The Last Sheriff in Texas. James P. McCollom. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: James P. McCollom
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Биографии и Мемуары
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781619029972
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he spent ten days in a sickbed. Most people had never seen Vail without his hat before.

      Get-well cards and letters and telegrams arrived from all across America. (Camp Ezell, always exact, cited thirty-five a day.) The hospital had lost count of the long-distance telephone calls. Sheriffs, highway patrolmen, city policemen, FBI agents in Texas and other states wrote personal letters. The police department in Klamath Falls, Oregon, issued a commendation. So did the Bayou Rifles in Louisiana. W. D. Whalen, governor of the Texas-Oklahoma district of the Kiwanis clubs, issued a citation. And there was a resolution by the Bexar County commissioners:

      Whereas the Commissioners of Bexar County, in common with the citizens of Bee County in particular, and of Texas in general, have learned from the daily press of the heroic act of The Honorable Vail Ennis, Sheriff of Bee County, in keeping with the unbroken traditions of the peace officers of this state and an unwavering and unswerving fidelity to the public trust and to law and order . . .

      Resolved that when the Commissioners Court shall adjourn today it will stand adjourned as a tribute to and in respect of the Honorable Vail Ennis.

      The paper also mentioned that the county commissioners had been moved to pay Vail’s hospital bills. The hospital charge was $730.90. Dr. Edmondson’s fee was $250. The $980.90 was more than three months of the sheriff’s salary.

      6

      Johnny spent Christmas of 1947 in Beeville and visited with folks downtown, in and out of the doorways on Main. He saw Mr. Schulz, his old boss from his soda jerk days at the pharmacy. He saw Mr. Raymond Brown, sitting in his customary chair outside Bagley’s newsstand. Mr. Brown, blind since age twelve, knew Johnny’s voice at once and asked him for details about law school. Blindness hadn’t prevented Raymond Brown from earning a law degree at the university. Inside the newsstand, he saw Dudley Dougherty, the town’s one legacy millionaire, absentmindedly leafing through the week’s new periodicals, which he would then decline to buy. At the American Café, he had coffee with Monte Hall, now managing the store his dad had founded as Hall’s Emporium fifty years before. Johnny went by the newspaper office to say hello to Camp Ezell, who asked him about his plans after graduation, taking notes.

      The town was alive. On the three downtown blocks there were a half dozen cafés, not counting the soda fountain at Schulz’s pharmacy, and four barber shops: Walter Chesshir’s and the Rialto Barbers were across from each other on Main, the Post Office barber shop (run by Sid and Curly Hirst) and Bob Lothringer’s across from each other on St. Mary’s Street. Three banks, all locally owned, were within two blocks of each other. Three drugstores: Schulz’s, Conoly’s, and Ballard’s. Old man Jim Ballard sat out in front of Ballard’s carving small figurines and telling Texas stories. J. Frank Dobie used him as a source. Puss Malott’s was busy all day long: men shooting pool, playing dominos, smoking, standing at the bar and talking, standing outside and talking, where they could watch the traffic, mostly foot traffic, of the town. Down the street, the grand Kohler hotel cooled its spacious lobby with overhead fans. There was another coffee shop at the Kohler. People visited at the post office, at the Lou Anna bakery with its wonderful smells, at Burrough’s hardware, Lack’s, and Perry’s and Ferguson’s dime stores, where kids could walk around and look at tiny toys.

      During the years of World War II, American boys mired in foreign mud and chaos dreamed of such order—warm houses, mown yards, clean neighborhoods where people didn’t lock their doors at night—far removed from European ruins and scorched Pacific beaches. Ohhmmm. Hooommme. At Christmas in 1947, the sense of homecoming was still powerful. All over town one heard Christmas songs and the sentimental music of the 1940s:

      I’ll be seeing you, in all the old familiar places.

      Kiss me once again; it’s been a long, long time.

      I’ll be home for Christmas . . . if only in my dreams.

