Chapter One
Trout Moseley was a day shy of sixteen
when his father, Reverend Joe Pike Moseley, ran away.
Most people thought it started with
the motorcycle. Maybe even before that, when they sent Trout's
mother off to the Institute. But people thought Joe Pike had
been handling that unpleasantness reasonably well -- keeping
his equilibrium, as they said -- until he showed up with the
motorcycle.
It was an ancient Triumph, or at least
what had once been a Triumph. Joe Pike found it in a farmer's
barn, in pieces, and brought it home in the trunk of his car.
Trout was standing at the kitchen window when he saw Joe Pike
back the car down the driveway to the garage behind the parsonage.
By the time Trout got out there, Joe Pike had the trunk open
and was standing with his arms crossed, staring at the jumble
of wheel rims, pitted chrome pieces, engine, handlebars, gasoline
tank.
"What's that?" Trout asked.
"A once and future motorcycle."
"What're you gonna do with it?"
Joe Pike uncrossed his arms and hitched
up his pants from their accustomed place below his paunch.
"Fix it up. I am the resurrection and the life. Yea, verily."
A trace of a smile played at his lips. "Up from the grave
He arose!" he sang off-key. Joe Pike sang badly, but enthusiastically.
In church, he could make the choir director wince. He referred
to his singing as "making a joyful noise."
"You know anything about motorcycles?"
Trout asked.
"Not much."
"Need some help?"
Joe Pike stared for a long time at
the jumble of metal in the trunk of the car. Trout wondered
after awhile if he had heard the question. Then finally Joe
Pike said, "I reckon I can manage. It ain't heavy."
"I mean..." But then he saw that Joe
Pike wasn't really paying him any attention. His mind was
there inside the trunk among the parts of the old Triumph,
perhaps deep down inside one of the cylinders of the engine,
imagining a million tiny explosions going off rapid-fire.
Trout studied him for a minute or so, then shrugged and turned
to go.
"It's a four-cycle," Joe Pike said.
Trout turned and looked at him again.
Joe Pike's gaze never left the motorcycle. "What?"
"You don't have to mix the gas and
oil."
"That's good," Trout said. "You might
forget."
When Trout looked out the kitchen
window again a half-hour later, the trunk of the car was closed
and so were the double doors of the old wood-frame garage.
But he could faintly hear Joe Pike singing inside, "Rescue
the perishing, care for the dying!"
Over the next two months, Trout stayed
away from the garage when Joe Pike was out there. But he followed
the progress of the motorcycle by sneaking a look when Joe
Pike was gone. At first it was a spindly metal frame propped
on two concrete blocks like a huge insect, and metal parts
bobbing like apples in a ten-gallon galvanized washtub filled
with solvent to eat away years of grime and rust. Before long,
with the metal sanded smooth, the motorcycle began to take
shape on the frame. Joe Pike took the fenders, wheel rims,
gasoline tank and handlebars to a body shop and had them re-painted
and re-chromed. Replacement parts -- headlamp, cables, speedometer
-- began to arrive by UPS.
Trout remained vaguely hopeful at
first. Fifteen years old, almost sixteen, fascinated by the
thought of motorized transportation. But he came to realize
that Joe Pike had no intention of sharing the motorcycle.
Joe Pike worked on it in the garage
deep into the night, showing up for breakfast bleary-eyed,
smelling of grease and solvent, grime caked thick under his
fingernails. That was uncharacteristic. Joe Pike was by habit
a fastidious man. He took at least two baths a day -- more
in the summer, because he was a prodigious perspirer -- and
changed his underwear each time. But this present grubbiness
didn't seem to bother him. Neither did the state of their
housekeeping, which got progressively worse. The church had
hired a cleaning woman to come once a week after Trout's mother
went off to the Institute, but she was no match for the growing
piles of dirty dishes and laundry. Trout finally took matters
into his own hands and learned to operate the dishwasher and
the washing machine and dryer. After a fashion. At school,
he endured locker room snickers over underwear dyed pale pink
by washing with a red tee-shirt. Joe Pike's underwear was
likewise pale pink, but he didn't seem to notice, or at least
he didn't remark upon it. Joe Pike's mind seemed to be fixed
on the motorcycle, or whatever larger thing it was that the
motorcycle represented. There was a gently stubborn set to
his jaw, almost a grimness there. On Sundays his sermons were
vague, rambling things, trailing off in mid-sentence. He didn't
seem to be paying the sermons much attention, either. In the
pews, members of the congregation would steal glances at each
other, perplexed. What?
