In the kitchen, Helen was sitting at the table cradling a hot mug
of cocoa, Aunt Gert was piling dirty dishes into the sink, and Granny was standing at the counter, packing our lunch tins. Any conversation they might have been having stopped when I pushed open the back door. Ignoring their silent stares, I flung off my jacket and boots on the mudroom floor. I grabbed the kettle off the stovetop, poured steaming water into the jug for my washbasin, and headed toward the upstairs. Helen broke the silence before I reached the hall.
“What's up with you, P.J.?”
Like she doesn't know.
“Shut up, Helen.”
Larry entered through the back door, hung up his jacket, and lined his boots neatly beneath it. Without saying a word, he followed me as I carried the hot water up the stairs. He stood in the doorway of my room and watched as I poured it into the washbasin and banged around in the dim light, looking for the soap and a towel in the heap of mess around it. I didn't care if I woke Alfred. The little brat could sleep through a thunderstorm anyhow.
“I don't feel any better about this than you do, P.J.,” Larry said.
“Do you mind? I'm getting washed!” I kept my back to him, found the soap on top of the dresser, and peeled off my shirt. “And move away from the door, would you? You're blocking the light.”
I finished dressing, grabbed my satchel off the floor, brushed past Larry, and returned downstairs. I pulled my lunch tin off the counter, slipped on my jacket and boots, and walked out the back door alone. After what had happened to Isabelle, I was sick of this place and everybody in it. I wanted out of there and away from them. I was furious at Ma for bringing us here, and I wanted her to take us home.
Uncle Jim stood at the barn door as I crossed the yard. He forced a smile and swept a hand through the air. I ignored him and rushed down the drive. Thomas was waiting out on the road, as usual, but I kept going straight past him, too.
“Hey, wait up.” He rushed up behind me. “What's the matter, P.J.?”
Like he doesn't know.
“You're not mad about Mr. White's stupid ol' cow, are you?” Thomas asked. “My dad said it was some bit o' business goin' down to the river after the dumb ol' thing.”
“Shut up, Thomas. You don't know anything.”
I picked up my pace and tried to lose him, thinking the whole of Northbridge Road must have been murderous crazy. My satchel
slammed hard against my back. I hitched my hands under its straps and huffed my way along the newly shovelled road.
Pat Jr. hurried down the Giddingses' drive, his satchel slung over a shoulder. He waved to me and picked up his pace. “P.J., wait up.”
I kept on going.
“What's up with him, anyhow?” I heard Pat Jr. ask Thomas.
If Pat Jr. couldn't figure it out for himself, he was as stupid as the rest of them.
At recess, Thomas searched me out. He and Pat Jr. were making a snow fort and he asked me was I interested. I wasn't. The snow was too dry to rollâit would crumble in my hands. It seemed a waste of time to try to shape it only to have it fall apart again. Mostly, I wanted to be left alone.
Thomas and Pat Jr. pulled huge chunks down from a snowbank, brushed them into near-perfect squares, and fitted them together.
Then they filled in the gaps with more snow.
Helen noticed us from across the schoolyard and sauntered over. “Ma says you're not being fair to Larry.” She scooped snow up from
the ground, turned her back to me, and helped Thomas and Pat Jr.
with their snow fort.
“What do you know, Helen?” I said, thinking that if she had something to say to me, she could say it to my face.
“Well, Ma says they did the right thing; that's what I know.” She patted in the snow, her head tilted back, her snot nose pointing skyward. “Ma said that old cow ran off on Mr. White and broke her leg. She said Uncle Jim
had
to put her down.” She brushed off her hands and turned to me. “At least he was there to help her out with her calf.
And
he and Larry are working real hard to keep it alive. That's what Ma said.”
“Who asked you, anyhow?” I wanted to pound her. Instead, I scooped snow up and sprayed it all over her.
“I'm telling Ma,” she howled.
“You go right ahead, Helen. Blab to Maâsee if I care.”
Larry walked home beside me after school, not saying a word. Thomas and Pat Jr. followed close behind with Helen and Maggie MacIntyre. For the first time since we had moved to the Island, Larry slowed his pace so I didn't have to take running steps to keep up with him. He knew I wouldn't anyhow. I fixed my gaze on the road and hitched my hands into the straps of my satchel, feeling herded in. No one spoke. Snow banked up on either side of us and crunched under our feet.
As we approached the house, Lu trotted up to the fence at the front pasture. She nodded and whinnied, then brushed a hoof through the snow.
“Not today, Lu.” I wasn't in the mood for games.
As I trudged up the drive ahead of Larry, I noticed Lu waiting by the fence at the end of the yard. I ignored her and kept walking toward the house. Larry caught up with me and grabbed my arm.
“What would you have done, P.J.?” His eyes searched for mine. His voice had deepened since we moved. It sounded like Dad's. Only sad.
“Something.” I stared off into the distance, refusing his gaze. Refusing to acknowledge that maybe my older brother shared my grief. “I wouldn't have just stood there and let Uncle Jimâ”
“Cripes, P.J.” Larry tightened his grip. “She broke her bloody leg.”
Then he calmed himself and let go my arm. He moved away and looked off toward the back pasture. “You should have seen Uncle Jim when he came backâ¦. It took him a long time before heâ¦you knowâ¦before he did it. He checked her all over again, just to make sure. He talked to herâ¦.” Larry's voice trembled. And for the second time since Dad died, I saw him cry. “He knelt down beside herâ¦in that freezing mudâ¦he held her headâ¦told her what a good girl she wasâ¦Howâ¦how she had done such a good jobâ¦He promised her we were going to take care of her calfâ¦told her not to worry. He stayed there for the longest timeâ¦.” Larry stepped back from me and wiped his eyes. “I think he was crying, P.J. I've never seen Uncle Jim cry.”
