Mercy Me (3 page)

Read Mercy Me Online

Authors: Margaret A. Graham

The wife he has got was once the saddest looking creature you ever laid eyes on. But she wasn't always like that. When they came to Live Oaks sixteen years ago, she was the prettiest bride ever you saw, and they were both full of pep—full of fun and anxious to do good things here. They worked together like hand in glove. Went
knocking on doors and got people in church who had not darkened the doors for years. They really wore theirselves out reaching the young people. They'd take them on hikes, hayrides, wiener roasts, summer camps, and such, don't you know. Both of them could sing, but then she quit singing in the choir. I don't know how many young people went off to Bible school because of the Osbornes' work. But a lot of the older people criticized him for spending too much of his time with the young people when there were shut-ins and sick folks he needed to be taking care of.

Back then, Reverend Osborne preached with passion and held street meetings long after that kind of thing was not done anymore. That's when the deacons told him they wanted him to “move along with the times,” and little by little, that's what came to pass at Apostolic Bible.

Reverend Osborne didn't cave in, but there were changes in Live Oaks that had a bearing on the way things were going in the church. When the mill closed, people had to move away to find work, so there weren't much point in preaching on the streets if there weren't nobody listening. And as soon as the teenagers needed jobs, they left town, and that was the end of the youth work.

So Pastor Osborne was left having more funerals than weddings, but he didn't leave; he kept right on tending the flock, visiting the sick and holding their hands when they were dying. It wasn't until this new crop of young'uns came along that the deacons decided to hire a music director who could keep the teenyboppers in church.

I watched our preacher through all of this, and to my way of thinking, it seasoned him. People said the light in his study at the church was on late at night. Of course, there was a mean opinion going around that he dreaded going home, but I knew he was in there poring over the Scriptures and books that lined the shelves of that little cubbyhole. It showed in his sermons. We got something to think about or to do every time he spoke, and he never lost sight of Jesus. I believe that's what brought the new high school Spanish teacher to Apostolic. She'd not been born again long, and she drank in that new wine like it was Gatorade. The preacher's critics would've liked to have him lighten up. They would've liked for him to clown around in the pulpit like that preacher at Bethel does, but he didn't. And I, for one, needed that red meat of the Word he gave us.

I have a notion that Pastor Osborne spent a lot of time on his knees. He sure had a lot to pray about, mainly his wife.

Like I said before, Betty Osborne was not the same woman she'd been as a bride. I can't remember exactly how old she was when they came here, but now she was pushing forty, one side or the other, maybe thirty-nine and holding. She bemoaned the fact that they didn't have any children, and like the kudzu vines taking over the abandoned mill, it was eating away at her, just swallowing her whole. The hardest time for her was when her husband dedicated a baby in church. When one of the Neely boys and his wife brought their twins to the front for dedication, Betty burst into tears and ran out of the service.

I couldn't guess whether she had taken them fertilizer treatments or not. She must have, because she had given up on ever having a baby. But I didn't think he had. Why do I say that? Well, there was a young unmarried girl in the next town who got pregnant once, and her family tried to persuade her to give up the baby. Her parents came to the Osbornes and asked them if they would not like to have the child, seeing as how they were good Christians. Then maybe their daughter might come to her senses and be willing to part with her baby when it came. Betty got all excited, but the pastor said they'd have to pray about it. When the family came back again, Reverend Osborne said no, that it would be cruel to take the baby away from its mama if the mama didn't want to let go.

After that, Betty Osborne was not only depressed, she was so mad at him she took her leave and flew off to her mama's and stayed away three weeks.

I'd not say this even to Beatrice, but I figured it was probably his fault they couldn't make babies. That's the kind of thing can make a man lose heart in himself. Make him so sober he don't laugh no more, and although Reverend Osborne would smile, that was about it. Must've been that medicine they advertise on TV for a man's problem didn't work for him, or else he had not tried it. The only doctor we've got here is Dr. Elsie, and it might be because she's a woman that Pastor Osborne goes up to the University Medical Center for his checkups. Dr. Elsie is a good doctor, but she's getting old. When she retires, I doubt we can get another doctor to come here.

Well, now, let me get back to Reverend Osborne (my mind takes a notion now and then to wander all over the
place). It's hard to describe the pastor, but I tell you flat out, he is no wimp. Even back when I first knew him, I could tell he was the kind of man who'd make a good father. Kindness is his middle name, and patience is his long suit. Otherwise he would've pulled up stakes long ago and left Apostolic on account of the officers and members he has to deal with here.

The reason I knew he would be a good father was because he had a good father. One time when he was helping me shell pecans, he told me about his daddy—said they were very poor and that his daddy worked two jobs to make a living for his family. But even so, he found the time to be with his boy—played catch with him, took him fishing and such. But mainly it was the things he taught his son. Pastor Osborne said his daddy taught him how to get along with people, how to make his money make do, all kinds of things. Showed him how to always look out for poor people.

When he was telling me about his daddy, I could see in his eyes how much he was wanting a boy of his own. I could understand that, because Bud had always wanted a son. Bud was overseas when our baby was born dead, and when he came back with his mind gone and his body full of shrapnel, there weren't opportunity for us to make another one. Our baby was a boy too. Full term. To this day, I can't think about what a comfort and joy it would be to me if our baby had lived and was now grown to manhood. I just have to put it out of my mind.

