Margaret made it to the head of the receiving line awful fast for someone whose legs are not always dependable. She let go of Lor- raine’s arm and grabbed Mike’s hand in both of hers. “Now listen to me. You take care of this girl here. We’ll be watching you, son.”
Bernice added, “We love her so very much,” and she did a curtsy that made her trip over her own feet.
Mike kept her from falling, and Margaret quietly turned and told Lorraine to please put Bernice’s television on something be- sides the BBC.
It’s hard to say “thank you” when you’re not sure what you’re thanking somebody for. I might write one line about the picture, but that don’t begin to tell it. I guess one thing I want them to know is that they’re the ones who’ve been taking care of me. Maybe only once a week, but faithful. I wish that word didn’t sound so religious. Faith to me is putting my heart where my hope is. I don’t have no doubt what Margaret Clayton and Bernice Stokes hope for me. I feel it every time I see em. I believe I can be happy, which is more than I was brought up to wish for. That’s progress, and I’m not one to sit around and wait.
c h a p t e r tw e n ty- on e
Margaret
E
scaping was not my idea in the first place, I’ll swear with my hand on the Bible, something I have never done except the
one time in my life I had to go to a court of law, and that was only because my maid Desiree shot her husband in the leg with a pistol. I’m not saying I didn’t
want
to get out, I mean I didn’t actually plot it. Where did we really think we were going to end up anyway without being tracked down? It would have to have been a hell of a lot further away than downtown Raleigh, I’ll tell you that. We’d have had to make it to a secluded beach in Mexico or somewhere, and that truly would have been a feat because the only thing I can say in Spanish is “burrito” and Bernice, well, need I say more?
All that being the case, it was still worth every minute, even listening to my daughter Ann tell everybody in creation and me personally about a hundred times that she was so beside herself with worry that she got a migraine headache and had to go to bed sick for two days. Poor thing couldn’t swallow a thing but soda crackers and ginger ale. I’m sorry for her trouble, but she’s never been someplace like this that she couldn’t get out of if she wanted to.
I do not want anybody’s pity. I’ve lived a long time on this earth and I’ve worn myself out in pleasure and in pain, and that’s enough. And I’ve never been sick to speak of except for the f lu
or a urinary infection sometimes, that’s it. I know my time’s coming sooner or later, we all do, but the kicker of it is, right here I sit, old as Methuselah, and most of the time I feel pretty damn good. The only time I’m a little bit out of sorts is when I eat something greasy, and that’s something that’s not going to change. I was raised on fried chicken, pork barbecue, and hot-as-fire sausage, and I have absolutely no intention of changing my diet now as long I can persuade Ann to smuggle contraband in here.
As with most great escapes, timing was everything. I had woken up from my nap and was about to switch on the television but dropped the remote. It would ordinarily have to stay there until someone else picked it up. I don’t think I’m able to reach that far over the side of the bed without it looking like attempted suicide.
“Don’t get up, don’t get up,” Bernice cried, walking in from the hallway. “We’ll get it for you, darlin.” The “we” meant herself and the stuffed animal she was carrying. I hadn’t yet gotten used to the fact that she no longer carried Mister Benny. It had definitely taken some time for her to get over his being burned up, but she was back to her old self now, and at her side waking or sleeping was her new friend, a bright red, white, and blue stuffed bulldog with no eyes. I had often asked Bernice if her friend had a name, but I finally gave up when all she said was, “You don’t know her. Her people are from Virginia.” I guess she figured if she never told anybody that bulldog’s name, she’d never risk the same fate as befell Mister Benny, who in my opinion was probably enjoying his eternal rest at this very moment at the bottom of the county landfill.
Bernice put the remote on the table beside my bed, almost knocking over a water pitcher and my glass of ice. “Thank you Bernice, bless your heart. Otherwise, that thing would have to stay down there ’til dooms- day or a nurse walks by, and I don’t know which one will come first.”
“I like helping you, Margaret.” Bernice smiled her usual toothy grin. “I’ll help you every day. You’re my neighbor.”
“I am, sugar. You have no idea how much I appreciate that.”
“I want to do something.” She leaned in real close, and I got a little nervous that her upper plate of dentures was so loose it would fall out of her mouth and onto my lap. “I want to leave here tonight. Both of us.”
