Chapter One
the shadow of a crow
At the first gesture of morning, flies began stirring. Inman's eyes and the long wound at his neck drew them, and the
sound of their wings and the touch of their feet were soon more potent than a yardful of roosters in rousing a man to
wake. So he came to yet one more day in the hospital ward. He flapped the flies away with his hands and looked across
the foot of his bed to an open triple-hung window. Ordinarily he could see to the red road and the oak tree and the low
brick wall. And beyond them to a sweep of fields and flat piney woods that stretched to the western horizon. The view
was a long one for the flatlands, the hospital having been built on the only swell within eyeshot. But it was too early
yet for a vista. The window might as well have been painted grey.
Had it not been too dim, Inman would have read to pass the time until breakfast, for the book he was reading had the
effect of settling his mind. But he had burned up the last of his own candles reading to bring sleep the night before,
and lamp oil was too scarce to be striking the hospital's lights for mere diversion. So he rose and dressed and sat in
a ladderback chair, putting the gloomy room of beds and their broken occupants behind him. He flapped again at the
flies and looked out the window at the first smear of foggy dawn and waited for the world to begin shaping up outside.
The window was tall as a door, and he had imagined many times that it would open onto some other place and let him
walk through and be there. During his first weeks in the hospital, he had been hardly able to move his head, and all
that kept his mind occupied had been watching out the window and picturing the old green places he recollected from
home. Childhood places. The damp creek bank where Indian pipes grew. The corner of a meadow favored by brown-and-black
caterpillars in the fall. A hickory limb that overhung the lane, and from which he often watched his father driving
cows down to the barn at dusk. They would pass underneath him, and then he would close his eyes and listen as the
cupping sound of their hooves in the dirt grew fainter and fainter until it vanished into the calls of katydids and
peepers. The window apparently wanted only to take his thoughts back. Which was fine with him, for he had seen the
metal face of the age and had been so stunned by it that when he thought into the future, all he could vision was a
world from which everything he counted important had been banished or had willingly fled.
By now he had stared at the window all through a late summer so hot and wet that the air both day and night felt
like breathing through a dishrag, so damp it caused fresh sheets to sour under him and tiny black mushrooms to grow
overnight from the limp pages of the book on his bedside table. Inman suspected that after such long examination, the
grey window had finally said about all it had to say. That morning, though, it surprised him, for it brought to mind a
lost memory of sitting in school, a similar tall window beside him framing a scene of pastures and low green ridges
terracing up to the vast hump of Cold Mountain. It was September. The hayfield beyond the beaten dirt of the school
playground stood pant-waist high, and the heads of grasses were turning yellow from need of cutting. The teacher was a
round little man, hairless and pink of face. He owned but one rusty black suit of clothes and a pair of old overlarge
dress boots that curled up at the toes and were so worn down that the heels were wedgelike. He stood at the front of
the room rocking on the points. He talked at length through the morning about history, teaching the older students of
grand wars fought in ancient England.
After a time of actively not listening, the young Inman had taken his hat from under the desk and held it by its
brim. He flipped his wrist, and the hat skimmed out the window and caught an updraft and soared. It landed far out
across the playground at the edge of the hayfield and rested there black as the shadow of a crow squatted on the
ground. The teacher saw what Inman had done and told him to go get it and to come back and take his whipping. The man
had a big paddleboard with holes augured in it, and he liked to use it. Inman never did know what seized him at that
moment, but he stepped out the door and set the hat on his head at a dapper rake and walked away, never to return.
The memory passed on as the light from the window rose toward day. The man in the bed next to Inman's sat and drew
his crutches to him. As he did every morning, the man went to the window and spit repeatedly and with great effort
until his clogged lungs were clear. He ran a comb through his black hair, which hung lank below his jaw and was cut
square around. He tucked the long front pieces of hair behind his ears and put on his spectacles of smoked glass, which
he wore even in the dim of morning, his eyes apparently too weak for the wannest form of light. Then, still in his
nightshirt, he went to his table and began working at a pile of papers. He seldom spoke more than a word or two at a
time, and Inman had learned little more of him than that his name was Balis and that before the war he had been to
school at Chapel Hill, where he had attempted to master Greek. All his waking time was now spent trying to render
ancient scribble from a fat little book into plain writing anyone could read. He sat hunched at his table with his face
inches from his work and squirmed in his chair, looking to find a comfortable position for his leg. His right foot had
been taken off by grape at Cold Harbor, and the stub seemed not to want to heal and had rotted inch by inch from the
ankle up. His amputations had now proceeded past the knee, and he smelled all the time like last year's ham.
