boomed up to be sold to WP. And so what if WP loses a few blades too? Serve both the sonsabitches right. He worked all day, and when dusk settled he complimented himself on a job thoroughly done. He dragged back to his car and drove into town. He ate the cold left-overs in the kitchen, then drove on in to see if news of a Stamper breakdown had yet reached the Snag. It had. Along with the news that the Stamper mill workers were all being transferred to woods work for the rest of the year. “McElroy said that Joe Ben said,” the first man Floyd met told him, “that Hank is got sawn lumber aplenty and was just looking for some excuse to move his whole crew into the woods to get at this WP contract.” Evenwrite didn’t say anything; he stood, silent and chilled, wondering why he wasn’t more surprised by the news. “An’ you know what?” the man went on. “You know what me ’n’ the boys an’ a lot of others reckon?” He shook his head slowly. “No. What is it you ’n’ the boys reckon?” “That Hank Stamper hisself brought off this breakdown for just such a reason. It’s just like him to pull a trick like that.” Evenwrite ............
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