
- 306 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
In the unforgiving vortex of the American heartland, when you have to choose, you always choose life
For Iona Moon, the open fields of the Kila Flats and the town of White Falls are centuries apart rather than the distance of a few miles. Mocked and feared by her classmates, Iona is only desirable to beautiful, brilliant Jay Tyler when they're in the backseat of Willy Hamilton's Chevy. Passion offers relief from the abuse of her older brothers and the sorrow of her mother's slow surrender to cancer. But transient pleasures do not lead to graceâand Iona discovers she must escape everything she knows before she can learn to love the ones who have harmed her.
Â
Sensual, haunting, and tender, Iona Moon is a cry for independence, a demand for respect, and a realization that all worlds are cruel in their own ways.
For Iona Moon, the open fields of the Kila Flats and the town of White Falls are centuries apart rather than the distance of a few miles. Mocked and feared by her classmates, Iona is only desirable to beautiful, brilliant Jay Tyler when they're in the backseat of Willy Hamilton's Chevy. Passion offers relief from the abuse of her older brothers and the sorrow of her mother's slow surrender to cancer. But transient pleasures do not lead to graceâand Iona discovers she must escape everything she knows before she can learn to love the ones who have harmed her.
Â
Sensual, haunting, and tender, Iona Moon is a cry for independence, a demand for respect, and a realization that all worlds are cruel in their own ways.
Tools to learn more effectively

Saving Books

Keyword Search

Annotating Text

Listen to it instead
Information
1
Matt Fry couldnât go home, so he lived in the abandoned shed down by the railroad tracks. Willy Hamilton and Iona Moon each knew part of Mattâs story, how his troubles began the day his brother died. But Willy and Iona didnât talk to each other, and Matt Fry wasnât talking to anyone, so there were pieces no one knew, secrets locked in the boyâs body.
At Everettâs funeral, Iona watched Matt squirm, scratch his crotch then sit on his hands. He kept glancing over his shoulder as if he expected to see his brother come strutting down the aisle, head held high, medals gleaming. Just a flesh wound. Ugly scar, but girls like a man with something to show.
Hearse to grave, six men carried Everett up the hill. Matt shuffled and smirked, pinched himself but couldnât stop smiling. The sun was white. Dry leaves skidded across the yellow grass.
Sharla Wilder sobbed like a widow, softly and to herself. Other girls cried too, clinging to one anotherâto keep from falling, Iona thought. Matt thrust his hands in his pockets and kicked stones toward the hole. All those words. Beloved son, war hero.
Everett Fry had gotten out of Vietnam alive in â66, nothing worse than that scar on his shoulder where shrapnel tore skin and muscle but left bones unbroken. Heâd had a heroâs welcome in White Falls, Idaho, where people believed any man in uniform was doing a good thing for the country. But a month after he came home, Everett still hadnât looked for work. In his parentsâ house on the Kila Flats, he paced the attic room, wore nothing but his underwear, kept the blinds shut tight. Sometimes he got dressed and drove to town, parked on Main and stared at women who passed his truck. He made them nervous. With his hat pulled down over his brow, he looked like a man who meant to go hunting.
More than one young lady said she had dreams about Everett, dreams that made a girl giggle and hide her mouth, dreams that made her cry out in her sleep till she woke with her damp nightgown twisted up around her waist.
