The Devil All the Time (2020) Movie Script

1
[somber piano music playing]
[male narrator] If you asked most people
where Knockemstiff, Ohio
or Coal Creek, West Virginia were,
they probably couldn't point 'em out
to you on a map.
But I guarantee,
they'd be there all the same.
How and why so many people
from those two piddlin' places on that map
could end up connected
has a lot to do with our story.
Some would claim it was just dumb luck,
while others might swear
it was God's intention.
But I'd say
with the way things turned out,
it was a little bit of both.
In 1957, it'd take someone
approximately ten hours
to drive fromCoal Creek
to a paper mill town
in southern Ohio calledMeade.
Once you got to Meade,
Knockemstiff was only a short drive away.
[birds chirping]
Four hundred or so people
lived in Knockemstiff
in 1957,
nearly all of them connected by blood
by one godforsaken calamity or another,
be it lust or necessity
or just plain ignorance.
[dog barking]
The Russells had rented the house on top
of the Mitchell flats for nine years now.
But most of the neighbors down below
still considered them outsiders.
[dog barking]
[boy] Hey, Dad.
[man] You're coming with me today, boy.
[narrator] Years ago,
Willard had fitted together
a weathered cross above a fallen tree
in a small clearing behind his house.
He came every morning and evening
to talk to God.
It seemed to his son that his father
fought the Devil all the time.
[Willard] Now, you pray on...
what happened today.
Now, remember, be honest.
No bullshittin', he'll know.
[narrator] When he prayed,
his mind would often drift back
to the war in the South Pacific
and the day that he and a couple
of other soldiers came across the body
of Gunnery Sergeant Miller Jones.
[bombs exploding in the distance]
[insects chirping]
[gunshot in the distance]
[flies buzzing]
[Willard] Holy shit.
[flies buzzing]
[Willard] Fuck. [breathing heavily]
[man] What's it say?
Miller Jones.
[both gasp]
-[man] Fuck!
-[Miller gasping]
[man] We gotta do something.
The Japs just left him up there.
[Miller gasping, wheezing]
[gun cocking]
[gunshot fires]
[bus driver] Next stop, Meade, Ohio.
Dream
When you're feeling blue
[car honking]
["Dream" by Johnny Mercer
continues playing]
-[door chimes open]
-[indistinct chatter]
[door clanks shut]
-Please.
-Thank you.
[narrator]
Right before Willard fell in love,
the man whose seat he took
would also meet his match.
I'm so sorry. I forgot my damn keys.
Okay. Guy by the window counter.
So, what'll you be having?
Ham and cheese.
[whispers] Ham and cheese.
-Okay.
-You're a little green on the job.
-That obvious, huh?
-[man chuckles]
My brother just got me the job, so...
Ham and cheese.
You take pictures?
[narrator] In the years to come,
Carl would call Sandy "the bait,"
and she'd called him "the shooter."
Only when I find a smile
pretty enough to photograph, that is.
[narrator] Both called
their victims "the models."
I'll have to think about it.
-[door chimes open]
-[waitress] What can I get ya?
Meatloaf is the blue plate special.
Um-- Just coffee and a doughnut.
-Thank you.
-[door chimes open]
-Looks really fine.
-[manager] No!
No!
-Get out. I told you last time.
-Come on, now.
[manager] Next time,
the cops will drag you out.
-[waitress] Excuse me.
-Get out!
I'm just gonna take my break outside.
[homeless man] All right.
-All right!
-[door clanks shut]
[door clanks shut]
[man] Thank you. God bless you.
Did you need anything else?
Um... No, I'm fine.
[soft piano music playing]
That was nice, what you did.
Some people just need a little help
once in a while.
You know what I mean?
Yep.
-Hmm.
-You back home from the war?
Nah, I'm just passing through.
On my way to West Virginia.
My people are from Coal Creek.
That's too bad.
You have a nice face.
[Willard chuckles]
Well... [exhales]
It's nice to meet you.
It's nice to meet you, too.
[man] Is it true
the Japs ate their own dead?
-[Willard] Where'd you hear that?
-Read it in the paper.
[country music playing on the radio]
-[sighs] Lord, that's good stuff.
-Mm-hmm.
-I got three more in my kit.
-Yeah?
Yep. And I've got something else
for you, Uncle Earskell.
Now, this here is supposed to be the gun
that Hitler used to blow his brains out.
[scoffs] You still got
the bullshit in you, ain't you?
-You think that guy lied to me?
-[chuckles] Yeah.
That is a nice gift, though.
-Yeah.
-Thank you.
It's German.
That's a Luger.
-[crickets chirping]
-[country music playing inside]
[woman crying] Oh, come here! Oh...
[sighs] Oh, Lord, I was so worried.
No... [chuckles]
It wasn't that bad.
It wasn't that bad, Mama.
I would ask you to get down
and thank Jesus with me,
but I can smell the liquor on your breath.
I know.
I felt the need to celebrate.
I'm in love.
-What's this girl's name?
-[Earskell clears throat]
Well, I ain't never got her name.
[lighter clicks]
-[Earskell laughs]
-Earskell.
You ain't got her name?
[Earskell laughs]
I left her a dollar tip, though.
[Earskell] A what?
For a cup of coffee?
[Earskell] Well, she won't forget that.
[woman] I know you like this waitress.
Oh, but there's a--
a girl from church I want you to meet.
-I don't wanna go to church, Mama.
-[shushing]
You get some rest. [grunts]
You'll feel better in the morning.
[narrator]
Though he couldn't look at a cross
without thinking of Miller Jones,
he never told anyone
about the crucified Marine.
-[man] Welcome.
-[woman] Willard.
Willard, I've asked Helen to sit with us.
Go on, Helen.
-Nice to meet you.
-[Willard] Hi, how are you?
Willard just got back, Helen.
-You--
-Welcome home.
[church choir singing]
It's been four days.
[narrator] Willard didn't know
that Emma had promised God
that in exchange
for bringing him home safe,
she'd make sure he married Helen Hatton.
The girl's family burned up
in a house fire
leaving the poor thing all alone.
[pastor] Good gracious.
It's hot, ain't it?
-[crowd] Amen.
-It's bound to get hotter.
Right now, we got two boys
from over in Topperville
-gonna lead the service today.
-[man] All right.
And from what folks tell me,
they got a right good message.
So, let's bring 'em up.
Boys, come on up here.
-Let's make 'em feel welcome.
-[woman] Oh!
[man] Welcome, boys. Welcome.
See that one in the wheelchair?
Drank too much strychnine or antifreeze,
or something is why he can't walk.
So good to see you. Thank you for coming.
Testing their fate, they call it.
It's going too far, the way I see it.
Thank you, Reverend.
My name isRoy Laferty,
and this here is my cousin, Theodore.
Now, the Holy Ghost is going to visit
this little church
that bears his sacred name!
Are you washed
In the blood
In thesoul-cleansing blood
Of the Lamb?
Are your garments spotless?
Are they white as snow?
Are you washed
In the blood of the Lamb?
Have you been to Jesus
For His cleansing power?
Are you washed
In the blood of the Lamb?
Are you trusting in his Grace
This hour
Are you washed
In the blood of the Lamb?
[Roy] Come on, Theodore!
Whoo!
[guitar keeps playing]
[Roy] What is it you're most afraid of?
Hmm?
Because if your worst fear is rats, well..
Satan'll make sure
you get your fill of them. Mm.
-[man] That's right, tell 'em, boy.
-Brothers and sisters...
you'll see them,
eating away at you whilst you lay there
unable to lift a single finger.
And it won't ever cease.
A million years
in eternity.
Now, don't even try and figure that up.
[man] Come on, Lord.
Ain't no human head big enough
to calculate misery like that!
-[crowd murmurs]
-[chuckles] Yeah?
And really, brothers and sisters,
ain't no man ever been evil enough,
-not even that Hitler fella...
-That's right.
...come up with the ways
Satan's gonna make them sinners pay
-come the Judgment Day!
-[crowd] Yeah!
Yeah! Yes, that's right, my friends!
[woman] Yes, sir! Praise the Lord!
Amen.
Let me tell you something, friends.
[woman coughs]
Before I found the Holy Ghost...
[sighs deeply]
I was scared plumb to death of spiders.
-Ain't that right, Theodore?
-Mm-hmm.
-[Roy] Mm?
-Hmm.
