Part 4 (1/2)

I walked down the row and started again at the first car, hunting more carefully this time, looking for my color under the newer words. On the third car, a glittery white paint caught my eye, fooling me, but it wasn't silver.

The next car had the picture of the rose. It was drawn straight up and down, ignoring the tilt of the slanted car. The green stem ended where the car met the ground, and it grew straight up, so that some of the petals touched the undercarriage.

All three of the flower drawings looked weathered, as if the paint had been there awhile. The gypsy would have seen this rose, then, and she must have guessed it would catch my eye. The words s.e.x, Drugs, Rock-n-roll, Anna! s.e.x, Drugs, Rock-n-roll, Anna! looked fresh, written thick and dark, as if Anna had gone over each letter twice. I leaned in closer. Under those words, I could see that something had been written in metallic silver paint. The gypsy may have used the rose as a marker for me, but some girl named Anna had taken a can of blue paint, her name, and her unhealthy priorities and wiped the message out. looked fresh, written thick and dark, as if Anna had gone over each letter twice. I leaned in closer. Under those words, I could see that something had been written in metallic silver paint. The gypsy may have used the rose as a marker for me, but some girl named Anna had taken a can of blue paint, her name, and her unhealthy priorities and wiped the message out.

I went backwards, moving right to left away from the rose until I found the place where the silver paint began, under the e e in in s.e.x s.e.x. The writing was small, and two lines of text were buried under Anna's message. I could make out a capital letter I I, then a d d, and what I thought might be the top and the dot of a lowercase i i that was framed by the capital that was framed by the capital D D in in Drugs Drugs. I could see the top half of the letter after that. It was a vertical line, so it could be a lot of things. Another d d, maybe, or b b, k k, h h, or l l. Maybe even a t t with a low crossbar; spray paint didn't lend itself to good handwriting. Anna had written her important philosophy in thick, broad strokes, covering the gypsy's smaller words at random, but I found an with a low crossbar; spray paint didn't lend itself to good handwriting. Anna had written her important philosophy in thick, broad strokes, covering the gypsy's smaller words at random, but I found an o o, a v v, another possible o o, and an obvious u u with a low, curved line after, like a comma. with a low, curved line after, like a comma.

The second line had more visible pieces. It started with an ay ay, and I could make out three letter bursts of longer words, Sai Sai and and Cec Cec. It ended with a lowercase a a and a smeared exclamation point. and a smeared exclamation point.

I stepped back from the car, into the full force of the wind, trying to gauge the s.p.a.cing of the letters. I put my free hand up to hold my hat on.

I di ov u, b.u.t.ting up to the picture of the rose.

Under that, -ay t Sai Cec a! -ay t Sai Cec a!

”I'd like to buy a vowel,” I said, squinting at it, hating Anna and drugs and rock-n-roll and s.e.x so hard in that blank second. She couldn't have painted over the tic-tac-toe game? I couldn't make the letters say Berkeley Berkeley. Perhaps my mother was in a suburb or a smaller town nearby. Saint something? Santa Cruz didn't fit, and I didn't know California well enough to make a better guess. I s.h.i.+fted from one foot to the other, trying to remember the names of cities in California. I stared and stared, and then, almost involuntarily, I understood the first line of the gypsy's message: I did love you. And then a comma and my name in picture form. I was already shaking my head in flat negation when the rest of the missing letters filled themselves in for me, and now I could see the whole thing. And then a comma and my name in picture form. I was already shaking my head in flat negation when the rest of the missing letters filled themselves in for me, and now I could see the whole thing.

I did love you, Rose. Pray to Saint Cecilia!

I shook my head. That couldn't be it. Pray to Saint Cecilia? If she was going to tell me to pray, why not to Monica, a beaten wife herself, or a hard-a.s.s like Saint Paul? Saint Paul and the gypsy both knew all about abandoning a life in midstride. Cecilia was the patron saint of music, and there was no way praying to that pious warbler could ever make me safe.

I leaned in close to check the s.p.a.ce below Anna's message for more silver paint. There wasn't any, so I searched the car's whole side, expecting to see more peeking out from under something fresh. There was none to be found. I kept going, on to the next car and the next. I dropped to my knees to check each car's belly, crawled to read the inside of the ones with no doors.

There was nothing else for me.

I walked back to the car with the rose on it and stared through Anna's message at the silver words. I tried to make the few letters I had picked out say something else, but I couldn't. Once the message filled in-I did love you, Rose. Pray to Saint Cecilia!-I couldn't unsee it.

My body turned itself sideways, and my hands came up into the good batter's stance I'd learned in Little League T-ball. I'd played from the time I was five until I was eight. After that, no one was around to take me to practice, but my body still remembered how to choke up. I gripped the narrow neck of my c.o.ke bottle as if it were a miniature slugger. I swung it as hard as I could at the car. The bottle hit the spray-painted rose where the petals met the edge of the car's underside. The blow s.h.i.+vered the thick gla.s.s so hard that it cracked into five or six pieces. I felt those s.h.i.+vers move all the way up through me to become a buzz in my teeth as I watched the shards fall to the ground. I was left holding the neck with a single, jagged slice of gla.s.s jutting out from it.

