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Authors: David Baldacci

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BOOK: Wish You Well
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Lou nodded, but in truth she wasn’t convinced she did.

 

 

CHAPTER ELEVEN
When Lou went outside, she saw Diamond and Oz over by the split-rail corral where the horse was grazing. When Diamond saw Lou, he pulled a sheet of paper and a tin of tobacco out of his pocket, rolled the smoke, licked it closed, struck a match against a rail, and lit up.
Oz and Lou both gaped, and she exclaimed, “You’re too young to do that.”
Diamond casually waved off her protest, a pleased smile on his face. “Aww, I all growed up. Man a man.”
“But you’re not much older than me, Diamond.”
“Different up here, you see.”
“Where do you and your family live?” asked Lou.
“On down the road a piece afore you get somewhere.”
Diamond pulled a cover-less baseball from his pocket and tossed it. Jeb raced after the ball and brought it back.
“Man give me that ball ’cause I tell him his future.”
“What was his future?” asked Lou.
“That he gonna give a feller named Diamond his old ball.”
“It’s getting late,” Lou said. “Won’t your parents be getting worried?”
Diamond stubbed out the homemade smoke on his overalls and stuck it behind his ear as he wound up to throw again. “Naw, like I say, all growed up. Ain’t got to do nothing if’n don’t want to.”
Lou pointed to something dangling on Diamond’s overalls. “What’s that?”
Diamond looked down and grinned. “Left hind foot of a graveyard rabbit. Aside fur heart’a calf, luckiest thing they is. Shoot, don’t they school you nuthin’ in the city?”
“A graveyard rabbit?” Oz said.
“Yessir. Caught and kilt in graveyard in black of night.” He slipped the foot off its string and gave it to Oz. “Here, son, I always get me ’nuther, anytime I want I can.”
Oz held it reverently. “Gosh, thanks, Diamond.”
Oz watched Jeb race after the ball. “Jeb sure is a good dog. Gets that ball every time.”
When Jeb brought the ball and dropped it in front of Diamond, he picked it up and tossed it over to Oz. “Prob’ly ain’t much room to throw nuthin’ in the city, but give it a whirl, son.”
Oz stared at the ball as though he’d never held one. Then he glanced at Lou.
“Go ahead, Oz. You can do it,” she said.
Oz wound up and threw the ball, his arm snapping like a whip, and that ball sprang forth from his small hand like a freed bird, soaring higher and higher. Jeb raced after it, but the dog wasn’t gaining any ground. An astonished Oz just stared at what he’d done. Lou did the same.
The cigarette fell off a startled Diamond’s ear. “God dog, where’d you learn to toss like that?”
Oz could only offer up the wonderful smile of a boy who had just realized he might be athletically gifted. Then he turned and raced after the ball. Lou and Diamond were silent for a bit and then the ball came sailing back. In the gathering darkness they couldn’t even see Oz yet, but they could hear him and Jeb coming, a total of six spirited legs flying at them.
“So what do you do for excitement in this place, Diamond?” asked Lou.
“Fishing mostly. Hey, you ever skinny-dip in a gravel pit?”
“There are no gravel pits in New York City. Anything else?”
“Well”—he paused dramatically—“course, there’s the haunted well.”
“A haunted well?” exclaimed Oz, who had just run up, Jeb at his heels.
“Where?” asked Lou.
“Come on now.”
Captain Diamond and his company of infantry cleared the tree line and plunged across an open field of tall grass so fine and uniformly placed, it looked like combed hair. The wind was chilly, but they were much too excited to be bothered by that slight discomfort.
“Where is it?” asked Lou, running beside Diamond.
“Shhh! Getting close, so’s we got to be real quiet. Spooks round.”
They kept moving forward. Suddenly Diamond called out, “Hit the ground!”
They all dropped as though attached by taut rope.
Oz said in a trembling voice, “What is it, Diamond?”
Diamond hid a smile. “Thought mebbe I hear something, is all. Can’t never be too careful round spooks.” They all rose.
“What y’all doing here?”
The man had stepped from behind a stand of hickory trees, the shotgun in his right hand. Under the moonlight Lou could make out the glow of an evil pair of eyes staring dead at them. The three stood frozen as the fellow approached. Lou recognized him as the crazy man on the tractor recklessly flying down the mountain. He stopped in front of them and his mouth delivered a shot of chew spit near their feet.
“Got no bizness round here,” the man said, as he lifted up the shotgun and rested the barrel on his left forearm such that the muzzle was pointed at them, his forefinger near the trigger.
Diamond stepped forward. “Ain’t doing nuthin’, George Davis, ’cept running round, and ain’t no law agin that.”
“You shet your mouth, Diamond Skinner, afore I put my fist to it.” He peered over at quaking Oz, who drew back and clutched his sister’s arm.
“You ’em chillin Louisa take in. Got the crippled ma. Ain’tcha?” He spit again.
Diamond said, “You ain’t got no bizness with ’em, so leave ’em be.”
Davis moved closer to Oz. “Mountain cat round, boy,” he said, his voice low and taunting. And then he cried out, “You want it
git
you!” At the same time he said this, Davis feigned a lunge at Oz, who threw himself down and huddled in the high grass. Davis cackled wickedly at the terrified boy.
Lou stood between her brother and the man. “You stay away from us!”
“Gawd damn you, girl,” Davis said. “Telling a man what to do?” He looked at Diamond. “You on my land, boy.”
