"I'm afraid not."
The cardplayers at the long table quiet down to hear what comes next but Finn disappoints them all by merely looking slowly at Dixon from under his eyebrows.
"The missus thinks you're in a little deep," says Dixon.
"The missus does."
"That's right."
"And what do you think."
"I reckon she's correct."
"Tell me," Finn says. "How deep's too deep, exactly? I mean according to the missus."
Dixon pulls a ledger from beneath the bar and adds up some numbers and shows the total to Finn, who possesses enough mathematics to recognize generosity and disaster when he sees them tallied together into a single figure.
"That adds up to a passel of catfish."
"It does."
"Even them precious little sweet ones."
"Amen."
"I know when I'm licked." He pushes his stool away from the bar.
"I'm obliged," says Dixon.
"I appreciate your kindliness."
"Come back tomorrow with some of them sweet little fiddler cats, and we'll start to whittle it down."
"I will."
MORNING FINDS HIS SKIFF overburdened and alive with thrashing fish, as if some god has smiled down upon him and arranged for the richest of his bounty to surface hook after laden hook and fairly leap into his boat. He guts them and cuts reeds and binds them up damp for safekeeping, and he takes a few of them up the steps into Dixon's place.
"The world has conspired against me." He intones the words with a forlorn look as he drops his bundle on the bar and unwraps it to reveal two or three decent bluegills and a couple of fat sunfish.
"They ain't so bad."
"I don't reckon."
"You had me fooled."
"I didn't mean to."
"Got more in the boat? I'll come on down."
"Don't bother."
"It ain't no bother."
"This here's the lot."
Dixon gives him a look both incredulous and sympathetic.
"I know."
"This ain't going to make much of a dent."
"I know it. Do what you can."
"Better luck tomorrow."
Finn sorrowfully dons his broken slouch hat and descends the steps and unties his skiff. Before he poles away he removes his long coat and flings it wide and uses it to cover up his catch, or at least as much of it as he can, in case Dixon should happen to glance over the side and spy him as he heads downriver.
South of the village on the left descending bank, just a mile or two above St. Petersburg, he comes to a trading post. He hates coming all the way down here but he reckons that since he could give everything he has to Dixon and still be in the hole he ought to take the greater part of his bounty where it can be turned to profit free and clear. The proprietor of the trading post is a choleric old swindler named Smith, a gigantic slug of a man who gasps for air when he walks and coughs up yellow phlegm into a tin cup and hates Finn all the way down to the ground, but no more than he despises the rest of mankind. On his first day in business he painted his name in black on a bleached piling and hung a sign on the door reading CLOSED. He has neither improved nor altered either one of these indicators over the intervening years.
Finn ties up the skiff and selects some of the catfish and enters through the door marked CLOSED as he has done so many times previous. He takes off his hat and jams it underneath his arm and lays the bundle of reeds and fish upon the counter.
"What'd you do to your head?" says Smith from the shadows.
Finn has not forgotten his year in the penitentiary but he has let himself forget that his skull yet bears the evidence. He runs a hand over the stubble. "They done it to me at Alton."
"What'd you do?"
"I let them. Didn't have no choice."
"I mean to get sent."
"Killed a man wouldn't buy my catfish."
Smith laughs his gasping laugh. "I won't make that mistake." But Finn can see that he does not entirely mean it.
"So how much you think?"
"Is this the lot?" Eyeing them greedily but doing his best not to let it show.
"This ain't but the beginning."
"Somebody's had a good day."
"Don't you dare ruin it."
"I hate to."
"You won't." Finn takes Smith by the sleeve and pulls him from behind the counter and sets him on his breathless path to the door. From there they look over the side of his pier to the spot where the skiff is tied up below bearing its bounty of succulent cats barely concealed and cooled by their wet wrapping of reeds.
"Why, most of them's just fiddlers."
Listening to Smith breathe. "Folks like them better small."
"I know what folks like."
"They're sweeter."
"Don't tell me my trade." He hawks and spits into the river and turns to make his way back inside. "Them little fiddlers don't hardly weigh enough to charge for."
