You Are My Only (18 page)

Read You Are My Only Online

Authors: Beth Kephart

“I'm not tall enough,” I say.

“Try harder.”

I stand on my toes, press my knees into the low wall beneath the sill. I tip across the ledge, lower my shoulders, and now when Joey stretches, his hands clasp mine and he pulls himself toward me on the tree.

“Little by little,” he says, his words pressed out of a too-small space, and I'm pulling so hard that I can't speak. “Slow,” he says now, “and easy,” and my arms are around him, his weight is near, I can hear his thumping heart, and the limb bends and rises like a seesaw game and the leaves shower down to the ground.

“It's not safe,” I say.

“I'm almost there.”

“The tree's not strong enough.”

“It better be.”

I hold tight and ease him in, hug him slow off the wobble of the tree—his cheek on my cheek now, his words in the space between my neck and chin. “Not bad for a girl,” he says, and then he's laughing, and I'm laughing, pulling him up and in, until his head and neck and shoulders are through the open window, and his one knee is on the sill, and then the other is through, and he's beside me, in my house, in my attic, breaking every single rule, the splinters shivering beneath us.

“What are you doing?” I ask him, breathless.

“Aunt Cloris made cookies,” he says. “Thought you should have some.” And now he digs into his pocket and finds the cookie crumbs and puts the cookie back together on his hand.

“Chocolate chips,” I say.

“That's right,” he says, and then he's kissing me, breathless, and the cookie falls to the floor, and it's all I've ever wanted is these kisses.

“You shouldn't be here,” I manage between everything.

“I should be,” he says, “because I like you.”

“I have brothers I never met,” I tell Joey later, after the moon has decided to come out after all, a bright moon, growing smaller.

“Aunt Cloris told me,” he says. “At least a little.”

We lie each on one joist, the carpet of pink stuff between us, watching the moon disappear, the night grow lighter. “You'll get in trouble,” I told him, but he said that he wouldn't, that Miss Cloris and Miss Helen were all in favor of keeping a friend in need safe.

“I've been safe all these years on my own,” I told him.

“But now you don't have to be,” he answered, and after that he held my hand over the fluff of pink stuff and stopped talking. We had a million things to say and nothing needing immediate saying. I had stories in my head—my stories, his. I had his hand in my hand, the taste of Miss Cloris's cookies on my lips, my mother sleeping down below, the box of personals. There were two little boys. They weren't outside. The fire got them. The fire still burns my mother's knees.
What do you suppose any of us wish to be remembered for?
she asked me.
For the things that tried to stop us or the ways we carried on?

“What are you going to do?” Joey asks me now.

“Find out the truth.”

“What happens if you don't like the truth?”

“It can't be helped. It will be true.”

“What are you hoping?”

“Hoping to stay here, to stop moving. To go to a real school. To go into town. To get a dog of my own and take an Airstream adventure.” To go fly a kite, I almost say, but I remember not to.

“That old Airstream,” Joey says softly. “It's not going anywhere.”

“How do you know?”

“Because Aunt Helen's time is soon. She's dying, Sophie.”

I turn, search for Joey's eyes in the dark. “She's dying for sure?”

“Little by little, but quickly. Aunt Cloris pretends like it's not going to happen. Aunt Helen lets her. It's the only way, I guess, for them. Except sometimes I find Aunt Cloris crying.”

“How long,” I ask, “does she have to live?”

“She stopped going to doctors,” Joey says, “a year ago. She said there was nothing they could tell her that she didn't already know. Make every day count, is what she says now.” I squeeze Joey's hand and close my eyes, try to picture Miss Cloris and Miss Helen. The big one and the little one. The wheeled chair and the custard. The clanking chains of the porch swing at night. Miss Cloris left behind. My whole body hurts just thinking of it. A tear falls from my eye, and then another tear, and now my whole face is drowning with the sadness of what is to come and what can't be changed and the pressing down of time.

“You're lucky,” I say. “Growing up with them.”

“I still miss my sister,” he says. “And my mom and dad.”

“Unlucky and lucky,” I say. “At the same time.”

Emmy

“ ‘The barn was very large,' ” I read, from the
Charlotte's Web
book. “‘It was very old. It smelled of hay and it smelled of manure. It smelled of the perspiration of tired horses and the wonderful sweet breath of patient cows. It often had a sort of peaceful smell—as though nothing bad could happen ever again in the world.'”

Past the rectangle of the window, snow falls, fat and wet and white. All morning, all afternoon, it has laid its whiteness down, and beyond the window, in the courtyard, the bare trees wear the red bulbs of Christmas. The sound of the weather has worked its way inside—the hush-pause and the down tick, the ache in the clock on the walls.

“Autumn.” I stop. “Sweetheart, look.”

But she has closed her eyes and she won't look up. “Keep reading,” she says with a sigh.

“‘It smelled of grain and of harness dressing and of axle grease and of rubber boots and of new rope,'” I read on. “‘And whenever the cat was given a fish-head to eat, the barn would smell of fish. But mostly it smelled of hay, for there was always hay in the great loft up overhead. And there was always hay being pitched down to the cows and the horses and the sheep.'”

