 
Excerpt from
fierce by Barbara Robinette Moss
Birmingham,
Alabama 1965
magic
Our neighbor
asked my brother Willie, and my sister Doris Ann,
and me to pull the weeds from his sidewalk. When we
finished, he paid us a nickel apiece, and we headed
down to 50th Street Delicatessen to buy candy.
A little bell
jingled as we entered the store, and Sylvester, the
owner, came from behind the meat counter, wiping his
hands on his apron, and stood behind the cash register,
which sat on the penny candy counter. The penny candy
counter had everything: caramels, sourballs, apple
grasshoppers, wax Coke-a-Cola bottles, candy cigarettes,
banana bikes, licorice whips, and more.Without hesitation,
Doris Ann snatched up two cherry jawbreakers. Willie
nudged me, and asked, What are you going to
buy, Barbara?
I studied the
bins of brightly wrapped candies. My favorites were
the caramel squares, but theyd be gone in a
minute. Something that will last, I pondered.
Heres
what youre looking for, Sylvester said,
pointing to a shallow box next to the cash register.
We peered into the box. Two dozen little round balls
jumped rhythmically.
Mexican
jumping beans, he said. Theyre magic.
He waited a moment for that bit of information to
sink in, then, waving his hand over the box, he said,
Go ahead. Pick one up.
Wide-eyed,
Willie lifted a bean from the box and placed it in
his palm. At first it didnt move and we stuck
our faces closer. It jumped, and so did we.
Wow,
we said simultaneously.
Willie held
the bean between his thumb and index finger. This
is a real Mexican jumping bean?
Sylvester chuckled.
The real thing. For a penny, you get your wish.
Willie and
I quickly dug our nickels from our pockets and slapped
them on the counter. We watched to see which beans
jumped with the most zeal, and carefully lifted them
from the box into our palms.
Doris Ann was
reluctant to put her jawbreakers back. Finally, she
said, Im just going to buy three. Ive
only got three wishes anyway. She handed over
her nickel, and picked out three jumping beans. We
headed out the door, lost in our dreams.
Dont
blow all your wishes on candy, Sylvester shouted.
We ignored him.
As the beans
continued to wiggle in my palm, I decided the fate
of each wish. This one is for a horse, because
well, because I need a horse. I thought about our
overgrown back yard, wondering whether horses liked
to eat dandelions and kudzu. They like oats; it makes
their coats shiny. I had checked out all the books
from the Anna Stuart Dupuy School library on how to
groom a horse.
This one is
for ice skates. I had also checked out books on ice
skating (The life story of Carol Hess)
because I wanted to be an ice skater, a real dilemma
since it never got cold enough in Alabama for the
local ponds and waterways to freeze.
Number three:
Zap me in front of The Last Supper so I can see it
for real. Dad wouldnt let us plug in his light
up picture of The Last Supper. He was afraid wed
break his investment. A one-of-a-kind,
he called it, convinced that it would be worth a lot
of money someday. I wanted to see the real one, the
big one, the one Leonardo Da Vinci had painted.
As I walked
down the sidewalk, I slipped into my favorite daydream
of becoming a famous artist. Suddenly, I had painted
The Last Supper. I tumbled along in that fog for a
minute, then snapped out of it and got back to the
task at hand.
Number four:
Make Dad quit drinking, and quit yelling at everybody.
I thought about the night before. Dad had come home
from the bar at 3 AM and gotten everybody out of bed
to clean up the house and cut the grass. The police
came and made my brother Stewart shut off the lawn
mower. After they left, Dad yelled at Mother for not
making him cut the grass earlier that day.
I studied the
last bean, and decided Id give it to Mother
so she could wish for whatever she wanted.
Suddenly Willie
took off running. Stewart! he shouted.
Stewart! Doris Ann and I ran after him,
careful not to drop our beans.
Stewart stood
in front of the house with his paper-route canvas
bag stuffed with The Birmingham News hanging over
his shoulder. Breathless, we surrounded him.
Look,
Willie said, opening his fist.
Theyre
magic, I said, spreading my palm next to Willies.
Mexican
jumping beans, Doris Ann said, extending her
hand.
Theyre
magic, I repeated.
Stewart dropped
his canvas bag onto the sidewalk. Those are
Mexican jumping beans, he said, matter-of-factly.
Yeah,
I said, catching my breath. Watch em jump.
You can make a wish and get anything you want.
Stewart shoved
his hands into his pockets. Who told you that?
Sylvester,
I answered.
Stewart rolled
his eyes. Those arent magic beans.
Theyre
Mexican jumping beans! I shouted.
Yeah,
Stewart said, but theyre not magic.
Our faces fell,
and we backed away from Stewart.
Theyre
not magic, he said again.
I walked up
to him and held out the beans. Watch em
jump, I said.
Theres
a worm in there, Stewart said. Thats
what makes em jump.
Huh!
Willie shouted.
Go ask
Mom, Stewart said.
Doris Ann ran
inside and came right back nodding her head. She
says its a worm.
