Mark Spragg - Bone Fire

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Ishawooa, Wyoming, is far from bucolic nowadays, as the sheriff, Crane Carlson, is reminded when he finds a teenager murdered in a meth lab. His other troubles include a wife who's going off the rails with bourbon and pot, and his own symptoms of the disease that killed his grandfather.
Einar Gilkyson, taking stock at eighty, counts among his dead a lifelong friend, a wife, and his only child, and his long-absent sister has lately returned home from Chicago after watching her soul mate die. His granddaughter, Griff, has dropped out of college to look after him, though Einar would rather she continue with her studies and her boyfriend, Paul. Completing this extended family are Barnum McEban and his ward, Kenneth, a ten-year-old whose mother (Paul's sister) is off marketing enlightenment.
What these characters have to contend with on a daily basis is bracing enough, but as their lives become even more strained, hardship foments exceptional compassion and generosity, and along with harsh truths come moments of hilarity and surprise and beauty. No one writes more compellingly about the modern West than Mark Spragg, and Bone Fire finds him at the very height of his powers.

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“It’s expensive here,” the boy said.

“You get what you want. This one’s on me.”

“I got my own money.”

“I’m sure you do, but I wouldn’t mind hearing you say thank you.”

Kenneth looked at him over the top of the menu. “Thank you,” he said.

“You ever had an omelet?”

“I don’t know what that is.”

“It’s eggs. They got a Denver omelet advertised, and here we are. You game?”

Kenneth nodded, folding the menu and setting it to the side.

Jerry scooted out of the booth. “Order me one too. And more coffee, and rye toast if they’ve got it.”

“Where are you going?”

“I’m just going outside for a smoke. You’ll see me standing there through that window.”

When the waitress came back, Kenneth ordered their omelets and finished his milk, watching Jerry smoke and pace back and forth. He ordered a second glass to drink with his meal, and they ate with their heads down, not speaking until the waitress asked if they wanted anything else.

“No, thank you,” Jerry said, “that should do it.” Then he turned to Kenneth. “What do you think you’d have done if I hadn’t bought you that ticket?” He sat back, working a toothpick in his mouth.

“My mom said I could offer some extra money. For the trouble, I mean.”

“Like a bribe.”

“I guess so.”

“Your mom thinks of everything, doesn’t she?”

“She’s real smart.”

“What kind of bribe did I miss out on?”

“Ten dollars.”

“Is that all you got?”

“I’ve got more than that down in my boot.”

Jerry smiled, dragging his suitcase from under the table. “You ready?”

“How far is it?” Kenneth said, slipping his backpack over his shoulders. “I have to go to the bathroom.”

“It’s only a block but you ought to go now. The restrooms will be nicer here. I’ll just be waiting outside when you’re done.”

They walked over to the Amtrak station on Wynkoop and found the bus they needed.

“You say howdy to your cousins for me.”

“Aren’t you coming?”

Jerry was leaning against a concrete pillar holding his pack of cigarettes, but he hadn’t shaken one out. “Not me,” he said. “I thought I’d walk over here just so I could see you get on this bus.” He stuck a cigarette in his mouth and put the pack away. “And for Christ’s sake don’t go telling everybody you meet about that money you got stuck down your boots.”

“I won’t.”

“All right, then.” Jerry extended his hand. “It was nice to meet you, Mr. Kenneth.”

He felt a little bit like crying and kept his head down when they shook hands and then walked right on the bus, taking another seat by the window. Jerry stood watching by the pillar until they pulled away.

He was so tired his eyes felt scratchy and he nodded asleep on the short stretches between stops in Longmont and Greeley and Fort Collins, and then they were in Cheyenne, with the bus driver staring in the rearview mirror and calling, “Twenty minutes.”

He used the bathroom on the bus, and when he came out he could see the driver through the window talking to another man dressed in a Greyhound uniform. He took his backpack and basketball with him when he got off. Having read the pamphlet in the seat about unaccompanied children, he knew he wouldn’t be allowed to ride up to Wheatland, to Douglas, to Casper, to anywhere, and he could see it in their faces. He smiled at them, hooking up his backpack and walking out into the street. He’d already planned what to do next.

He stood at the pop machine on the sidewalk until the driver looked away, then ducked around the corner into the parking lot. He found a two-gallon gas can in the bed of the second pickup he looked in and climbed over the tailgate, dropping the can out by the side of the truck, counting out five one-dollar bills and pulling the head of a sledgehammer on top of them so they wouldn’t blow away.

He walked quickly along Deming with the empty can, squatting up under the overpass to check his Google maps. When he got to Central he turned north for four blocks to the Sinclair on the corner, just where it was supposed to be. He filled the can and went in and bought a small bag of chips and a Dr Pepper, then sat around the corner from the station eating the other half of his sandwich and all of the chips, washing it down with the Dr Pepper.

The food made him so tired that his legs felt rubbery, but he kept north on Central until the street ended at a black-and-yellow barrier. He ducked under and crossed several railroad tracks, crawling under the couplings of the parked boxcars and watching to make sure none of them were going to move away and cut him in half. Then he was out in a huge dirt workyard, where there were maintenance buildings and cars and trucks and a man yelling what the hell did he think he was doing here. He dropped the basketball when he started to run and didn’t dare go back for it, and the gas can had gotten so heavy that he ran holding it up against his chest. When he crossed over more tracks he stopped to catch his breath, the guard behind him still standing there with his ball but too far away for Kenneth to hear his screams.

He crossed three more sets of tracks and found a regular street again, walking backwards with his arm out and his thumb sticking up like he’d seen in old movies. He’d only gone two blocks when a woman pulled to the curb, waving him forward and rolling the window down on the passenger side.

It was hot and he set the gas can down, pulling up the front of his T-shirt to wipe his face.

The woman was leaning across the seat. “Are you lost?” she asked.

“No, ma’am. My mom just sent me for gas.” He brought the can up to window-level for her to see. “We ran out, and she was afraid to leave me with the car.” The woman tilted her head like dogs do when they hear a noise they don’t understand, so he added: “She hurt her leg real bad and couldn’t come with me.”

The woman pushed the door open. “Get in here right now.” She sounded mad.

He slid his backpack onto the backseat, setting the gas can on the floor there, and got in the front.

“How come you’re all sweaty?”

“A man was chasing me.”

The woman looked in the rearview mirror. “Where was he chasing you?”

“By the railroad cars.”

She was pulling away from the curb, glancing in the side mirror. She still looked mad.

“A man gave me a ride to the gas station, but then I couldn’t get a ride back, so I was walking.”

“Where’d you say your mom ran out of gas?”

“ Iron Mountain Road.”

She looked at him like he’d cussed, and he thought maybe he’d remembered it wrong from the map.

“That’s clear north of the city.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“Then how come you’re all the way down here for gas?” She looked at the gas can again, checking her wristwatch.

“This is where the man dropped me off. He said he didn’t want to stop before he got home.”

“What man?”

“The man who picked me up.”

“I wish that son of a bitch had told you his name,” she said. “I’m sorry I cussed, but I’m upset about this.”

“He never did.”

“Of course he didn’t.” She was settling now, starting to forget about being late for whatever else she had to do. “He wouldn’t dare, running you down here and dropping you off like he did.” She was watching the side mirror as she merged with the northbound traffic on I-25. She looked at the gas can again. “You don’t think that’s going to explode, do you?”

“No, ma’am. I’m sure we’re all right if we leave the windows down.”

She looked at him, studying him. “You’re a cute one. I’ll give you that,” she said.

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