“T’ain’t your land!” said Diamond, his hands making fists, his anxious gaze fixed on that shotgun. “Don’t belong nobody.”
“Calling me a liar?” snapped Davis, in a fearsome voice.
Then the scream came. It rose higher and higher until Lou figured the trees must surely topple from the force, or the rocks would work loose and slide down the mountain and maybe, with luck, crush their antagonist. Jeb came around growling, his hackles up. Davis stared off anxiously into the trees.
“You got you a gun,” said Diamond, “then go git your old mountain cat. ’Cept mebbe you scared.”
Davis’s gaze burned into the boy, but then the scream came again, and hit them all just as hard, and Davis took off at a half-trot toward the trees.
“Come on now!” cried out Diamond, and they ran as fast as they could between trees and along more open fields. Owls hooted at them, and a bobwhite bobwhited at them. Things they couldn’t see ran up and down tall oaks, or flitted in front of them, yet none of it came close to scaring them as much as they already had been by George Davis and his shotgun. Lou was a blur, faster even than Diamond. But when Oz tripped and fell, she rounded back and helped him.
They finally stopped and squatted in the high grass, breathing heavy and listening for a crazy man or a wildcat coming after them.
“Who is that awful man?” asked Lou.
Diamond checked behind him before answering. “George Davis. He got a farm next Miss Louisa’s. He a hard man. A bad man! Dropped on his head when he were a baby, or mebbe mule kicked him, don’t know which. He got a corn liquor still up here in one of the hollows, so’s he don’t like people coming round. I wish somebody just shoot him.”
They soon reached another small clearing. Diamond held up his hand for them to stop and then proudly pointed up ahead, as though he had just discovered Noah’s Ark on a simple mountaintop in Virginia.
“There she is.”
The well was moss-crusted brick, crumbling in places, and yet undeniably spooky. The three glided up to it; Jeb guarded their rear flank while hunting small prey in the high grass.
They all peered over the edge of the well’s opening. It was black, seemingly without bottom; they could have been staring at the other side of the world. All sorts of things could have been peering back.
“Why do you say it’s haunted?” Oz asked breathlessly.
Diamond sprawled in the grass next to the well and they joined him.
“ ’Bout a thousand million years ago,” he began in a thick and thrilling voice that made Oz’s eyes widen, fast-blink, and water all at the same time, “they was a man and woman live up chere. Now, they was in love, ain’t no denying that. And so’s they wanted to get hitched o’course. But they’s family hated each other, wouldn’t let ’em do it. No sir. So they come up with a plan to run off. Only somethin’ went bad and the feller thought the woman had done got herself kilt. He was so broke up, he came to this here well and jumped in. It’s way deep, shoot, you seed that. And he drowned hisself. Now the girl found out what was what, and she come and jumped in herself too. Never found ’em ’cause it was like they was plopped on the sun. Not a durn thing left.”
Lou was completely unmoved by this sad tale. “That sounds a lot like Romeo and Juliet.”
Diamond looked puzzled. “That kin of yours?”
“You’re making this up,” she said.
All around them sounds of peculiar quality started up, like millions of tiny voices all trying to jabber at once, as though ants had suddenly acquired larynxes.
“What’s that?” Oz said, clinging to Lou.
“Don’t be doubting my words, Lou,” Diamond hissed, his face the color of cream. “You riling the spirits.”
“Yeah, Lou,” said Oz, who was looking everywhere for demons of hell coming for them. “Don’t be riling the spirits.”
The noises finally died down, and Diamond, regaining his confidence, stared triumphantly at Lou. “Shoot, any fool can see this well’s magic. You see a house anywhere round? No, and I tell you why. This well growed up right out of the earth, that’s why. And it ain’t just a haunted well. It what you call a wishing well.”
Oz said, “A wishing well? How?”
“Them two people lost each other, but they’s still in love. Now, people die, but love don’t never die. Made the well magic. Anybody done got a wish, they come here, wish for it, and it’ll happen. Ever time. Rain or shine.”
Oz clutched his arm. “Any wish? You’re sure?”
“Yep. ’Cept they’s one little catch.”
Lou spoke up, “I thought so. What is it?”
“ ’Cause them folks died to make this here a wishing well, anybody want a wish, they’s got to give up somethin’ too.”
“Give up what?” This came from Oz, who was so excited the boy seemed to float above the supple grass like a tethered bubble.
Diamond lifted his arms to the dark sky. “Like just the most grandest, importantest thing they got in the whole dang world.”
Lou was surprised he didn’t take a bow. She knew what was coming now, as Oz tugged at her sleeve.
“Lou, maybe we can—”
“No!” she said sharply. “Oz, you have got to understand that dangling necklaces and wishing wells won’t work. Nothing will.”
“But, Lou.”
The girl stood and pulled her brother’s hand free. “Don’t be stupid, Oz. You’ll just end up crying your eyes out again.”
Lou ran off. After a second’s hesitation Oz followed her.
Diamond was left with the spoils of something, surely not victory, judging by his disappointed face. He looked around and whistled, and Jeb came running. “Let’s get on home, Jeb,” he said quietly.
The pair ran off in the opposite direction from Lou and Oz, as the mountains headed for sleep.

 

 

CHAPTER TWELVE
BOOK: Wish You Well
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