Ron Rash
Serena
A Novel
For my brother, Thomas Rash
A hand, that with a grasp may grip the worlde.
—CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE
Contents
Epigraph
Part 1
One
WHEN PEMBERTON RETURNED TO THE NORTH Carolina mountains after three…
Two
THE FOLLOWING MORNING PEMBERTON INTRODUCED his bride to the camp’s…
Three
DEW DARKENED THE HEM OF HER GINGHAM dress as Rachel…
Four
WHEN THEY’D LAID THE TRAIN TRACK THE PREVIOUS September, Pemberton…
Five
WINTER CAME EARLY. ONE SATURDAY MORNING men awoke in their…
Six
BY LATE SUNDAY MORNING THE SNOW HAD stopped, and Buchanan…
Seven
WHEN RACHEL WENT TO THE BARN TO GET A cabbage…
Eight
THE EAGLE ARRIVED IN DECEMBER. SERENA HAD notified the depot…
Nine
WHEN THE SICKNESS CAME UPON THEM RACHEL thought it was…
Part II
Ten
THE LINGERING COLD DEFIED ANY CALENDAR. From October until May,…
Eleven
IT WAS CAMPBELL WHO TOLD PEMBERTON THAT the Harmon girl…
Twelve
IN THE FOLLOWING WEEKS, MOST OF NOLAND Mountain had been…
Thirteen
SHE HAD FORGOTTEN HOW MUCH LOGGERS COULD eat, how it…
Fourteen
THE MEETING WITH THE PARK DELEGATION WAS set for eleven…
Fifteen
THE PARTY GATHERED SUNDAY MORNING IN FRONT of the commissary.
Sixteen
THE PREVIOUS DECEMBER, BUCHANAN HAD suggested all the workers be…
Seventeen
ON THE FIRST SUNDAY OF THE NEW YEAR, THE Pembertons…
Eighteen
SLEET FELL AGAIN IN THE MIDDLE OF THE night, but…
Nineteen
TWO MORE ACCIDENTS OCCURRED THE FOLLOWING week on Shanty Mountain.
Twenty
REPAIRS ON THE CABIN WERE NEEDED, THINGS that should have…
Twenty-One
MEN SEEKING WORK CAME TO THE CAMP IN A steady…
Part III
Twenty-Two
SHE LEFT THE HOSPITAL SOONER THAN THE doctors or Pemberton…
Twenty-Three
SHE’D BEEN TOLD TO STAY IN BED FOR SIX weeks,…
Twenty-Four
ON SATURDAY EVENING PEMBERTON FOLLOWED the blacktop through the declining…
Twenty-Five
BEFORE THE FIRST STRINGHOUSE HAD BEEN set on Bent Knob…
Twenty-Six
SHERIFF MCDOWELL DROVE INTO CAMP AT MID-MORNING. He didn’t knock…
Twenty-Seven
BEFORE SHE SAW THE LATE MORNING LIGHT, Rachel had felt…
Twenty-Eight
“A RATHER DAINTY APPETITE TONIGHT,” SERENA said. “Are you feeling…
Twenty-Nine
RACHEL DIDN’T SLEEP WELL THE FIRST NIGHTS in Kingsport. Every…
Thirty
BY EARLY OCTOBER, THE RAILROAD TRACK TO the new camp…
Thirty-One
RACHEL CROSSED THE TRACKS AND SOON WAS on the sidewalk,…
Thirty-Two
THAT NIGHT IT WAS NOT THE GLARE OF FLAMES or…
Part IV
Thirty-Three
IT WAS MID-MORNING BEFORE ENOUGH LIGHT filtered through the pall…
Thirty-Four
AT LEAST THERE ARE MOUNTAINS. THAT WAS what Rachel told…
Thirty-Five
IT WAS SNIPES’ CREW WHO CUT THE LAST TREE. When…
Thirty-Six
THE FOLLOWING EVENING PEMBERTON AND SERENA dressed for Pemberton’s thirtieth…
Thirty-Seven
THE FOLLOWING MORNING PEMBERTON AWOKE with the worst hangover of…
Coda
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Other Books by Ron Rash
Copyright
About the Publisher
PART 1
One
WHEN PEMBERTON RETURNED TO THE NORTH Carolina mountains after three months in Boston settling his father’s estate, among those waiting on the train platform was a young woman pregnant with Pemberton’s child. She was accompanied by her father, who carried beneath his shabby frock coat a bowie knife sharpened with great attentiveness earlier that morning so it would plunge as deep as possible into Pemberton’s heart.