"How's it going?" Trout would ask.
"Okay."
"Don't you get cold out there?" It
was March, the pecan trees in the parsonage yard still bare-limbed
and gaunt against the gray morning sky.
A blank look from Joe Pike. "No. I
reckon not." Then he would stare out the kitchen window in
the direction of the garage and Trout would know that Joe
Pike wasn't really there with him at all. He was out there
with the Triumph.
It worried Trout a good deal. It brought
back all the old business of his mother's long silences, the
way she went away somewhere that nobody else could go, stayed
for days at a time, and finally just never came back. With
Irene's silences, he had felt isolated, left out, wondering
what of it, if anything, was his fault. Now, Joe Pike's preoccupation
with the motorcycle gave him the same old spooked feeling.
Joe Pike, like Irene, seemed unreachable. And Trout finally
decided there was really nothing he could do but watch and
wait.
So he did, and so did the good people
of Ohatchee, Georgia -- particularly, the good people of Ohatchee
Methodist. They watched, waited, talked:
"What you reckon he's gone do with
that thing?"
"Give it to Trout, prob'ly. Man of
his size'd bust the tires." (Hearty chuckle here. Joe Pike's
stood six-feet-four and his weight ranged from 250 to 300
pounds, depending on whether he was in one of his Dairy Queen
phases.)
"Well, it gives the Baptists something
to talk about."
"Yeah. That and all the other."
"Damn shame."
"Was she hittin' the bottle?"
"Don't think so. Just went off the
deep end."
"Poor old Joe Pike. And little Trout.
Bless his heart."
Long pause. "Don't reckon Joe Pike
had anything to do with it, do you?"
"'Course not." Longer pause. "But
it does make you wonder."
"Reckon they'll transfer Joe Pike
at annual conference?"
"Prob'ly not. He's only been here
two years."
"Hmmm. But folks sure do talk."
"Yeah. 'Specially Baptists."
They talked among themselves, but
they did not talk to Joe Pike Moseley about his motorcycle.
No matter how gracefully he seemed to have handled the business
of his wife, there was in general an air of disaster about
Joe Pike. People were wary, as if he might be contagious.
Then too, a motorcycle just didn't seem to be the kind of
thing you discussed with a preacher. At least it didn't until
Easter Sunday.
Ohatchee Methodist was packed, the
usual crowd swelled by the once-a-year attendees, the ones
Joe Pike referred to as "tourists." They were crammed seersucker-to-crinoline
into the oak pews and in folding chairs set up along the aisles
and the back wall. It was mid-April, already warm but not
quite warm enough for air conditioning, so the windows of
the sanctuary were open to the Spring morning outside and
the ceiling fans went whoosh-whoosh overhead, stirring
the smell of new clothes and store-bought fragrances into
a rich sweet stew.
When they were finally settled into
their seats, the choir entered from the narthex singing, "Up
From the Grave He Arose!" They marched smartly two-by-two
down the aisle, proclaiming triumph o'er the grave, and the
congregation rose with a flurry and joined in, swelling the
high-ceiling sanctuary with their earnestness. The choir paraded
up into the choir loft and everybody sang another verse and
then they all sat down and stared at the door to the Pastor's
Study to the right of the altar, expecting Joe Pike to emerge
as was his custom. They sat there for a good while. Nothing.
They began to look about at each other. What? Then
after a minute or two, they heard the throaty roar of the
motorcycle, faintly at first and then growing louder as it
approached the church and stopped finally at the curb outside.
Trout -- seated midway in the middle section with his friend
Parks Belton and Parks' mother Imogene -- looked about for
a route of discreet escape. Joe Pike had spent all night in
the garage. He was still there when Trout left for Sunday
School. And now he had ridden the motorcycle to church. Maybe
if I crawl under the pew. But he sat there, transfixed.
They were all transfixed.
After a moment, the swinging doors
that separated the sanctuary from the narthex flew open and
Joe Pike swept in, huge and hurrying, his black robe billowing
about him, down the aisle and up to the pulpit. He stopped,
looked out over the congregation, gave them all a vague half-smile,
and then settled himself in the high-backed chair behind the
pulpit. He slouched, one elbow propped on the arm of the chair,
chin resting in his hand, one ham-like thigh hiked over the
other, revealing a pair of scuffed brown cowboy boots. Trout
stared at the boots. Joe Pike had bought them in Dallas years
ago when he played football at Texas A&M, but they had been
gathering dust in various parsonage closets for as long as
Trout could remember. He had never seen Joe Pike wear the
boots before.