[Roy] I was a runt,
hiding under my mother's long skirts,
spiders crawling through my dreams...
[man] Hm.
...laying eggs in my nightmares.
They was...
hang in their webs everywhere...
waitin'.
I had fear in me all the time,
awake or asleep, didn't matter.
Now, that's what hell is like,
brothers and sisters!
[woman] Praise the Lord.
[Roy] I got no rest from them devils!
[crowd] Amen!
Not until the Lord gave me strength!
[crowd] Amen!
Brothers and sisters...
[woman] Whoo!
[Roy sighs]
...behold!
The Lord looks out for me now!
[man] Amen!
[crowd gasps and squeaks]
Mark my word, people!
The Spirit will take away your fears
if you're willing!
[Willard] Them spiders,
sure was a nice touch.
I ain't gonna sleep tonight as it is.
I wish Helen left with us.
Well, she might have come with us,
if you'd paid her a little more attention.
The right man
would make a good life for Helen.
[narrator] Emma was concerned
something bad might happen
if she couldn't keep her promise to God.
["Wheel of Fortune" by Kay Starr playing]
Helen did, in fact, meet the man
she would marry that afternoon.
Bless me, Reverend.
Bless me.
And Willard's mind was already
hundreds of miles away.
Will the arrow point my way
Be right there.
I ain't no rush.
-Why, if it isn't--
-I never got your name.
[manager] Charlotte,
second call on chicken over peas.
Be right back with you, hon.
[indistinct chatter]
While the wheel is spinning
Spinning, spinning...
[man] See, full-time, I'm a lawyer.
-Real estate isn't my business, but...
-[dog barking]
I own a few of these properties
around Meade, Knockemstiff.
Real long-term investments.
There aren't any sinks in here,
Mr. Dunlap.
[Dunlap] Ain't no running water, missy.
There's a well out back.
For love's precious flame
Oh, wheel of fortune
What do you think, Arvin?
I'm hoping somehow
[mellow music playing]
[narrator]
Though he hadn't talked to God in years,
not a single petition or word of praise
since he'd come across
the crucified Marine.
Willard could feel it
welling up inside him now,
the urge to get right with his maker
before something bad
happened to his family.
[woman]
Just before the children came
And my room was very quiet
I heard someone call my name
Saying, "Come up here
My little Bessie"
Where'd you go?
I was just looking the land over.
What you think?
-It's nice.
-[baby cooing]
Rent seems fair for what we get.
We keep saving,
we could probably buy it.
Wouldn't that be something? [chuckles]
Arvin have a home of his own.
[both chuckle]
I never did have that.
[Willard] Things are good, Mama.
We found a place
in a holler called Knockemstiff.
[man] Let's move!
[Willard] Arvin just turned one,
and he has lots of grass to play on now.
We're saving money
to buy the house one day.
So things are gonna be tight for a while.
We'll get to you as soon as possible.
Your son, Willard.
P.S...
I got the urge to pray again.
[baby cooing]
"We'll get to you as soon as possible.
Your son Willard.
P.S. I got the urge to pray again."
[car horn honking]
[baby cooing]
-Sure you don't mind watching Lenora?
-[Emma] Sure.
Don't mind. Hand her over here.
Where y'all going?
-We just thought we'd take a ride.
-[Emma grunts]
-Get out of that little house for a bit.
-[Emma chuckles]
[smooches]
[narrator] Though she didn't know it,
she'd never see Lenora again.
Seven years later, they found
Helen's body buried in the woods.
I'm thinking we take a walk.
Be fine to pray outside
and adore them trees.
Whatever you want, Roy,
but what about Theodore?
Theodore will be all right
sitting in the car.
That's right.
Don't y'all worry about me.
Maybe I oughta take me a nap.
Just be you and me, sweetheart.
[engine starting]
[engine revvs]
[baby coos]
[dog barking]
[narrator] In 1957,
Arvin Eugene Russell was nine years old.
He was the only kid on the school bus
who wasn't somebody's relation.
Three days before,
he'd come home with another black eye.
You're coming out back with me today, boy.
You got a deposit to make, sir?
-[Arvin] C'mere, Jack.
-[Willard] Second time.
Those little shits keep picking on him.
It ain't right.
Them boys might be bigger than you.
But the next time
one of them starts his shit,
I want you to finish it.
You understand?
Yes, sir.
Now, you pray on what happened today.
And remember,
be honest, no bullshittin'.
He'll know.
[birds chirping]
[mellow music playing]
[footsteps approaching]
[man] Hell, they having
a little revival meetin'.
Shit, I'm thinking now'd be a good time
to pay his old lady a visit.
[Arvin] Dad?
This here's the Lord's time,
not nobody else's.
[man 1] Probably in bed
keeping it warm for me.
[man 2] Shut the fuck up, Lucas.
[Lucas] Wouldn't you take a piece of that?
Come on, you dumb son of a bitch.
This thing's getting heavy.
[Lucas spits]
[narrator]
Despite Arvin's fears,
the two poachers
didn't head to his home that day.
I was trying to be quiet
-And to think
-[Arvin humming along]
Of what you said
Just before the lamps were lighted
[Arvin humming]
Just before the children came
When my room was very quiet
I heard someone call my name
[both]
Saying, "Come up here, my little...
-Arvin
-Bessie
-Arvin
-[woman chuckles]
[Willard] Arvin, gonna go gas up.
No sense in you
napping in here like a house cat all day.
-Get off the couch, Jack.
-Can Jack come?
[Willard] Mm-hmm.
-Come on, Jack.
-[Charlotte] Hey.
Will you get me some sugar?
[Willard] Hmm.
[Willard panting]
Roll up your window.
[car door closes]
[Lucas] Motherfucker!
[both grunt]
-[both grunting]
-[Jack barking]
-[man] -Oh, shit! Hey, take it easy!
-[man 2] He's gonna fuckin' kill him!
[Lucas groaning]
[man 2] Come on! Get off him!
[man] That's enough!
You're gonna kill him!
-[Jack barking]
-[car engine starting]
[man] Oh, shit!
-[Jack barking]
-[man] God!
-Stubbs!
-Stubbs, get out here, man!
-Get out of here!
-Come on, give me a hand.
Get the fuck out of here!
[Jack barking]
[door bangs shut]
[Willard panting]
[exhales sharply]
Now you remember what I told you?
About them boys on the bus
that gave you the black eye?
That's what I meant.
[groans] Just gotta pick the right time.
Yes, sir.
There's a lot of no good
sons of bitches out there.
-[breathing heavily]
-More than a hundred?
[chuckles]
Yeah, at least that many.
How about I buy you a candy bar, huh?
[Willard panting]
We gotta get some sugar for Mama too.
[Willard] Mm-hmm.
[narrator]
Arvin would often think back on this day
as the best one
he ever spent with his father.
So what kind of candy bar
you gonna get, huh?
Um... a Charleston Chew, yeah.
Mama?
Mama?
Mama?
-Mama?
-[Jack whines, barks]
Dad!
-[dog whines]
-Mama!
[Willard] No! Charlotte!
Listen to me. Charlotte!
-[Willard] What are you saying?
-[man] The test results aren't good.
The morphine will continue
to dampen the pain but...
there's no way we can destroy that cancer.
[Willard] Let's talk downstairs.
[footsteps departing]
Now... them doctors
can't do your mom any good.
But He can save her.
Yeah, if we just pray hard enough.
The Lord can do anything
-if you just ask him right.
-[Jack whining]
Okay?
Now hold them tight.
And pray like you mean it.
Lord,
please save my wife.
Destroy this cancer inside her, Lord.
We need your help, Lord.
We need your help,
and I know you can do it.
I know you can do it.
Please Lord, please.
[Jack panting]
[loud slap]
Pray, God dammit.
-You want your mama to die?
-No, sir.
Then pray!
Lord, please save my mama!
-Clean the cancer inside of her!
-[Willard] We need your help!
Now you pray, now! You hear me?
Yes, Lord!
Save my mama, Lord!
Please clean the cancer inside of her!
[Jack whining]
And don't be crying, you hear?
Don't be crying!
-Pray like you mean it! Lord!
-[Jack whining, barking]
Spare my wife!
[shakily] Don't take her from me.
[Jack barking]
Don't take her from me.
[crying] Don't take her from me.
[Charlotte moans]
[Charlotte sighs]
[sighing]
[exhales]
Everything's gonna be okay.
