All That Lives (51 page)

Read All That Lives Online

Authors: Melissa Sanders-Self

Tags: #Contemporary, #Fantasy, #Ghost, #Historical, #Horror, #USA

BOOK: All That Lives
6.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Let’s play plow blade towns again.” Joel turned to Richard at the breakfast table, certain he had a willing partner for his
game. Each day since the plowing had begun, the boys had come home with dreadful cakes of mud on their woolen stockings. Mother
had Chloe wash them out at night and hang them by the fire all evening so they could dry for the next day, and our house strongly
smelled of rich red earth.

“When will John Jr. return?” I asked Mother, for I felt he knew the most about how Father conducted business.

“Yes, John Jr….” Mother allowed herself to dreamily not answer my question or finish her sentence as she sipped her tea. I
wondered if this was the effect of the milkweed and butterfly root. She seemed truly calmer and more relaxed than ever before
in a way that concerned me greatly. How could she be so secure? I thought we might soon be on the brink of financial distress
without Father. I could easily imagine the evils of poverty, all I had to do was picture Old Kate’s farm, but Mother appeared
confident on all aspects of Father’s business.

“Don’t you worry, Betsy.” She shook her head and reached to pat my hand, and despite the fact I knew she was growing stronger
every day, I noticed the blue veins rose high on the backs of her fingers, and I worried further. “There will be no trouble
with the crops,” she reassured me. “Dean has the knowledge and the know-how.”

“And the shoes!” Drewry smiled across the table, for he was well aware of the good feeling she had created amongst the hands,
having provided them with boots.

“Perhaps today I will put on a smock and venture out for a look-see at the state of my garden.”

“Do not go out too soon, Mother, for a chill remains in the air,” I cautioned her. Since Amanda Ellison’s funeral we had successfully
kept Mother at home, but as the winter days gave over to spring, she grew most anxious to work outdoors.

“Elizabeth, I am now blessed and warmed by the fruits of summer, but if I wish to grow my own, I must soon direct the pruning,
for the time to do it has nearly passed me by.”

“Have Chloe stay with you and carry the clippers,” I advised, for I knew she was still weak.

“Miss Betsy,” Mother laughed, “thank you for your kind concern, but I believe I am wise to my own condition.” Her laughter
caused her to cough a little and she grew serious with me. “You have suffered enough, dear girl; the loss of your father topped
with the anxiety of nursing your mother, and the absence of your oldest brothers. I know you are frightened by the knowledge
of all that has come before now.” She paused and I could tell she meant the Spirit and its unpredictable horrors. “But you
must strive to keep your thoughts on tomorrow, for therein lies your opportunity to better the days, each as they pass.”

“I do try, Mother.” I felt as worried as before.

“Of course you do, Betsy.” We sat in silence for a moment and then Mother smiled again, observing me. “The Easter holiday
fast approaches, and ’tis your birthday before that, in just three weeks’ time. Would you like to have a luncheon party?”

“I could invite Thenny and Becky Porter …”

“Chloe and I could bake a molasses and caramel cake for you.” Mother was most girlish and I recalled her face during the summer
at the dance when she’d coaxed Father to his feet. “What a good suggestion, I must say, even though it was my own. It is hard
to believe you are near fourteen already.”

“Near fourteen, but this past year seems to have contained more than a lifetime of experiences.”

“Dear child, I know how you must think it is, but older and wiser as I am, I tell you true, God willing, you have much still
to experience in your years ahead.” Mother rose from the table and took her cup to the kitchen, and I retired to the parlor,
for all I wished to do was sew the tiny stitches into the pleats of my dress. I spent the remainder of the day and a good
many more sewing away, and I did make fair progress.

The night before my birthday, a storm blowing from the south sent great clouds rolling over our house and a downpour fell,
lasting all the dark hours, so we slept to the rush of wind through the tree branches and the pattering of rain on the roof
and windows. When I woke early, a bright sun teased my ceiling and, looking out my window, I saw steam rising in wisps off
the ground, bringing to my mind the picture of angels ascending to Heaven in droves. I opened my window and smelled the rich
red dirt and the bark of the trees loosening their sap for growing, and I recognized the delicious odor of the world returned
to life.