I smell Christmas Eve on Autumn's breath, the chicken potpie that we ate with a slender wedge of cheese and a little puddle each of cranberry juice poured out in Dixie cups. Someone had brought in an old stereo and plugged it in with old-fashioned Christmas blues, and we sat there, together, while Jimmy Butler sang “Trim Your Tree” and Felix Gross sang “Love for Christmas,” and when Sugar Chile Robinson sang “Christmas Boogie,” Wolfie took up Virgin Mary's hand in hers and a space was cleared on the tabletop and the two of them danced, Virgin Mary's eyes a million miles away, but something close and near on her lips, something like a blessing. I half expected Autumn to dance, but she has learned her lesson, she says, or so she told Bettina five days ago, when they returned privileges to her and unlocked the door and told her, “But we are watching.”

“‘The barn was pleasantly warm in winter when the animals spent most of their time indoors,'” I continue, even though we both already know what will happen with the spider and the pig, the words in the web, the radiant, the terrific, the humble, “‘and it was pleasantly cool in summer when the big doors stood wide open to the breeze.'”

“I'd like some of that summer breeze,” Autumn says.

I take my time reading—give Charlotte A. Cavatica and the farm fair and the magnum opus all the space they need, until my eyes start to close and my thoughts drift off to Baby and how I will not be holding her, will not be singing to her, will not be saying, “Happy First Christmas, Baby.” I won't be saying, “I love you,” and that is why she'll never know. You are not a mother if your daughter never knows.

I hear a knock at the door, the knob turn. “Bettina?” I say.

“Am I interrupting?” she asks, and when she comes in and stands there, I think of how Bettina is practically an inmate, too—born here or not, here she is, the Christmas hour approaching, and nowhere to go but to Room 433. She has let her hair grow down to her shoulders, and it falls in irregular curls. She has taken the cross from her neck and pulled a sweater over her uniform, and at the hem, some of her yellow slip sticks out. Her hose are white and see-through. Her knees look blue and cold.

I watch her watching me, just standing there, thinking something I can't see, and then it's as if she remembers why she's come, and from her apron pocket she slides a package tied with string. “It appears that you have a correspondent,” she tells me, and I shake my head no. I have no correspondent. I have nothing, except for Autumn, except for Charlotte and Wilbur and the farm.

But she stands there anyway, lit up by the lamp beside her and the Christmas colors from the courtyard below. “Here,” she says. “Addressed to you.” I sit tall, my back against the wall, and the package smells like rainwater and stamp glue, wood shavings and graphite, the accordion fold of old air.

“Ma'am?”

“Yes?”

“I have no correspondent.”

“Apparently, Emmy, you do.”

I turn the packet over in my hands. Loosen the strings with my thumb. Look up at Bettina, but she only shrugs.

“Special delivery,” she says, and she stands there waiting for me to open the thing, but I won't do that until she's gone.

“Merry Christmas,” I say.

“Merry Christmas, Emmy, Autumn,” she says after a minute goes by, after the snow keeps falling past the window. When the door closes, Autumn turns and sits up beside me, and still I hear Bettina in the hall, feel her near, smell her sadness, and I wish I had a present to give her, a box for her to take down the hall, to the elevator, past the guard, across the spokes, through the arch, into her quarters. If she was born here or not. If she is in love or never will be.

“What do you suppose?” she says.

“Don't know.”

I set Charlotte aside. I slide the package from one hand to the other, turn it over again, do not recognize the handwriting on the brown envelope, cannot read the ink across the stamps. It is not a book, or I would feel it. It is not a hat; my mother's gone. It is not a scarf or mittens, because it has no lean into or stretch. It's something solid inside. Too hard and heavy to be fragile.

“Autumn,” I say. “We are remembered.”

The snow is falling. The year is almost done. I cannot see the clock on the wall or hear its ticking. I split the package seam with my longest finger, run my flesh through the thick packing, reach inside, and take my Christmas. It is cold to the touch; it is sculpted. It is driving wheels and bell and smokestack, cylinders and steam chest, whistle. I know what it is, and it is perfect.

“Who?” Autumn asks.

“Arlen,” I say, and I am like the snow, falling, falling.

Sophie

He leaves the way he came—a shimmy down the long arms of the tree. I hear his front door swish and creak closed, and he is gone, and the light leaking in through the window is pink. From another rooftop or another tree, the crows return. I smell like Joey and attic splinters and chocolate.

Mother will wake soon. She'll rub her knees and call my name, and if I'm not where I'm supposed to be, there will be questions; there will be trouble. Slowly, I walk the attic boards and the right part of the stairs. I step into my room, change into a T-shirt. I crawl into bed and try to sleep over the wildness and strange hurt of my head.

When I wake, she is standing above me, her long hair falling forward. The sun through the window catches a small square of her face—the blue river of a vein working its way to her eye. The flesh beneath her lashes looks like the scratched-out scribble of a sketch.

“What's gotten into you?” she's asking.

“Mother?”

“Nine a.m. and still in bed?”

“It just happened,” I say, rising up on my elbows and rubbing the sleep from one eye. My head still hurts, and now my heart, too, and my throat is like a scene from Cather's desert. I swallow and hear the click.

She studies me, tucks her hair behind her ears. She fits her hands onto her corduroy-skirt hips and leans in, closer. I take a long, deep breath and pray that she cannot hear my heart. “what's this?” she asks me now, lifting a spot of pink fluff out of my hair, into her hand.

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