A Far Piece to Canaan (48 page)

Read A Far Piece to Canaan Online

Authors: Sam Halpern

Lisa June giggled. “You sly old fox, what have you got up your sleeve?”

“If you answer yes, you'll find out.”

She laughed. “All right, yes!”

I turned at the next corner and pointed the BMW toward Old Cuyper Creek Pike.

Our first stop was a hardware store in Spears where I bought two shovels, a grubbing hoe, and two pairs of gloves. Lisa June kept asking me questions about what we were going to do and I would answer with a wink and a grin.

By the time we got to Cummings Hill, the shadows were lengthening. I looked at the top of the hill, which was probably three hundred yards from where we stood. About a third of the way to the top, trees began. At first, there were just a few trees, but at the top they became an oak forest. At first I didn't recognize any landmarks. Then I saw a giant oak near the top of the hill. Perhaps a hundred feet below the sentinel oak was a slightly smaller oak. Nothing else in that direction even approached the two in size. Those had to be the trees Fred had selected. I lined them up and lay my shovel handle as the third point for my first coordinate.

As I worked, I glimpsed Lisa June. She was sitting on the hillside holding her knees with a bemused look on her face, occasionally shaking her head and chuckling.

For the other coordinate Fred had chosen a big pine tree on the pond side of the hill. One large pine dwarfed the many smaller pines. I decided the large pine was the one Fred had chosen as a horizontal landmark, but there was nothing to line it up with because the oak was gone. Without it, I had no idea how to complete my triangulation. I wandered over to a limestone outcropping and sat, letting my legs dangle over the edge.

Lisa June joined me. “Problems?”

I sighed. “Lisa June, I'm afraid somethin' has destroyed one of th' landmarks your grandfather used for finding our treasure.”

Lisa June, nudged me with her shoulder. “It's all right. I'd have liked to have somethin' that belonged t' him, but th' memories you gave me are more important than whatever you and he hid away. Let's go have dinner, I'm hungry.”

I didn't feel like eating. I was no more than a few hundred feet from the only remaining relic from my best friend's life to which I had a true connection, and it was being denied me. Was this my final punishment for abandoning him, for letting him die alone in despair? God had eternity in which to punish me, why disgrace me in front of Fred's granddaughter? We walked toward the equipment that lay strung out like a dashed line. The moment I reached for one of the shovels, I had an epiphany. I returned to the rock ledge. When I reached it, I studied the angle it made with the line that ran down the hill. The ledge was thick. Bedrock, probably covered for millions of years until erosion uncovered it over the past sixty. Bedrock that Fred and I encountered when we buried the slingshots. I took a sighting down the ledge.

“Lisa June,” I called, “get th' shovel that's farthest up th' hill and bring it down 'til I tell you t' stop.”

Minutes later the shovel marked a spot and we began digging. We hit rock in less than two feet. I decided we should extend our dig uphill. An hour and a half later we were still digging, then my shovel point hit what sounded like metal. I put the shovel aside and scraped with the broad end of the grubbing hoe. Remnants of gunnysack appeared in the growing darkness. I freed the box and tore away the rotted cloth.

The lunch box was badly rusted and my shovel had crashed through one edge. My hands were shaking as I pried the box open.

There they were, the rubber and leather shriveled and barely recognizable, but the wooden handles were still intact. I recognized mine, picked it up and rolled it around in my hand. It felt good. I put it back in the box and picked up Fred's. It was all I had of my best friend. Then I remembered Lisa June and passed the handle to her. “Your grandfather made this over sixty years ago. When we buried them he said we would never make slingshots for ourselves again, only for our children. We had a pact that someday we'd come back and dig them up together.”

My voice broke. “Fred's slingshot was his most prized possession. It's yours now.”

The tears flowed from both of us as we held each other. A young woman and an old man had both found part of their past.

56

I
canceled my reservations for New Hampshire. For the next few weeks, Lisa June and I spent a lot of time together. UK was between sessions and she was taking some vacation from her day job. We walked through the world of my childhood, Berman's, the Shackelford place, the graves of her family, and, of course, the Blue Hole, where we went swimming. I made elm poles and we fished where the four of us had caught the buffalo.