Darn,
Willie whispered. Our hearts fell, and our shoulders
sagged. The three of us sat on the front porch steps
and rolled the beans onto the sidewalk at our feet.
They jumped and wiggled.
That
Sylvester, I fumed.
Doris Ann slipped
the wrappers from her jawbreakers and popped both
of them into her mouth.
Realizing he
had crushed our dreams, Stewart picked up a bean and
rolled it around in his palm. The worm eats
the bean from the inside out, he said.
I didnt
want Stewart to feel bad, so I picked up a bean and
pretended to be more interested than I really was.
I turned the bean over and over. There were no holes
or cracks in the shell. How does it get in there?
I asked.
I dont
know, Stewart said, holding one up to the light
and squinting as if to see through it.
Doris Ann made
a loud sucking noise, and I glanced up. She looked
like a chipmunk. I thought of trading her all five
of my jumping beans for one of her wet jawbreakers,
but I knew shed never go for it.
Stewart sat
down beside me. Trying to cheer us up, he said, You
know, these beans do have magic. If you watch them
long enough, the worm eats the bean and it turns into
a butterfly. Thats magic, dont you think?
Willie groaned.
Weve got thirteen worthless beans and
no candy.
And pretty
soon, I added, we wont have the
beans.
Doris Ann sucked
noisily on her jawbreakers.
Stewart scooped
up a handful of jumping beans. They are swell,
though, dont you think?
I put one in
my palm and watched it wiggle. Yeah, I
said.
The screen
door slammed behind us, and our brother John, who
was just five, came out and sat down beside Stewart.
Whatcha
got? he asked.
Mexican
jumping beans, Stewart said, dropping one onto
Johns palm.
It wiggled.
Wow, he shouted, lifting his hand for
a closer inspection. The bean wiggled again. Wow,
he said, and without taking his eyes off the bean,
marched inside to show it to Mother.
Stewart dropped
his head, nodding, letting us know that John had understood
the magic of a Mexican jumping bean without any hope
for granted wishes. He studied the beans for a minute,
then bumped my shoulder with his, and smiled broadly.
So, what were you going to wish for? he
asked.
 
Chapter 1
Near the
Center of the Earth
Mother spooned
the poisoned corn and beans into her mouth, ravenously,
eyes closed, hands shaking. We, her seven children, sat
around the table watching her for signs of death, our
eyes leaving her only long enough to glance at the clock
to see how far the hands had moved. Would she turn blue,
like my oldest sister, Alice, said? Alice sat hunched
next to me in the same white kitchen chair, our
identical homemade cotton dresses blending into one. She
shoved my shoulder with hers as if I were disturbing her
concentration and stared unblinking at Mother. Each time
Mother hesitated, spoon in mid-air, Alice’s face
clouded and she pushed against my shoulder.
"She’s
dying," Alice whispered, covering her mouth so
Mother could not hear her. "I told you she was
gonna die."
I ignored her
and watched Mother. I wanted to feel the kernels of
sweet yellow corn slide against my teeth. I didn’t
care if they were poisoned. I was so hungry my head
throbbed. The clock ticked as loudly as the clattering
train that passed beside our house every day, each tick
echoing against the wall and bouncing into my head,
making my heart beat in my temples and my eyes want to
close. I forced my eyes to stay open, to watch my mother
as she ate. I stared at
her; the light
freckles on her face smeared into a large round blur,
then snapped back into focus. No one spoke or moved. My
oldest brother, Stewart, sat next to me, hands in his
lap, clenched into tight white balls; David, his chair
pushed as close to Stewart’s as possible, leaned
forward with his arms spread across the table ready to
catch Mother if she fell. Willie and Doris Ann also sat
together, their small legs sticking straight out, dirty
bare feet dangling over the edge of the chair seat,
Doris Ann’s arms wrapped around the feather pillow
from her bed. Mother held John cuddled in her lap,
leaning over his head to spoon the beans into her mouth.
He fussed and reached for the spoon, hungry and angry
because she kept pushing his hand away.
Mother had
waited all morning for a letter from Dad, a letter with
money for food. When, once again, no letter or money
arrived, she went out to the tool shed and brought in
the corn and bean seeds for next year’s garden. The
seeds had been coated with pesticides to keep bugs from
eating them during the winter. Poison. I watched Mother
split the dusty sealed brown bags with a kitchen knife
and empty the contents into bowls, the seeds making
sweet music as they tapped the glass: "ting, ting,
ting." She ran her hands through the dry seeds,
lifting them to her nose. Did they smell like poison?
She rubbed a fat white bean between her fingers and
touched her fingers to her tongue, then spit into the
sink, rinsed her mouth with cold water and spit into the
sink again. She stood staring out the window above the
sink, her hands limp in the bowl of seeds. She stood
this way for ten minutes or more, staring out the
window.
Then, as if
released from a spell, she opened the cabinet and got
out two colanders. She poured the dry seeds into them:
corn in one, beans in the other and ran water over and
over them. She rubbed each tiny seed with her fingers
and wiped the cool water on her forehead and the back of
her neck. Her dress was already damp under the sleeves
from the afternoon heat.
