“She ain’t fifty yet, but Wen n Addie were married a long, long time, just the same,” Frank
said. “Got hitched back when neither of em was old enough to vote or buy a legal drink. Like
that Chuck Berry song, the one about the teenage wedding. That kind of hook-up usually
doesn’t last long, but theirs did.”
Tim also made the acquaintance of Orphan Annie, a homeless woman who many nights
slept on an air mattress in the alley running between the sheriff’s office and the DuPray
Mercantile. She also had a little tent in a field behind the rail depot, and when it rained, she slept
there.
“Annie Ledoux is her real name,” Bill Wicklow said when Tim asked. Bill was the oldest of
the DuPray deputies, a part-timer who seemed to know everyone in town. “She’s been sleepin
back in that alley for years. Prefers it to the tent.”
“What does she do when the weather turns cold?” Tim asked.
“Goes up to Yemassee. Ronnie Gibson takes her most times. They’re related somehow, third
cousins or something. There’s a homeless shelter there. Annie says she doesn’t use it unless she
has to, on account of it’s full of crazy people. I tell her look who’s talkin, girlfriend.”
Tim checked her alley hideaway once a night, and visited her tent one day after his
warehouse shift, mostly out of simple curiosity. Planted in the dirt out front were three flags on
bamboo poles: a stars and stripes, a stars and bars, and one Tim didn’t recognize.
“That’s the flag of Guiana,” she said when he asked. “Found it in the trash barrel behind the
Zoney’s. Pretty, ennit?”
She was sitting in an easy chair covered with clear plastic and knitting a scarf that looked
long enough for one of George R. R. Martin’s giants. She was friendly enough, exhibiting no
sign of what one of Tim’s fellow Sarasota officers had named “homeless paranoid syndrome,”
but she was a fan of late-night talk radio on WMDK, and her conversation sometimes wandered
off into strange byroads that had to do with flying saucers, walk-ins, and demonic possession.
One night when he found her reclining on her air mattress in the alley, listening to her little
radio, he asked her why she stayed there when she had a tent that looked to be in tip-top
condition. Orphan Annie—perhaps sixty, perhaps eighty—looked at him as though he were
mad. “Back here I’m close to the po-lice. You know what’s behind the depot and them
warehouses, Mr. J.?”
“Woods, I guess.”
“Woods and bog. Miles of slash and muck and deadfalls that go on all the way to Georgia.
There’s
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