The choir director, seated at the
piano, gave Joe Pike a long look over the tops of her glasses.
Then she nodded to the choir and they stood and launched into
"The Old Rugged Cross." As they sang, Joe Pike sat staring
out the window, the toe of his boot swaying slightly in time
to the music, brow wrinkled in thought.
The last notes faded and the choir
sat back down. Joe Pike remained in his seat, still staring
out the window, out where the motorcycle was. The choir director
gave an impatient cough. Then Joe Pike looked up, shook himself.
He stood slowly and moved the two steps to the pulpit. He
picked up the pulpit Bible. It was a huge thing, leather-bound
with gold letters and gold edging and a long red ribbon to
mark your place. Joe Pike held it in his left hand as if it
weighed no more than a feather. He opened it with his right,
flipped a few pages, found his place, marked it with his index
finger.
His eyes searched the words for a
long time. Then his brow furrowed in dismay, as if someone
had substituted a Bible written in a foreign tongue. He looked
up, gaze sweeping the congregation. His mouth opened, but
nothing came out. Sweat beads began to pop out on his forehead.
He opened his mouth again, made a little hissing sound through
his teeth.
Trout had known for a good while that
Joe Pike was really two people -- the big man you saw and
another, smaller one who was tucked away somewhere inside.
Trout didn't know who the small man was. Maybe Joe Pike didn't
either, actually. But he gave little evidences of himself
in tiny movements of eye, hand, mouth -- such as this business
of hissing through the teeth -- mostly when agitated. You
had to be quick to catch it. Most people didn't. But Trout
had formed the habit of watchfulness. You had to be watchful
in a house where your mother said nothing for long stretches
and your father was two people. So now, watching Joe Pike
carefully, he saw this hissing through the teeth and read
it as trouble, pure and simple.
"What's he doing?" Parks Belton whispered
to Trout.
Trout shrugged. "I don't know."
Imogene Belton glared at them. "Shhhhhh!"
Suddenly, Trout felt a great urge
to get up from his pew, go up to the pulpit and take the Bible
from his father's hand, take him by the arm and say, "It's
all right." He felt that the entire congregation, every last
one of them, expected him to do just that. But he sat, as
immobilized as the rest, all of them like morbid onlookers
at the scene of a wreck. Finally, Joe Pike gave a great shuddering
sigh and put the Bible back down.
There was a long, fascinated silence,
a great holding of breath, broken only by the throb of the
ceiling fans. And then Reverend Joe Pike Moseley said, "I'm
sorry. I've got to go."
He closed the Bible with a thump.
He drew in a deep breath. Then he walked quickly down from
the pulpit and up the aisle, the black robe flapping about
him, and out the door, looking neither left nor right. Not
a soul inside the church moved. After a moment they heard
the motorcycle cough to life out front. Joe Pike gunned it
a couple of times, then dropped it into gear and roared away.
They could hear him for a long time, until the sound finally
faded as he topped the rise at the edge of town, heading west.
They sat there for awhile longer and then one of the ushers
got up and went through the swinging doors into the narthex.
He returned, holding Joe Pike's black robe. "I reckon he's
gone for the day," the man said. With that, everybody got
up and went home.
* * * * *
Trout woke the next morning in an
agitated muddle, and for a moment he couldn't think of what
was wrong. Then he remembered Joe Pike and the motorcycle.
Trout had slept badly, what little
he had slept at all. He had assumed Joe Pike would return,
certainly by nightfall. Apparently, so had the good people
of Ohatchee Methodist, because none of them inquired, in person
or by phone, during the afternoon. Whatever was going on at
the parsonage or in the tortured soul of Reverend Joe Pike
Moseley, best to let it marinate until Monday.
By dark, Trout was getting worried.
He pictured Joe Pike stranded somewhere, sitting morosely
on a deserted roadside with a flat tire or a blown cylinder.
Or worse. He thought at one point of sounding some kind of
alarm. But two things deterred him and gave him some ease.
