THE BALLAD OF SAMUEL HEWITT
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Available directly as an e-book from Nick’s publisher, The Porcupine’s Quill, or in print through your local, Indie bookstore.
Also available at Chapters/Indigo, and online at AbeBooks and Amazon.
June 1934: the depths of the Great Depression. Reckless with anger and spoiling for a fight, seventeen-year-old Samuel Hewitt and his Shuswap friend Charleyboy conspire to steal a prize stallion and disappear into the blistered, unforgiving terrain of British Columbia’s Thompson River Valley.
The boys are looking for a fresh start—and for somewhere to belong. But what they find is a hardscrabble existence enlivened by ruthless criminals and boxcar bums... until they come upon the denizens of a once-majestic travelling circus struggling to survive in an era in which even marvels have lost their capacity to charm. In this surreal, ramshackle environment, Samuel develops an unexpected kinship with the failing ringmaster and his enigmatic daughter. But violence and treachery are prevalent in the shadows of the Big Top, and Samuel may well find himself on the run once more.
In The Ballad of Samuel Hewitt, Nick Tooke presents an uncommon coming-of-age story as well as a thoughtful examination of the meaning of home and family.
PRAISE
“A thrilling and immersive journey through the peaks and valleys of Depression-era British Columbia.” — Open Book Ontario
“A rich addition to British Columbia literature that is place based.” — The Ormsby Review
EXCERPT
From "Chapter One"
Ashcroft, BC—June, 1934
The rain fell so heavy that night it hit like hail. It flattened the bunchgrass and bounced off the dust until the path that wound up to their small, pine-wood house ran like a river. Samuel had been reading The Tempest to his father when the downpour began, and he thought for a moment he’d conjured it. Water gushed out of the downspouts in columns, the eaves troughs overflowed and rain splashed off the windowsill onto the bedroom floor coining dark watermarks on the bare, wooden boards. It lasted ten minutes at the most, then just as suddenly it ceased. The sky cleared. If either one of them had anything to say about it—about anything at all—now was the time, but they did not. Samuel’s father simply turned from the window, tightrope-walked the length of a single floorboard, avoiding the cracks, climbed back into his bed and rolled toward the wall.
Half an hour later Samuel stole out of the house with his saddlebags packed. The resiny scent of sagebrush clung like pitch to his clothes and skin. When he reached the barn he slipped inside and felt for the electric light. Ignatius nickered in the dark. The single bulb above the hayloft hummed and flickered when he hit the switch. It burned bright for no more than a few seconds before it flickered again and died. Samuel threw open the doors, led Ignatius from his stall and began to saddle him in the barn bay, the shine on the leather and the steel bit glowing muted and blue in the moonlight.
The dog had followed him down from the house and stood hopefully in the open doorway. ‘Not this time, Spud,’ whispered Samuel. He buckled the cinch-strap round the gelding’s belly, waited for the horse to exhale, then tightened it. ‘Somebody’s got to pay the bills. You look after the old man,’ he said, tucking the loose end behind the buckle. Spud wagged his tail when Samuel spoke.
Samuel checked the saddlebags one more time as the dog looked on. There were oats for the horse in one pouch and a blanket and some tinned beans and cheese in the other. A sharp knife, a clean shirt. Some beef jerky. ‘You couldn’t keep up,’ Samuel muttered, without turning around. ‘Besides, God knows where we’ll end up.’ He buckled the saddlebags shut. ‘Maybe somewhere they eat Jack Russell Terriers.’
The dog raised its ears, its head tilted slightly to one side.
Samuel passed the reins over the horse’s head, slid his foot into the stirrup and stood up into the saddle. The doorway framed the rising moon and the rim of the valley, the dog in silhouette beside the jamb. ‘You stay here,’ he said.
The dog would not look at him. After a while he sat down. ‘Good boy,’ said Samuel. He clucked the horse forward and rode out.
Samuel passed beneath his father’s bedroom window and did not stop. Did not glance up to see his father standing there, folded into shadow. The rain had not yet soaked into the clay, and in that second sky Robert Hewitt watched the moon in pools of standing water roil and disband beneath the horse’s hooves, then wobble and perfect again after his son had moved on. He saw the grey, weathered house engulfed in stars, and his forlorn image windowed away like a lost penitent.
It was quiet in the valley. After Samuel had rounded the corner, Robert heard the gate click open and shut and the slow drag and clop of the horse’s shoes on the wet tarmac diminish down the road into town. When all was silence again he sat down on the floor, his back to the window, and leaned against the sill. Eyes closed. ‘Be not afeard,’ he began. ‘The isle is full of noises, sounds, and sweet airs. Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments will hum about mine ears,’ he continued, a passable thespian. His eyes blinked open. ‘And sometimes ... voices.’