Angels Watching Over Me (Shenandoah Sisters Book #1) (17 page)

Within about a week I was through with the stories in the first reader, and Katie excitedly brought me the next, called
The Eclectic Second Reader
. I saw right off that the printing was smaller. The book was thicker too.

‘‘This looks harder,’’ I said. I didn’t see how I would ever get through it.

‘‘Just try it,’’ said Katie, looking at the first story, then turning the page. ‘‘Here, read Lesson Two.’’ She handed me the book.

‘‘I don’t even know that first word,’’ I said.

‘‘It’s ‘James,’ ’’ said Katie.

‘‘All right . . . ‘James,’ ’’ I read, ‘‘ ‘it is now mormor . . . ning. Morning. The sun is just peep . . . peeping over the hills in the east. Get up, my boy, for the sun has just . . . risen.’ ’’

‘‘There, you see,’’ Katie smiled, ‘‘you can read it fine. Just keep going with one or two stories a day, and we’ll keep reading them aloud together. You’re doing real well, Mayme.’’

As I read more in the second reader, Katie was showing me some of her favorite books too, and I began to spend time in front of the bookshelf, pulling out volumes and looking at some of them myself. She told me about biographies of famous people written by Peter Parley—she especially liked the one about George Washington—and the silly book of funny drawings and verses called the
Book of Nonsense
. She was also real fond of some fairy tales by a man named Hans Christian Andersen.

‘‘Sometimes those fairy tales come alive in my mind,’’ she said, ‘‘when I’m at my secret place in the woods.’’ Then she stopped and got a funny look on her face.

‘‘What secret place?’’ I asked.

‘‘I’ve never told anybody about it,’’ she said slowly, ‘‘not even my mother. It’s a place I found in the woods.’’

‘‘Can I see it?’’ I asked. Katie promised to show it to me sometime soon.

K
ATIE ’S
P
OEMS
23

I
CAME UPSTAIRS WITH AN ARMLOAD OF CLEAN clothes from the line outside. Katie had insisted that I wear some of her mother’s dresses. At first I wouldn’t hear of it, but finally I realized the rags I was wearing were eventually going to fall right off me. So I made her pick out two of the plainest ones, and I had one to wear when I washed the other.

Anyway, I was carrying a load up the stairs and came upon Katie in her room, bent over her writing desk.

‘‘What are you doing?’’ I asked from the doorway.

‘‘Writing a poem.’’

‘‘A poem . . . you really write poems?’’

‘‘Yes. This is my poem book. I haven’t written one since . . . you know, before everything that happened.’’

‘‘What does it say?’’ I put the clothes on the bed and sat down.

‘‘It’s a little embarrassing to let someone else read your poems,’’ she said, her cheeks pink.

‘‘Please show me, Miss Katie. I’ve never thought up a poem in my life.’’

‘‘All right. But promise you won’t laugh.’’

‘‘I would never laugh, Miss Katie. If you thought of it all by yourself, that makes it special.’’

‘‘Okay, then—here it is. It’s called, ‘Mama’s Gone.’

‘‘When morning comes, the voices of the birds still ring.
They think it’s the same as before.
But I’ve got no song to sing.
I’m quiet, and cold to the core.
My music has turned to dismay.
Mama’s gone away.

Outside my window, everything looks drab and odd.
There’s nothing to do but cry.
What makes bad things happen, God?
Can you tell me why?
What once was joy is only gray.
Mama’s gone away
.’’

Tears came to my eyes. ‘‘That’s beautiful, Miss Katie, even though it’s sad,’’ I said. ‘‘It’s kinda like a song. I’m sorry about your mama, but I think your poem is real nice. I never knew anybody that could make something like that up out of their own head.’’

‘‘You make up stories, Mayme. I’ve never made up a story. And black folks make up poems and turn them into songs.’’

‘‘Yeah, I reckon. But that seems different than this. Will you read me another?’’

‘‘Yes, if you want. Here’s one I wrote at my . . . well, you know, my special place in the woods.’’

I nodded.

‘‘Sometimes when I used to go there, I’d think of poems. Here’s what I wrote.’’

She turned a couple of pages, then took a breath and started to read.

‘‘There’s little Miss Rabbit, Mrs. Robin, and grand big
     
Mr. Deer.
They all come to drink.
They don’t mind if I’m here,
    
because they know I’m their chum.

Mrs. Robin sings. Mr. Deer tiptoes through the grass.
    
Miss Rabbit scampers along.
But Mr. Raccoon is shy.
He doesn’t think I belong
    
in this place where the animals come.

People and animals ought to be friends. We have the
    
same home. We share this earth.
There shouldn’t be fear.
God gave all creatures birth,
    
so friends is what we ought to become.’’

‘‘That’s right fine, Miss Katie. What’s that one called?’’

‘‘I don’t know. I haven’t given it a name yet.’’

‘‘Do deer and rabbits really come and drink when you are there?’’

‘‘Yes. But I only saw Mr. Raccoon once, and he never came back. I’m sad that he’s afraid of me. That’s why I wrote the poem.’’

It made me want to see her secret place even more.

M
RS
. H
AMMOND
24

M
AYME . . .
M
AYME, THERE’S A WAGON COM
ing!’’ shouted Katie, running from the house.

I was near the barn mixing up some grain and water to make slop for the pigs to eat.

‘‘How close?’’ I asked, dropping the bucket. We both headed back to the house at a run.

‘‘I heard it and saw the dust from the road toward town,’’ she panted. ‘‘It’s just coming through the field and will be here any minute.’’