For a while there was only the sound of Balis's pen scratching, pages turning. Then others in the room began to stir
and cough, a few to moan. Eventually the light swelled so that all the lines of the varnished beadboard walls stood
clear, and Inman could cock back on the chair's hind legs and count the flies on the ceiling. He made it to be
sixty-three.
As Inman's view through the window solidified, the dark trunks of the oak trees showed themselves first, then the
patchy lawn, and finally the red road. He was waiting for the blindman to come. He had attended to the man's movements
for some weeks, and now that he had healed enough to be numbered among the walking, Inman was determined to go out to
the cart and speak to the man, for Inman figured him to have been living with a wound for a long time.
Inman had taken his own during the fighting outside Petersburg. When his two nearest companions pulled away his
clothes and looked at his neck, they had said him a solemn farewell in expectation of his death. We'll meet again in a
better world, they said. But he lived as far as the field hospital, and there the doctors had taken a similar attitude.
He was classed among the dying and put aside on a cot to do so. But he failed at it. After two days, space being short,
they sent him on to a regular hospital in his own state. All through the mess of the field hospital and the long grim
train ride south in a boxcar filled with wounded, he had agreed with his friends and the doctors. He thought he would
die. About all he could remember of the trip was the heat and the odors of blood and of shit, for many of the wounded
had the flux. Those with the strength to do so had knocked holes in the sides of the wood boxcars with the butts of
rifles and rode with their heads thrust out like crated poultry to catch the breeze.
At the hospital, the doctors looked at him and said there was not much they could do. He might live or he might not.
They gave him but a grey rag and a little basin to clean his own wound. Those first few days, when he broke
consciousness enough to do it, he wiped at his neck with the rag until the water in the basin was the color of the comb
on a turkey-cock. But mainly the wound had wanted to clean itself. Before it started scabbing, it spit out a number of
things: a collar button and a piece of wool collar from the shirt he had been wearing when he was hit, a shard of soft
grey metal as big as a quarter dollar piece, and, unaccountably, something that closely resembled a peach pit. That
last he set on the nightstand and studied for some days. He could never settle his mind on whether it was a part of him
or not. He finally threw it out the window but then had troubling dreams that it had taken root and grown, like Jack's
bean, into something monstrous.
His neck had eventually decided to heal. But during the weeks when he could neither turn his head nor hold up a book
to read, Inman had lain every day watching the blind man. The man would arrive alone shortly after dawn, pushing his
cart up the road, doing it about as well as any man who could see. He would set up his business under an oak tree
across the road, lighting a fire in a ring of stones and boiling peanuts over it in an iron pot. He would sit all day
on a stool with his back to the brick wall, selling peanuts and newspapers to those at the hospital whole enough to
walk. Unless someone came to buy something, he rested as still as a stuffed man with his hands together in his lap.
That summer, Inman had viewed the world as if it were a picture framed by the molding around the window. Long
stretches of time often passed when, for all the change in the scene, it might as well have been an old painting of a
road, a wall, a tree, a cart, a blind man. Inman had sometimes counted off slow numbers in his head to see how long it
would be before anything of significance altered. It was a game and he had rules for it. A bird flying by did not
count. Someone walking down the road did. Major weather changes did-the sun coming out, fresh rain-but shadows of
passing clouds did not. Some days he'd get up in the thousands before there was any allowable alteration in the
elements of the picture. He believed the scene would never leave his mind-wall, blind man, tree, cart, road-no matter
how far on he lived. He imagined himself an old man thinking about it. Those pieces together seemed to offer some
meaning, though he did not know what and suspected he never would.