The first was the physical image of
his father, massive and fearless. Joe Pike had played football
for Bear Bryant. He was the only Georgia boy on the Texas
A&M team when the Bear went there in 1954 and piled sixty
of them onto buses and took them out in the desert to a dust-choked,
heat-blasted camp and tried to kill them. Most gave up, some
of them sneaking away in the night, dragging their weary bodies
and their cardboard suitcases to the bus station at Junction
so they could escape crazy Bear Bryant. But twenty-seven of
them survived to ride the bus back to College Station, including
Joe Pike Moseley. Trout had never been able to fully understand
and appreciate why otherwise sane people willingly endured
things like that, but it was enough to know that Joe Pike
did. Joe Pike weighed two hundred-fifty pounds at Texas A&M,
even when Bear Bryant got through with him. He was very slow,
but immovable and also brave. The Bear stuck him in the middle
of the line and made the rest of the game take a detour around
him. He once played three quarters against Rice with a broken
wrist, until he finally fainted at the bottom of a pileup.
All that was back before he became a preacher and a gentleman,
of course. But even now - powerful of body, thunderous of
voice - there was no question that Joe Pike was still immovable
and brave. The good people of Ohatchee Methodist might think
that Joe Pike was fleeing from something when he swept down
out of the pulpit and roared off to the west yesterday. But
Trout suspected just the opposite. He knew the look on Joe
Pike's face, had seen it often enough before. Joe Pike was
going to do battle. With what? The answer to that would have
to wait for Joe Pike's return.
The other thing that kept Trout from
calling for help was sheer embarrassment - both for Joe Pike
and himself. He imagined that by now, Joe Pike had probably
fought whatever battle he was looking for and was laying low
somewhere, considering how he might return to Ohatchee without
the congregation or the Bishop doing anything drastic. Joe
Pike was not a man to hurry to trouble. And for Trout's part
- well, there would be snickers and whispers enough at Ohatchee
High School tomorrow without sending out an alarm on Sunday
night.
So Trout fretted and kept his own
counsel and finally drifted off into troubled sleep in the
small hours of the morning. When he awoke, the house was still
empty and quiet. Joe Pike, wherever he had gone, was still
there.
As Trout lay there wondering what
the hell to do now, he could feel something else besides Joe
Pike Moseley nibbling at the back of his brain. Then he remembered:
it was his birthday. Sixteen years old. This was supposed
to be something really special, wasn't it? But there was nobody
here singing and prancing around, the way Joe Pike loved to
do on birthdays and Christmas and Confederate Memorial Day
and any other excuse he could find to be celebratory. For
such a gentle man, he loved nothing better than a good celebration.
It occurred to Trout that maybe a
lot of Joe Pike's celebrations had been an attempt to fill
up Irene's silences. A kind of pitiful denial that never really
worked. Since they had taken Irene away, Joe Pike had simply
stopped trying. A final admission of defeat. And now, on what
should have been the most celebratory occasion of Trout's
young life, Joe Pike had gone away.
Trout lay in bed awhile longer, mulling
it all over, feeling a little brain-fevered. Then finally
he got up and padded barefoot to the kitchen where the clock
on the stove read "8:30." Late for school. Nobody here to
write him an excuse. What to do? He decided, for the time
being, on inertia. He poured himself a glass of orange juice,
sat down at the kitchen table, drank it slowly and listened
to the silence. In truth, he decided after awhile, the empty
quiet was something of a relief after all that had happened.
You could only put up with so much ridiculousness. Considering
that, he felt better.
Then he thought, I am alone in
the house and I can do anything I want to do, as long as it's
not permanent damage. So he got up, took off his pajamas,
dropped them in the middle of the floor, and stood there feeling
the silence on his bare skin. He wandered for awhile buck
naked through every room in the parsonage, ending up in the
living room where he checked to make sure the front door was
locked, then sat down in Joe Pike's favorite chair and finished
the orange juice, celebrating the utter novelty of it.
Even when his mother had been here,
mute and withdrawn, it hadn't been like this. A Methodist
parsonage was a public accommodation. Church people would
drop by at all hours of the day or night, march right in without
knocking, as if they owned the place. Which, in fact, they
did. A preacher might fill up the drawers and closets with
his clothes and tack do-dads to the wall, but he didn't own
the place. The congregation considered the parsonage not so
much the preacher's residence as an extension of the church
itself. So there was always a lot of noise, coming and going,
and you didn't wander around in your pajamas, much less buck
naked. Over the years, Irene had shrunk from that. Her own
silence seemed in part a protest against invasion, the only
way she could get any peace and quiet.