God'll hear us.
And he'll take care of Mama.
You good, honey.
[pool balls clacking]
[woman] We got cozy rooms in the back
if you need some company.
I'm fine.
[narrator] It occurred to him
that maybe something more was expected
than just his prayers and sincerity.
God had a tendency
of asking men to make sacrifices
in order to prove their faith.
[Jack barking]
[door shuts]
-[gunshot]
-[loud whine]
[door clicks open]
Dad, no!
Dad, no!
Dad!
Lord, this here is my boy's dog.
We loved him.
He loved him.
Now you take him!
Bring him back!
You save Charlotte!
[Arvin sobs]
It's gonna be all right, Arvin.
It's gonna be all right.
[shovelful of dirt thumps on coffin lid]
[thump]
[thump]
[Willard] I'm thinking
we might take us a trip.
Go down and visit your grandma
in Coal Creek.
You can meet Uncle Earskell.
And that girl that's living with them...
She's just a little younger than you.
Maybe we'll stay for a while.
[door opens]
[Willard] Arvin.
[Arvin] I wish you were here, Jack.
When Dad goes to sleep...
I'm going to bring you down
and give you a proper burial.
Just like they gave to Mama.
[dog barking in the distance]
[flies buzzing]
I'm not doing that no more, you hear me?
I ain't prayin'!
You hear me?
I said I'm not doing that no more.
-You hear me?
-[loud thud]
["Little Things Mean A Lot" playing]
Blow me a kiss from across the room
Say I look nice
When I'm not
There's money to be made
if a man of the law is careful and...
doesn't get a big head.
I wanna get out of my house, Lee.
I told you, sweetie,
it's only matter of time.
And no more parking lots.
No more Pepsi cups. Just a big ole bed.
Yeah.
People like me in this town.
-You know that, honey.
-Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
I'll get myself elected.
-[Lee panting]
-[woman moans softly]
Get a...
-cushy place up in Brewer Heights.
-Mm-hmm.
You see them...
[Lee groans]
[breathes heavily]
That was good. [sighs]
[chuckles]
-You get it all in the cup?
-Yeah.
[dispatcher] Any cars out
around Knockemstiff? Over.
Deputy Bodecker around those parts?
We got a call from Hank over at--
-Fuck.
-Can you get over and check that out?
-Can I come with you?
-Are you crazy?
-Come on.
-Didn't you hear anything I said?
I've got an election to think about.
[car door opens and closes]
[Lee] Well?
Better not be one of them goddamn
window peepers you keep calling about.
[man] I wish it was.
It's about this boy's Daddy.
Well, what is it, son?
He's dead.
And they buried his poor mama today.
It's a damn shame, it is.
Is that blood on your face?
[Arvin] No.
Somebody left us a pie.
-[Arvin] He's right there.
-[Lee] Jesus.
What's that smell?
[flies buzzing]
God dammit, boy.
What the hell is this?
It's a prayer log.
Prayer log?
Yeah.
But it don't work too good.
[baby fussing]
[Helen] Lenora?
Mama's coming, Lenora.
-It's all right.
-[Roy screaming indistinctly]
Hey, it's all right. [tutting]
-[shushes] It's all right.
-[knocking on door]
-[Helen] Roy!
-[thud]
Your dinner's ready.
[Roy] I've got the Holy Ghost in me!
I'm ready to use it!
[knocking continues]
Lord!
-Speak!
-Roy?
[thud]
I've been thinking...
Maybe the Lord wants you
to come out into the light.
I mean, how can you be close to God
stuck in there?
The Lord don't like dark places.
[Roy praying indistinctly]
Roy?
[narrator] Roy'd been bitten on the cheek
by a spider while preaching a sermon,
and his head had puffed up
as big as a pumpkin.
All right, then.
[plate clinking]
Enjoy your dinner.
[narrator] In the time it took
the swelling to go down,
he'd become convinced
that the Lord was testing him
to see if he was ready
to take on something bigger.
He'd stayed in the dark closet
for a fortnight waiting on an answer.
He smelled worse
than a truck-stop shitter.
[Theodore] Stealin', stealin'
Pretty mama, don't you tell on me
[Roy muffled praying]
I'm stealin' back
To my same old used to be
[Roy] Lord, is that you?
Oh, no, I'm not scared!
-[Theodore humming]
-[Roy] I trust in you!
-[door opens]
-Glory to God!
I hear you! Yes, I am here!
Helen. Oh, it's so good to see you, honey.
-Been a while, ain't it?
-Is everything all right?
Oh, everything's fine now.
Uh, Roy finally got
himself straightened out.
Well, that's good to hear.
[Helen] "P.S.
I got the urge to pray again."
[car honking]
-Sure you don't mind watching Lenora?
-[Emma] Sure.
Don't mind. Hand her over here.
Where y'all going?
-We just thought we'd take a ride.
-[Emma grunts]
-Get out of that little house for a bit.
-[Emma chuckles]
-There you go.
-[smooches]
Yes.
[brakes screeching]
[door opens]
[Helen humming]
This spot looks about
as good a place as any, don't it?
Yes.
The Lord is here, sweetheart.
I can feel him.
God loves you, Helen.
[gasps]
[Helen grunts]
[groans]
[Helen panting]
Lenora...
[breathing shakily]
God...
I've heard your word.
Helen...
I resurrect you...
with the grace of God in me...
I resurrect you!
Return!
God!
It is time!
Resurrect! Return!
Return, Spirit! Resurrect!
God!
[Roy] Resur--
God!
Resurrect!
Come on, now!
Come on, now, res--
I could tell the police what happened.
That it was an accident.
[Theodore] You stabbed your wife
in the neck with a screwdriver.
Tried to bring her back from the dead
and then buried her body.
[Roy clears throat]
That ain't an accident, Roy.
That sounds like a crazy person
who killed his wife.
Keep driving south.
If we stay off highways,
we should be fine.
["Old Ship Of Zion"
by Ralph Stanley playing]
From the storms of life
I could see
[Theodore groans]
[groans softly] Where are we, Roy?
[insects chirping]
Roy?
Roy?
Roy?
[man] Where about?
C-Coal Creek, West Virginia.
We'll get you close enough, son.
I'm Carl, by the way, this here's Sandy.
Huh? Ain't she somethin'?
Mister, I do appreciate this.
I don't understand
people that won't pick up strangers.
It should be a good thing,
helping someone out.
You sound like a Christian.
Carl used to teach at Sunday school.
Didn't you, babe?
That's right.
That's right.
What's your name, sweetie?
It's Roy.
Roy Laferty.
So what's in West Virginia, Roy?
Going back home to see my daughter.
[Carl] Buddy, come on. [tapping]
Hey, come on.
I wanna show you something.
[Carl] Huh?
What?
I'm giving you a good thing here, buddy.
Come on.
Said I'm giving you
a good thing here, buddy.
I wanna get some shots of your ugly
old mug sitting next to a pretty lady.
Come on, she likes lanky old studs
like yourself. Come on.
What's going on here, mister?
Oh, come on, Jesus Christ, huh?
Pay attention. It's like I said,
you're gonna fuck my wife
and I'm gonna take some pictures,
that's all.
Your wife?
Come on.
I've never heard of such a thing.
I thought you was a good Christian--
Shut the fuck up
and get that welfare suit off, son.
-Jesus.
-Well, I've been run through the wringer!
Do you really want these hands
touching you?
Oh, come on, sweetie.
We'll just take a few pictures and then
the big dumb bastard will leave us alone.
Woman... look at me.
-[Carl] Do what I say, you son of a bitch.
-[gun cocks]
No, I ain't.
[breathing heavily]
[Carl] Oh, Jesus.
Carl, maybe we should just
get out of here.
Oh, forget it. Jesus.
-[Sandy] I'm cold, Carl.
-I know it's cold
[narrator] Roy looked up
at the clouds drifting by and wondered
if that's what death would be like,
just floating away in the air.
He preached on it for years,
but still didn't know what to expect.
Just one thing.
Yeah, what's that?
Her name is Lenora.
What the fuck you talking about?
My little girl.
-Lenor--
-[gunshot]
[gunshot]
[Carl] Come on.
[narrator]
This was still early days for the pair,
and Carl was still working out
the particulars.
[Carl] God damn...
He realized that he would have
to get more selective with his models
if he wanted to keep Sandy onboard.
