sign up?”
There was a brief murmur.
“I can’t,” said a woman with extravagantly pinned red hair. “Not with four babies under five.”
“I just don’t see why our government is wasting hard-earned tax dollars dishing out books to people who can’t even read,” said Jowly Man. “Why, half of ’em don’t even go to church.”
Mrs. Brady’s voice had taken on a slightly desperate note. “A month’s trial. Come on, ladies. I can’t go back and tell Mrs. Nofcier that not one person in Baileyville would volunteer. What kind of place would she think we were?”
Nobody spoke. The silence stretched. To Alice’s left, a bee bumped lazily against the window. People began to shift in their seats.
Mrs. Brady, undaunted, eyed the assembly. “C’mon. Let’s not have another incident like the Orphans Fundraiser.”
There were apparently many pairs of shoes that suddenly required close attention.
“Not a one? Really? Well . . . Izzy will be the first, then.”
A small, almost perfectly spherical girl, half hidden among the packed audience, raised her hands to her mouth. Alice saw rather than heard the girl’s mouth form the protest. “Mother!”
“That’s one volunteer. My little girl will not be afraid to do her duty for our country, will you, Izzy? Any more?”
Nobody spoke.
“Not one of you? You don’t think learning is important? You don’t think encouraging our less fortunate families to a position of education is imperative?” She glared out at the meeting. “Well. This is not the response that I anticipated.”
“I’ll do it,” said Alice, into the silence.
Mrs. Brady squinted, raising her hand above her eyes. “Is that Mrs. Van Cleve?”
“Yes, it is. Alice.”
“You can’t sign up,” Bennett whispered urgently.
Alice leaned forward. “My husband was just telling me that he believes strongly in the importance of civic duty, just as his dear mother did, so I would be happy to volunteer.” Her skin prickled as the eyes of the audience slid toward her.
Mrs. Brady fanned herself a little more vigorously. “But . . . you don’t know your way around these parts, dear. I don’t think that would be very sensible.”
“Yes,” Bennett hissed, “you don’t know your way around, Alice.”
“I’ll show her.” Margery O’Hare nodded to Alice. “I’ll ride the routes with her for a week or two. We can keep her close to town till she’s got a nose for it.”
“Alice, I—” Bennett whispered. He seemed flustered and glanced up at his father.
“Can you ride?”
“Since I was four years old.”
Mrs. Brady rocked back on her heels in satisfaction. “Well, there you are, Miss O’Hare. You have another two librarians already.”
“It’s a start.”
Margery O’Hare smiled at Alice, and Alice smiled back almost before she realized what she was doing.
“Well, I do not think this is a wise idea at all,” said George Simmonds. “And I shall be writing to Governor Hatch tomorrow to tell him as much. I believe sending young women out by themselves is a recipe for disaster. And I can see nothing but the foment of ungodly thoughts and bad behavior from this ill-conceived idea, First Lady or not. Good day, Mrs. Brady.”
“Good day, Mr. Simmonds.”
The gathering began to rise heavily from its seats.
“I’ll see you at the library on Monday morning,” said Margery O’Hare, as they walked out into the sunlight. She thrust out a hand and shook Alice’s. “You can call me Marge.” She glanced up at the sky, wedged a wide-brimmed leather hat onto her head, and strode off toward a large mule, which she greeted with the same enthusiastic surprise as if it were an old friend she had just bumped into on the street.
Bennett watched her go. “Mrs. Van Cleve, I have no idea what you think you’re doing.”
He’d said it twice before she remembered that this, in fact, was now her name.
TWO
Baileyville was unremarkable among the towns of southern Appalachia. Nestled between two ridges, it comprised two main roads of a stuttering mixture of brick and timber buildings, linked in a V, off which sprouted a multitude of winding lanes and paths that led at the lower level to distant hollers, as the small valleys were known, and at the higher, to a scattering of mountain houses across the tree-covered ridges. Those houses near the upper reaches of the creek traditionally housed the wealthier and more respectable families—it being easier to make a legitimate living on the flatter lands, and easier to hide a liquor still in the wilder, higher parts—but as the century had crept forward, the influx of miners and supervisors, the subtle changes in the demographics