"Those
seeds are poison, you know. Poison. If we eat them, we’ll
die," Alice whispered. She was eleven and knew
these things. I tapped my bare feet against the kitchen
chair and thought about this, deciding I would eat them
anyway. I was so hungry and certain that no poison could
kill me. I could just tell myself not to die and I
wouldn’t. I was that strong.
John slid from
his chair and pulled at Mother’s dress, kicking and
fussing, wanting to be held, wanting to be fed.
"Alice,
why don’t you take the kids outside for a little
while," Mother said as she churned the seeds
through the water. She turned and caught Alice’s
disappointed face. "Just for a little while,"
she said.
We stumbled
reluctantly out the back door. Alice peeled John from
Mother’s legs and carried him out; he liked to be
outdoors and stopped fussing. We moved into the yard,
each claiming our territory. Stewart and David ran into
the garden and picked corn stalks, to joust like the
knights in our storybooks. Alice took John for a walk in
the shade of the oak trees, to push the leaves around
and look for buckeyes. She began reciting from her
favorite book — Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland —
the part where the Mad Hatter sings Alice an example of
what he sang for the Queen of Hearts: "‘Twinkle,
twinkle, little bat! How I wonder what you’re at! Up
above the world you fly, Like a tea tray in the sky.’"
I sat on the steps with Willie and Doris Ann and
listened. When she couldn’t remember any more, she
jumped to her favorite parts of "The Walrus and the
Carpenter."
"The
Walrus and the Carpenter were walking close at hand.
They wept like anything to see such quantities of sand.
‘If this were only cleared away,’ they said, ‘it
would be grand! If seven maids with seven mops swept it
for half a year. Do you suppose,’ the Walrus said, ‘that
they could get it clear?’"
Pale mountains
jutted in the far distance. I could see the gas station
at the bottom of the hill and farther on, barely
visible, our closest neighbor’s house. Directly in
front of me was the garden, or what was supposed to be a
garden. The fierce sun had baked it brown before any
vegetables had appeared, the temperature climbing over a
hundred degrees every day. Twelve rows of shriveled
corn, dwarfed and fruitless. So many tomato plants,
twenty or more, the little yellow flowers dried and
stiff, not bothering to form into green balls. The
tomato vines weaved in with the cucumber vines like the
hot-pan holders we made on our loom. Grasshoppers,
thriving in the heat, had stripped the cucumber plants.
Vines, like curved barbwire, ran through the dusty red
clay, in and out of the tomato vines and in and out of
the bean rows.
Nothing to put
up and stack on the pantry shelves for winter, no steam
from boiling kettles fogging the kitchen windows, the
aroma seeping into every corner of the house: tomato
sauce, soup stocks, creamed corn, sweet bread and butter
pickles, succotash, green beans, white navy beans,
speckled pinto beans. Not one jar to open when the
coldest days arrived, when it hurt to breathe the air.
There had been no summer tomato sandwiches smeared thick
with mayonnaise on white bread baked in the oven, no
corn on the cob dripping with butter, no crispy
cucumbers to eat, straight from the garden, still warm
from the sun.
That summer,
in Eastaboga, Alabama, what had flourished were the day
lilies: thousands of them, in the yard hovering close to
the house, around the trees, alongside the road and in
the ditches. Dad called them ditch lilies. "Ditch
lilies! Living in the ditches, like beggars. Returning
every year — more and more of ’em. We can’t grow
one goddamned tomato but we can grow thousands of these.
We couldn’t weed enough to make ’em disappear, even
if we wanted to. ‘But Solomon in all his glory was not
arrayed like one of these.’"
Dad had pulled
a handful of lilies up by the roots and tossed them into
the sun to dry like bones, knowing Mother loved the
bright red and orange lilies, knowing she did not want
them to disappear.
The day lilies
had not disappeared but, somehow, my father had. Alice
said she had gotten out of bed one morning and he was
gone and did not show up again.
"That’s
disappearing," she said matter of factly, hands on
her hips. It was, after all, more mysterious to have a
father who disappeared than one who had just gone
somewhere. And this time, we were sure, he had not just
been put in jail for the weekend. The black-and-white
sheriff’s car had not driven into the yard. The
sheriff had not, this time, stepped out of the car,
tipped his hat to our mother and apologized for
disturbing her, telling her he would bring our father
back home in a day or two. No, this time our father had
been gone for weeks. We wanted to ask Mother where he
was but had learned not to ask questions, or speak of it
except among ourselves.
Actually, Dad
had not disappeared but had gone to Scranton,
Pennsylvania, where he was born and his brothers still
lived, to find work. He left no money. He took the car.
Said he’d write and send money soon. Mother couldn’t
drive anyway, so the car wasn’t a great loss. The one
time he had tried to teach her to drive, she had driven
into a ditch. He never let her try again, claiming women
weren’t made to drive, they were made to take care of
the home. And that’s just what she did: wash clothes,
iron clothes, wash dishes and cook meals for her husband
and seven children.