[Carl] Get some shots off down there
while the light's still good.
[car door opens and closes]
[man] Good day, ma'am.
-You Emma Russell?
-Yes.
[man] I have some papers for you to sign
and the boy here's all yours.
Here, let me have that.
[door opens]
[Emma] Arvin?
Here, you give me that heavy old bag.
[cries] Oh...
[sobs]
[Emma clicks tongue] Oh...
Oh, sweetie,
we are so happy you're here.
This here is your...
your Uncle Earskell.
Hey, there.
This is Lenora.
Lenora is your stepsister.
Hi, Arvin.
Hi.
[Emma] Here we go.
[Earskell] Oh, here we go.
-[Lenora] Happy birthday, Arvin.
-[Emma] Happy birthday, honey.
-[Lenora] Happy birthday!
-[Emma] Oh, no.
[Lenora] Happy birthday to you
Happy birthday.
[both chuckle]
[inhales deeply]
All right.
[Emma] Make a wish
before that candle burns out.
[Earskell] It looks like a dandy cake.
-Arvin!
-All right, hang on.
[plates clinking]
[Arvin] Thank you.
[clears throat]
Well...
This was your daddy's.
[Earskell sighs]
[Emma] What's that?
[Easrkell]
That's Willard's gun he gave me.
I figure it's time to pass it on.
That's a German Luger.
Brought back from the war.
I... got no use for handguns myself.
But I figure he'd want you to have it.
[sniffles] It's the best present
I ever got. Thank you, Uncle Earskell.
Shotgun's what'll do you good.
Maybe, but I don't have
anything else of his, so...
thank you. [sniffles]
Time does pass.
[boy] Get down there.
[narrator] Boys in school liked
to pick on Lenora for her pious manner
and pinched face.
[boy] You're so damn ugly, I'd need a sack
over your head just to get a hard-on.
[narrator] Gene Dinwoodie,
Tommy Matson, and Orville Buckman
had managed to corner her
by the dumpster behind school.
[boy] Probably fucked your brother,
you brother fucker.
[Arvin] Hey!
-[boy] Come on, get him!
-[Lenora] Please stop! Stop!
God dammit! [grunts]
[groans]
-[Arvin] Get the fuck off me!
-[Lenora] Stop it!
[Arvin] Get off of me! Fuck!
[narrator]
Arvin loved her like his own sister.
-[boy] Sister fucker.
-He would do anything to protect her.
No matter what the weather was,
Lenora would visit her mother's grave
after school.
Some days
she'd even read the Bible out loud,
and imagine her mother was listening.
Though he wasn't one for praying
Arvin would often drive her
and keep her company.
[Lenora] Arvin?
It was a sight
you didn't end up in the hospital.
Yeah, well, there's a lot of no good
sons of bitches out there. [grunts]
Well, Lord, Arvin, you've been saying that
almost since the day I met you.
You know, that's because it's true.
Maybe you should try praying for 'em then.
Would that hurt none?
You already do enough for all of us,
and where's it doing you much good, huh?
You know what would do you good?
To not be wandering behind school
by your own self, like I told you.
Fuckin' Gene Dinwoodie.
Do you ever think about...
how we ended up orphans
living in the same house?
No.
Besides, you might not even be an orphan.
As far as everybody
around here is concerned
your daddy's probably still out there
somewhere alive and kicking.
Fuck, he might even come over that hill
any day now, dancing a jig.
[chuckles] I hope so.
I pray every day he will.
Even if it means he did something?
I've already forgiven him.
Hm.
We could start over.
That's crazy.
No, it's not.
What about your father?
What about him?
I know what my daddy did.
Well...
forgivin' him...
if he could come back.
Well, shut your mouth. We both know
that ain't never gonna happen.
I'm sorry for bringing it up.
[sighs] It's all right.
You know,
I appreciate you always coming with me.
I know you'd probably rather
be doing something else.
We're kin.
We gotta look out for each other.
[man] Lenora! Arvin!
C'mere!
[man coughs]
I might be gone a while.
[man coughs]
I'll be praying for you.
[man coughs]
[man] In the meantime...
[grunts]
my sister's boy from down in Tennessee
is gonna come up and take my place.
He just graduated from one of them...
Bible colleges.
Well, I would appreciate it if you all
would try and make him feel welcome.
Tell your grandmama I'm asking folks
to bring a dish next sermon.
[Lenora] Of course.
[man 2] What you got planned
after school, Arvin?
Cliff Baker says he can get me
on the crew laying blacktop
on the Greenbrier stretch off Route 60.
[man 2] Yeah.
I'm probably just gonna do that. You?
Oh, my old man's holding me here.
Better than getting shipped off
to Vietnam I expect.
Yeah, I suppose so.
[Emma] Everyone says
they like the way I do them, but I--
Well, just get him a big steak then.
[both chuckle]
You know
I can't afford anything like that.
Grandma, quit worrying about it.
He's just a preacher.
Anyway, everyone says ain't no one
doesn't like you, you know that.
So chicken livers it is.
[Emma chuckles]
There's a village
Hidden deep in the valley
Among the pine trees half forlorn
And there on a sunny morning...
It's nice to meet you, Reverend.
[Emma repeating] It's nice to meet you.
-Nice to meet you, Reverend.
-Nice to meet you.
In the little valley town...
[narrator] Emma was known
as one of the best cooks in the county.
When people praised her food,
she always told them
that she couldn't fry an egg
until she found the Lord.
And that he was the one
that guided her hand
and made everything turn out good.
Lead us not into temptation
Bless this hour of meditation
Guide him with eternal love
[sighs] All right.
My heart's in my stomach.
That hat. You know better.
...the mountains high above
And there, twenty years thereafter
Jimmy was to meet his love
Hello there.
Pleased to meet you, Reverend.
Emma Russell.
Nice to meet you too. What you got there?
[sniffles]
[narrator]
As Preston Teagardin swished the juice
from the chicken livers
around in his mouth,
he felt the stirrings
of a sermon coming on.
Blessed...
are they who hunger...
and thirst...
for righteousness.
Bless, oh Lord, this celebration
May their lives be filled with love
Hope you like them, Reverend.
[narrator] Preston loved
the way people listened to him
and held onto every word.
[Preston] Hmm.
[narrator] He was grateful
his mother decided all those years ago
that he was going to be a preacher.
He'd never win a fist fight,
but he could recite
the Book of Revelation in his sleep.
Friends...
[clears throat]
there's no doubt...
we're all humble people gathered here.
-[woman] Amen.
-[man] Amen.
Y'all have been awful nice to me
and I thank you from the bottom
of my heart for the welcome.
-[man] Yes.
-[churchgoers whispering]
But friends...
the poor soul...
that brung in them chicken livers
on that beat-up plate...
let's just say I'm inspired to preach
on it for a minute before we eat.
Sure...
some of us are better off than others.
And I see...
plenty of white meat and red meat
laid out on this table.
And I suspect that the folks
that carried them platters in
-eat mighty good sometimes.
-[man] Yes, sir.
But poor people...
got to bring what they can afford.
So them organs...
is a sign to me...
telling me that I should,
as the new preacher of this church,
sacrifice myself.
so that y'all can have a share
of the good meat tonight.
And that's what I'm going to do, friends.
I'm going to eat these organs.
'Cause I model myself
on the good Lord Jesus
whenever he gives me the chance.
And today...
he's blessed me with another opportunity
-to follow in his footsteps.
-[churchgoers] Amen.
[car doors close]
Now, don't you worry
about that pus-gutted blowhard.
I bet he ain't got two nickels
to rub together.
I never been
so embarrassed in all my life.
I could've crawled right under the table.
-All right, I'm gonna go talk to him.
-No, Arvin.
None of that.
He sure ain't the preacher
I was hoping for.
Grandma, that ain't no preacher.
He's as bad as they got on the damn radio.
Heck, I bet he just wanted
them chicken livers all for his own self.
That's why he did that.
You see the way he was gobbling them down.
You shouldn't talk like that, Arvin.
Preacher Teagardin wouldn't be here
if the Lord hadn't sent him.
["Honeycomb" by Jimmie Rodgers plays]
Honeycomb
Well it's a darn good life
And it's kinda funny
How the Lord made the bee
And the bee made the honey
And the honeybee lookin' for a home
And they called it honeycomb...
[boy shouting] Whoo! Lenora!
