Part 13 (1/2)

chapter sixteen.

Samuel was just on the other side of the river, but he felt a million miles away. We never saw each other. We never spoke. And Nathaniel no longer talked about his son, the Vietnam hero. I guess he was afraid that talking about Samuel could lead to something more dangerous than what he'd found in that jungle.

Maizelle said that Samuel was already back in school, even hoping to return to Morehouse in the fall. He thought it best to stick close to home for a while, though. He was a good boy, she said. He knew his parents needed some time with him before he up and left again. I just nodded like I knew I should, as if all of that made perfect sense to me. And then I went on pretending that everything else in my life was fine. And in some ways, I guess it was.

By early spring, Mother had begun to venture out into her garden. She still knitted and read her Bible most every day, but usually around four in the afternoon she would put on her wide-brimmed hat and spend some time among her flowers. Sometimes I think she just stood in the middle of her garden, not really sure what to do but enjoying the beauty of everything growing around her.

She even planted a few tomatoes, and she babied those vines until they started producing fruit ripe enough to pick. When she picked the first one, she seemed almost afraid to eat something that looked so perfect. But then Maizelle took it from her hand, sliced it, salted it, and put it back in front of Mother. When she ate it, she said it was the best thing she had ever put in her mouth.

Uncle Thad came over most evenings just as the sun started to drop toward the treetops. He helped Mother with the last of the weeding and the watering. Sometimes the two of them would linger in that garden until well after dark. A couple of times I even caught them running around catching lightning bugs between their hands. Maizelle thought they had both lost their minds. Maybe they had, but Mother seemed to find an awful lot of comfort in Uncle Thad's presence. And Uncle Thad seemed to enjoy having someone to care for now that Cornelia spent most of her time in Boston, working as diligently on another graduate degree as on her relations.h.i.+p with a Harvard doctor whose family tree was rooted so deep that Cornelia herself said it almost reached the center of the earth.

Maizelle didn't really leave Grove Hill much anymore. She said her nieces and nephews had all moved out of town by now, and there wasn't much left for her on the other side of the river. She guessed she felt more at home here than anywhere else, but I couldn't help but wonder if she missed the life she had all but given up to tend to a family that apparently had a hard time caring for itself.

She spent a lot of time on the front porch, stringing beans, mending clothes, or whatever else she considered important. And even though her hands were always busy, her body was now slow and deliberate. Sometimes she sat there for a couple of hours simply pulling the husks off a single bag of corn. And sometimes I'd find her sound asleep with an old cardboard fan from some funeral home resting in her lap. It made Mother very nervous when she found Maizelle sleeping like that. I think she was already growing afraid of living in this world without Maizelle by her side.

A couple of times I dreamed that Maizelle had pa.s.sed. I saw myself sitting by her bed telling her stories about heaven that she had first told me when I was a little girl. I'd wake up crying and dripping in a cold sweat. Maizelle said when you dream about something three times, then it comes true. So some nights I tried to stay awake, desperately attempting to avoid a dream of any kind.

Maizelle had always promised me that Adelaide would grow out of her awkward ways, and now it seemed she had. She was getting ready to join Miss Clements and a small group of girls traveling to Rome to admire Italian art. Of course, when she asked Mother for permission to go, Mother simply looked at me for an answer. I told them both it was a wonderful, life-altering opportunity for Adelaide and she surely shouldn't miss it.

And even though I wanted the best for my little sister, secretly, honestly, I was mad that she was going and I was not. I was mad that somehow, without my even knowing it, my mother had become my child. The only time I escaped Grove Hill much anymore was in my stories. I'd probably written a hundred of them by now, all of them stuffed in a shoe box and hidden under my bed. And that's where I figured my dreams were going to stay, neatly tucked out of sight.

At least on paper, I had traveled the world and found true love on top of the Eiffel Tower and standing in the shadows of the Egyptian pyramids. I guess, in the end, Nathaniel's mother had been right. In a story, you can be anybody you want to be, even if it's just a girl who wants to be loved right. I made Adelaide promise to send me a postcard every day. I told her to memorize every detail. My next story would be set in a small village just outside of Rome. Of course, I never thought that my sister, the one who used to stand on the front steps with a grape-jelly biscuit in her hand, would be the one to take me there.

And just when life seemed to be feeling a little bit normal, my grandmother called the house. She had not telephoned since Mother was in the hospital, since before I had driven out there to pick up the memorabilia from my mother's childhood room. She had told me then she was done worrying about her girl, and apparently she'd meant it. Now, she was only calling for a favor.

”You want to talk to your daughter, Nana? I'm sure she'd love to hear from you.”