It looked like a weapon. Something a person would have in prison, wicked and curved and slim. I dropped it, fast, and it jangled when it hit the other shards. I stared down at the green gla.s.s, glinting in the soil.

”Oh, I'm sorry,” I said, and my voice dripped acid. ”I did love you, c.o.ke bottle.”

She'd made me come out here. She told me I had to kill Thom Grandee if I wanted to live. I'd put bullets in my dog because of her. Saint Roch tried to speak, and I said, ”Shut the h.e.l.l up,” to him. He didn't know how Gretel was. None of them did, this chain of saints bobbing in my wake, and these saints all came from her, too, didn't they? She was the one who had always called them. They'd answered her in ways they'd never answered me before today.

The wind that was their breath had smelled so sweet to me, like summer coming. A long time ago, on a day like this, she had knelt with her arm around Rose Mae's shoulders. Rose wore poppy-colored running shorts and pigtails. It was kindergarten field day. They watched the other girls line up, all taller than Rose, with longer strides.

She was praying into Rose Mae's ear, calling Saint Sebastian, patron to all athletes. The exact words were lost, but I remembered the low burring of her voice, calling him and calling him, until Rose could see him. He stood on her other side, looking down, shot through with a thousand arrows that bristled out of his body like b.l.o.o.d.y quills. His eyes were white hot and fervent. One arrow had pierced his cheek and gone out the other side, and when he grinned, Rose Mae saw the post going across his mouth like a horse's bit, and his teeth were rimmed in blood.

All the girls were in a line. Rose squirmed away and trotted fast from Sebastian to join them.

Instead of a starter pistol, there was Mrs. Peirson, the gym teacher, counting down. Three, two, one, go! Rose took off. There was no way she could win. She was the shortest girl in the whole cla.s.s. But Sebastian came fast up behind her. From the corner of her eye, she could see his shafts bounce as he ran. He bristled and dripped.

Adrenaline washed into Rose Mae's blood, a push like a big red wave. She put her head down and tore forward. She could see him keeping leering pace as she ran her guts out and kept running, past the hundred-yard mark, past the booth where they sold c.o.kes and Popsicles, though she could hear she was being called. ”Stop, Rose Mae. Stop! Stop, you silly.” The crowd around the broad jumpers rose up in her path to block her.

Rose felt hands on her, lifting her, swinging her body high, and she almost screamed. It was only her mother, who had run on quick little feet to catch up. Sebastian was gone, but he had indeed wrought a miracle. Rose Mae placed second.

My mother had called saints when she lost her keys, when we were late, when we were hungry or sad or tired or jubilant. These saints that I had called today were hers. Cadillac Ranch was hers. Shooting at my husband, the bullets in my dog, these were all hers. I was doing what she wanted, obedient and dumb as that five-year-old who got a red ribbon because her mother called a saint stuck through with a thousand arrows and scarier than Satan.

Behind me, the trail of saints popped one by one, like soap bubbles, misting the air and then becoming nothing. I pulled off the baseball cap. I was too hot to stand it any longer, and Cadillac d.a.m.n Ranch was the one place in Texas I felt certain I would not run into my husband. The wind caught my sweaty hair and slung it around, snarling it. I let go of the cap, and the wind took it and tumbled it away across the field. My hair whipped into my face, and I could smell the sulfur of gunshots in it. I lifted my hands to my nose and breathed in more sulfur and fruit sugar clinging to my palms.

For the first time since I'd gotten up and cooked Thom's b.u.t.ter-logged breakfast, I felt like I was living wholly in my body. I gathered my hair up and held it in a wad at the base of my neck with one hand, glaring at the gypsy's message. I was surprised the layers of paint didn't blister and bubble and flake off and disappear under my angry gaze. Those words should be burned away. They were insulting on so many levels. Not the lowest of which was, she had written, I did love you, I did love you, in the past tense. in the past tense.

”Smug,” I said, and turned my back on the Caddies. I was done looking at them. I walked toward Mrs. Fancy's car, my feet smas.h.i.+ng down hard into the soil, every step an angry stab at the earth itself.

She'd said Thom Grandee would kill me if I didn't get him first. I had failed, and yet the earth still turned and Thom and I were both still breathing, because the reading wasn't about me. It was all her.

I had reached the road. I stamped at the asphalt to get the soil off my shoes and because the stamping felt good.

The first card was loss. That was hers. She had lost me. Her marriage had been the thing that was made of swords, and no one knew that better than the girl who had spent her first eight years growing up inside of it. My mother was the hanged man, the one who'd had to choose, and she had chosen herself.

There was a phrase for what her child had been to her. I knew it from the black-and-white war movies Thom and I rented to watch on the weekends. An acceptable casualty; that was what they called those poor fellows that the generals decided they could spare ahead of time. I was the thing she left in her place when she saved herself, and I was still sitting in it, in a place so like hers, it was easy for both of us to mistake who owned those cards.