[screaming]
-[indistinct yelling]
-Hey, chicken shit!
Made my baby's lips
Oh, honeycomb
[Arvin] That preacher's a little flashy.
Are you not coming?
No, I got some things to do
before we go home.
Can't we go do them after I see Mama?
No, you go on, I'll be back.
Go on.
[door opens]
[Lenora humming]
[thunder rumbling]
[radio announcer] ...stand on the verge
of a big breakthrough.
God has said in the next few years,
we stand on the verge of paradise.
But there's something wrong.
And I'm gonna tell you,
we've got to have prayer power
and spiritual power.
In south Vietnam,
soldiers fight with arms.
but now our spirit...
[announcer continues indistinctly]
[footsteps approaching]
[Preston] Who is it out there?
Lenora Laferty, Preacher Teagardin.
Girl, you been crying?
It's nothing.
I just get down sometimes--
Uh...
The kids at school, they like to tease,
and I ain't gonna have family there
come next year.
I was like you when I was your age.
Full of the Lord.
Some of them other kids just...
came down hard on me.
What did you do about it?
Well...
it was a rough time.
They was just jealous.
Envy.
Brings out the worst in people.
Especially the young ones.
I don't know
if you have anywhere you gotta be.
But, uh...
maybe we can take a drive.
There's a quiet place I found
I like to go and pray on things.
["Young Love" by Sonny James
playing on the radio]
They say for every boy and girl
There's just one love
In this whole world
And I know
I've found mine
[narrator] Like his father years before,
Arvin had always been careful
about picking his time.
He knew he'd stand a better chance
if he didn't try to take on
all the dirty bastards at once.
[door opens]
[door closes]
Young love, first love
[woman moaning]What was that?
Nothing.
It must not have got shut all the way.
Let's get them bloomers off, come on.
You-- Close that door!
Goddamn better be worth it.
[thunder rumbling]
[grunts]
-[Arvin] You piece of shit!
-[girl screams]
[boy groans]
[girl] Stop it!
-[both grunting]
-[Arvin] Motherfucker!
Hey, Orville, will you start it up, man?
I don't think it's the spark plugs.
["Young Love" continues playing]
Hey...
[car starting]
No. Hey, Gene, you want another Twinkie?
I'm all right, thank you.
Wait--
Wait! I'm sorry! I'm sorry!
[groans]
[Arvin] Want your fuckin' Twinkie now?
Is that what you want?
[boy] No!
[Arvin panting]
[grunts]
[boy gasping and groaning]
[boy wheezing]
You touch my sister again...
I'll kill you.
Do you understand me?
[wheezing] Yes.
-Do you understand me?
-I'm so sorry. [wheezing]
[car door bangs shut]
[groans]
Now, we can feel the Lord our here,
can't we?
It's kind of you to come all this way.
[thunder rumbling]
Lenora...
have you truly opened yourself
to the Lord with...
Preacher Sykes or...
any other preacher?
Once...
Reverend Sykes wept with me.
[Preston] Hmm.
That's not my meaning.
Have you shown yourself
as the Lord made you?
You mean in my birthday suit? No.
-No?
-No.
To show yourself
as the Lord made his first children,
is to truly turn yourself to him...
and his witnessing of it.
Now, that's courage itself.
[thunder rumbling]
Meaning I take off my clothes?
Come on and pray with me.
[inhales deeply]
Lord, Lenora is showing herself to you.
See her, Lord,
as you made her.
She presents herself to you now.
Give her the strength.
[thunder rumbling]
[Preston chuckles]
We are together
before the Lord.
Amen.
Amen.
[Preston chuckles]
[door closes]
Sorry I didn't come today.
It's okay.
I know there's other things
you wanna be doing probably.
["Put It Off Until Tomorrow"
by Bill Phillips plays on the radio]
[Lenora]
So, I can come on my own from now on.
You say our love is over
[narrator] Like her mother years ago,
Lenora felt the same force
that drew Helen to Roy Laferty.
The girl imagined that she could touch
the love emanating from the preacher.
But leave me tomorrow
Wo-wow
-You've hurt me enough today
-[sniffles, sighs]
You've hurt me enough...
Thirty-three to Athens,
50 to Clarksville...
Seventy-nine North to Pittsburgh.
[sniffles]
Thirty-three, 50, 79.
Thirty-three, 50, 79.
Thirty-three, 50, 79.
Fuck you, Carl!
You won't be coming back
So, stay...
Shit.
Shit.
Loneliness isn't far away
[narrator] It was the summer of 1965,
and the couple were getting ready for what
would be their fourteenth road trip.
Carl had decided long ago
that young, good-looking hitchhikers
were the best.
What the fuck is going on out here?
[sighs]
Couldn't sleep.
And you went outside for...
Thought I'd pack the limousine early.
[dogs barking in the distance]
We don't pack early, Sandy, that's a rule.
[sighs]
-You fucking around?
-No.
-Work?
-No.
I gotta go into town
for business tomorrow.
Think I wanna drive around
in a car full of bags?
Buying a camera ain't business.
Hmm.
[indistinct TV chatter]
[thumping on door]
[thumping on door]
I'm coming, God dammit!
[thumping]
-[man] I'll break in if you don't answer.
-Jesus.
-You don't look too good.
-I was asleep.
What do you want?
[Sandy sighs] Huh?
What are you looking for?
Stop tearing my damn kitchen apart.
You got any candy?
Jane got you sober again? [scoffs]
Going somewhere?
Not that it's any of your business,
big brother,
but I'm going on a little vacation.
North Carolina.
Why are you here, Lee?
[Lee sighs]
[Lee sighs]
-[Lee munching]
-Hmm?
I've been getting a lot of calls
from people about
girls that someone snatched
out of Tecumseh.
[munches]
They even mentioned your name
a couple times.
That's horseshit.
I got another election coming up, Sandy.
Ol' Matthew's out there doing anything
he can to try to make me look bad.
Is Carl the one pimping you?
That fat son of a bitch?
No, he's working, making deliveries.
Deliveries?
For who?
Hell if I know.
But he's bringing home money
that I don't gotta ask you for.
Is it Leroy?
Get the fuck out of here, Lee.
[sighs] Son of a bitch has it coming.
[sighs]
Just leave off the horn
until after the election, you understand?
Don't act like you do nothing wrong.
I'm the law around here, little sister.
And that makes all the difference.
[narrator] Cody Hamilton,
a 20-year-old carpenter out fishing
early one morning in West Virginia.
What the fuck are you doing, Sandy?
["He Says The Same Things To Me"
by Skeeter Davis playing]
If he did there's no surprise
-[door opens]
-[woman] Hey, Lee. Sandy's off.
[song continues playing]
Leroy's private space
owns up half this dump.
I'm gonna inspect those whore rooms.
[woman] Lee, ain't nothin' there.
Let me by.
Lawman.
-[Lee groans]
-[punching]
[Lee grunts]
[man] When the man who puts extra money
in your pockets asks why you're as red
as a newborn baby,
you tell him who the whore is.
[Lee breathes heavily]
["Welcome To My World"
by Jim Reevs playing]
[narrator] Bodecker believed
people were like dogs:
once they start digging,
they don't wanna stop.
First, it would just be
that the Sheriff had a whore for a sister,
and after that, all the bribes
and other shit that had piled up
since he'd first pinned on a badge.
And if he wasn't careful,
eventually someone would find out
about his own dealings with Leroy.
[Leroy] My boy, my boy.
-It's been a while.
-[Lee sighs] Yeah.
-[waitress] Whatcha having, honey?
-Coffee. Ain't staying long.
You got a new toy?
[man] It's an English firearm.
It's really rare.
It's got special bullets.
Untraceable.
[Lee] Untraceable.
[loud bang, cutlery clanking]
[waitress] Sorry!
[Leroy] Word starts going around Sheriff's
got his eye on the girls at Tecumseh.
That's gonna cost me my money.
Me losing money
is gonna cost you your cut.
It didn't have anything to do with you.
It does now.
Bobo, you ever go and beat the shit
outta someone I made my money off?
[Bobo] No.
Never crossed my mind,
thinking about that.
Guy running against me
is going door-to-door
telling folk I look the other way
when it comes to Sandy.
Bobo, don't eat my scraps.
Give over the envelope.
[Leroy sniffles]
There's debt you owe me.
What I'm gonna lose at the bar.
Horse shit.
You ain't losing nothing there.