Iona knew that Sharla Wilder was one of the girls Everett had watched, one of the girls whoâd had those dreams. Last summer, when Everett was still alive, Jeweldeen Wilder bolted the cellar door to tell Iona. They squatted in the dark, puffing cigarettes that Jeweldeen had stolen from her sisterâs purse. âSharla says that when Everett stares at her, she feels like her whole bodyâs about to catch fire, like sheâs been doused with gasoline and heâs got a match. In this dream, sheâs naked and he just stands there looking âcause a womanâs body doesnât do a thing for him. Finally he touches her, just one finger on her belly or maybe her forehead. His hand is cold, the way metal gets so cold it sticks to your skin. She shatters like hot glass, like a bomb goes off inside her. The pieces fly in Everettâs face. His eyes are bleeding. Then my sister has to lead him around by the hand. Sheâs alive, you see, and not exploded, âcause it turns out the whole thing is Everettâs dream, not hers.â
Jeweldeen and Iona sucked on their cigarettes. âI think my sisterâs crazy, having dreams like that. One night she went sleepwalking. Came down here in the cellar where you canât see your own nose if you look cross-eyed. She woke up and started hollering. Daddy and I ran around the house looking for her. Sheâs standing here wearing nothing but her own goose flesh, yelling her fool head off, saying, âDonât bury me. Iâm still alive.â She keeps rubbing her eyes because she thinks theyâre full of dirt and thatâs why she canât see. Daddy says heâs gonna put her in a special school if she doesnât straighten up. He says he can smell the sickness in her. He says girls go crazy just like animalsâsomething like rabies but it only happens to females.â
Iona thought of Sharlaâs dream, the way Everett shattered her. She imagined Everett staring at them all now, getting ready to toss a grenade into the crowd. Theyâd wake up dead. Sharla would think she was sleepwalking again. Sheâd scream and scream, but this time her father wouldnât run down the stairs, wouldnât say: Cover yourself. But Everett Fry didnât throw the grenade. He held it instead. Stuck it in his mouth and pulled the pin.
Iona never told Jeweldeen how Everett gave her a dollar one day to run across the street and buy him a pack of cigarettes. He didnât stare at her, because she was just a scrawny kid with no butt. Sharla Wilder had too much ass but nice tits, thatâs what Ionaâs brother Leon said. Even Jeweldeen had breasts big enough for a bra, but Ionaâs ribs still stuck up higher than her chest when she lay on her back. Maybe thatâs why she wasnât scared of Everett Fry and didnât have any crazy dreams either.
âDonât get any smart ideas about running off with my money, you little shit,â he yelled.
She whirled in the middle of the street and stuck out her tongue. Well howâd I know what heâd do? She brought him the cigarettes and change. He started to roll up his window but she stood there waiting.
âWhat you gawking at?â
âThank you,â Iona said. âYouâre supposed to say thank you.â
He handed her a quarter. âNow get lost,â he said.
Willyâs father was the first one to see Everett Fry, and his mother was the last.
âYou never saw such a mess,â Horton Hamilton told his wife. He was on duty that Saturday morning and took the call alone. âBlood spattered all the way to the ceiling.â
âCareful,â Flo said. âThe children.â
But Willy already knew. The wailing siren hours before had sent Willy and Jay Tyler flying on their bikes, pumping and panting to catch Horton as he sped out east of town. Rumors whipped across the Flats. Now neighbors stood silent in the Frysâ front yard; like stumps, Willy thought. No one moved. That morning, Everett Fry had locked the bathroom door, put on his uniform, double-knotted his shoelaces, sat down on the toilet, and shot himself in the mouth.
Jay stood on Willyâs shoulders to see inside the bathroom. Horton Hamilton spotted the tuft of blond hair, the fingertips clutching the sill. He snapped down the blind. âDamn kids,â he said later. âThatâs all this town needsâboys bragging that they saw Everett.â
Jay didnât tell anyone but Willy. They pedaled all the way back to town as if racing a flood, as if the gorged river swelled behind them and any moment they might be swept away, no more than sticks in the roiling water.
When they were lying in the damp grass in front of Jayâs house, staring at the blank sky, Jay wished a dog would bark. He hoped his mother would yell at him to come inside, but there was nothing except the quiver of bare branches and the sound of Willyâs breath. âI didnât think it was gonna look like that,â Jay whispered.