It was a wonderful time of year, the oaks and maples were slightly turning and the sky had a hint of October blue. It was a wonderful time for me too. One day Lisa June and I picnicked under the sweet apple tree. When we finished eating I was full and happy and stretched out on my back with my head propped up on a tree root. “Guess what I did yesterday?”

Lisa June was sitting against the tree's trunk, her jean-covered legs crossed. “I wouldn't be surprised at anything after watchin' you drive up in a new car. What?”

“Put a down payment on a little piece of property this side of Spears.”

Lisa June's mouth fell open and her eyes lit up. “What's it like!”

“Beautiful land, not so good house. Kind of a cross between Walden and a moonshiner's paradise.”

Lisa June's head went backward, and she laughed loudly. “That description could only come from a literature professor. I can't wait t' hear th' details.”

I turned my head toward her. “Two weeks ago, I saw an ad for six and a half acres. It's heavily wooded. Th' only road in is a gravel lane. The house sets in a little clearing. There's a big pond surrounded by trees that I'm going to stock with bass. Wanta see it?”

Lisa June got to her feet so quickly she startled me. “Samuel Zelinsky, you take me there right now!”

The trees that bordered the lane to my house were tall and blocked a lot of light, making it difficult to see the gravel beneath the weeds. My new Ford must have thought it had died and gone to automotive hell as it plunged in and out of chuckholes.

“This is beautiful, just beautiful,” Lisa June kept saying, clapping her hands and grabbing my shoulder and shoving me back and forth sideways.

“Wait'll you see my abode.”

We rounded an oak and the lane ended. Lisa June began laughing. The house was a step up from present day Berman's, but it was a small step.

“Whadayathink?” I asked.

“The house is a wreck, but this forest is so beautiful. Where's th' pond? When are you gonna build a new house? It should be a cabin . . . th' furniture should be rustic, built like they did in th' early years in th' Kentucky Mountains. This place is just too beautiful for words. Just too beautiful,” and she spun like a ballerina across the grass, holding her arms straight out.

“Come on, I'll show you th' pond,” I called.

We walked past the house and into the trees. Shortly, we were beside a small lake nestled among the timber. A meadowlark trilled, then it became very quiet. “Like it?”

“Oh my God, yes!” Lisa June whispered and she stood as though transfixed.

“I like your idea for a cabin. Soon as escrow closes, I'll meet with an architect. I'd like to move in by next September. Spend the fall here.”

Lisa June's face lost expression.

“What?” I asked.

When Lisa June answered, her voice reminded me of a little girl's. “Aren't you going to move to Kentucky permanently?”

I shook my head. “Spring and fall. Summer and winter with my kids and grandkids. New Hampshire is beautiful in winter and th' whole family skis. In summer, I can take th' grandkids trout fishin'. I'll spend spring and fall with you and th' Langleys and Kentucky. I'm th' man who has everything.”

What happened next was an eruption Vesuvius could envy. “Oh sure! Everything's dandy for you. What about me? You go back to your kids and grandkids and see me in your spare time! Just what am I to you anyway! You come here and get tight with Aunt Jen and Uncle Melvin so you can spend time with th' little orphan girl? So you can feel less guilty about having let your best friend kill himself? That's what I am to you, isn't it, your highway out of th' guilt swamp. After that I'm nothin'! T' hell with you! Go back t' your damn family!”

With that, Lisa June Winchester ran out of the woods.

I felt . . . I'm not sure what adjective fits. Devastated? Destroyed? I just stood there as she disappeared. The worst fears of Jenny, Melvin, and me had come to pass. I walked into the trees in a daze, trying to understand how I had allowed this to happen. Then came a question: What was Lisa June to me? I stopped walking, leaned against a maple, and waited while my mind played with the issue.

I was probably there half an hour when I heard a twig snap. I looked up and there was Lisa June. Her eyes were red and a mask of anguish covered her face. She looked so much like Fred when he was hurt that it frightened me. She walked toward me with tentative steps until we were a couple of feet apart.