[Leroy] Yeah?
And you know that
'cause you're a loaded diaper
like everyone else who works for me
or because all of Meade
knows you're dirty?
[sniffles]
That's your weekly earnings
'til we're square.
Now, get the fuck out of my diner. [sighs]
[narrator] Bodecker knew
that Leroy and his errand boy Bobo
would kill him soon enough
if he made any more trouble.
He had an election to think about
and couldn't afford any liabilities.
[Leroy] My bar is off limits and so is
your whore sister, you understand?
[man] Thanks for stopping.
[door closes]
-[Sandy] What's your name, sweetie?
-Private Gary Matthew Bryson.
[Sandy] That's a nice name.
[Carl] You sound like you're at roll call.
Relax, boy.
[Sandy] Which of them you go by?
Gary. That was my dad's name,
so at home, I'm Gary Matthew.
[Sandy] Matthew?
That's from the Bible, ain't it, Carl?
[Carl] Everything's from the Bible, honey.
Hell, Ol' Matthew,
he's one of the Apostles.
You probably knew your name
came out of the Bible, didn't you?
[Gary] We didn't go to church much
when I was a kid.
But you've been baptized, right?
[Gary] Of course.
We ain't heathens.
I just don't know much
about the Bible is all.
Good.
Lord knows where a person
who ain't saved might end up.
Hm... Right now it looks like Vietnam.
[Sandy] It's beautiful, isn't it?
All them trees just going up, up, up.
That's a good picture.
[Gary] Sure is.
You're a nice boy, Gary.
[Carl humming]
[Gary] Thanks for inviting me to lunch.
What do you say we eat, huh?
[Sandy] What do you want, Gary?
[Gary] Uh, bologna's good.
Bologna? You want cheese?
Yes, please.
Okay.
-[Gary] Thank you.
-[Sandy chuckles]
Here you go, hon.
[Sandy] Gary?
Oh, no, thank you.
You don't drink?
I don't hold it very well.
Usually gets me in trouble.
Well, come on.
You mean to tell me
you're not gonna have a drink
with a pretty little thing like her?
[Gary] Oh, what the hell. [chuckles]
[Carl] Yeah.
[Gary clears throat]
Whoo! That'll wake you up.
[Sandy and Gary laugh]
-[Gary] Here.
-No, you go on and take another one.
-[Gary] Cheers.
-[Carl] Cheers.
I got an idea.
Seeing as we might not
see one another again...
we oughta record this for posterity.
[Gary clears throat]
-[Gary] You mean a picture?
-[Carl] Damn right, I mean a picture.
-Sure, I'm game.
-That's the spirit.
[Carl] I'll tell you what, Private.
Why don't you just...
lie down on that blanket there
on your side.
[Gary] Like that?
Like that.
Now, take that bottle and hold it
like you got it on you all the time.
[Gary] How's that?
[camera shutter clicks]
["Wings Of A Dove"
by Ferlin Husky playing]
He sends His pure sweet love
A sign from above
Sign from above
On the wings of a dove
Wings of a dove
When troubles surround us
When evils come
The body grows weak
Body grows weak
The spirit grows numb
Spirit grows numb
-You're snoozing through Ferlin.
-I don't like this gospel shit.
[music stops]
You know, we did him a favor.
He was just gonna get shot up
and killed in Vietnam anyways.
God dammit.
-He wasn't nothing but another model.
-I told you I don't like this anymore.
Ain't it fair
if I hate the way some of 'em cry?
Not that you'd appreciate it,
but tears make for a good photograph.
[narrator] What Sandy didn't understand
was that to his way of thinking,
this was the one true religion.
Only in the presence of death
could he feel the presence
of something like God.
[Gary] No, no, no!
[Gary screams]
[sobbing] Please! Please! Please!
[Gary screams]
[Carl] Don't you-- Don't you touch
that fuckin' camera there, son.
[camera shutter clicking]
[narrator] The sick fuck.
How about we check into a motel?
Get a couple of steaks,
and relax for a day or two.
How does that sound?
[Sandy] Private Gary Matthew Bryson
won't be reporting to Fort Eustis.
But he ain't a coward,
he went and got himself killed.
Buried by the Mechums River
in West Virginia.
Chopped up pretty bad in a suitcase.
No, I won't speak to nobody else.
[Preston] I've heard of cases
in my reading
about sin
where someone got so sick...
over some sin
they felt
they had committed that was so terrible
that they...
started imagining things.
Back, I read a story about...
people.
Poor people.
Barely
able to write...
thinking they're...
the president
or...
or a Hollywood celebrity
like Ava Gardner.
I--
I don't understand
what you're talking about.
The thing is, that's the part of it.
The book says...
it's not,
not understanding.
See, think about it.
How...
could I be
the daddy...
when all we done
is spend time with the Lord?
[door closes]
[Arvin] Late night?
[Earskell] Played cards
over at Elder Stubbs's garage again.
You win this time?
No, not really.
[chuckles]
Saw Fred Dinwoodie over there.
He said his boy is just about healed up.
I still think
you could have held back a little bit.
Well, he ain't bothered Lenora since.
Him or his candy-ass buddies.
I gotta go check in on her.
She ain't been feeling too good.
You keep an eye on her for me
while we're at church.
[Lenora retches]
[coughs]
[narrator] Lenora had stopped asking Arvin
to join her at Helen's grave.
He didn't mind much.
His mind
would always drift back to Willard
and the prayer log and his poor dog Jack.
Besides, he'd gotten a job
working on the road crew
and was busy making some money.
[inhales] I never missed church before.
[panting]
[breathing heavily]
I'm so ashamed.
You ain't got nothing to be ashamed of.
I'm sure the Lord will forgive you
for missing one Sunday.
Ol' Jesus probably had
his fair share of bad mornings.
[chuckles]
[whispers] I love you, Arvin.
[Lenora sighs]
How's about we, uh... [sniffles]
go see your mama's grave
when you're better?
Sound all right?
[Preston] The good book...
is filled with good men
and women
suffering delusions.
Eve in the garden.
Noah...
naked, drunk.
Bringing shame upon his family.
The idol
the Jews bowed before in the desert.
And even the Lord Jesus himself
was presented with delusions in the desert
that only through his faith...
and his strength...
-overcame.
-[man 1] Mm-hmm.
[man 2] Praise Jesus.
The Lord's delusion in the desert
was a game...
of the so-called "Devil."
And what the Lord experienced...
was a delusion
that would've kept him from saving us!
But he did not fall for it!
It is our delusions
that lead us to sin.
Striking a mother or a wife
for something that you thought they said.
Neglecting work or Sunday service,
for that matter.
[man] Right. You said it.
Some girl...
gets a feeling for a fella
and lets him have her holy gift.
Delusions!
Blaspheming the Lord
in your mind and in your heart
for some wrong done to you
by another person.
[man] That's true.
You're saying you don't...
remember all the things
we did in your car?
I'm saying you must be crazy.
Coming in the Lord's house
and talking all this trash.
Look, my advice to you, girl...
is you figure some way to get rid of it.
'Cause otherwise...
it's gonna be you, a whore mother,
and her little bastard child
running around,
living in that poor old woman's house
who raised you.
If nothing else, think of her.
She'll die from the shame of it all.
Come on.
Come on.
[narrator] Lenora suddenly knew
she was making a mistake.
Grandma wouldn't be ashamed
and she and her baby would be okay.
[choking]
Oh, my God!
Oh, my God!
No! No! No!
[yells] Grandma!
Grandma!
No, no, no!
Grandma!
[grunts]
[somber violin music playing]
Grandma! [grunts]
[narrator] No one would know
she wasn't a suicide
and that in the end,
she was all right with her maker.
Oh, Lord.
There's just some things
we can't understand.
But you take her into your arms.
[Emma sobbing]
Uh, ain't somebody...
saying prayers or...
[clears throat]
[somber music continues playing]
[Emma sobs]
[breathes heavily]
[sniffles]
[indistinct chatter]
[man 1]
Need to have a word with you, Arvin.
-[man 2] All right, see ya, buddy.
-[man 3] Yep.
See ya tomorrow.
[Arvin] About what?
[man 1] It's, uh...
It's about Lenora.
What about her?
I came by here instead of home
so nothing's...
put on your grandmother.
"Put on"? What do you mean?
Well...
ol' Dudley, in the Coroner's...