"You'd charge a man to breathe your air." Hollering after him through the open door.
"If I could."
"Them little ones are just as much trouble to catch."
"Not for me they ain't."
Back at the counter Smith names a price by the pound and says that although it pains him to do so he'll take the whole lot of them.
"That'll make my life easy now, won't it?" says Finn.
"I reckon."
Finn makes as if to begin looking around the trading post for his necessaries. "I'll wait here while you go on fetch them up."
"You will not." The mere walk to the pier and back has left his face ablaze and his bald head running with sweat. He collapses upon his stool and begins mopping at his brow with a muddy handkerchief.
"Suit yourself," says Finn. "But I might have to charge for cartage." And he returns to his skiff and sorts through the fish, leaving out most of the small ones and wrapping up the rest and bringing them up to Smith.
"I thought you had more."
"You were mistaken."
"They's not so many young ones as I thought." Calculating his loss by the pound.
"It's your lucky day."
"I reckon." Not knowing whether he has been bested or not, yet unable to walk out on the pier again and see what quantity of fish his visitor may or may not have left in his boat for more profitable sale elsewhere.
Finn takes Smith's money and spends some of it on things that Mary has requested and puts them in the skiff. He denies himself a bottle of whiskey this once because he has plans to take some of his earnings around to the old blind bootlegger and get a jug of poorer-quality stuff as a means of sacrificing on behalf of his dependents. Then as the sun burns heavily overhead and the river sulks nearly to a stop in the shallows he boards his boat and poles northward to a place where he knows he can get full value for the remainder of his catch.
ON THE EDGE of darktown is a long low shack as collapsed upon itself as its proprietor's toothless visage. The building has a covered porch with a rusted tin roof that lets in the rain and a single rotted and sprung step that none of the regulars dares use anymore. Finn treads upon it and it nearly gives way beneath the weight of him and his tow sack full of catfish, and he vows to be more circumspect on the way out. Two men huddled over dominoes on the porch watch from under their bent brows and wonder exactly what business he might be here to conduct. He passes them without acknowledgment and enters the still and tomblike interior of the store.
"Mr. Finn."
"Hey."
"Don't see you much."
"I can't hardly see you neither, you keep it so goddamn dark in here." Waiting for his eyes to adjust.
"If I could afford another window, I'd open it." The man is black as tar, squat of build, and powerful across the shoulders as a bull, and he approaches Finn with a gaiety and a toothless grin which together suggest that every human being on earth-even this unlikely one-is his boon companion. "What brings you here today?"
"Got cats. Them little ones."
"My, my, my." He calls to the men on the porch that they should come and see this if they know what's good for them, so they begrudgingly lay aside their dominoes and sulk in through the open door.
Finn backs away as if they are contagious but keeps one hand on the sack. "Them's good eating," he says to no one in particular.
"I know it," says the proprietor.
"How much?"
"This all you got?"
"All I got left."
The proprietor names his price, which is less than Finn believes the fish are worth but more than he would have gotten from Smith.
"Done," says Finn.
The proprietor makes a little shooing motion, just enough to let the domino players know that he and Finn might like to speak in confidence. The two black men are safely back out on the porch when he resumes, yet he whispers nonetheless: "You plan to put some of that on the lady's account?"
Finn tilts his head as if the man has begun addressing him in a foreign tongue.
"You know."
But Finn does not know.
"The tab she been running. While you was down to Alton."
"Alton's my business."
"I know it." Understanding the man's shame or secretiveness or whatever else it may be, but needing all the same to navigate past it if he is to begin recovering his losses. "And if I was too generous, then that's my business. I know it. I'll have to pay the price."
"Too generous."
"I just thought."
"Generous how."
"Some folk need more credit than the rest. Generally them as can't be counted on to make it up. You know how it goes."
Finn eyes the fish aglisten on the counter in the dark room. "I should have thrown them back."
"Let's just keep this between us gentlemen. I expect she wouldn't want me asking." The proprietor nods as he speaks, in time to his own slow and sleepy rhythm. "She said she'd be keeping up best she could, with the laundry and all."
"I put a stop to that."