”Don't really have the time to chat right now, Bezellia. I called for a reason, not to sit here and talk up a blue streak. I need to get Nathaniel's phone number from you. I've done torn the house apart looking for it, but figured Elizabeth would have it for sure.”

”Why do you want Nathaniel's number?”

”I didn't know I needed to explain my business to you, dear. But apparently that's what it's gonna take to get that number from you. I'm trying to get ahold of that boy of his before he heads this way.”

”Samuel?” Just hearing myself say his name left me feeling excited and sick, like a thousand b.u.t.terflies were swarming in my stomach. My heart started to race, and the palms of my hands grew hot and sweaty.

”He's only got one boy, don't he? You got his number, Bezellia, or not? I really ain't got all day to sit here on this d.a.m.n telephone.”

”Why do you want to talk to Samuel?”

”Lord, child, if you must know he's fixing that d.a.m.n dock. Thing is about to float right out into the lake, and your grandfather ain't strong enough to do it himself. But I need Samuel to stop on his way up here and get a couple of gallons of gasoline for the tractor. Your grandfather wants him to mow the yard. You got that number, Bezellia, or not?”

Mother had written it in pencil on the wall by the telephone not long after coming back from the hospital. Nathaniel had told her to call him night or day if she needed anything. Just knowing the number was there by the phone helped her sleep at night, she said. But I didn't need to look at those old pencil markings. I knew it by heart.

I gave my grandmother the number and then rushed into the kitchen and told Mother and Maizelle I was meeting some old friends over at the shopping center. I told them I didn't know when I'd be home. We might even stay for dinner and a movie. All I knew was that Samuel was leaving for Atlanta in a few weeks, and if I didn't get to that lake, I might not ever see him again. I grabbed my mother's keys from the nail where they were left hanging by the back door and ran to the garage without waiting for Mother or Maizelle to think of anything to say to stop me.

As I drove toward the lake, I realized somewhere deep inside that I had no idea what I was doing, but I couldn't turn back, not now. Something kept propelling me forward. When I pulled up to Route 171, I looked for the old man in his blue coveralls keeping watch over his collection of Quaker State motor oil. But he wasn't there. The building was empty, and the cans of motor oil were gone. I sat at the stop sign for a moment trying to make sense of his absence, wondering if I'd made a wrong turn. My window was down, and the air seemed particularly still and quiet. It was as if even the cows had disappeared. I finally turned left and headed toward the lake, still not really knowing what I was going to do when I got there.

Maybe I was feeling a little hungry or maybe I was stalling, still trying to come up with a plan, but just before turning onto the gravel road that led to my grandparents' house, I pulled in front of the little corner store where Pop came early in the mornings to buy his minnows for the day's fis.h.i.+ng. It was an old wood-frame building that looked as though it might collapse if you sneezed real hard. Faded lettering above the front door read WATKINS BAIT AND TACKLE.

There were some high school boys standing in front of the concrete tank that held the fresh bait. They were drinking RC colas and talking about fis.h.i.+ng and football. Every once in a while the biggest one, with sandy brown hair, would pick up the net hanging outside the tank and run it through the water. He'd lift the minnows into the air, and just when you imagined those poor little fish, flopping about in front of their captor were about to die, he would drop the net back into the water, giving them another chance to escape.

The boys stopped talking and stared real hard as I walked past them and opened the screen door before stepping inside to get a cold drink. The man behind the counter said I looked familiar and asked where I was headed. I reminded him that I was the Morgans' granddaughter and was just here for a short visit. He said he'd heard my mama wasn't doing well. Said he knew her when she was just a little girl and hated to hear that she had done gone and lost her mind. Spending time in the state hospital was no picnic, he knew that for sure, seeing how his own mama had been there a few years back.

”For some reason always thought your little sister was the one that was kind of special that way. Wasn't she the one that carried that baby doll around with her all the time, remember that? What she's up to these days anyway?”

I rea.s.sured him that my mother was doing much better and that Adelaide was actually vacationing in Italy with some friends from school. ”Hmm,” he said, as if I was telling some kind of tall tale to disguise my family's misfortune, ”vacationing in Italy” being nothing more than a big-city, fancy way of lying about another tragic event.

I grabbed a bottle of Dr Pepper from the icebox in the back of the store and a bag of potato chips and took them to the counter to pay. I thanked the man for his concern and then stepped back outside, the bright sunlight blinding me for a moment. But even with my hand s.h.i.+elding my eyes, I could see the boys were still there. I could hear them whispering as if they were telling a joke meant only for them. And as I stepped toward the Cadillac, I heard one of them humming the tune of ”Big City Girl.” I turned my head and shot them all a scathing stare. But the three of them just laughed and took another sip of their RC colas. The big one licked his lips.