I ain't never heard of no Dudley.
Well, he's a drunk...
but he ain't no liar.
Did you know Lenora was carrying a baby?
That's bullshit.
That son of a bitch is lying.
I tell ya...
Dudley ain't a liar.
He came to me privately
so as your family knew.
I felt he was right.
Now, I might've put my foot
in something. It...
wasn't my intentions.
You know that preacher
ain't said no words for her.
Not for people that kill themselves.
[engine starting]
[engine revving]
[moaning]
[Preston grunts]
[engine starting]
[grunts]
[inhales deeply]
[sighs] Uncle...
[narrator] Arvin wanted so much
to be able to tell them goodbye,
but they would be better off
not knowing anything
if the law came looking for him.
You have to be good to Grandma.
You know that she ain't hardly been out
of her bed since the funeral?
Yeah.
Grandma needs you.
All right?
[somber violin music playing]
[Arvin] Dear Grandma...
I'm writing to you
because I cannot say goodbye to your face.
I love you and I will always remember
the things that you have done for me.
[door creaks open]
What I'm about to do,
I do because I have to,
not because I want to.
Please do not try and find me.
Love, your grandson, Arvin.
[lip smacking]
[Arvin breathes shakily]
[breathing shakily]
[exhales]
[quietly] Excuse me.
[clears throat]
Excuse me.
Preacher?
Got time for a sinner?
I've been doing wrong
and I wanna get right by the Lord.
Well, that's what I'm here for.
I've done...
lustful acts.
Yeah.
That could be a big problem.
Especially for the young people.
Go on, tell me about it.
I got me a pretty wife at home.
One that'll do pretty much anything I ask.
But I treat her real bad.
Well, when you say anything,
what do you mean?
Just what I said.
Sometimes she'll be going down
on me with...
[breathing shakily]
well, you know, her mouth.
Heck, I get so excited I start forcing it.
She ever puke on you?
They got a little trigger,
back there in their throat.
Yeah, well, that ain't my problem.
Well, what's the problem then, son?
This guy I work with
has gothimself a daughter.
Real young thing,
just started high school.
One day I got this girl in my truck
and I drove her out into the sticks
and I...
had my way with her.
Did she put up a fight?
No.
But, you see, the problem is, is...
once I'd had a taste,
I just couldn't get enough.
I kept taking that girl there
any chance I got.
So I'd strip her clothes off.
But I'd make her pray
before we got started.
Why don't you take that hat off, boy.
Sometimes I'd even...
keep her panties.
Now, I'd just...
sniff 'em as she rode off on her bike.
And then I'd go home
to that whore of a wife of mine
and make her bake me a cake
like I was celebrating.
-What in the hell is this?
-[gun cocks]
You've been spying on me, boy?
I've been watching your every move
for the last couple weeks.
You can't get enough
of that Reaster girl, can you?
[inhales]
Is that how you did my Lenora too?
So...
Mrs. Russell's boy?
All right.
Don't do anything you'll regret, son.
Why don't you put the gun down and...
we can talk all about it.
Go ahead and talk.
[clicks tongue]
It wasn't my fault.
[scoffs]
And Lenora...
was just like this...
this Reaster girl.
She wouldn't let me be.
But I want you to know that I--
I pray for that girl's soul
every night.
Do you pray for her baby's soul too?
Look, I didn't have...
nothing to do with that.
She came to me...
-saying she got that way from a boy--
-Don't fuckin' lie to me!
Lies-- [chuckles]
The lies--
The lies are hers.
She got it in her head
that I was the father.
That I was gonna take care of everything.
God dammit, boy!
Listen to me!
I ain't gonna take the blame
for no bastard child!
It would ruin me, man.
You can understand that, can't you?
Hell!
Listen to me, boy.
She was...
delusional.
She was crazy.
You see?
No, she was just lonely.
No, man.
-[gunshot]
-[Preston groans]
[groaning]
Please, God!
Please, God!
Fuck. [panting]
[yells]
-Fuck!
-[drops shell]
Shit.
Shit.
[breathing heavily]
[panting]
[groans]
[narrator]
He had to get away from this place
or any he ever called home.
But in this moment, he felt a sudden force
pulling in back towards Knockemstiff.
No matter what else happened,
he had to try to set right
those things about his father
that still ate at his heart.
[engine sputtering]
[car stops]
[engine starts and stops]
Come on.
Fuck.
["Needles And Pins"
by Jackie DeShannon playing]
I saw him today
I saw his face
It was a face I loved
And I knew
I had to run away
And get down on my knees and pray
[Bobo] Morning, Lee.
[Lee] Heya, Bobo.
Sorry to come by so early.
I was on my way to work and...
I thought I might chew your ear.
[Bobo] Hm.
Still thinking
about that gun you showed me.
Uh... I'm gonna scramble some eggs.
You want some?
Yeah.
["Needles And Pins" continues playing]
I'll take coffee if you got any.
[Bobo] Coming up.
Leroy here?
He's upstairs.
Pistol's in the dining room.
Pretty nifty.
[drawer closes]
Hey, that's how it begins, uh?
He'll feel those needles and pins
A-hurtin' him, a-hurtin' him
Why can't I...
It's a fine piece.
And tell myself I'm wrong
I'm wrong, so wrong
Wonder if you'd consider selling me it.
[Bobo] Well, I just got it.
But everything's got a price, I guess.
[eggs sizzling]
You know,
one thing I never can get is the...
scoops and water.
Is it more water to scoops
or more scoops to water?
[muffled gunshot]
[radio announcer]
Jackie DeShannon here on KBWB.
Jackie first toured with The Beatles...
[Leroy] "Bobo, go there do this."
He goes there, does it.
He's simple. [chuckles]
You too.
[slams phone down]
Huh.
[gun cocks]
[radio] ...at Hopkins Automotive.
And now, for the WIXY sports scoreboard.
[radio announcer continues indistinctly]
[Sandy] Carl?
I see him.
Carl?
-We don't even know where he's going.
-Carl?
-Just--
-God dammit, Carl.
He's going to Ohio.
No one from home. That's your rule.
[car honks]
Let's just see where he's going, Sandy.
Morning.
Where you headed?
Meade, Ohio. You heard of it?
The paper-mill town, right?
Yeah, that's right.
We're passing right through it.
[country music playing on the radio]
[Carl] What you going to Meade for?
-Just visiting.
-[Sandy] Got family there?
No, I used to live there a long time ago.
[Carl] Well, probably ain't changed much.
Little towns never do.
[Arvin sighs] Where is it y'all live?
[Carl] In Chesterfield.
We're headed up to Chicago, Illinois.
We like picking up strangers
along the way, don't we?
Meet new people, don't we, hon?
Sure do.
[Carl] Oh, shit.
My old billy don't work like it used to.
I'm gonna have to... [sighs]
pull over and take a leak somewhere here.
[Carl] Is that all right by you?
Sure.
There should be a road
somewhere up here on the right.
-Here?
-[Carl] No, a little further.
Little further. Slow down.
Turn in right here.
This is good.
[Carl] Right here.
Yeah, this'll work.
I won't be long.
[Carl groans]
[door bangs shut]
[Carl sighs]
[Sandy opens match box]
Oh, shoot.
[Carl] Damn.
That's gonna be one fine sunset.
You have to be patient with me
while I get a few shots off.
Hon, give me the key.
Don't you worry none.
We've got some hooch in the back and...
[breathes heavily]
Well, Sandy's good company.
[birds chirping]
[narrator] The thought of killing Carl
and taking off
with the boy in the backseat
suddenly crossed Sandy's mind.
[Carl muttering]
He was young, but that didn't mean
she couldn't make it work.
Tell you what, son. Why don't you ste--
[shoots twice]
[Arvin panting]
[Sandy gasps] Shit!
[both gasp]
[Sandy] No! Calm down, please!
I don't wanna shoot you! Put the gun down!
-I don't want to shoot.
-I'm so sorry!
[gasps]
[groans]
[Sandy] Carl, you want sandals or heels?
Heels.
[Carl singing]
[narrator] Serial murderers
aren't the most trusting kind.
Carl brought the additional quality
of being maniacally paranoid.
Sandy's behavior
before they left home made him uneasy,
and Carl thought it'd be better if he was
the only one with a loaded weapon.
[Carl singing]
Poor Sandy never stood a chance.
[groans, breathes heavily]
Her gun was loaded with blanks.