“He was?”
Larry stared at the ground and nodded his head. He looked about as sad as he had on the day of Dad's funeral. “Uncle Jim told me it was the hardest thing he ever had to do. Then he said for me to go home; he didn't want me to see.”
“He did?”
Larry waited for a moment. “Think about it, P.J. It would have been way worse for her if it weren't for Uncle Jim.”
I stood there, watching Larry brush back tears, and ran the whole
episode through my head. I saw Isabelle's pleading eyes and Uncle
Jim's finger on that trigger. Then I heard the gunshot ring out through the trees. But thinking about her situation and what Uncle Ed had told me about large animals and broken legs, there really
wasn't
any other way. I took a breath and nodded my head.
Larry put an arm over my shoulder as we headed toward the house. Granny and Ma were in the kitchen. Ma had baked an apple pie that
afternoonâmy favourite and an extravagance for that time of year.
She cut a generous slice of it and held it out as we entered through the back door.
“No, thanks.” I still couldn't stand the smell of food.
“Fine, I'll give it to Alfred.”
“I don't care.” I was sure Ma was thinking this was a first.
“Why don't you take a piece out to your Uncle Jim,” Granny said.
“He's in the barn.”
“I got homework.” I grabbed my satchel and headed across the
kitchen toward the upstairs. “He'll be in for his tea soon anyhow, won't he?”
“Wait a minute, young man,” Granny said. “I'm not
asking
you to take this out to your uncle; I'm
telling
you. It's about time you understood how things are around here. And stop your sulking.”
If I had learned anything about my grandmother, it was that she
won all the arguments; fighting with her was futile. I took the pie and scraped back across the kitchen floor and out the back door. My eyes stung and a lump formed in my throat.
Uncle Jim was in the barn feeding the baby calf. He smiled at me as I walked toward him holding out the pie.
“She wouldn't wait for you fellas.” He gazed down at the baby calf. “She was starvin'.”
When the calf finished the bottle, Uncle Jim pulled up a stool, sat down, and tucked into the pie. “Nice little thing, ain't she?”
“I guess.”
“Have you thought of a name for 'er yet?”
“Uh-uh.”
“What about Betsie or Cupcake? She looks like a Betsie; what d'you think?”
“I dunno.” They both sounded stupid to me.
When I turned to walk away, Uncle Jim got up from the stool and put the pie down. “Pius James, we should have us a little chat.”
I turned back to him and stared at the mud floor.
“Listenâ¦I had no business takin' you down them woods after that cow. If I had a notion of what we were gonna findâ¦. What I mean to say is, I shoulda had the brains to send you home. Anyhow, I didn't and I'm sorry.”
I glanced up at him and nodded, then dropped my gaze to the floor. I noticed a piece of a shaved hoof imbedded in the mud and concentrated on it.
“I thought good and hard about it. You know it was the last thing I wanted to do.”
“Larry told me.” I still couldn't look him dead-on.
Uncle Jim thought for a moment, then took a breath. “Listen Pius James, I think I've been pushing you boys pretty hard. What d'ya say we cut down on the chores a bit? What d'ya say we try to have us a bit a fun?” He looked straight at me and put out a hand. “How 'bout we shake on it?”
I saw the pained look on Uncle Jim's face. I thought about all the time he had spent with Larry and me over the past two months. How he had taught me everything I needed to know about tending Lu. How much care he put into her and Big Ned; how much he loved his herd. This wasn't a man who dealt out intentional harm.
I reached my hand out to him, then heard a rattling noise, and
watched the plate fly off the stool. And the calf leaning over it, baked apple and crumbs covering its face.
“Well, ain't that somethin'!” Uncle Jim said. “One day old and already she's into the pie.”
Uncle Jim and I stood and watched the baby calf lick crumbs from its face and sniff the empty plate.
“Cupcake's pretty close to apple pie, isn't it?” I said.
The evening after my conversation in the barn with Uncle Jim, Ma took me into the parlour and sat me down with her.
“You and your Uncle Jim patch things up?” she asked.
“Uh-huh.”
“You okay now”?
“I guess.”
Ma waited for a moment, then said, “I'm sorry, Pius James.”
“What for? You didn't do anything.”
“For everything,” she said. “For bringing you up here. For exposing you to things you're too young to see.”
“Like Isabelle?” I said.
“Like Isabelle.” She turned to me. “That sort of thing doesn't happen all the time, Pius James. But you have to understand that animals can get into trouble sometimes. Difficult decisions have to be made. Your uncle put Isabelle down because he didn't want to see her suffer. And it won't be the last time he has to do something like that. It's just too bad you had to see it so soon.”
There was a lot of stuff I had seen too soon. Like my dad in a closed coffin in Aunt Mayme's parlour. Like his funeral, which was first one I had ever attended. Like Ma packing up our house, giving most of our stuff away, and bringing us up here. Old Dunphy behaving like a lunatic at school and putting on his fake charm at Granny's dining room table. And Isabelle dying on a mud bank, while giving birth to Cupcake.
This was the first time Ma had talked to me alone since we had moved to Granny's. And now she was reaching into a hollow place inside of me and opening up a valve. I stared at the floor, blinking
back tears. But as sorry as I felt for myself, I had to realize that most of what had happened since Dad died wasn't Ma's fault. It was just a sad set of circumstances most people would call “fate.”
“What about Mr. Dunphy?” I asked.
Ma heaved a sigh. “He sits at our dining room table twice a month,
smiling and chatting like nobody's business. He gets into the class
room and he's somebody else altogether.” She paused and touched my shoulder. “I don't know what to do. Maybe he's unhappy, Pius James. What do you think?”