”Stick your tongue back in your mouth. You wouldn't even know what to do under that tree if you were ever lucky enough to get there,” I shouted at him. And then I jumped behind the steering wheel of my mother's car and pushed the gas pedal to the floor, leaving the boys choking in a cloud of dust and me feeling more determined than ever to see Samuel Stephenson.

But I couldn't drive to my grandparents' house and admit that I had come to see the black boy working on the dock. And neither Nana nor Pop would believe for a minute that I had come to see them. So I slowed the car down, making certain not to stir any dust in the road and reveal my position. I coasted a few hundred yards past the final turn to the house and then pulled the Cadillac off the road and into a field dotted with nothing but a couple of cows and some Queen Anne's lace.

Perched on the hood of the car, I could see Nathaniel's old blue truck sitting in my grandparents' driveway. I sat there for what seemed like hours, making necklaces out of dandelions and drinking my Dr Pepper. And when I had to pee, I jumped off the hood and squatted low in the field, leaving my mark like a dog declaring his territory. I picked a bouquet of Queen Anne's lace, crawled back on top of the car, and counted the clouds floating across the sky.

Finally, just as the sky cleared and left me nothing to look at, the sound of my grandfather's John Deere tractor hummed in the distance, consuming the quiet of the late afternoon. I knew Samuel's work was almost done for the day, and he'd be heading home soon. I slipped off the top of the Cadillac and walked back to the small private road that led to my grandparents' drive. I had thought all afternoon about what I would say to Samuel when he saw me out here in the middle of nowhere, waiting for him. But now I couldn't remember anything that made any sense. I waited some more, and just as I was growing afraid that Samuel would never finish mowing that yard, the tractor grew silent.

I figured by now my grandmother was handing Samuel his pay for the day's work. She may have even offered him a cold Coca-Cola and a piece of b.u.t.tered corn bread. He'd surely smile and say thank you and then promptly get in his truck and head on home. And as if I was ch.o.r.eographing the scene myself, I saw his blue truck ease its way toward me.

I walked into the middle of the road, and as Samuel got closer I could see that his eyes were growing wide with surprise. He just stared at me, seemingly trying to make sense of my being there. And again I found myself wondering, as I had so many times during the afternoon, if I had made a mistake coming all the way out here. But then he smiled, gently at first, and the smile grew slowly until it stretched clear across his face. He slowed the truck and stopped a few feet in front of me. I walked around to the side, yanked the door open, and climbed onto the seat next to him. And without saying more than a few words, I directed him back down the road to the sandy beach that Ruddy had introduced me to some years ago now.

”A beach,” Samuel said in surprise. ”Never would have thought of putting a beach out here on the lake.”

”Crazy, huh?”

”Yeah. Maybe not as crazy as seeing you here today.” And then Samuel looked at me, obviously searching for some kind of explanation. I opened the door and motioned for him to join me on the sand.

”Yeah. That's pretty crazy too,” I admitted. ”Maizelle told me you were leaving for Atlanta soon. I don't know. I just never had much of a chance to talk to you. I just wanted to know ...” I hesitated, hoping that Samuel would somehow rea.s.sure me, that he would let me know he was glad to see me. But he didn't. And just when I thought he might not say anything, he turned and looked out toward the water.

”I've missed you too,” he said. Just hearing those few words left me feeling relaxed and rea.s.sured that I had done the right thing.

”You know, nothing has ever turned out the way I thought it would,” I began. ”And I don't know why I should expect it to now. But I'm tired of trying to convince myself that I don't love you, Samuel. I just don't think that's ever going to be possible. And I don't care what anybody thinks.” Samuel took my hand in his and held it so carefully, almost as if he was afraid it would break.

”But you do care, Bezellia. Why else would you have snuck all the way out here if you didn't care? You do care. I care. Everybody's going to care.” And then he kissed me on the cheek and smiled. ”Doesn't mean I don't love you.”

Before I could make sense of anything Samuel had just said, I heard the sound of twigs snapping behind us. At first I didn't think much of it; maybe it was just a deer pa.s.sing by. But the sound grew louder and more persistent, and I turned around to find the three boys from the corner market standing about fifty feet behind us.

”Well, ain't this cute. A little vanilla and chocolate right here in front of us,” said the large boy with the sandy brown hair, the one the other two called Ritchie. ”You think the two of them know this is a family beach?” he asked, and then he started grinning.

His buddies shook their heads as if to tell us we should have known better than to come here. Samuel didn't say a word, but he stood up and pulled me behind him, seemingly unafraid of the three boys moving toward us.

”Listen, boy, I don't think you ought to be touching that girl like that. Might get you into some awful trouble, and I sure would hate to see anything happen to you way out here,” Ritchie said. But Samuel didn't flinch, and I could see the muscles in his entire body tighten.