I got in Mrs. Fancy's Honda and slammed the door so hard behind me that the car's frame shuddered. The most terrible part was, now that I had seen through all her layered gypsy scarves and figured her out, she wasn't here for me to tell her. I couldn't shove her nose down into the truth. All the Stephen King book had given me was a city and a state, and unless I wanted to hire a plane to sky-write a message over Berkeley, I couldn't tell her a d.a.m.n thing.

What was left? What could I do?

I could get home. I felt my mouth drop open in a perfect O and my eyes widened. ”They shot at you?” I said. Better. ”They shot shot at you?” I could act surprised. I could go see if my dog was going to live. If only Gretel was alive, then I could sleep bug cozy next to my husband tonight in our soft bed. at you?” I could act surprised. I could go see if my dog was going to live. If only Gretel was alive, then I could sleep bug cozy next to my husband tonight in our soft bed.

In the black-and-white movie Thom and I had watched not two weeks ago, they'd sent some French guy to have his head lopped off. He'd lifted his pointy nose and walked to the guillotine, calm and n.o.ble, saying, ”The blood of kings flows in my veins.”

Well, screw that. The blood of a.s.sholes flowed through Rose Mae Lolley's. My mother had just proven that. She was not going to rescue me. She could take her empty You are welcome You are welcome offer of a haven and stuff it directly up her a.s.s. I'd sooner go to h.e.l.l than go to California now. I didn't need her, anyway. I'd forgotten, in the wake of seeing her, that I could d.a.m.n well handle Thom Grandee. A woman who couldn't would have been dead nine times over by now. I set off for home. offer of a haven and stuff it directly up her a.s.s. I'd sooner go to h.e.l.l than go to California now. I didn't need her, anyway. I'd forgotten, in the wake of seeing her, that I could d.a.m.n well handle Thom Grandee. A woman who couldn't would have been dead nine times over by now. I set off for home.

My foot, heavy in its anger, had shoved the gas pedal down. I was going a good twenty miles over the speed limit. I made myself slow. The last thing I needed was to be pulled over now, with an unregistered gun in the car and no ID. And I was only speeding because I was angry with that gypsy. Surely Thom was off the road by now. He must be at the vet, please G.o.d, saving Gretel. Or he might be at the police station.

Even now, this speeding, it was about the gypsy, too. I should have been home by now, unloading the dishwasher and practicing my surprised face. But instead I'd wasted an hour creeping around a wheat field looking for an empty love note she'd left with no way for me to write her back.

”I'm going back there,” I told the blessedly empty car. ”I'll live through this and soothe Thom down, and then I'm going to take a rotisserie chicken and fruit salad and some paint and Gretel and Mrs. Fancy, and go out to Cadillac Ranch.” I would cover s.e.x, Drugs, Rock-n-Roll, Anna! s.e.x, Drugs, Rock-n-Roll, Anna! and the silver remains of the gypsy's message with graffiti of my own. and the silver remains of the gypsy's message with graffiti of my own.

I would be sure to bring red, so I could freshen up the hippie chick's flowers. Beside the rose, I would write the word Jim Jim, with a tiny heart for the i i's dot. Then a larger heart after his name, point up and humps down, so it looked like a pretty girl's bottom. Jim upside down hearts Rose. Those words and pictures had been on the cover of every one of Rose Mae's high school notebooks. It would feel good to write them again.

Then when the gypsy returned, she'd see I'd left no answer. She wasn't my loss. There would be nothing for her, and my doodle would stick in her throat, pointy as a fish bone.

My loss was Jim Beverly. I'd thrown that fact at her at the airport like it was monkey p.o.o.p, something to offend her as she'd gawked at my life like a tourist. Now it seemed like it was true. Rose Mae'd been soldered to Jim Beverly's right hip bone from third grade on, through most of high school, for more years than Rose had had a mother.

In grade school, after the boys were divvied up for kickball, Jim had picked her first from all the girls, every time. Rose Mae got free lunch in middle school, and Jim's mother packed him one from home. He'd always shared his fresh fruit and eaten half her chalky brownie. In high school, she'd written his reports for civics, and he'd done her dissections. They'd traded virginities in tenth grade. He was the boy she first saw naked, too, though that was years earlier, when they were only nine. Rose had made him show first.

They'd met in the woods behind the elementary school. He had turned his back, pulling down his shorts and underwear very quickly. His T-s.h.i.+rt hung down so only the lower half of his bottom showed. She saw two beige squares with a crease between them, flat and small, like the crimped edge of the Post toaster pastry she'd eaten for breakfast.

”Now you,” he said.

Rose turned her back. She was so spindly that she barely had a b.u.t.t at all, more like a little slice. She reached up under her dress, careful not to raise the hem, and pushed her cotton underpants down. Then she quickly flipped the skirt up and back down, yanking up her panties a scant second after. She turned around to face him. It was summer, and the Alabama woods were so lush that even the air seemed green as the sunlight filtered through all those trees.

”Want to do fronts?” Jim asked.

Rose shrugged and they stood there for half a minute, maybe longer. She said, ”You first.”