Inman watched the window as he ate his breakfast of boiled oats and butter, and shortly he saw the blind man come
trudging up the road, his back humped against the weight of the cart he pushed, little twin clouds of dust rising from
beneath the turning cartwheels. When the blind man had his fire going and his peanuts boiling, Inman put his plate on
the windowsill and went outside and with the shuffling step of an old man crossed the lawn to the road.
The blind man was square and solid in shoulder and hip, and his britches were cinched at the waist with a great
leather belt, wide as a razor strop. He went hatless, even in the heat, and his cropped hair was thick and grey,
coarse-textured as the bristles to a hemp brush. He sat with his head tipped down and appeared to be somewhat in a
muse, but he raised up as Inman approached, like he was really looking. His eyelids, though, were dead as shoe leather
and were sunken into puckered cups where his eyeballs had been.
Without pausing even for salutation Inman said, Who put out your pair of eyes?
The blind man had a friendly smile on his face and he said, Nobody. I never had any.
That took Inman aback, for his imagination had worked in the belief that they had been plucked out in some desperate
and bloody dispute, some brute fraction. Every vile deed he had witnessed lately had been at the hand of a human agent,
so he had about forgot that there was a whole other order of misfortune.
-Why did you never have any? Inman said.
-Just happened that way.
-Well, Inman said. You're mighty calm. Especially for a man that most would say has taken the little end of the
horn all his life.
The blind man said, It might have been worse had I ever been given a glimpse of the world and then lost it.
-Maybe, Inman said. Though what would you pay right now to have your eyeballs back for ten minutes? Plenty, I bet.
The man studied on the question. He worked his tongue around the corner of his mouth. He said, I'd not give an
Indian-head cent. I fear it might turn me hateful.
-It's done it to me, Inman said. There's plenty I wish I'd never seen.
-That's not the way I meant it. You said ten minutes. It's having a thing and the loss I'm talking about.
The blind man twisted a square of newsprint up into a cone and then dipped with a riddly spoon into the pot and
filled the cone with wet peanuts. He handed it to Inman and said, Come on, cite me one instance where you wished you
were blind.
Where to begin? Inman wondered. Malvern Hill. Sharpsburg. Petersburg. Any would do admirably as example of
unwelcome visions. But Fredericksburg was a day particularly lodged in his mind. So he sat with his back to the oak and
halved the wet peanut shells and thumbed the meats out into his mouth and told the blind man his tale, beginning with
how the fog had lifted that morning to reveal a vast army marching uphill toward a stone wall, a sunken road. Inman's
regiment was called to join the men already behind the wall, and they had quickly formed up alongside the big white
house at the top of Maryes Heights. Lee and Longstreet and befeathered Stuart stood right there on the lawn before the
porch, taking turns glassing the far side of the river and talking. Longstreet had a grey shawl of wool draped about
his shoulders. Compared to the other two men, Longstreet looked like a stout hog drover. But from what Inman had seen
of Lee's way of thinking, he'd any day rather have Longstreet backing him in a fight. Dull as Longstreet looked, he had
a mind that constancy sought ground configured so a man could hunker down and do a world of killing from a position of
relative safety. And that day at Fredericksburg was all in the form of fighting that Lee mistrusted and that Longstreet
welcomed.
After Inman's regiment had formed up, they dropped over the brow of the hill and into the withering fire of the
Federals. They stopped once to touch off a volley, and then they ran down to the sunken road behind the stone wall. On
the way a ball brushed the skin of Inman's wrist and felt like the tongue of a cat licking, doing no damage, only
making a little abraded stripe.
When they got to the road, Inman could see they were in a fine spot. Those already there had trenched along the
tightly built wall so that you could stand up comfortably and still be in its shelter. The Federals had to come uphill
at the wall across acres and acres of open ground. So delightful was the spot that one man jumped onto the wall and
hollered out, You are all committing a mistake.
Continues...
Excerpted from Cold Mountain
by Charles Frazier
Copyright © 1997 by Charles Frazier.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Copyright © 1997
Charles Frazier
All right reserved.