“I'm sorry,” she said. “I'm such a bitch. You've been wonderful to me and th' last thing you deserved was th' crap I just laid on you. I was just so jealous. I wanted you to myself. You to be my grandpa. I know you're not my grandpa, but I . . . I . . . Can you ever forgive me?”

I took one step forward and she lunged into my arms. I stroked her hair while she cried and squeezed my chest. I was still trying to understand what I felt. The only answer I was sure of was that somehow, I loved this child. Was it as much as I felt for my kids? I didn't know. Why the hell did I have to quantify everything anyway? I untangled us but held on to her arms. “Lisa June, I'm not good at expressing my emotions, but I'm gonna try in my own way. Promise me if I screw this up that you won't run away from me again. That you'll let me explain. Can you promise me that?”

Lisa June answered with a nod.

“I told you about th' death of Ben, th' time in his cabin when he was mortally wounded. I told him that I loved him before I ran out th' door for help. Earlier in our friendship he had said th' same thing t' me but I couldn't say it back to him. I'm sure that I did love him, but I just couldn't say it for some reason. It took his being minutes from death for me be able t' tell him that. I don't want that t' happen now. I love you, Lisa June. I don't know how much or anything else, just that I love you and I want to be as much grandfather as I can be to you until I die. That's all I know, Lisa. I hope that's enough.”

Lisa June gave me a bear hug. “I love you too. Thanks for puttin' up with me . . . Grandpa.”

Our arms went to our sides, then we stood looking at each other. Neither of us knew where things went from here. Then I heard myself say, “You ever been in New Hampshire?”

“No.”

“Next year we'll go t' New Hampshire in June . . . after UK's spring semester ends. You can ride to New Hampshire with me, then fly back t' Kentucky whenever you want. Meet th' other people in my life.”

Lisa June thought about my proposal. When she answered she was smiling. “I'd love to see New Hampshire.”

I took a deep breath. “You know, I came here a couple months ago a dyin' man. I . . .”

Lisa June had started walking and stopped abruptly and turned to face me. Her eyes were wide and I saw her tremble. “What do you mean?”

I quickly remedied my error. “I'm perfectly healthy. What I meant was, I was dying a death of the spirit, not th' body. Society saw me as someone whose life had been successful, but I felt like a failure.”

The look on Lisa June's face changed from fear to relief, then wonder. “I don't understand. How could someone who won th' most important prize in their field have considered himself a failure?”

This was not going to be easy to explain. “Lisa June, I was raised in these hills. Simple things in our little community took on special meanings, and you lived your life by those simple things. You told th' truth. You came through for your friends, no matter what, or you weren't a man. My childhood society was defined by simple rules and I believed them with all my heart.”

The slight nod of Lisa June's head told me that she had gotten the big picture.

“Your life after leavin' Kentucky got a lot more complicated, didn't it?”

“Yeah,” I said, “and I kept trying to live by th' old rules. I couldn't make the adjustments. The old rules didn't work in my new world and I paid a big price. Constant conflict with the rule makers and the rules that they made . . . and bent . . . without having problems of conscience.”

Lisa June swallowed. “If I'd been there, I'd have used Grandpa Fred's slingshot on them!”

I laughed. “Slingshots are great for huntin' frogs and shootin' fence posts. I want you to remember something—if you wanta have a happy life, Lisa June, be willin' to bend little rules. Not the important ones, though. Important rules are best not bent.”

I moved my head in the direction of the car, meaning that we should start back.

“Which rules do you think are the important ones?”

“Those covering truth,” I answered. “Never disregard a vow made with all your heart without doing everything you can to keep it.”

We walked to the car by way of a blackberry thicket, picking berries and shoveling them into our mouths until our hands and lips were stained red. It was getting late and Lisa June needed to get to her restaurant job. As we drove, I delicately brought up the subject of the Langleys' offer to help with her education.

Lisa June turned in her seat until she faced me. She wasn't angry, but she was obviously bothered. “Samuel, Jenny and Melvin have been great to me, but they aren't rich and they're getting old. When they're real old they might need that money and suppose I couldn't pay them back. What's good in this for Aunt Jen and Uncle Melvin? What do they get out of it?”

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