âMy mom says everybody has his own way of dying. Some folks smile like they just told a good joke. And some folks grit their teeth like they got a hot poker up their behind.â
âEverett looked like he couldnât believe it,â Jay said. âBut he did it. Why should he be surprised?â
âMaybe he didnât know how it was gonna feel.â
âShit. You can jump off the bridge, you can take a handful of your motherâs pills. You donât have to make such a goddamned mess. Somebody has to clean that wall. I wonder if he thought about that, his own mother on her knees, wiping the tiles.â
Willy said, âMaybe he wanted her to see how much it hurt.â
âYour mom gonna fix him up?â
âI sâpose.â
Jay whistled through his teeth. âJesus,â he said, âsweet Jesus.â
Sooner or later Flo Hamilton saw most everyone in town. She scraped under their fingernails and sponged their feet, swabbed inside their nostrils and wiped the sleep out of their eyes. Ladies got lipstick and rouge. Baldwinâs Funeral Home had pink and red, one shade of each. She couldnât do anything fancy. She had to shave the men because their beards grew for a day after they died. Everett Fry had such tender skin she lathered him up twice. Mr. Baldwin said, âNo need to go to all that trouble, Flo. Nobody but the good Lord himself is going to see that face.â
But she shaved him anyway. âJust like a boy,â she told her husband, âjust like Willy.â
Willy thought of the pig, how theyâd poured scalding water over its back and shaved it with the edges of spoons, shaved it until its skin was pink and smooth and softer than his motherâs own cheek when she kissed him goodnight.
âI never knew there was so much blood in a man,â Horton said. âAll my years, I never saw anyone do it that way.â
Flo said, âTheyâll have to have a closed casket. Itâs a shame, such beautiful skin.â
Willy remembered watching his father cut the pigâs neck. Horton Hamilton was a big man. He wore size twelve shoes, extra wide; he could pin you to the wall with one hand. He had hair up his nose and hair in his ears. But he was no match for a three-hundred-pound pig that knew it was going to die. That animal kicked and squealed, rolled on its side and flailed at the air with its stubby legs. Finally Willy and his sisters and his mother got on top of the pig and Horton jabbed the knife into its throat. Such a small cut, but the blood flowed into the basin, so much blood, and the basin was emptied and filled again; still it came, thick and dark, and the pig lived but no longer struggledâno, made a suckling noise and seemed to slip into some sweet dream of his motherâs teats, eyes half closed, tongue lapping. Willyâs father worked the foreleg to keep the blood pumping through the heart, and Willyâs mother said, âI never knew there was so much blood in a pig.â
The minister said: Suicide is sin, but God forgives, as we must forgive. Matt Fry kicked another stone. It hit the lip of the grave and tumbled, banged against the coffin lid, left a small dent in the perfect, polished pine. Judge not lest ye be judged.
Mrs. Fry smacked Matthew as they climbed into the long black limousine. Men pound you with their fists, Willy thought, blacken your eye or break your nose. Women slap you with an open palm and leave the red marks of their fingers on your face.
Two weeks later Matt drove his motherâs Buick into the Snake River and let it sink. He set fire to her drapes three days after that, but his father got the hose in time. In early December, when the ground was hard but no snow had fallen, he stole the lights from the lawn of the funeral home.
Willy was cruising with his father that night, pretending they might get lucky and find some trouble. They caught up with the boy down by the Miller Creek bridge. His white face rose, a moon above his dark coat.
Horton Hamilton climbed out of the patrol car, one hand on his hip. Thick fingers unsnapped the leather band that held the pistol safe in its holster. Mattâs eyes glazed, blind as stones in the twin beams of the headlights. âDonât you be gettinâ any ideas of makinâ like a jackrabbit, boyâI got a gun.â Willy knew his father had never shot a human being. A man doesnât shoot peeping Toms out of trees or pull his gun on drunken girls reeling through the woods. Once heâd fired off a round to scare a badger off poor Mrs. Griswoldâs porch, and Willy thought he might do that now, might blast the ground just to show the boy he took what business he had seriously.
