Ted Dunagan

The Salvation of Miss Lucretia


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      The Salvation of

      Miss Lucretia

      Ted M. Dunagan

      NewSouth Books

      Montgomery

      Also by Ted M. Dunagan

      A Yellow Watermelon

      Secret of the Satilfa

      Trouble on the Tombigbee

      NewSouth Books

      105 S. Court Street

      Montgomery, AL 36104

      Copyright © 2014 by Ted M. Dunagan. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by NewSouth Books, a division of NewSouth, Inc., Montgomery, Alabama.

      ISBN: 978-1-58838-293-1

      eBook ISBN: 978-1-60306-255-8

      Library of Congress Control Number: 2014933021

      Visit www.newsouthbooks.com

      To middle school English

      teachers everywhere,

      especially Annell and Renea.

      Contents

       Chapter 1: The Forest

       Chapter 2: The Voodoo Queen

       Chapter 3: Mojo

       Chapter 4: Shackles and Chains

       Chapter 5: Miss Lucretia

       Chapter 6: Butterbeans and Okra

       Chapter 7: Drogues

       Chapter 8: Voodoo Secrets

       Chapter 9: Fire Walking

       Chapter 10: The Visitor

       Chapter 11: The Disappearance

       Chapter 12: A Wingless Dragon

       Chapter 13: A Face from Above

       Chapter 14: Sister Gal

       Chapter 15: The Treasure Hunt

       Chapter 16: The Return

       Chapter 17: Saved by the Rain

       Chapter 18: Grinning

       About the Author

      Chapter 1

      The Forest

      The seductive forest had stands of thick, tall hickory and oak trees for as far back as you could see. I wagered the ground was littered with hickory nuts and acorns, and that would mean that up high in those giant trees there would be nests full of squirrels.

      Off to the east I spotted a huge grove of loblolly pines with thick trunks and big stubby limbs and I knew that was the preferred range of the red fox squirrel.

      My dog, Old Bill, the most renowned squirrel dog in Clarke County, Alabama, was trembling and whimpering at my side and I knew he was chomping at the bit to find the scent of one of the furry creatures. I patted his head and told him to be patient.

      The grand forest of four hundred acres of virgin timber belonged to Mister Leon Autrey, the largest land owner in the county who was a colored man. There were all kinds of stories and rumors of how he had accumulated such a large tract of land, but the plain truth was that part of it had been handed down through the generations of his family and he had accumulated the rest by hard work.

      Folks had schemed for years to deprive him of it, but the love of the land had inspired him to find ways to keep it as his own. The latest way he had been able to pay his taxes and maintain ownership of his property was by abandoning cotton and switching his crops to the production of peanuts.

      He had gone up to Tuskegee to the institute and been taught the way to grow peanuts from the teachings of George Washington Carver, and now, in the summer of 1949, he was teaching my Uncle Curvin how to switch his crop from cotton to peanuts.

      That’s how Poudlum and I had ended up with the opportunity to hunt on Mister Autrey’s land. While he and my uncle were discussing the advantages of peanut farming, they had agreed to give us boys the run of Mister Autrey’s woods for as long as we wanted.

      The time to harvest squirrels was on toward the fall when the weather got cool. Now was the time to train Poudlum’s young dog so that when fall came he would be ready. And Rip was a fortunate dog because he was going to be taught to hunt by Old Bill.

      Squirrel hunting this year was going to be mine and Poudlum’s money crop. Hunters hired Old Bill and me out for fifty cents. Old Bill would tree the squirrel and I would shake a vine or a bush to trick him to move around to the side of the tree where the hunter could get a clean shot. We aimed to make Poudlum’s dog as good as mine and expand our hunting business.

      Old Bill and I had gone down to Coffeeville to visit with my Uncle Curvin yesterday and we had picked up Poudlum and Rip this morning, then traveled up to Zimco, where Mister Autrey lived.

      “They look like some good woods to hunt and camp in,” Poudlum said as we unloaded our gear off the back of my uncle’s truck.

      “Yeah, look at the size of them hickory trees,” I replied. “They must be two hundred years old.”

      “Uh huh, and I ’spect they some monster squirrels