Seven
children: girl, boy, boy, girl, boy, girl, boy, like
descending stairs: eleven, nine, eight, seven, six, four
and two years old, some without a full year in between;
four with their father’s hazel eyes and dark hair and
three with their mother’s blue eyes, but blondes
rather than redheads.
I had just
turned seven years old and didn’t think Dad’s
disappearance was such a bad thing; no more dishes
shattering into the wall, no more whiskey breath and
smell of urine, no more fear of being discovered, of
having to peek into a room before entering to see if he
was slumped in a chair waiting for you to walk within
his reach.
"Now I’ve
got ya," he would shout, like he had just caught a
raccoon raiding the corn patch, pulling his leather belt
from the loops as the unwary one struggled to get free.
You didn’t have to do anything — anything at all —
to get pinched, poked, shoved or hit, just be where he
could reach you when he was drunk. "You belong to
me and I’ll do with you what I want."
Unless, which
often happened, he decided you didn’t belong to him at
all.
"Where
did these towheads come from?" he chided, ruffling
Doris Ann’s blond hair, pulling just hard enough to
make her wince. "I got dark hair, your mama’s got
red hair; maybe they got you mixed up at the hospital
and you don’t really live here."
"I live
here and I got blond hair," David said defiantly.
"Maybe
you don’t really live here either. Maybe I’m feeding
kids that don’t really even live here," Dad said
and thumped David on the head. "Hell, Mamie’s
kids look more like me than you do!"
Mamie, our
closest neighbor, lived about a quarter of a mile
farther down Mudd Street. We played tag and leapfrog
with her children. How could he believe Mamie’s kids
looked more like him than some of us? Mamie and her
husband, Buck, and her kids — they’re Negroes —
how could he think they look more like him than us? We
ran as fast as we could to the kitchen to ask Mother.
"Did they
mix up the babies at the hospital?" Alice asked,
breathless and close to tears.
"Of
course not," Mother frowned. She pulled plates from
the cupboard and put them on the table.
"Then how
come I got blond hair?!" David demanded, holding up
a lock of straight blond hair.
"And
me!" Doris Ann said. She held her hair out from
both sides like a long-eared puppy.
"Because
God gave you . . ."
"But how
do you know they weren’t really mixed up at the
hospital?" Stewart interrupted, holding his hands
out and hunching his shoulders.
"Am I
eating food that’s not mine?" David asked. He
sucked in a sharp breath and held back tears.
"What?!"
Mother asked.
"Am I
eating food that’s not mine? Do Mamie’s kids look
more like Dad than I do?" he choked, pressing his
palms over his eyes.
"That’s
ridiculous," Mother exhaled heavily. She put her
hands on her hips and glanced in the direction of Dad’s
crackling laughter. We turned toward the laughter but
inched closer to Mother, surrounding her.
I pulled on
the skirt of her dress. "Are you sure I live
here?" I asked. "Are you sure I live
here?"
"And
me?" Doris Ann added.
"Yes, I’m
positive," she said irritably. She patted my hand
so I would let go of her dress. "Nobody was mixed
up at the hospital. You all belong right here!"
I would not
have questioned my parentage for I had dark hair and
hazel eyes like my father except: How did I get to be
left-handed if neither my mother nor my father were
left-handed? Maybe I was swapped for another baby girl
with dark hair and hazel eyes. Maybe I was the one
eating food that wasn’t mine; maybe I was the one that
didn’t really live here.
It annoyed my
father that I was left-handed. He called me
"Southpaw," "Sinister," and
sometimes "Middle-of-the-Road" because I was
the middle child: three older, three younger. Just
before I started to school he decided to remedy my
left-handedness.
Dad came in
the door with a six-pack of beer and a brown bag.
"Southpaw,"
he shouted. "Southpaw, come here! I got something
for you." He dropped the bag on the couch.
"Bring me a church key for my beer, there, Stu,"
he said, pulling a beer from the carton and sending the
rest with Stewart to the refrigerator.
When I crept
into the room, he was sitting on the couch drinking —
small, refined, pleasurable sips, pleasure that he
seemed to get from nothing else. He put the beer on the
coffee table and pulled the contents from the bag: a
small blackboard, a box of chalk and a length of cord.
He propped the blackboard against the large family Bible
on the coffee table.
"Well,
get over here," he barked. "I can’t reach
you from there."
I walked
slowly toward my father, my heart beating faster with
each step. I didn’t understand the meaning of the
chalkboard or the rope. The fear crept higher in my
chest and I could hardly breathe. I wanted to run out
the door but I knew he would catch me and more than
likely hit me. I looked around for Mother, but she was
not there. I could hear Alice and Stewart in the next
room talking, "Dad brought home a rope for
Barbara." I bit my tongue and tasted salty blood in
my mouth. What had I done?
"Now,
Miss Sinister, we’re gonna rid you of your
problem," Dad said, pulling me toward him and
shaking me gently by the shoulders. He let go of me,
took another sip of his beer and opened the box of white
chalk. He took out one piece and placed it firmly in my
right hand. Then he picked up the length of cord and
shook it out, holding on to one end.