[Arvin panting]
[narrator] Jim Lacey.
New Burlington, Indiana.
Carl never photographed
a more symmetrical face.
This photo really meant something to him.
Jim had been their first.
[breathing heavily]
[radio] Sheriff Bodecker,
this is Deputy Howser. Come in. Over.
Sheriff, you there?
A farmer called in a double homicide
off the 506. I need you here.
I'm sorry, Lee. This is fucked up.
What do you mean?
It's your sister and her husband.
[man] Carl was shot twice.
Sandy once.
It looks like it was a nine millimeter.
Sandy got one shot off but...
her gun was loaded with blanks.
-[whispers] Jesus Christ.
-[man] Lee?
Give me a couple minutes here
alone with her.
[narrator] She'd always been
sort of fucked up,
but Lee blamed Carl
for the way she'd gone downhill.
Regardless of all that,
she was still his baby sister.
But the sheriff couldn't help but think
of his own situation for a moment.
He thought about that photo
he found of her
and worried about what else
people might find
if he didn't get to it first.
Reverend Roy Laferty,
Durham, North Carolina.
Though the poor fucker had been
completely worthless as a model,
Carl was insistent on keeping a record
of both his successes and his failures.
[man] Howdy.
You look like you've been traveling.
-Yeah.
-Where you headed?
There used to be a house and a barn
up on the hill over there.
Some lawyer owned it. You know it?
Sure I do.
Up in the Mitchell Flats.
Still there?
Well, I'll be damned.
You're that Russell boy, ain't you?
I just thought, seeing as I was this way,
I'd stop by and see the old place again.
[dog barking in the distance]
[sighs] Son, I hate to tell you this,
but that place burned some years ago.
They think some kids did it.
Wasn't nobody ever living there
since you and your folks.
Well, heck, I come all this way,
I may as well walk up there anyways.
Sure, just cut across Clarence's pasture.
He won't say nothing.
[thunder rumbling]
I never did thank you
for the night my dad died.
You were awful kind of me,
and I just want you toknow
that I ain't never forgot it.
You had that pie smeared
all across your face.
Damn Bodecker thought it was blood.
Remember that?
Yeah, I remember everything
about that night.
He ain't the lawman that I expected.
Shame about his sister though.
Why? What happened?
Well, his sister and her husband
were found dead.
Not far from Meade.
You come back to see me.
We'll sit out and drink some beer.
I'll do that.
[man] Lee.
Got a call from Sheriff Thompson
in Lewisburg, West Virginia.
Wants you to call him back
as soon as possible.
[Thompson]
I had a man shot down here two days back.
He was a preacher.
And we're suspecting it's a boy
that used to live up around your parts.
That right?
How'd he kill the man?
A couple shots.
Pistol. Probably a Luger
that the boy's known to have.
-That's a nine millimeter, ain't it?
-That's right.
What'd you say the boy's name was?
I didn't say, but it's Arvin Russell.
Both of his parents died up around there,
as I understand it.
Father was a suicide,
and he's been living down here
with the grandmother and the uncle.
Listen, I don't think the boy's dangerous.
From what I'm hearing,
this preacher might've deserved killing.
Is this boy driving?
Could be.
He owns an ol' busted up Chevy 3100, '54.
I don't know
that it'd make it all the way up there.
At this point, he might be hitchhiking.
Dark hair, not bad looking. Quiet.
[sighs]
Who's gonna bury Jack?
I don't know.
I don't know
who's gonna wanna touch that thing.
[sighs] Look, kid...
my daddy didn't do anything
like what your daddy did up there,
but he did up and leave me,
my mama, and my sister.
He just went off to the shoe factory
one morning and never came back.
And there was nothing to do
but forget his sorry ass.
Some people were born
just so they could be buried.
[birds chirping]
[sighs, sniffles]
[narrator] Arvin thought about the days
leading up to his mother's death,
how Willard wanted so much
for her to live.
His father
would have done anything to save her.
Fuck the blood and stink,
the heat and the insects.
Anything.
Arvin said to himself.
[barking in the distance]
And suddenly he realized,
standing in his father's church,
that he'd had no other choice,
that Willard had needed to go
wherever Charlotte went.
[footsteps approaching]
Arvin Russell!
I know you're down there somewhere!
It's Sheriff Bodecker, son!
Got some questions to ask you!
[gunshot]
[gun cocking]
Sorry about that!
Goddamn bird scared me.
I ain't here to hurt you!
And I know that you don't wanna hurt me!
Come on out so we can have us a talk!
[gun cocks]
[panting] Okay.
[Lee]
I figured this might be where you'd come.
Remember that night
you brought me up here?
That was an awful thing your daddy did.
[stick clatters]
[gunshot]
God dammit, boy, don't--
don't fuck with me!
Put the gun down, Sheriff!
I got one pointed right at you!
Can't do that, son!
Just set it on the ground and step away!
What?
Just set it on the ground and step away!
So you can kill me like you did my sister
and that preacher down in West Virginia?!
[breathes shakily]
I'm not a bad person, Sheriff.
That preacher weren't no good!
He hurt my sister so bad
she killed herself, Sheriff!
I had no choice!
[breathes heavily]
I hate to be the one to tell you this,
Sheriff, but your sister...
and her husband,
they weren't no good neither!
I got a snapshot in my pocket here
of her hugging on some dead guy.
You let loose that gun
and I'll show it to you!
[gunshots]
[Lee gasps]
[bird chirping]
[breathes heavily]
[gasps]
[Arvin panting]
[exhales]
I had no choice.
[gasps]
They were gonna kill me, I swear.
I begged her to put the gun down.
I'm sorry.
[narrator] Though it seemed to Arvin
as if hours went by
while he listened
to the Sheriff fight to stay alive,
it actually took the man
only a few minutes to die.
[breathes heavily]
[sniffles]
[dog barking in the distance]
[car honks]
[indistinct radio newscast]
Thank you, mister.
I didn't think
anybody was gonna pick me up.
Looks like you had a rough day.
[Arvin] Yeah.
Uh, where you headed?
[Arvin] I ain't figured that out yet.
Where you headed?
[man] Cincinnati.
-All right.
-That okay for you?
[Arvin] Uh...
Yeah, I've been meaning
to get up that way.
[reporter] ... to make known
his final decision
to significantly increase
the number of US troops
deployed to south Vietnam.
He explained the reason for his actions
in these historic words.
[Lyndon B. Johnson]
We intend to convince the communists
that we cannot be defeated
by force of arms
or by superior power.
They're not easily convinced.
[narrator] Arvin didn't want
to fall asleep sitting next to a stranger,
and as he fought hard to stay awake,
his mind began taking him places.
He started to think maybe the law
would recognize he had done good.
Maybe he'd be forgiven.
Maybe he'd even be able to see Grandma
and Uncle Earskell again.
Or maybe that was too risky.
What happened?
[narrator] But still...
maybe he'd meet a girl,
start a family like his daddy did.
[Jack barking]
As the thoughts came, he wasn't sure
if he was going backwards or forwards.
He knew wherever this was,
it felt nicer than Knockemstiff.
No fighting or screaming or pain.
Then the thought of enlisting
got into his brain.
And he wasn't sure if he was thinking
about himself or Willard anymore.
He didn't want
to end up in a war like his father.
But he was good at fighting.
Maybe that's where he belonged.
Grandma would tell him to pray on it,
and he'd laugh at her.
But maybe she knew something he didn't.
Right now, he needed sleep
and just felt lucky
someone was giving him a ride.
[indistinct radio newscast]
[tranquil violin music playing]
["Bank Of The Ohio"
by Pokey LeFarge playing]
I asked my love
To take a walk
Just a walk
A little way
And as we walked
Oh, may we talk
All about our wedding day
Only say that you'll be mine
In our home we'll happy be
Down beside where the waters flow
On the banks of the Ohio
I held a knife against her breast
As into my arms she pressed
She said Willie, don't you murder me
I'm unprepared for eternity
I took her by her lily white hand
And dragged her down that bank of sand
There I throwed her in to drown
I watched her as she floated down
Was walking home 'tween twelve and one
Thinkin' of what I had done
I killed a girl, my love you see
Because she would not marry me
The very next morning
about half past four
The Sheriff came and
Knocked on my door
He said young man come now and go
To the Banks of the Ohio
[music ends]
[suspenseful violin music playing]