‘‘Who is it?’’

‘‘I couldn’t see. It’s from the wrong direction to be Mr. Thurston again.’’

‘‘I’ll go inside,’’ I told her. ‘‘You’ll have to talk to them again, like last time.’’

‘‘But—’’

‘‘I don’t know what you’ll say, Miss Katie,’’ I interrupted her. ‘‘You’ll have to see who it is and what they want.’’

I tore off my muddy boots and ran inside.

As I hurried upstairs, Katie stationed herself by the front door. I could hear the clatter and jingling and snorting of horses pulling a buckboard even before the bedroom door slammed shut behind me. I crouched down and peeked over the edge of the window.

It looked like a woman was driving a team of two horses. The three dogs were running and barking around the wagon. Even from up where I was hiding, the expression on her face made me a little nervous. She looked like the kind of woman who had a perpetual scowl on her face, the type of person who made a habit of butting into other people’s business. I doubted she’d be inclined to let sleeping dogs lie, pardon the expression since the dogs sure weren’t sleeping right then.

I heard Katie open the door and walk out onto the porch.

‘‘Hello, Miss Kathleen,’’ the woman said. ‘‘Where’s your mama?’’

‘‘She’s not here, Mrs. Hammond.’’

‘‘Where is she?’’

‘‘She’s . . . away, ma’am, uh, on business.’’

‘‘What kind of business?’’

I could hear suspicion in the lady’s voice so thick you could’ve cut it.

‘‘I’m not sure, Mrs. Hammond.’’

‘‘Well . . . hmm—I guess it can’t be helped,’’ said the lady, climbing down from the buggy. ‘‘Call your dogs off ,’’ she said with some irritation. ‘‘I do declare—’’

And I heard Katie calming down the three dogs and calling them away from the lady. I peeked over the windowsill again and almost chuckled to see them standing around Katie like they were protecting her.

‘‘Might as well deliver your mail, then,’’ she said, handing over a bundle.

‘‘Yes, ma’am,’’ said Katie, standing firmly in place as she took the letters.

‘‘It’s been piling up at the post office,’’ Mrs. Hammond said. ‘‘That’s when I realized I hadn’t seen your mama for longer than usual. The mail’s been collecting since that day you came to pick it up and said your mama was busy with the slaves. Do you remember?’’

‘‘Yes, ma’am.’’

‘‘I started wondering if something might be wrong, not seeing her in all this time. So I thought I would bring it out and find out for myself. Is there anything wrong, Kathleen?’’

‘‘Uh . . .’’ began Katie in a hesitant voice.

One of the dogs started growling in its throat, and Mrs. Hammond stepped backward as did I from my window.

‘‘Why hasn’t your mama been to town to collect her mail?’’ she asked, glaring down at the dog. ‘‘And aren’t you even going to invite me inside for a glass of water?’’ Mrs. Hammond went on. ‘‘Gracious, child, where’s your manners? What’s wrong with you today?’’

‘‘I’m sorry, ma’am. You’re welcome to a glass of water.’’

Mrs. Hammond was already on her way inside with or without an invitation. I tiptoed toward the door in case I could hear more of the conversation drifting up the stairway.

Katie had followed Mrs. Hammond into the kitchen.

‘‘Where’s Beulah?’’ I heard the woman ask.

‘‘I don’t know, ma’am,’’ answered Katie.

A
humph
of dissatisfaction sounded. I heard the clacking of the kitchen pump followed by running water.

‘‘Well, tell your mama to come and see me,’’ Mrs. Hammond said after a short time. ‘‘I don’t like the sound of her being so busy she can’t even come to town to pick up her mail, especially when she hasn’t made a payment on her account at the store for three months. You tell her I don’t mind carrying her along when times get lean, but I’ve got a business to run too. And there’s a note in that stack of mail from Mr. Taylor. When he heard I was coming out to Rosewood, he asked me to tell your mother that he wants to talk to her about her loan that’s due in two months. Can you remember that, Kathleen?’’

‘‘Yes, ma’am,’’ Katie said meekly.

‘‘Well, I hope so.’’

She let out a sigh, then I heard footsteps moving toward the door. ‘‘Goodness, child, I thought you’d have grown up more by this time. You must be a grief to your poor mother sometimes.’’

The door shut.

I hurried back to the window and was relieved to see the buckboard disappearing along the road the way it had come.

T
HE
S
ECRETARY
A
GAIN
25

W
HEN I GOT DOWNSTAIRS, KATIE WAS STILL standing in the kitchen, not exactly trembling from the encounter, but almost.

I saw the mound of mail sitting on the kitchen table. Without thinking, I went over and absently started thumbing through the stack. There were some advertisements for farming equipment and seeds and that kind of thing, a magazine, a rolled-up newspaper, and two or three letters, and—

All of a sudden I realized what I was doing. I froze, then jerked my hand away.

Katie must have seen the motion and it brought her back to herself.

‘‘What’s wrong, Mayme?’’ she asked.

‘‘Nothing, I was just forgetting myself, that’s all,’’ I said. ‘‘Sometimes I got to remind myself that this ain’t my house. Not that I ever really forget, but you know what I mean, and I got no right to be prying into other folks’ affairs. I’m sorry, Miss Katie.’’

Other books

Crystal Soldier by Sharon Lee, Steve Miller
Broken Love by Kelly Elliott
Evan and Elle by Rhys Bowen
Wolf Among Wolves by Hans Fallada