"What are
you gonna do?" I asked, my voice barely audible.
"Are you gonna tie me up?"
Dad didn’t
answer. He took my left hand and wrapped the cord around
and around my wrist.
"Where’s
Mom?" I asked, beginning to shake. I must have done
something terrible . . .
He pulled my
left hand behind my back, twirled me around to wrap the
cord around my waist and wrapped it, once again, around
my wrist. I dropped the chalk from my right hand as I
was whirled around. It hit the hardwood floor and broke
into pieces.
"It’s
time for you to learn the correct way to write,"
Dad said as he tied the cord snugly, tugging at it to
check for security, as if I was a prisoner that might
try to escape. "It’s time for you to change
hands. You’ll be off to school this fall. We can’t
have you still writing with your left. You want to be
like everybody else, don’t you?" He picked up a
piece of the broken chalk from the floor and put it back
in my right hand.
I nodded but
didn’t really see why it mattered if I wrote with my
left instead of my right, as long as I could read it.
Besides, I knew I wasn’t like everybody else. Not like
the other girls, anyway. I was smaller. And when I
looked in the mirror, the face that looked back at me
didn’t have nice cheeks and a round chin. It was thin
and long and squirrelly. If Dad could change that, I’d
willingly let him tie me up.
"I’m
gonna write your name for you," Dad said, picking
up another piece of the broken chalk, "and you copy
it, using your right hand. By the time school starts you’ll
know how to spell your name and you’ll be using the
correct hand to write with."
He wrote my
name on the chalkboard using all capital letters. Mother
and Alice had already taught me how to write my name
with big and little letters, how to count to ten and the
colors of the rainbow.
I tried to
copy what my father had written, pushing up on the chalk
rather than pulling down, sometimes making the letters
backwards. He erased the entire word and made me start
over. My head buzzed. I thought I’d never be able to
think straight again. By the time we finished the first
lesson, white specks floated in my eyes, swimming around
inside my eyes like tadpoles in the creek.
"We’ll
do this every evening until you’ve got it," Dad
said, erasing the letters I had worked so hard on with
one quick brush of his palm.
One evening,
just days before school started, I worked on the
chalkboard for an hour with Dad giving instructions. I
was still making letters backwards, sometimes the whole
word backwards. Every time I started to write with my
right hand, it felt like my brain would pop — like
opening a Mason jar — everything I knew spilling out
into the air never to be seen again. After Dad untied
the cord holding my left hand behind my back, I went
outside and sat on the steps. I wanted to cry but knew
better than to cry around him. He’d say, "If you’re
gonna cry, let me give you something to cry about."
Even Mother disliked for us to cry; crying was permitted
for real injuries only: a cut foot or falling down
skinned knees. There was something about tears that made
them both uneasy, almost fearful, so I held my tears,
but they were thick and teeming in my chest. I propped
my arms on my knees, sunk my face into my hands and
thought about the only time I had seen Mother cry.

It was before
I started to school. Mother was having another baby. I
had been waiting for this new baby, not particularly
anxiously but with curiosity. John was not a baby at
all, not to me anyway; he could walk and talk a little,
too. And Willie and Doris Ann were certainly not babies,
even though Mamie called them that when she talked to my
mother. A baby smelled pretty and let you hold them in
your arms like a doll; they didn’t cry or tear at your
hair.
Mamie came
over while Mother was gone to the clinic and dressed me
in my only good clothes. All of us were dressed in our
good clothes and placed on the couch in the living room,
in order of birth, like a row of ornaments: Alice,
Stewart, David, me, Willie, Doris Ann and John. We sat
for what felt like a long time waiting for Mother to
arrive with the new baby. Mamie went home. Finally a car
drove into the yard. We all ran to the door. Mother got
out of a taxi, alone. She had a small suitcase but no
baby.
"Where’s
the baby?" Alice and Stewart asked simultaneously,
pushing open the screen door.
"The baby
died," Mother answered, moving through the sea of
0 children, gently pushing us aside with the suitcase and
creeping toward her bedroom.
"Where’s
Dad?" Alice asked, turning from the screen door,
directing the question to Mother’s back. Mother didn’t
answer. The screen door slammed shut.
Later that
evening, after Dad had come home and gone back to the
bar, I heard squeaks, like a caught mouse, coming from
my parents’ bedroom. I sneaked to the door and peered
into the darkness expecting to see the cat with a
mouthful of fur. Instead, I saw my mother sitting on the
edge of the bed rocking back and forth, crying bitterly,
a pillow held tightly over her face to muffle the sobs.
Alice told me
later, under the quilts in the dark, her warm breath in
my ear, what she had overheard Mother telling Mamie:
that Dad had buried the new baby girl while Mother was
still in the hospital; he was drunk and could not
remember where he had buried her. She heard that this
baby was a blue baby. A sky blue baby to hold, to play
with, to show off to Mamie. We would surely have had the
only sky blue baby had she lived. Alice also heard that
Dad had been watching when this baby died, that this
baby had hair the same color as mine, that her name was
Mary Louise.