I stared directly into her eyes and said, “We’re here together and we’ll do all right, but don’t start thinking about getting out. It doesn’t lead to anything.”
I was probably more blunt with her than I ought to have been, but I had to tell myself that same thing every now and again when I had a real good day, walking and eating and digesting. I might start won- dering if I could sleep in my own bed again. I knew better. I knew better, and it didn’t matter if it made me mad or not.
“We can go, we can go right now, I’ve got my own money,” Ber- nice continued, as serious as I’d ever heard her.
“Bernice, you do not have any money, go to bed.”
She promptly reached down inside the bosom of her nightgown and pulled out a wad of green, all crumpled up in a roll.
“One, two, three, four, five, six . . .” She kept counting all the way up to ten twenty-dollar bills as she laid them down beside me on the blanket. I cranked myself up in the bed. No doubt about it, she had stashed away a nice little bankroll. The most I’d ever been able to keep tucked away was fifty dollars—that’s what Ann gave me to keep here “for emergencies” as she called them. I have no idea what kind of emer- gency she thinks happens here except one where an ambulance comes to get you, but I don’t argue. I like having a little cash around me.
I lowered my voice. “Where in God’s name did this come from?
Get over there and close that door.”
Bernice peeked out into the hallway, pulled my door to, and scam- pered back in. The only sound was a quick “whish, whish” of her slide-on scuffs dragging across the linoleum f loor.
I picked the money up off the bed and handed it back. “I don’t
know where you got this, but if you stole it, you’re going to be in more trouble than anybody who ever lived.”
Bernice held her ground as usual. “It’s my money, all mine. Won it. You ask Alvin.”
“Alvin?”
“Poker playing. Ask Alvin. I won it. We play in the middle of the night. He’s supposed to be washing f loors, but he bets money. I got ten bills right here. Just like the Ten Commandments. All the thou shalt nots. I memorized them. I won this money. It’s all mine. Always save for a rainy day. I hid it good too. But don’t hide your light under a bushel—that’s in the Bible. Did you know that?”
I was accustomed to Bernice’s forays out of the sane world, but I had no idea what she was talking about. I knew she used to have money once upon a time, but I also knew that she didn’t have a cent of it to herself anymore.
“Bernice, tell me where we’re going to go when we can’t even go to the parking lot? You take your money and put it wherever you got it from and go to bed.”
She leaned in again. “I’ll show you. It’s a trick I saw Alvin do.” “Bernice . . .” I started to reiterate my objection, waiting for some-
thing sensible to come so I could say it and be done with it. Instead a crystal-clear picture dropped down in front of my eyes. It was the next morning and there was a bowl of cornflakes in front of me, and a local Baptist youth choir was at the door of my room in matching red T-shirts singing something like, “God is my Rock—rock on, God.” An epiphany of sorts.
“Let’s do it.” I grabbed both her shoulders. “Right now, before I think another thing about it. Reach down there and undo this bed rail.”
Sometimes things make more sense the more you think about them, and sometimes they make less, and it often doesn’t have to do with anything except the way you’re feeling in that exact minute. Right then, Bernice’s plan sounded like the most sensible thing in the world.
It was like she knew she needed my brain, which is no great shakes, believe me, but she figured in her own special Bernice way that we’d make a good team. Don’t ever rule out how somebody’s mind might be working, even when it looks like it’s not working at all.
“Get ready to go, let’s go, get ready,” Bernice said, scurrying back into the hall and to her room.
“Don’t worry about me. You give me five minutes.”
I managed to struggle into pants and a sports jacket, the same things I had taken off earlier. That’s the kind of outfit I liked for traveling because it was comfortable to sit in. Then I got my cane, just in case, and cracked open the door to take a look at the nurses’ station. There was a big clock hanging in the hallway with light-up numbers. Nine o’clock. Everybody went home after feeding us dinner and cleaning up except the janitors and a couple of nurses on duty. One was sitting at the desk f lipping through a clipboard. I thought her name was Gina, and I did not have a good feel- ing about her. I had seen her stand right there when a buzzer was going off in somebody’s room and instead of checking to see what was wrong, she’d take her time talking to Alvin or another one of the cleaners about the best way to grow tomatoes. With all the halls sticking out from the nurses’ station like points on a star, trying to go anywhere except to the other end of our own hall meant we would have to pass right by her.
