It was not the kind of night that belonged to people. It belonged to the dark: to the creak of old cypress limbs, to the hush of cottonrows asleep beneath dust, to the low moan a delta makes when it remembers every sorrow at once. A sliver of moon lay thin as a blade over Mississippi, and the fields were quiet but not at peace—like a church after a funeral, when the air still holds the last notes of singing and the last salt of tears.
Robert didn’t fear the dark anymore. He feared what it wouldn’t let him forget. He’d learned that grief has a sound—not crying, not yet, but a seam ripping where love was sewn tight. He heard it when the old woman’s door opened: She gone, child. The baby too. Where were you? He wore that sound like a second skin.
People told him the blues was devil music; Sunday was for saving, Saturday for spending, and the blues spent what salvation gave. He listened like rain on a tin roof—aware but unchanged. Music wasn’t temptation; it was a language, and he had too much to say to die in silence.
After the door with bad news closed, something in him went with it. He wandered. Played for nickels and stares. Learned the smell of a room before a fight. Laughter without mirth, kindness without roots. Nights were a long road with no marker but the next song. He was eighteen, then older, then gone from the maps other people kept of him.
Where the Road Meets Itself
There’s a crossroad where two lines of dirt lead out and lead in, stained with boot prints that never wash away. Folks say the devil stands there in a coat the dark admires, and if you listen long enough, you’ll hear a tuning fork in his smile.
On the day Robert found it, the sun died early. The sky bruised; the land blew out its candles. A crooked sign, a deep ditch, a sly moon in oil-slick water. He felt the pull of kneeling and refused. He opened his case. Wood keeps memory better than men do, and his guitar had swallowed every loss and given him back a voice. But voice alone ain’t always enough.
He stared down a church spire road and a juke lantern road—and stood in the middle where both choices and neither choice argued like ghosts. “If you come,” he said to the air, “I’ll know what price I paid.”
The wind returned his words, altered: What would you give?
He answered with a simple A—clean, unafraid. The night turned articulate. A man in a pinstripe suit arrived like a rumor learning to walk: hat brim low, shoes too clean for mud, a smile you could hear but not see.
“You called,” the stranger said. “I answered.”
“I ain’t your neighbor,” Robert replied, playing still.
“You will be. In time.”
Stories poured from the stranger’s voice—cedar, rain on iron, the last seconds before thunder. He read Robert’s life like a ledger: broken house, loud heart, backfields, death, distance, church that kept an hour, road that kept the rest. “He wants what the road promised and never paid.”
“You got a habit of telling a man his own story?”
“Only when he’s about to forget it.” He tipped toward the guitar. “May I?”
A guitar is a confession. Robert hesitated, then set the neck in the stranger’s hands.
The man cradled it gently, plucked, and each note sat up straighter. “Doggin’ your thirds,” he murmured. “Let ’em sag, then lift. Question and answer—no church in between.” He turned pegs a fraction; the night re-tuned itself. Then he touched the place past the six strings and pulled a sound that shouldn’t have been there: the memory of a voice at the door, not yet invited in. The air prickled. Truth had met skin.
Crossroads Whisper: “Some instruments were made before the tree.”
“What’s the price?” Robert asked.
“Why so eager to pay? You don’t know the product.”
“I know it ain’t the silence I been livin’.”
“Price is simple. I hold your caution for a while; you keep the rest.”
“How long is ‘a while’?”
“Long enough to be remembered. Short enough not to waste. Music’s a jealous wife when she’s finally yours.”
“You want my soul?”
“I don’t steal what’s welded. I borrow what you ain’t using. You ain’t been using your caution.”
He thought of a pale face in a bed he didn’t reach in time. Of the doorframe gripped to hold a house still. Of rooms going quiet when a man plays truer than folks can stand. He nodded. “Tune it so the road knows my feet.”
The night folded down like a prayer shawl. Pegs turned. A ladder of notes leaned against what eyes can’t see. The ditch shivered; the moon widened its eye. Then the stranger touched empty air and drew a new line—thin as silk, strong as rumor. A seventh string lay where absence had pretended to be enough.
Robert placed his fingers and found the way to press that hadn’t existed the night before. Two truths at once: sorrow and pride holding hands. He struck an E and bent it until it testified. Wood opened like a throat thirsty forever.
“I’m the crossroads,” the man said softly. “Not what you meet—the meeting itself. Remember: you asked.” And the lantern down the juke road flared. The church shadow lengthened. The seventh string was there and not there, visible only to those who already believed.
When a Room Learns to Listen
The first club had no name worth writing—just breath, sweat, and the kind of laugh that leans into a shoulder. He wasn’t the headliner, but rooms know their gravity, and this one leaned toward the door when he entered.
He took a crate for a stage. The first chord was careful, the way you touch a scar after it stops hurting—just to remember it did. He let the bass keep time like a porch foot and made the treble tell secrets. Then he did the new thing—not show-off but saw-bones, cutting where the hurt hides and leaving you grateful. Left hand slid between distances that had become neighbors. Right hand found the tremble inside the string—a river thing, a rattlesnake thing. Wooden walls remembered they’d been trees and shook like wind had come home.
People stopped being people and became a single listening animal. He didn’t look up. He didn’t need a certificate for what he already knew: the door had opened.
After the second song, a woman in red caged a bird beneath her palm. After the third, a guitar man placed his instrument down and sat like a student. After the fourth, a drunk laughed the way some folks do when they’re near crying.
On the break the owner leaned in, kindly in the way money gets kind when it sees a crowd. “Boy, what you call that last one?”
Robert thought about a shiny lie, then told the dangerous truth. “Cross Road.”
The owner nodded slow, superstitious as scripture. “Keep that for the late hour. Ain’t fair to serve it early. People got to work tomorrow.”