Horton Hamilton was the one to drive Matt up to the state school for delinquents in Cross City. The Frys told the judge theyâd lost control of their child. Witsâ end, they said. No sense sending him home. So Willy learned that if you did a bad enough thing your parents could decide they didnât want you. Horton told Matthew: âYouâre getting a second chance, son. Next time theyâll judge you as a man and it wonât go so easy. Take my adviceâlearn something useful. You end up in prison, all they teach you to do is stamp license plates.â
But the boy didnât take to his education. Willy heard whispers at home, stories at school. Matt Fry always was the kind whoâd throw a kid to the ground for looking at him too hard. He had a reputation and finally lived up to it by biting off a piece of another boyâs ear. He got solitary for that. âLucky for him it was only the hole,â Horton said. âThey shoot dogs for less.â
Eighteen days later, when they dragged Matt Fry into the light, he was like this: lame in one foot, skinny as a coyote at the end of winter. Heâd forgotten how to talk, forgotten he was supposed to unzip his pants before he took a piss. Willy wondered: What did the guards do to him when they pulled him off the boy with half an ear? How hard did his head hit the gravel, and how many times?
Matthew returned to White Falls that spring to find the basement windows of his parentsâ house boarded shut and their doors locked.
Now he lived in the shed by the tracks. The shack was big enough for one man, two sheep and some chickensâif a person could stand the smell. Old man Hardy had lived that way for 40 years. He died in â63, and in the end, it was his smell that drove the animals out.
Willy followed Iona Moon and caught her doing things with Matt Fry. He watched through the window of the shed while they ate cold soup from a can and smoked cigarettes. Mattâs head bobbed up and down; spit dribbled from his slack lip. He was more of an idiot than Roy Wilkerson, who was born with those slanty eyes. When Matt tried to eat a cigarette, Iona had to pull it from his mouth.
Another time, Willy saw Iona cover him with a tattered blanket and curl up behind him, belly to butt. She held that filthy boy in her arms and kissed his dirty hair. She pressed herself against his torn jeans, damp with piss and smelling like a body died in them.
Iona didnât mind the smell. Her brothers were always making her pick up dead things. Once she carried a pack rat home by its hairless tail. Mama yelled and Iona cried. Her brothers vanished and she took the licking alone, stood naked in the cold bath water while her mama scrubbed her hands with a brush, soaped her face and wasnât careful of her eyes. But Iona didnât fuss. She was done crying. And she didnât wail when Daddy came home and took his belt to her bare behind. Her brothers watched and she never told on them. She was eight when it happened, and now she was eleven. She still didnât mind the smell of dead thingsâbut sheâd learned not to bring them home.
She didnât try to bring Matt Fry home either. She knew what Mama would say if she saw him. Always was a bad influence, teaching my sons things they didnât need to know.
But Iona remembered Matthew a different way. He and her three brothers said they had a surprise for her in the gully. They blindfolded her and led her into the trees. Count to fifty, Iona. And she did. When she pulled the bandanna down around her neck, they were gone. She sat on a rock, counted to fifty again, but there was no surprise. She sat still as she could, waiting for something to happen.
When Matt circled back, he found her curled on the ground, holding her knees to her chest, her face blotched and salty. âCome on, Iona,â he said, âIâll take you home.â
She said, âIâm not lost.â
âThen why you been cryinâ?â
âI wantedââ She choked on her words. âYou said you had a surprise.â Matt didnât laugh at her. âI just wanted to see something.â
He knelt beside her. Sheâd been sucking on her hair and he pulled the wet strand from her mouth. âIâll show you something,â he said.
He knew a secret place, a cave heâd dug in the earth at the edge of the woods. He too...
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
- 11
- 12
- 13
- 14
- 15
- 16
- 17
- 18
- 19
- 20
- 21
- 22
- 23
- 24
- Acknowledgments
- About the Author
- Copyright Page
Frequently asked questions
Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription
No, books cannot be downloaded as external files, such as PDFs, for use outside of Perlego. However, you can download books within the Perlego app for offline reading on mobile or tablet. Learn how to download books offline
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
- Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
- Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.4M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 990+ topics, weâve got you covered! Learn about our mission
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more about Read Aloud
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS and Android devices to read anytime, anywhere â even offline. Perfect for commutes or when youâre on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app
Yes, you can access Iona Moon by Melanie Rae Thon in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Literature General. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.