Now, as Trout sat here doing what
he darned well pleased, he considered that this, too was a
form of protest over being at the mercy of other people's
silences and preoccupations. But enough of protest. Empty
silence or not, it was his sixteenth birthday. Nobody could
take that away from him. Even if he got run over by a truck
at mid-morning, the obituary would still read, "Troutman Joseph
Moseley, 16…" It was a marvelous thing, like having Christmas
and the Fourth of July and Easter and Confederate Memorial
Day all rolled into one. And even more marvelous was the fact
that he was sixteen on a Monday, the only day of the week
the state driver's license examiner would be in Ohatchee.
Trout Moseley didn't need anybody singing and prancing to
get a driver's license.
* * * * *
He drove Joe Pike's car downtown himself
and parked it across the street from the courthouse. He was
waiting, first in line, when the examiner arrived at ten.
"Ain't you supposed to be in school,
son?" the examiner asked.
"My daddy said it would be all right
to skip this morning," Trout lied without blinking. "I've
got band practice after school this afternoon, so I couldn't
come then." Band practice? He admired his own inventiveness.
The closest he got to music was church on Sunday and the Atlanta
oldies' station on the radio. But at five-ten, one hundred
thirty pounds, he looked more like a band member than an athlete.
He produced his birth certificate
and took the written examination. Trout had been studying
for it for more than a year, had every word of the manual
committed to memory. He sat quietly while the examiner checked
his answers, and then they walked across the street to the
car for his road test.
"How'd this car get here?" the examiner
asked as they climbed in, Trout behind the wheel, the examiner
holding a clipboard in his lap with a stub of pencil stuck
under the metal clip.
"My daddy brought me and then walked
home."
"Who's your daddy?"
"Reverend Moseley."
Eyebrows up. "Joe Pike Moseley?"
"Yes sir." Had the examiner heard
about Joe Pike's Sunday escapade? Apparently not.
Wide grin. "I used to play football
against Joe Pike. Lord, he was a grain-fed young'un. And rough
as a cob." The examiner laughed, showing stained, uneven teeth.
"Him and a long tall drink of water named Wardell Dubarry.
Wardell would hit you low and then Joe Pike would get up a
head of steam and come in high. They near about ruined our
quarterback one year. You had to watch Joe Pike, or he'd take
your head off with an elbow."
"Well, he's still grain fed," Trout
said. He put his key in the ignition, started the car.
"Played for Bear Bryant."
"Yes sir. Texas A&M."
"Folks never could figure why Joe
Pike went all that way to play football. He could've got a
scholarship at Georgia. Or Georgia Tech." The examiner shook
his head. "And then made a preacher to boot. You just never
know about folks."
"No sir. I guess not."
"He doing okay?"
"Yes sir," Trout said. "He's just
fine."
"Well, you tell him Will Dobbins
from Thomson asked about him."
"Yes sir. I'll do that."
The examiner put his hand on the door
handle. "Hell, turn the car off, son. I imagine you know how
to drive just fine. You made a hundred on the written test.
No sense in us wasting gas. Just make the Arabs richer. Come
on in and I'll write you out a temporary license."
* * * * *
Trout drove out the highway a good
way toward Valdosta with all the windows on the car rolled
down, filling the car with warming April and the smell of
fresh-turned earth and blossom, feeling the novelty of being
alone in the car, sixteen years old, legally licensed. It
was heady stuff. Someday, he thought, he might drive the car
buck naked. That would be about as ridiculous as you could
get. He thought fleetingly of going on to Florida. Decided
against it. Thought about going to school. Decided against
that too. And then he thought suddenly of Joe Pike and the
motorcycle and his spirits sank. He turned around and headed
home.
It was nearly noon when he got back
to the parsonage. The phone was ringing, jarring the emptiness.
"Hello."
"Trout, it's me."
"Where are you?"
"Hattiesburg, Mississippi."
"What are you doing in Hattiesburg?"
"It's on the way to Junction."
"Junction what?"
"Texas. Listen, there's some chicken
pot pies in the freezer."
Trout sat down at the kitchen table
and stared at the refrigerator. Over the telephone line, he
could hear the faint roar of traffic, the bleat of a semi's
air horn.
"Trout?"
"Yes sir."
"You can fix 'em in the regular oven
or the microwave. Directions on the package. Poke some holes
in the top with a fork."
"Are you all right?"
