The Wonder Boy of Whistle Stop is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright 2020 by Willina Lane Productions, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Random House, an imprint and division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.
RANDOM HOUSE and the HOUSE colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.
Hardback ISBN9780593133842
Ebook ISBN9780593133859
randomhousebooks.com
Book design by Victoria Wong, adapted for ebook
Cover illustration: Ben Perini
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Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Prologue
Sheriff Grady Kilgore
Dot Weems
Idgie Threadgoode
Buddy Jr.
Twenty-Five Years Later
Welcome to the World
U.S. Army Base
Dot Weems
The Visit
Ruthie and Brooks
Dot Weems
Different Backgrounds
At Caldwell Circle
Dot Weems
Silver Spring, Maryland
Callaway Resort and Gardens
Bud in a Nutshell
The Bee Charmer
Atlanta, Georgia
Losing Ninny
An Unexpected Turn of Events
Atlanta, Georgia
Daddys Girl
The Elephant in the Room
What Now?
The Weems Weekly
Briarwood Manor
Losing Daddy
Nervous in the Service
Why Isnt He Calling?
The Escapee
Time on My Hands
Briarwood Manor
The Mix-up
Amtrak
Whistle Stop, Alabama
Aboard the Amtrak
Whistle Stop, Alabama
The Weems Weekly
Amtrak Train
A Christmas Tradition
A Year Later
Whistle Stop, Alabama
The Weems Weekly
Whistle Stop, Alabama
Amtrak Train
Going Home
All Over the News
Get Me to Birmingham
Bud in Birmingham
A Kindred Spirit
The Connection
More Than Meets the Eye
The Wonder Boy
A New Friend
The Weems Weekly
Whistle Stop, Alabama
Surprise Visitors
Going Back to Briarwood
Jessie Ray Scroggins
Safe at the Plate
Evelyn and Ruthie
Fairhope, Alabama
Opal Butts
The Birthday Wish
Dot Weems
The Proposal
A Close Call
Who Would Believe Such Pleasurefrom a Wee Ball of Fur
The Eviction Notice
Ruthie Gets a Call
The Insurrection
The Will
Evelyns Call
Time Ran Out
The New Proposition
Only in America
Telling Daddy
Let the Project Begin!
23 and Who?
The Surprise
Very Bad News
Dot Weems
Dot Weems
Breaking a Heart
Back Where She Started
The End of an Era
The Dead Body
Good News
An Old Acquaintance
Ready to Begin Again
The Chicks Return
Look What the Cat Dragged In
The Grand Opening
Epilogue
Dedication
Acknowledgments
By Fannie Flagg
About the Author
L & N TERMINAL TRAIN STATION
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA
November 29, 1938, 8:10 A.M.
IT WAS A cool November morning. Inside the large train station, shards of clear bright sunlight shot down through the glass ceiling as arriving and departing passengers and porters with carts piled high with luggage hurried back and forth across the white marble floor in a beehive of activity. Sounds of happy chatter and trains pulling in and out of the station echoed throughout the entire building.
Over on platform 7, the Crescent, the long silver train from New Orleans, was now ready to receive its Birmingham passengers, and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Hornbeck quickly climbed aboard, headed to New York City for their annual Christmas shopping trip.
Mrs. Hornbeck, carrying six large round hatboxes, three in each hand, happily banged down the aisle, hitting several sleeping passengers in the head as she passed by. Mr. Hornbeck, with his newspaper tucked under his arm, followed five steps behind.
Some twelve and half minutes later, after all the hatboxes had been stacked and her fur coat carefully hung up in the compartment closet, Mrs. Hornbeck was finally ready to settle down, relax, and enjoy the ride. She looked out the window just as they were approaching the Whistle Stop, Alabama, railroad crossing. As they got closer, she suddenly noticed a little blond boy in faded overalls standing by the tracks, smiling and waving at the train as it went by. Mrs. Hornbeck had a little boy at home about his age, so as they rode past him, she smiled and waved. When the little boy saw her, he began running under her window, waving back at her, as hard and for as long as he could. She watched him until he and the little dog running along beside him became smaller and smaller, until they were both completely out of sight.
After a long moment, Mrs. Hornbeck turned to her husband with a concerned look on her face and said, Arthur, I think that little boy back there had an arm missing.
Never looking up from his paper, he replied, Well, Ill be.
Mrs. Hornbeck sighed, sat back in her seat, and began fingering her triple strand of pearls, then said, Oh, what a shame. He couldnt have been more than seven or eight at the most, and he was the cutest little thing. You should have seen him. So happy, smiling away.Well, bless his precious little heart. My cousin Charles had a little finger missing, but an entire arm? I wonder what in the world could have happened to him.
Her husband glanced over at her. What did you say?
I said, I wonder how that poor little boy lost his arm. What could have happened?
Mr. Hornbeck, a master at stating the obvious, replied, Wellsomething must have.
SHE HAD SEEN the little boy for only a few seconds at the most. But every year after that, as their train passed through the Whistle Stop crossing, Mrs. Hornbeck always leaned forward in her seat and looked out, hoping to see him again. And every year when he was not there, she would always turn and ask her husband, Arthur, I wonder whatever became of that cute little blond boy with the one arm.
Beats me, he always said.
WHISTLE STOP, ALABAMA
January 24, 1991
GRADY KILGORE, A big barrel-chested bear of a man in his seventies, had been the sheriff of Whistle Stop, Alabama, until 1958, when he and his wife, Gladys, had moved to Tennessee. Today, Grady had driven down to Whistle Stop from Nashville with his grandson and was standing on the railroad tracks, looking across the street to where the old Whistle Stop Cafe used to be. Kudzu vines had grown all over the buildings and had covered most of the block. It was hard for his grandson to tell what was underneath.
Grady pointed over to one of the buildings. Thats the old post office that Dot Weems ran, and right theres the cafe, next to Opal Buttss beauty shop, where your grandma got her hair done up every Saturday morning. Grady stood there looking around and was sad to see how much the place had changed since the last time hed stopped by.
By now, the old two-lane highway from Birmingham to Whistle Stop had been bypassed by a new six-lane interstate, and most of the area was now just a dumping ground. Old rusty cars and trucks had been abandoned by the tracks, left to slowly fall apart. Empty beer cans and whiskey bottles were everywhere. And as a sad sign of the times, Grady noticed there was a lot of drug paraphernalia scattered around that hadnt been there before.
The Baptist church, where he had heard Reverend Scroggins preach every Sunday, was now almost falling down, the stained-glass windows broken, the pews removed and sold. All that was left of the town were some of the old buildings and the old Threadgoode home, and that was barely standing. Vandals had pretty much destroyed everything else. Grady turned to his grandson and shook his head. When I get to thinkin how this place used to be, and what it is now, it just makes me sick. It wasnt never a fancy town, but it was clean. Now theres junk scattered everywhere. And the old Threadgoode house is full of graffiti, the windows all knocked out. Youd never know to look at it now, but that house used to be the prettiest one in town. For the life of me, I still caint figure out why Whistle Stop went to seed like it did. I even heard the whole town was sold, and they were gonna knock it all down and build a tire factory out here.
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