The conductor shouted “Waynesville” as the train shuddered to a halt. Pemberton looked out the window and saw his partners on the platform, both dressed in suits to meet his bride of two days, an unexpected bonus from his time in Boston. Buchanan, ever the dandy, had waxed his mustache and oiled his hair. His polished bluchers gleamed, the white cotton dress shirt fresh-pressed. Wilkie wore a gray fedora, as he often did to protect his bald pate from the sun. A Princeton Phi Beta Kappa key glinted on the older man’s watch fob, a blue silk handkerchief tucked in his breast pocket.
Pemberton opened the gold shell of his watch and found the train on time to the exact minute. He turned to his bride, who’d been napping. Serena’s dreams had been especially troubling last night. Twice he’d been waked by her thrashing, her fierce latching onto him until she’d fallen back asleep. He kissed her lightly on the lips and she awoke.
“Not the best place for a honeymoon.”
“It suits us well enough,” Serena said, leaning into his shoulder. “We’re here together, which is all that matters.”
Pemberton inhaled the bright aroma of Tre Jur talcum and remembered how he’d not just smelled but tasted its vividness on her skin earlier that morning. A porter strolled up the aisle, whistling a song Pemberton didn’t recognize. His gaze returned to the window.
Next to the ticket booth Harmon and his daughter waited, Harmon slouching against the chestnut board wall. It struck Pemberton that males in these mountains rarely stood upright. Instead, they leaned into some tree or wall whenever possible. If none was available they squatted, buttocks against the backs of their heels. Harmon held a pint jar in his hand, what remained of its contents barely covering the bottom. The daughter sat on the bench, her posture upright to better reveal her condition. Pemberton could not recall her first name. He wasn’t surprised to see them or that the girl was with child. His child, Pemberton had learned the night before Pemberton and Serena left Boston. Abe Harmon is down here saying he has business to settle with you, business about his daughter, Buchanan had said when he called. It could be just drunken bluster, but I thought you ought to know.
“Our welcoming party includes some of the locals,” Pemberton said to his bride.
“As we were led to expect,” Serena said.
She placed her right hand on his wrist for a moment, and Pemberton felt the calluses on her upper palm, the plain gold wedding band she wore in lieu of a diamond. The ring was like his in every detail except width. Pemberton stood and retrieved two grips from the overhead compartment. He handed them to the porter, who stepped back and followed as Pemberton led his bride down the aisle and the steps to the platform. There was a gap of two feet between the steel and wood. Serena did not reach for his hand as she stepped onto the planks.
Buchanan caught Pemberton’s eye first, gave him a warning nod toward Harmon and his daughter before acknowledging Serena with a stiff formal bow. Wilkie took off his fedora. At five-nine, Serena stood taller than either man, but Pemberton knew other aspects of Serena’s appearance helped foster Buchanan and Wilkie’s obvious surprise—pants and boots instead of a dress and cloche hat, sun-bronzed skin that belied Serena’s social class, lips and cheeks untinted by rouge, hair blonde and thick but cut short in a bob, dist
inctly feminine yet also austere.
Serena went up to the older man and held out her hand. Though he was, at seventy, over twice her age, Wilkie stared at Serena like a smitten schoolboy, the fedora pressed against his sternum as if to conceal a heart already captured.
“Wilkie, I assume.”
“Yes, yes, I am,” Wilkie stammered.
“Serena Pemberton,” she said, her hand still extended.
Wilkie fumbled with his hat a moment before freeing his right hand and shaking Serena’s.
“And Buchanan,” Serena said, turning to the other partner. “Correct?”
“Yes.”
