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The Sight--Chapter 3 (standard:mystery, 2493 words) [3/4] show all parts | |||
Author: SoLikeCandy | Added: Mar 20 2001 | Views/Reads: 3078/2068 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Ruth tries to dig into the roots of her family tree, and the old man thinks of his past and his lost family. Keep those comments coming! | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story over the count of a game that had just ended. “I had five books, Kathy had four, and that makes nine,” Marie said between giggles. “You just upset cuz you lost; ain’t my fault your stankin ass can’t play spades worth shit!” The room erupted in cackles, and Ann stood up making her way across the table to where Marie sat. She grabbed her older sister and feigned strangling her, then softened and kissed Marie on the forehead. “Alright, Miss Marie,” she said, “you and Kathy owe me and Lulu a rematch.” “Hey Beanie!” Kathy called to Ruth. “Get on in here, baby, you wanna play?” “No, Auntie Kathy,” Ruth said. “Just watching.” Watching her family during gatherings was like some twisted nature film. There was enough dysfunction to provide a psychologist with years of research material. But all in all, Ruth loved her rowdy clan. There was a palpable energy when the family got together, a strange harmony in all the babies crying and cooing, and the older kids screeching outside and pelting passing cars with snowballs, and her father and uncles and grandfather screaming at the television screen as if the football players could hear them. She and her cousins close to her in age would sit on the porch and tend to the little kids or lounge in the parlor with the women and watch the babies. The chaos was somehow comforting to Ruth. All the sounds and smells and sensations embraced her, and she sank into the surroundings of this huge family that, beneath all the shouts and cursing, truly loved one another. “Well, I’m fixin to help Mama in the kitchen, Beanie,” Kathy said, rising from her chair and stubbing out her cigarette. “Come on here with me, baby.” They made their way through the living room toward the kitchen, with Kathy resting a hand on her niece’s shoulder. “Damn, girl,” she said, “are you eatin in Greenmeadow? I damn near cut myself on your bony ass shoulder.” Ruth laughed and shook her head. “No, ma’am, I stick to bread and water. Of course I eat, Auntie. I’m just thin.” “Well, ain’t nothin wrong with that, Bean, I wished I was your size sometimes,” Kathy said. “But a man likes a little meat on the bones, you know.” The women in Ruth’s family were rather rubenesque, with fleshy arms, wide hips and generous bosoms. Ruth had grown into a tall, willowy stalk of a girl, which lead to the family calling her “Beanstalk,” or “Beanie” for short. “I get no complaints, Auntie,” Ruth retorted with a smile. Kathy howled with laughter. “Watch out now, girl!” she said. “You got some boy on your arm up there in Greenmeadow?” Ruth smiled, shrugging. “I’ve been seeing someone for about a month or so, now.” “What’s he look like? Is he fine?” “I certainly think so,” Ruth replied. “He’s about 6’7”, blonde hair, blue eyes...” Kathy stopped and looked at Ruth, eyebrows raised. “Blonde? Blue? When are you planning on telling your father you datin a White man?” “Some time after the second child is born,” Ruth said, and her aunt Kathy giggled. The kitchen was positively full of food. Every counter was covered in pies, casseroles and main dishes. On the kitchen table was a ham, a turkey, and a strange looking roasted leg of an animal. Ruth let herself be seduced by the scents of the room for a moment before her eyes rested on the odd sight. “What the hell is that?” she asked. “Goat,” Kathy replied definitively. “Dad asked for goat this year.” Ruth was blank for a moment. “So...where does one go about finding a goat to eat?” Kathy laughed. “Baby, everybody got goat. That’s good meat, girl—back on the farm we had goat, raccoon, rabbit, squirrel...” Ruth wrinkled her nose and made a gesture of dismissal. “That’s enough imagery,” she said, shaking her head. “I’ll stick to the turkey this year.” She and Kathy were the only ones in the kitchen, and they both sat at the table. “Auntie Kathy, what do you know about Earl?” Ruth asked. “My brother? Your father?” Kathy asked. “He’s a sore loser, and hasn’t played spades with me for the past four years cuz I whipped his ass so bad the last time!” “No, your father, Earl.” Kathy’s smile faded a bit. “Well, not much.” She sighed before continuing. “Nobody does. We were all born so close together ‘cept for your daddy, and we don’t really remember him and Mama never said much about him.” “So who knows him? I mean, is he even still alive?” “Yes, he is. Only reason I know that is because he sends us all money on our birthdays.” “Even Daddy?” Ruth asked, incredulous. “Yep, even Earl. But he gives the money to Mama. Says he doesn’t want that man’s money.” Kathy looked over her shoulder, then lowered her voice. “Now, listen, don’t you tell a soul in this family I told you this. Mama doesn’t like talking about him, but your daddy hates it even more. Lord knows my brother doesn’t have