I watched an
army of ants march across the step below me, lifted my
feet and scooted up a step so they wouldn’t be
blocked. Mother came out and sat down beside me. She
smoothed her skirt and ran her fingers through her hair.
"The
writing lesson over?" she asked. I nodded. She
watched the ants march across the steps. She picked up a
leaf and placed it in the path of the ants. They marched
across it without pausing.
"It’s
foolishness you know, you writing with your right hand
when God gave only you in this family the ability to
write with your left."
I nodded my
head, unable to speak. Mother did not look at me; she
watched the ants and dropped another leaf in their path.
This time they moved around the leaf rather than over
it.
"Why don’t
we make this writing with the right hand a game,"
she said, almost whispering. "When you’re around
your father, you write with your right hand. When he’s
not home and when you’re at school, you write with
your left hand. It’ll be our secret, O.K.?"
I nodded again
and put my face down on my knees, a flood of relief in
my chest, barely able to hold back the tears. Mother
patted my back and stood up. She looked about the yard
as if searching for something, ran her hands into the
side pockets of her dress and began to whistle a tune.
She walked slowly back inside the house, her soft
serenade lingering in my ears.
After that
day, the right-handed writing no longer made me seasick.
It was a game and I was good at games. I got better and
better at it, no longer making letters backwards. Dad
would smile at me, so pleased with his teaching. I was
so delighted to be smiled upon by him that I worked even
harder, perfecting each letter, each number. With each
writing lesson, I hoped for my father to smile at me, to
shake me gently as he untied the cord on my left hand as
if he were tickling me, to swat at my bottom just as I
moved out of his reach.
After six
months Dad threw the cord away. My first grade year was
half over. As far as he knew, I was like everyone else.
We continued practicing on the chalkboard once a week,
moving from block letters to cursive. I began to notice
that my right-handed writing was completely different
than my left-handed writing, angular and sharp rather
than curved and flowing, perfect lettering but not
having the grace and rhythm that the left-handed writing
possessed. It was as if someone else had written it.

My father’s
disappearance made my mother very unhappy. She didn’t
sing the way she usually did, her sweet soprano filling
the house as she washed the dishes. She didn’t want to
read to us from our favorite book or play hide and seek,
indoors, just before bedtime. She filled her days,
silently, with housekeeping: stacks of dishes, mounds of
clothes sorted into jeans, colors, whites and diapers,
washed with a scrub board in the double kitchen sinks,
hard Lava soap rubbed across the cloth leaving marks
like a plowed field. When she wasn’t working, she sat
on the porch waiting for the mailman or stared out the
window as if expecting Dad to drive up with boxes of
groceries.
Within days of
Dad’s departure, there was nothing left to eat.
Nothing. Mother harvested edible wild greens from the
ditches using a stick to whack the brush and frighten
away the snakes before walking into the tall weeds.
Stewart
suggested we catch the snakes and sell them to the snake
handlers at the Holy Roller church down Mudd Street. We
hadn’t actually been to this church but we had heard
from the kids at school about the snake handlers,
wrapping rattlesnakes around their arms and necks to
pray. If the snake bites you and you die, then your
belief in God isn’t strong enough to keep you alive.
But Mother said they liked to find their own snakes.
"Besides,"
she said. "I think there’s something wrong with
those people, using snakes to worship God. I’ve read
enough of the Bible to know it doesn’t say anything
about torturing a poor snake or yourself to get to
heaven. If that’s what it takes to get to heaven, I’ll
just stay right here."
We tried to
help Mother find the greens by walking along the edge of
the ditch, picking what we thought she was picking.
"No, not
this, you can’t eat this," she said, taking the
weeds from our hands. "Dandelion greens look like
this, the curly ones, close to the ground with the
yellow flowers."
Our neighbor,
Mamie, brought Mother catfish on a line of rope. We had
known Mamie since we moved there. Dad had often gone
fishing with her husband, Buck.
Mamie and Buck
had more children than my mother, ranging from almost
grown to babies. The older ones helped care for the
younger ones so Mamie could work and fish. In the
afternoons, Mamie ironed clothes for white people for
five cents apiece. In the mornings, she fished. She
claimed she had to, "to feed all them young ‘ens,"
but she really just liked to sit on the red clay bank
with a can of worms and not hear a single child’s
voice. She fished in the pond that stood between our
house and hers. Nobody knew who owned the land the pond
was on. It had gone unnoticed for years, fished only by
those few who had stumbled upon it. It was swarming with
the biggest catfish you ever saw. They churned the water
when I threw in cracker crumbs.
I loved to go
fishing at the pond with Mamie and this she allowed as
long as I did not speak, not one word. She tapped
lightly on the back door just as the sun lit the sky. If
I was ready to go, fine, if not, she went on without me.
She would ask me how I was doing in school or something
like that, but I knew that once we broke into the path
toward the pond, I had best not speak, or even sneeze.