"Yea, verily," Joe Pike said. "A little
minor problem with the wiring, that's all. I got it fixed."
There was a long silence from Joe Pike, broken by the dinging
of a bell on a gas pump, a woman fussing at a child. Then
he said, "I need you to hang in there with me, Trout. Something
I've gotta do..." His voice trailed off. "Just hang in there,
okay?"
"Okay."
"Love you, son."
"Love you too."
Then there was a click on the other
end of the line and Trout was left with the silence and, after
a moment, a dial tone. He hung up the phone, heard the rattling
of the front door. He peered down the hallway and saw Imogene
Belton through the door glass. She had a key and she was coming
right on in.
Trout thought, He didn't say anything
about my birthday. And then he thought, But I didn't
ask him when he was coming back, either.
* * * * *
The Bishop came on Friday, after Trout
had spent the week at the Beltons' house, clucked over by
Imogene until he was sick to death of it.
"I feel like a freak," he told Parks.
"Well, what do you expect?" Parks
answered.
What he did not expect was the Bishop.
But he was waiting in the Beltons' living room when Trout
and Parks got home from school. He was a trim, gray-haired
man, about sixty, and he wore a black suit and clerical collar.
He had good strong gray eyes and a nice smile and a firm handshake.
But Trout thought of what he had heard Joe Pike say one time:
"When the Bishop shows up all of a sudden, it's most likely
either death or embezzlement."
The Bishop politely but firmly shooed
Imogene and Parks out of the living room, sat down on the
sofa next to Trout and leaned forward, elbows on his knees.
Then he said, "Trout, your father's had a breakdown."
Trout shrugged. "It's an old motorcycle.
He said he was having a problem with the wiring."
"You've talked to him?"
"Monday. He called from Hattiesburg."
"Did he sound all right?"
"Yes sir. I reckon so."
"Well," the Bishop said, "it's not
just the motorcycle."
Trout sucked in his breath. "Is he
okay?"
"Resting. A few days in the hospital..."
Trout stood, his school books clattering
to the floor. "Where is he?"
The Bishop pulled him gently back
to the sofa. "He's all right, Trout. I talked to him myself
this morning. Joe Pike has..." he fanned the air with his
hands a bit, searching for words, "...he's been under a lot
of pressure, and I think something just got out of kilter."
They sat there for a moment, Trout
imagining Joe Pike huge and pale in a hospital bed...tubes
and breathing apparatus.... Trout felt sick. Orphaned at sixteen.
Both parents gone batty.
Finally the Bishop said, "Your father
needs a little time and space, I think. I've got some friends
near Lubbock, and he's going to stay with them for a few days.
And then," he pursed his lips, musing, "I'm sending your father
home, Trout. To Moseley. Maybe with his family, familiar surroundings,
he can get his legs back under him. Your uncle Cicero will
go out to Texas and fetch him and take him directly there.
He and the minister at Moseley will simply swap pulpits. I
think this is best for everybody concerned."
Trout thought about the Easter congregation
at Ohatchee Methodist, staring slack-jawed as big solid Joe
Pike Moseley, the most substantial of men, unraveled before
their eyes. And then the curious stares of everybody at school,
the hovering Imogene Belton, the half-whispers. He thought,
with a rush of despair, It won't do to stay here.
The Bishop put his hand on Trout's
knee. "I know this isn't easy for you, Trout. Moving, right
here at the end of the school year."
Not just that. Unfair. Not just moving,
but the whole business. Why should he, at sixteen, have to
be the sane one in the family? At sixteen, you were supposed
to be flaky, irresponsible, hormone-driven. Unfair. But, there
it was.
"No," Trout said. "It's okay. We'll
manage."
The Bishop sat there for a moment,
then rose from the sofa, smoothing the creased front of his
black trousers. "Of course there's the other thing, too. Moseley's
just two hours from Atlanta."
Atlanta. The Institute. Irene. That's
what the Bishop was getting at, of course, but he wouldn't
come right out and say it. Nobody, including the Bishop, wanted
to talk about Irene, not directly. When you got anywhere near
the subject, folks started acting like boxers, bobbing and
weaving and staying out of reach of a good left hook. Joe
Pike had bobbed and weaved as long as he could, and then lit
out for Texas. Well, all right. Trout would pack up bag and
baggage and move, unfair as it might be. But before long,
somebody was going to have to sit still and talk to him about
his mother.