a mean bone in his body, but he hates his father somethin fierce.” Ruth sat silent for a moment. There was a man somewhere, a man that her father was said to strongly resemble, a man that was her flesh and blood grandfather. The thought taunted her a bit. “Does anyone...” she began, “know where he’s living?” Kathy shook her head. “I think Mama knows, but she can’t even bear to keep that man’s name in her mouth, let alone talk about him at any length. His envelopes never have any return address on them, but he always knows where we are, even when we move. That’s the strange part. He writes us little letters, and knows our kids’ names and things like that. He even knows about the baby boy my oldest daughter had last year.” Kathy’s voice trailed off, and she sat silent for a beat, then she turned away from Ruth. “You know, sometimes I wonder if he still talks to Mama,” she said to herself. “Or if he even has to.” “What?” Ruth said. “Nothing, baby.” Kathy made an effort to brighten; the wrinkles of worry melted from her face. “Why you askin about him, Beanie?” There was no malice in the question, but there was a barely perceptible note of concern. “Just curious,” Ruth replied. “I’ve never heard a lot about him.” “Well, baby, ain’t no need to. He never gave us nothin, really,” Kathy said, shrugging. “I thank the good Lord for every day I’m alive, and my father gave me life, but he didn’t give me much else. Jack is the only father any of us have ever really known, and he’s a wonderful man...leave Earl alone, sweetheart. He certainly left us alone.” No one is above suffering. No one is above loneliness. Regardless of what choices one makes, it’s the result of that choice which the person endures for the rest of his life. A decision made in a split second can change a person’s life forever. The old man thought about this as he sat in his tattered recliner and sipped a glass of wine on Thanksgiving Day. All the choices he’d made in the past brought him to this moment, this dragging and solitary existence. The local retirement community was full of graying relics, stooped and shaking men and women who were just as alone as he was. But the knowledge that he wasn’t the only one to suffer this forced seclusion was no solace to him. He hated seeing the raggedy old woman who was his neighbor struggle up the stairs to her residence, or his other neighbor, a little Korean man with skin speckled with liver spots, bend to retrieve his newspaper from the ground and groan in pain. That was one of the reasons he enjoyed strolling the campus so much. Young men and women walked briskly to and from classes, shuffled lazily to the café, or sat on benches in the commons and chatted. They all had a sense of purpose, a sense of reaching for something. The students all had paths they were destined to walk. The old man’s path was close to ending, and watching the young people made him, for a moment or two, feel younger. But then he would come home to his dreary, cramped apartment, and he was alone again. The old man had a phone but rarely used it—there was no one for him to call. His television and his stereo kept him company, and he would watch the news or listen to the old blues records he had, nodding and tapping in time with the rhythm, sometimes lending his mournful voice to the music issuing from the speakers. He often wondered what would have happened had he stayed in Mississippi with his wife and family instead of moving north to find work. Of course, he moved north to get away from his wife and children, and to get out of the then oppressive South. He’d wanted to free himself from the pressure of fatherhood and free his wife from the strain of such a strange marriage. Looking back on it all, he realized he was selfish, perhaps even cruel, leaving his girl of a bride to raise 6 children alone. But he also thought he’d robbed himself of a future. Now, his children were strangers to him, and his ex wife wouldn’t return phone calls. Letters to her had been left in his mailbox, return to sender. Years ago he’d stopped trying. She’d found a new man, a new life, had tons of grandchildren. No need to disturb her. And so, the old man lived his life in blues songs, and in crazy morning talk shows, and in the young people on the campus. And in Ruth. For years, he’d followed her. He’d even sent her a present on her 21st birthday, a carton of the cigarettes she smoked. She was a sweet girl, a beautiful young woman, who had brought him out of his depression. When she moved to Greenmeadow for college, he began to watch her more closely. Finally, he had a reason to get up in the morning. Finally, his life had a purpose. The old man knew the girl didn’t need much protecting, and in his advanced age; besides, there wasn’t much he could do in the way of anything physical. But he took pride in knowing that he could watch over her and see that she was always safe. But he knew there would come a time when he couldn’t protect her from danger. The old man knew the time was coming soon when she would come to know him, and that when she found out about him, neither of their lives would ever be the same again. Tweet
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