I always believed that if Reverend Osborne had a son, he would be a different man. Joy would come back in
him. And I tell you, I knew he would grow a boy into a good, solid man like himself.

And since that happened about Betty Osborne running off thataway, the burden for them to have a family never left me. So far nothing had come of all my praying, and it looked like the Lord was going to let her clock run down without giving her any offspring. It sure was hard to understand. Frankly, I didn't.

4

I hate it when people write right back the same day they get my letter. I knew that's what Beatrice would do when she read what I wrote about Percy. It's a wonder she didn't get on the telephone and run up another big bill. Anyway, here's what she wrote:

Dear Esmeralda,

I hope this finds you in good health. I am fine. My feet are killing me. I guess there's no use praying they'll stop hurting. All the praying I have done about a cure for my dreaded disease has not had no answer.

I know you are smarter than me but you don't understand my feelings for Percy. You got to marry your Bud and even though he got wounded and all in the war and wasn't right in his head, at least you got to care for him until he died. But I never got to marry Percy and
he's the onliest man I ever wanted to marry. I have heard you say many a time that you married the best and would never look at another man. That's the way I have always felt about Percy.

As for the way he said my name it was his mama's fancy way of talking that had him calling me Beetriss. I kind of liked that. Made me feel like a movie star. It like to have broke my heart when they called Percy into service but the war ended pretty soon after that. Like as not he married some nice girl up north or out west some place.

I have got a framed picture of him and when I got your letter I took it out to look at it. I guess them little round glasses did make him look kinda like a owl. Well, owls are real wise, Esmeralda.

There's a young couple looked at the apartment upstairs. I hope they move in. It will be company for me just hearing them moving about up there.

I'm going on a diet. I have got to trim up that flabby flesh that flaps under my upper arms. It's an easy diet. All I have to do is eat grapefruits and mayo.

I'm praying for the Willing Workers but mostly for Boris Krantz.

Yours very truly,

Beatrice

Well, that letter didn't set right with me. I didn't like her doubting the Lord about a cure for cancer. And I was a little sorry I had made fun of Percy, although for the life of me I couldn't believe she loved him like I'd loved Bud. Percy Poteat couldn't hold a candle to Bud.

The next Friday when I went up to Mrs. Purdy's to clean her house, I saw they were having a yard sale next door, so I took a look. There was a glider for sale, and when the woman came down to my price, I went home. As I had figured, there was enough money in that fruit jar where I keep my savings to pay for it. Every week after I pay tithe and buy groceries, I put what change I've got left in savings. Papa always taught us not to spend all we got but to keep back some. I always made sure I had the price of a bus ticket in case I had to go see about Beatrice. Well, I called Elmer after I got that glider, and he said he'd haul it up to my house as soon as he closed the store.

I still couldn't get Beatrice's letter off my mind. It made me think a lot about Bud and that hateful war that was no war at all, just something the politicians got started and wouldn't stop. I still don't know where Vietnam is, but Bud said it was his duty to go over there and fight the commies. Well, I did a lot of praying with him over there. I thought my faith was strong, but I guess it weren't strong enough. They sent him to one hospital after another until I brought him home. What was left of him was nothing but pain and misery for ten years, eight months.

If Elijah had not helped me, I couldn't have took care of Bud. Elijah would come over here and bathe him, help
me get him in the car, do whatever I needed him to do. When Bud would get crazy and start hollering and tearing up the house, the only person could calm him down was Elijah. Many a night I'd call Elmer, and he'd go get Elijah and bring him up here. I'd get out of the room and leave it to him. By the time Elijah would get Bud quieted down, it would be daylight. I'd peek in the room and see the two of them in that old rocker, Elijah humming and holding Bud in his arms like a baby, rocking him back and forth.

I never could think about that without filling up, so I pulled myself together and thought about Beatrice.

It took a few days before I got a handle on Beatrice. I knew I'd hurt her feelings about Percy, but mercy me, I was the only person in the whole wide world who had a chance of easing her out of that fantasy. On the other hand, I figured maybe a dream was better than nothing at all.

The next time I was in the hardware store, I asked Elmer about Percy, and I got news that I knew might break Beatrice's heart. I wasn't sure if I should or could tell her.

As for a cure for cancer, I needed to say something to buck up her faith. But in my heart I felt like a hypocrite. Nothing any preacher, even Reverend Osborne, had ever said helped me understand for sure why my prayers for Bud weren't answered. When he went overseas, I asked the Lord a million times to keep him safe, and when he came home without his mind and his body shot through
with shrapnel, I asked the Lord to heal him, even though I didn't have much faith he would. And he didn't.

Now here I was, getting ready to tell Beatrice God would send a cure for America's Most Wanted killer, even though that killer still escapes the minds of the best brains in the country.

Well, needless to say, I didn't feel ready to tackle all this, but I finally picked up the phone.

It rang three times before Beatrice answered. She sounded down.

“What's the matter?” I asked.

“My tongue is turning black. It scares the daylights outta me.”

“Well, I should think it would!”

“I'm scairt to death. Do you think my dreaded disease is coming back on me?”

“No, I do not,” I said, although I was not so sure. That killer can show up anywhere. “Your tongue is turning black because you've been on that fool diet. You deserve to be sick unto death! You of all people do not need to be on a diet. You don't hardly cast a shadder as it is. Leave off the grapefruits and mayo and eat nothing but fresh vegetables, cornbread, and buttermilk until you get straightened out.”

“Are you sure that's what it is?”

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