Buchanan took her proffered hand and cupped it awkwardly in his.
Serena smiled. “Don’t you know how to properly shake hands, Mr. Buchanan?”
Pemberton watched with amusement as Buchanan corrected his grip, quickly withdrew his hand. In the year that Boston Lumber Company had operated in these mountains, Buchanan’s wife had come only once, arriving in a pink taffeta gown that was soiled before she’d crossed Waynesville’s one street and entered her husband’s house. She’d spent one night and left on the morning train. Now Buchanan and his wife met once a month for a weekend in Richmond, as far south as Mrs. Buchanan would travel. Wilkie’s wife had never left Boston.
Pemberton’s partners appeared incapable of further speech. Their eyes shifted to the leather chaps Serena wore, the beige oxford shirt and black jodhpurs. Serena’s proper diction and erect carriage confirmed that she’d attended finishing school in New England, as had their wives. But Serena had been born in Colorado and lived there until sixteen, child of a timber man who’d taught his daughter to shake hands firmly and look men in the eye as well as ride and shoot. She’d come east only after her parents’ deaths.
The porter laid the grips on the platform and walked back toward the baggage car that held Serena’s Saratoga trunk and Pemberton’s smaller steamer trunk.
“I assume Campbell got the Arabian to camp,” Pemberton said.
“Yes,” Buchanan said, “though it nearly killed young Vaughn. That horse isn’t just big but quite spirited, ‘cut proud’ as they say.”
“What news of the camp?” Pemberton asked.
“No serious problems,” Buchanan said. “A worker found bobcat tracks on Laurel Creek and thought they were a mountain lion’s. A couple of crews refused to go back up there until Galloway checked it out.”
“Mountain lions,” Serena said, “are they common here?”
“Not at all, Mrs. Pemberton,” Wilkie answered reassuringly. “The last one killed in this state was in 1920, I’m glad to say.”
“Yet the locals persist in believing one remains,” Buchanan said. “There’s quite a bit of lore about it, which the workers are all aware of, not only about its great size but its color, which evolves from tawny to jet-black. I’m quite content to have it remain folklore, but your husband desires otherwise. He’s hoping the creature is real so he can hunt it.”
“That was before his nuptials,” Wilkie noted. “Now that Pemberton’s a married man I’m sure he’ll give up hunting panthers for less dangerous diversions.”
“I hope he’ll pursue his panther and would be disappointed if he were to do otherwise,” Serena said, turning so she addressed Pemberton as much as his partners. “Pemberton’s a man unafraid of challenges, which is why I married him.”
Serena paused, a slight smile creasing her face.
“And why he married me.”
The porter set the second trunk on the platform. Pemberton gave the man a quarter and dismissed him. Serena looked over at the father and daughter, who now sat on the bench together, watchful and silent as actors awaiting their cues.
“I don’t know you,” Serena said.
The daughter continued to stare sullenly at Serena. It was the father who spoke, his voice slurred.
“My business ain’t with you. It’s with him standing there beside you.”
“His business is mine,” Serena said, “just as mine is his.”
Harmon nodded at his daughter’s belly, then turned back to Serena.
“Not this business. It was done before you got here.”
“You’re implying she’s carrying my husband’s child.”
“I ain’t implying nothing,” Harmon said.
“You’re a lucky man then,” Serena said to Harmon. “You’ll not find a better sire to breed her with. The size of her belly attests to that.”
Serena turned her gaze and words to the daughter.
“But that’s the only one you’ll have of his. I’m here now. Any other children he has will be with me.”
Harmon pushed himself fully upright, and Pemberton glimpsed the white-pearl handle of a bowie knife before the coat settled over it. He wondered how a man like Harmon could possess such a fine weapon. Perhaps booty in a poker game or an heirloom passed down from a more prosperous ancestor. The depot master’s face appeared behind the glass partition, lingered a moment, and vanished. A group of gangly mountaineers, all Boston Lumber employees, watched expressionless from an adjacent livestock barn.
