Somebodyâwho was it?âsaid about her, âWhen Mary came to America, she thought it was all for her.â
No wonder she defeated Phinâkept him reading, hauling wood and water, while Jimmy graduated to the mine, opening a certain door for ore carts, otherwise watching that it stayed closed, and making up songs to keep himself awake.
Johnny OâConnor became a door boy, too. One day he sang himself to sleep. A cart rumbled into the door, and it flew back and smashed him. It was the kind of thing that happened.
But Jimmy Lundy passed unscathed from door boy to mule boy. Fifteen now, he belonged to a swaggering group of young mine workers. They fought among themselves, swore continually, told jokes Phin didnât understand and stories he could understand but not picture. Heâd never been below the surface to see for himself.
He argued with his mother. Sheâd kept him out of everything exciting and important, and she was so thin these days, so tired. Shouldnât he go to work now, earn money to help out? She could find some girl to read to her.
She straightened from her washboard. Her arms were red and her hands redder, and on her face was an expression he didnât understand, then or now.
âI donât want you getting used to it,â she said. âWhen youâre grown you can decide, but youâre not grown yet, Phin.â
He could have proved her wrong. He could have gone to the mine and taken what work was offered. He didnât because he half understood. Sheâd moved to Murrayâs for his sake, and while she didnât mind what people said, she didnât go there because she liked it. If Phin went into the mine, her sacrifice would be for nothing.
So it was Murrayâs he got used to, the world of drink and gambling, late nights and open secrets. That and the stable, clean and quiet, smelling peacefully of horses. It kept him busy enough that he saw Jimmy only in passing; Jimmy always part of a crowd.
Now Phin realized, staring at the dark wall of the Dog Hole, that he didnât know where Jimmyâs loyalties lay. At Murrayâs heâd watched, eavesdropped, tried toput together the puzzle: who was a union man, who AOH? Who was a Sleeper? Who combined both, or all three? Fascinating, treacherous currents, and heâd watched the surface. Jimmy swam them. Sweat popped out on Phinâs brow. Who might Jimmy be talking to, right this minute?
The Sleepers didnât take boys, he was pretty sure; not even mule boys. But Jimmy should be back by now. Shouldnât he be backâ
âTell me when this hits the floor.â Jimmy was there again, paying a fat rope down the side of the hole yard by yard.
Every ugly thought of betrayal left Phin instantly. He waited for the rope. âGot it.â
âHereâs more. The knotsâll make it shorter. Holler when youâve got ten or twelve extra feet.â
There were fifteen extra feet when Phin called up again. The rope was big around as a beer glass. Knots took up more of a thick rope, didnât they? It was the kind of thing Engelbreit wouldâ
No. Donât think about Engelbreit.
Jimmy hauled the rope up. Phin heard low-voiced swearing. It would be hard knotting such a long rope, especially if you wanted to work fast.
Not as hard as it was going to be to climb it.
Phin massaged his left arm. It wasnât broken, but the hand had no strength. He could barely close it, let alone squeeze.
After a few minutes the rope came down again, knot by lumpy knot. Jimmy looked over the edge. âGot it? Let me get set, then. When I twitch, you come ahead.â
Get set how? There was no tree up there to wrap the rope around, not even a good-sized rock. How would Jimmy do it? What would he brace against?
Donât think about that. He had his own job to do.
The rope twitched. Phin reached up with his right hand and got a firm grip. With his left forearm, he pinned the