      This place, this town, was all those dreams. Forty-five local boys hadn’t made it back alive. But Freddie Hobrecht and Viggo Gruy and Ed Brown had made it home. Freddie was a hero, a P-47 Thunderbolt pilot shot down behind enemy lines who captured a German soldier and brought him back with him. Viggo, commissioned early out of Texas A&M, had won the Silver Star in combat in France. Ed, another Aggie, halfback on the championship Beeville high school football team of 1934, had served on Omar Bradley’s staff. Leonard Kirkpatrick made it home from the navy and married Robatine Calkins, the fairest of the Beeville majorettes. A. W. Mussett came home and won the gorgeous Norma Sapp.

      I’ll be home for Christmas . . . if only in my dreams.

      Such a town. Such a town. With twelve cents, kids eleven years old could see a movie at the Rialto Theater—a worthy second cousin to the glorious Majestic and Aztec theaters in San Antonio—with its vaulted ceiling and artworks, carpets and drapes and air-conditioning. Texas, starring Glenn Ford and William Holden, was playing at the Rialto. The Rex was showing Eddie Dean in Arizona Trail and John Wayne in The Star Packer (Son of the Guardian Chapter 3) at the Saturday matinee.

      At the Beeville hospital, there were flowers everywhere, so many that the nurses had nowhere to put them. Mrs. Ennis pleaded for people to stop sending flowers. Flowers kept coming. A telegram from the Carthage, Texas, sheriff’s department, verged on haiku:

      Hold your head up.

      We are with you.

      A thug is a thug.

      Place them one by one.

      The twentieth century was nearing its midpoint. The Old West was long past, but Americans were not ready to let it go. Time magazine’s story about Vail Ennis, the hell-bent sheriff of Bee County, had proved that Texas was still Texas.

      Time:

      In Beeville’s Thomas Memorial Hospital, hothouse blooms banked all about his big room. Vail Ennis lay gravely wounded, his intestines riddled, a hip and arm ripped by bullets. But he was still alive.

      Said a Beeville resident: “They might as well have gone out and hanged themselves as to pull a gun on Vail.”

      7

      Vail’s wife was called Oncie. She was a Handley and her family was eleven kids and she was number eleven. In Spanish, that’s once. Oncie called me and she said, I want you to do me a favor, and I said, Well what is that. She said, Well, there’s an old boy here in town who wants to write a book about Vail. And I know you and Vail were very close and hunted a lot. Anyway I said, I’ll be glad to talk to him. She called me the next morning and she was pretty rough herself. She said that sonofabitch—everything he’s put in there was somethin real nasty about Vail. Don’t tell him anything. So I didn’t. He come by and I told im I was given instructions not to tell him anything. He was gonna say everything mean . . . and he told me, Well, I’ve got to do that to sell books. The meaner I show him, the more books will sell.

      —L. D. Hunter (in 2002)

      Every so often someone would come to Beeville with an idea for a book about Vail Ennis. But Vail Ennis already had a biographer. In fact, when Vail took office as sheriff in January of 1945, a writer had come with the job. Camp Ezell became editor of the Beeville Bee-Picayune that same month. In the three years since then, Vail Ennis had provided Camp Ezell with more column inches of newsprint than the county’s previous sheriffs had produced in a century. And good-looking newsprint it was. Most Texas weeklies were inky sheets that used banner headlines to fill space and make trivial items seem important. Something more than three columns was rare for the Beeville newspaper. The front page was blocked out conservatively, artfully, the photographic cuts sharp beneath the Old English masthead:

      The Beeville Bee-Picayune

      Plaques and testimonials covered the newsroom wall. The Texas Press Association had named the newspaper the best weekly in the state so often that its gentlemanly owner and publisher, George H. Atkins, was reluctant to enter more competitions. The paper’s appearance was the most anticipated event of the week. People began to watch their clocks after lunch on Thursday, counting down to 3:00 p.m., the time that Jimmy Crockett would deliver the first stacks of Bee-Pics to Bagley’s newsstand, across the street from Schulz pharmacy.

      It