Among them was an overseer named Campbell, whose many duties included serving as a liaison between the workers and owners. Campbell always wore gray chambray shirts and corduroy pants at camp, but this afternoon he wore overalls same as the other men. It’s Sunday, Pemberton realized, and felt momentarily disoriented. He couldn’t recall the last time he’d glanced at a calendar. In Boston with Serena, time had seemed caught within the sweeping circle of watch and clock hands—passing hours and minutes unable to break free to become passing days. But the days and months had passed, as the Harmon girl’s swelling belly made clear.
Harmon’s large freckled hands grasped the bench edge, and he leaned slightly forward. His blue eyes glared at Pemberton.
“Let’s go home, Daddy,” Harmon’s daughter said, and placed her hand on his.
He swatted the hand away as if a bothersome fly and stood up, wavered a moment.
“God damn the both of you,” Harmon said, taking a step toward the Pembertons.
He opened the frock coat and freed the bowie knife from its leather sheath. The blade caught the late afternoon sun, and for that brief moment it appeared Harmon held a glistening flame in his hand. Pemberton looked at Harmon’s daughter, her hands covering her stomach as if to shield the unborn child from what was occurring.
“Take your father home,” Pemberton told her.
“Daddy, please,” the daughter said.
“Go get Sheriff McDowell,” Buchanan yelled at the men watching from the livestock barn.
A crew foreman named Snipes did as commanded, walking rapidly not toward the courthouse but to the boarding house where the sheriff resided. The other men stayed where they were. Buchanan moved to step between the two men, but Harmon waved him away with the knife.
“We’re settling this now,” Harmon shouted.
“He’s right,” Serena said. “Get your knife and settle it now, Pemberton.”
Harmon stepped forward, wavering slightly as he narrowed the distance between them.
“You best listen to her,” Harmon said, taking another step forward, “because one of us is leaving here with his toes pointed up.”
Pemberton leaned and unclasped his calfskin grip, grabbled among its contents for the wedding present Serena had given him. He slipped the hunting knife from its sheath, settled the elk-bone handle deeper in his palm, its roughness all the better for clasping. For a lingering moment, Pemberton allowed himself to appreciate the feel of a weapon well made, the knife’s balance and solidity, its blade, hilt and handle precisely calibrated as the épées he’d fenced with at Harvard. He took off his coat and laid it across the grip.
Harmon took another step forward, and they were less than a yard apart. He kept the knife held high and pointed toward the sky, and Pemberton knew that Harmon, drunk or sober, had done little fighting with a blade. Harmon slashed the air between them. The man’s tobacco-ye
llowed teeth were clenched, the veins in his neck taut as guy wires. Pemberton kept his knife low and close to his side. He smelled the moonshine on Harmon’s breath, a harsh greasy odor, like coal-oil.
Harmon lunged forward and Pemberton raised his left arm. The bowie knife swept the air but its arc stopped when Harmon’s forearm hit Pemberton’s. Harmon jerked down and the bowie knife raked across Pemberton’s flesh. Pemberton took one final step, the hunting knife’s blade flat as he slipped it inside Harmon’s coat and plunged the steel through shirt cloth and into the soft flesh above the older man’s right hip bone. He grabbed Harmon’s shoulder with his free hand for leverage and quickly opened a thin smile across the man’s stomach. A cedarwood button popped free from Harmon’s soiled white shirt, hit the plank floor, spun a moment, and settled. Then a soft sucking sound as Pemberton withdrew the blade. For a few moments there was no blood.
Harmon’s bowie knife fell clattering onto the platform. Like a man attempting to rescind the steps that had led to this outcome, the highlander placed both hands to his stomach and slowly walked backward, then sagged onto the bench. He lifted his hands to assess the damage, and his intestines spilled onto his lap in loose gray ropes. Harmon studied the inner workings of his body as if for some further verification of his fate. He raised his head one last time and leaned it back against the depot’s boards. Pemberton looked away as Harmon’s blue eyes dimmed.
Serena stood beside him now.
“Your arm,” she said.
Pemberton saw that his poplin shirt was slashed below the elbow, the blue cloth darkened by blood. Serena unclasped a silver cuff link and rolled up the shirtsleeve, examined the cut across his forearm.