Mamie could get on to you something fierce.
Mamie would
sit right down with her big rump on the hard ground, her
cotton print dress spread across her knees making a
valley in her lap for extra bobbers, a foil package of
chewing tobacco and a fan with an advertisement from the
local funeral parlor. She wore a hat with two dozen
handmade fishing lures knit into the tight straw, fished
with a long cane pole and a round red-and-white bobber,
sometimes red worms. She could catch more fish than
anyone I knew, even Dad or Buck. Anyone. "Don’t
let your shadow get in the water," she’d say.
"Fish ain’t stupid you know."
Mother didn’t
tell Mamie that Dad was gone, that we had nothing to
eat, no money to buy anything. Mamie brought catfish
because she liked Mother and knew she appreciated the
fish. She showed Mother how to skin a catfish with a
razor blade, how to keep from being horned when cleaning
them.
"A
catfish has a needle-sharp spine on its back. If he
sticks you with it, the wound almost always gets
infected," Mamie said to Mother as she held a
squirming catfish with a pair of pliers. "Then you’ll
have to burn the infection out by packing gunpowder into
the wound and striking a match to it." Mamie showed
us the black round flat scars on her hands from being
horned by catfish.
Mamie had no
way of knowing that the few flopping catfish, lips
strung through a rope, were all we had to eat some days.
Three or four catfish, fried in a cast-iron skillet and
divided between eight people was not enough food for an
entire day. If Mamie didn’t stop by, there was nothing
to eat at all.

As if a school
bell had rung, we filed back into the kitchen and
claimed the same places we had occupied before, Alice
pushing for more than her half of our shared kitchen
chair. Mother had begun cooking the corn and beans. The
aroma made me dizzy and even though my stomach was
empty, I thought I would vomit. I put my face against
the kitchen table and watched Mother’s back, the curve
of her thin shoulders, the red curls of wet hair licking
the back of her neck. I wanted my hair to be curly and
red like hers instead of dark and wavy like my father’s.
I wanted to be able to stand at the stove and wave my
wooden spoon and make hot delicious food from hard
little seeds. I fell asleep.
I awoke to the
sound of rustling paper. Mother was tearing a piece of
0 paper from a brown grocery bag. Stewart came back into
the kitchen with one of his short yellow school pencils
and gave it to Mother. She wrote on the brown paper:
letters and numbers. First-grade letters and numbers
that even I could read.
"This is
your Aunt Janet’s address and phone number in
Birmingham," she said to Alice, placing the paper
in her held out hand. "I’m going to eat the corn
and beans now. If I get sick, you call your Aunt Janet
from the gas station and tell her to come and get you.
Throw the rest of the corn and beans into the outhouse
before you leave so none of the kids eat any of them.
The directions for calling collect are written right
here," she pointed to the bottom of the brown
paper. "Can you do this?" she asked.
"Yes ma’am,"
Alice answered, wadding the paper into her fist.
"If I’m
not sick in two hours, we’ll all eat the corn and
beans. O.K.?" She looked at the seven faces around
the table. We nodded.
"Tomorrow,
I’m sure we’ll receive some money in the mail from
your father," she said as she picked up John, who
was wet and fussing, and left the room. We stared at
each other. Stewart shrugged his shoulders. Alice
grimaced. Mother returned with the baby in a dry diaper
and the wind-up clock from her bedroom. She stood John
in a kitchen chair and wound the clock, placing it in
the middle of the table, the bright yellow face turned
so everyone could see it.
"When
this hand reaches the three, if I’m not sick, you can
eat." She walked to the stove and scooped corn from
one pan, beans from the other. She put the plate on the
table and sat John in her lap. She ate. Slowly. Taste
and wait. Taste and wait. One bean at a time, one kernel
of corn at a time, her hands shaking. Finally she
spooned the corn into her mouth and chewed, cheeks
puffed and eyes closed. Just watching her made my mouth
fill with saliva, my lips kiss together.
We watched
Mother for what felt like an eternity. No one spoke. I
could hear David breathing, in and out, in and out, as
if he were keeping time by breaths, his arms spread
across the table like the hands of the clock. Mother
played with John’s toes and seemed to have forgotten
we were there. Her blue eyes were unfocused and weary
and she seemed to be drifting further and further away.
Are her lips turning purple? Is she still breathing? No
one moved from their chairs; the tick of the clock
enclosed the room. Maybe we should touch her. Still, no
one moved. I could hear Alice’s stomach rumbling
loudly and I knew she could hear mine, fierce hunger in
our bones. Without taking her eyes off Mother, she
gently walked her fingers over my leg and put her hand
on top of mine.
Suddenly
Stewart slapped the table with his palms, knocking over
the yellow-faced alarm clock, and shouted, "Ten
more minutes!" Mother jumped in her chair, ransomed
back to the present by the noise, finally focusing her
eyes on what was truly visible.
John fell
asleep before the ten minutes were up. Mother carried
him to the living room, laid him on the couch and
covered him with an afghan from the rocking chair. We
never took our eyes from her; we were wide awake now,
voraciously hungry and smiling.