Bernice reappeared, gesturing wildly. “Come on! Come on!” “Lead on,” I answered and pulled the door closed behind me as I
stepped into the hall. The rail along the side of the wall made it easy for me to walk at a good clip. Gina looked up when we approached the desk. Before she could say anything, I told her I had a leg cramp and that I really didn’t want to have to take any pain medicine so Bernice was walking with me.
“It’s late,” Gina said. I waited for her to say something more, but she didn’t, simply went back to shuff ling papers.
“I can’t wait to close my eyes,” I said loud enough so she could hear, and we strolled leisurely around the desk.
When we got to the end of the hall opposite ours, Bernice reached down for something under one of the linoleum tiles. “This is my trick. Alvin does it so the door won’t lock. He smokes cigarettes outside. It’s my trick now,” she said and stuck the found object, a bent nail, into the crack of the door, enough to keep it from closing all the way.
“Bernice, you win the prize. You and your friend . . .” I stopped. “Don’t you think it’s about time you told me her name?” I pointed at the eyeless bulldog crushed under her arm.
She smiled and said, “You don’t know her. She’s from Virginia.
You tell me a name.”
Without even thinking, I said, “Well being that she’s patriotic colors and all, why don’t you call her Betsy Ross?” I knew Betsy Ross was not from Virginia, but I also knew Bernice didn’t know that, and I had no idea where she got the idea of Virginia anyway.
“Betsy Ross! Betsy Ross is the boss!” Bernice was delighted.
The air outside was fresh, just a little chilly, exactly the way I liked night air to be. I wanted to stand right where I was and do nothing but breathe, take it all in, but Bernice had hold of my arm and tugged me along. We walked past picnic tables at the edge of the parking lot and down the driveway toward the road. The trail of white cigarette butts on the ground told me that Alvin was not the only one doing the door trick.
Cars passed in both directions, and directly across the road was a gas station and an Ace Hardware store, both closed, on either side of an all-night Tastee-Freez. It was Shangri-La as far as I was concerned because from my own window I couldn’t see one thing except a water tower and a trailer park at the edge of somebody’s dirt field.
“Bernice sweetheart, I guess the Tastee-Freez has got our name on it. What do you think?”
Nobody looked up when we walked in, not that there were more than a handful of people, just a couple of teenagers with their faces
about two inches from each other, and a bearlike man wearing a base- ball cap sitting in a booth eating a hamburger in big bites, like a cow chewing cud. The lights were enough to blind a person—I have always despised bright lights in a room where somebody’s trying to eat.
Bernice walked directly up to the counter where a girl with thick black lines painted around her eyes and what looked like a fish hook hanging out of her nose said f latly, “Help you?”
“Y’all have banana splits?” Bernice stood up on her tiptoes and leaned in like she was saying magic words and then plopped Betsy Ross on the counter in front of the girl.
“Let me help you, Bernice,” I intervened. The girl’s expression told me what she was thinking, staring at the red-white-and-blue bulldog. “God, this is one crazy old bitch. Why on my shift?”
I picked up the dog and said, “I know Gardner Jr.’s going to be one happy boy when he gets this back.” I took a stab at making Betsy sound like she belonged to somebody other than an eighty-year-old woman. “Make it two banana splits, please,” I continued, gently pull- ing Bernice away from the counter with me toward a booth and out of suspicion’s line of fire.
“Lots of nuts!” Bernice waved her hand to the girl, and I thought to myself, “You’re not kidding.”
We took a booth across a narrow aisle from the hamburger man, who looked like a truck driver to me—he had that “I stay up all night and drive” look about him. I went to the self-serve area and brought back two cups of ice water, and when I sat down again, he looked at me rather suddenly, “ ’Scuse me, could you pass me that bottle of ketchup? Mine’s run out.” He pointed at a little tray of condiments on our table.
“Yes sir, I can.” I reached over to him without getting up. “Thank you. I ’preciate it. I have to have ketchup on my hamburger.