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Fiction

Caveat by Laura Kalpakian

Caveat
Laura Kalpakian

John F. Blair, Publisher
978-0-89587-223-4
$19.95 hardcover
5 ½ x 8 
258 pages
Published in 1998
Fiction

"For a man in the business of damp," Doctor Lucius Tipton muses, "Hank Beecham was the driest creature alive."

Hank Beecham's rainmaking abilities have brought him twenty years of fame all over the arid West. In 1916, the city fathers of St. Elmo, California, ask Hank to return and rescue his hometown from drought. Rather than pay his exorbitant fee, they propose a bet: Hank's skills against nature. Hank accepts, with this single caveat: he shall get credit for every drop of rain that falls from that day forth.

The bet offers Hank a chance to redeem his family's name. The Beechams were a shiftless lot, luckless, drunken, and violent. Hank's father, a Confederate veteran, had raged and failed on a ranch sentimentally named Shiloh. Hank, however, escaped Shiloh, and moved into town with his long-suffering mother, Eulalie. Returning to St. Elmo stirs up Hank's memories of her death and his own love affair with an older woman.
In paying a long forgotten debt to Doctor Tipton, the grim Hank strikes an unlikely friendship with the convivial doctor. But Lucius Tipton is appalled to discover what Hank truly plans for St. Elmo. 

The rainmaker unleashes a devastating flood, destroying lives, property, livestock. And when at last Hank comes to collect on his bet, the city fathers refuse to pay unless—according to his own caveat—he will accept responsibility for the ruination his rain has wrought.

Hank Beecham leaves, vowing to take his money out of St. Elmo's soul. Time means nothing to Hank. Eight years later, he sets up at Shiloh, prepared to take his revenge. 

Based loosely on historical events in 1916, Caveat tells a tale of rain and revenge, the power of the past to imprison and illuminate.

Reviews

“ ‘Rainmaker Returns to Valley’ trumpets the local paper. The year in this winning fable is 1916, and the place is Kalpakian's familiar, fictional St. Elmo, Calif., a Methodist and Mormon stronghold victimized by 302 straight days without rain. Into this arid landscape returns black sheep Hank Beecham after an absence of  20 years, invited by the city fathers in order to break the drought. Along with a reputation for saving towns in similar predicaments, Hank brings a ton of baggage: a drunken Confederate father whose ranch (aptly named Shiloh) was about as successful as the South's efforts in the war; brothers who were either drunks or felons; a sister who's a horse thief; an affair with an older woman; and a mother who taught him, ‘Never forget a wrong or a slight.’ Hank bets the city fathers $50,000 that he can fill the town's entire reservoir. There's one caveat: he gets credit for every drop of rain that falls, whether or not it can be clearly attributed to his rainmaking efforts. But Hank does his job a little too well. When, in the wake of his Old Testament downpour, the city fathers renege on their bet, Hank vows revenge. Kalpakian is skillful in evoking the conservative moral and cultural atmosphere of an earlier America; what might have been the plot of a conventional western is elevated to a fully dimensional story of human relationships under crisis. Written with graceful economy, her eighth book (after Graced Land) is an object lesson in being careful about what you ask for. More important, it is rich, never coy and startlingly original.”
—Publishers Weekly

“When I heard about this book, I thought that it sounded mildly interesting, so I picked it up. I ended up reading it in little more than three hours. This story, about a rainmaker who practices his magic through science, has to be the most original thing I've ever read in my entire life. In an age where there is ‘nothing new under the sun,’ stories like this are a refreshing reminder that the ideas, new or otherwise, are there, waiting to be found. This book, ‘The Pied Piper’ meets witchdoctor, is nearly everything a reader could want. Bravo, Miss Kalpakian!”
—Amazon.com reviewer

Links

Also by Laura Kalpakian:
These Latter Days