In the time it
took Mother to put John down, Stewart had passed out
spoons. Alice had a stack of chipped, mismatched saucers
in her arms. Willie, Doris Ann and I were squirming a
dance in our chairs, spoons in hand, while David
pretended to conduct our dance like a choir director.
There was a sense of excitement, of celebration, in the
air.
Mother scooped
equal portions of corn and beans onto each saucer.
Falling into the spell of David’s choir directing, she
hummed a song we had learned in church. She made a
saucer for John, covered it with another saucer turned
upside down and put it at the back of the stove. She put
our saucers on the table, asking us not to begin eating
until everyone was served and the food blessed. She put
down the last saucer and sat between Willie and Doris
Ann. After the blessing, she opened a book and began
reading aloud.
"’Alice’s
Adventures in Wonderland,’" she read, "for
Alice, because she has been so brave. ‘Alice was
beginning to get very tired of sitting by her sister . .
.’"
We ate. We
laughed. We kicked one another under the table, told on
each other, lined the bright yellow kernels of corn in
rows, spelled our names with them. We counted each corn
kernel as we put them on our tongues and, because we
like corn better, we devoured them all before starting
on the beans. Then we ate the sweet white navy beans,
spearing a bean onto each tine of the fork like little
shoes, licking the bean juice from our saucers, chins
dripping.
"Down,
down, down," Mother read. "Would the fall
never come to an end? ‘I wonder how many miles I’ve
fallen by this time?’ Alice in Wonderland said aloud.
‘I must be getting somewhere near the center of the
earth.’"
After dinner
we went outside to watch the stars peep out of the deep
Alabama sky, one at a time like tiny sparks from the
fire. Alice and I twirled around, making the stars spin
until they had tails, imagining that we had fallen to
the center of the earth like the Alice in the story. We
picked up imaginary bottles and drank from them. We
threw our hands over our heads and grew tall like a
telescope, then squatted on the ground growing small
again. We splashed around as if swimming in tears and
then fell to the ground and waited for the stars to stop
spinning. I caught one, a red twinkling dot, and made a
wish. I wished for a sailboat. We had been given
coloring pages in first grade and I had kept the one of
the sailboat. I colored the boat blue with a yellow
sail; and, as part of the secret I shared with my
mother, I traced my left hand in red onto the sail —
holding the crayon in my right hand. I smiled when I
gave her the drawing. She taped it on the refrigerator
door for Dad to see; it flapped like a kite every time
the door was opened and closed.
The next
morning we got out of bed, pulled on our clothes and
went to sit with Mother on the front porch to wait for
the mailman. We played a game called "I spy,"
where someone picks something that they can see, tells
what color it is, then everyone has to guess what the
person picked. "I spy something red."
"That
stop sign?"
"No."
"Is it Toot-toot’s shirt?"
"Stewart’s shirt is yellow, Doris Ann. It has
to be red."
"Oh."
"A red bird."
"What red bird? You have to be able to see
it."
"There was a red bird by the tree."
"The red sign on the gas station?"
"No."
"Mom’s hair."
"Yes!"
The sun
drifted from our faces to our knees. The baby whined and
we were tired of the game. Stewart asked Mother to read
to us but she shook her head.
"Not
right now, a little later," Mother said, tapping
the toes of her shoes on the step. She brushed two ants
from John’s leg and picked him up. The toe tapping
becoming a bounce, a pony ride. We went back to our
game.
Mother spotted
the mailman before any of us and stood up, handing the
baby to Alice. She watched him, a hand over her eyes,
walk slowly up the hill, sorting his letters. She smiled
when he handed her the letter from Dad. Waiting for the
mailman to walk back down the hill, she looked carefully
at the letter in her hand, at the return address, at the
postage, the handwriting.
She opened the
letter, not tearing the flap, and slid the letter from
the envelope. Folded neatly in a sheet of white paper
were two one dollar bills. Mother dropped her hands to
her sides, sucking in a quick sharp breath, the two
dollars in one hand, the envelope in the other; the
white paper fluttered down like a badly folded paper
airplane, coming to rest on the bottom step.
Mother stood
in silence a moment then abruptly walked down the steps.
We followed. Alice gave John to me and ran after Mother;
Stewart and David followed her. I was pulling John by
the arm trying to keep up. Willie and Doris Ann fell
behind and Doris Ann began to whimper. Mother stopped in
front of a thick bed of day lilies on the north side of
the house, fire-red, tall and straight, in full bloom.
She stood for a long time, not moving. We all stood
perfectly still, not attempting to move any closer to
her. She stared at the lilies.
"They’re
so beautiful," she said, touching a frilly petal
with the corner of the envelope. "I just wish we
could eat them." She burst into tears, crushing the
envelope and the two one dollar bills to her face.
An hour later
Mother took the crumpled brown paper with Aunt Janet’s
phone number on it and the two one dollar bills to the
gas station at the bottom of the hill and called her
sister in Birmingham to come and get her starving
children.

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