I put on my oldest plain cloth dress, one I had nearly outgrown, choosing it because it did not matter how dirty it became.
I grabbed my boots and ran downstairs and through the kitchen without stopping to check on Mother, to have breakfast, or say
good morning to Chloe. I felt possessed with urgency of movement, compelled to be part of the beauty. I ran through the shrub
of Mother’s perennial herbs, successfully wintered over, through her fallow garden plot and out into the orchard, where the
purple bark of the plum trees shone like the skin of the Spirit’s cherries. Tiny pink blossoms and new green leaves steamed
everywhere over my head, undaunted by pruning. I raced down the hill, behind the stable and past the dairy house and on, and
by the time I reached the first planting field, I was completely out of breath.

My chest heaved and I was warm inside my coat. Hastily I shed my jacket and hung the winter garment on the post marking the
boundary of the field. They had plowed it yesterday and puddles gleamed in the paths. I climbed up to sit on the fence and
soak up the sun so I might steam to Heaven also, for there is nothing so tantalizing as a spring chill burned away by the
Tennessee sun.

I wanted to remove my boots and go barefoot in the red mud, splashing in the new puddles as Richard and Joel would have done,
had I bothered to fetch them along, so I balanced on the fence and untied my shoes without further thought. I felt the wood
of the split log fence fairly icy under my bare toes, and I shivered. Hoisting my skirt up to my knees, I jumped.

The red mud was delightfully squishy, warm and cold at once, and so smooth it made me squirm. I stood in a clear puddle and
saw the sparkling sun reflected as a million jewels of light behind my head. I wiggled my toes breaking the water apart into
many fractured pieces, then I waited, still in the center, until the image formed again. At the bottom of the pool the mud
oozed and I felt the small pulsations of worms crawling under my heels. I thought of Father in the field;
these worms make our soil the richest in the district.
A wind blew through the newly leafed trees and the steam off the ground rushed over me like a passing cloud.

Oh that I had some secret place where I might hide from sorrow;

Where I might see my Savior’s face, and thus be saved from terror.

Oh had I wings like Noah’s dove, I’d leave this world and Satan;

And fly away to realms above, where angels stand inviting.

The Being sang like a choir, from all sides of the field,with many harmonies, and when it had finished, all the birds in the
trees nearby were inspired to try their own songs. I had a strong sense that something good and wonderful and important might
happen, but I wasn’t sure what it would be. At the very least I was a year older! I dug my toes deeper in the muck. A meadowlark
in a tree nearby began to sing alone, heavily influenced by the Being. I jumped from my puddle to the next one in the row,
then on, from puddle to puddle, until I had splashed to the end where I turned back, to splash down the next row. Even though
it was my birthday, I thought Chloe might be annoyed about the mud accumulating on the edge of my petticoat but I couldn’t
stop until my skirt was wet and dripping and my feet tingled, almost numb. I decided I had best put my boots and coat back
on and return for breakfast.

“What does possess you, Miss Betsy?” Mother was at the table in her nightdress when I arrived back home.

“It was so lovely, Mother! The mist appeared like angels on their way to Heaven.”

“In good time and God willing we will all get there.” Mother spread blackberry jam on Chloe’s morning biscuits. “After I have
dressed and you have had your breakfast we will wash your hair and body, for you are not wearing your beautiful dress with
mud covering your feet.”

We had just put the final stitches in the lace of my dress the day before. I hurried through my meal and helped bring water
from the stream for Chloe to boil on the stove. Mother decided I should have my bath in the kitchen so Chloe stoked the woodstove
high until the room was heated to summertime temperatures. Mother filled the tub and I dipped my hair in the water and remained
bent over while Mother wove soap and lather through it with her capable hands. I loved the gentle touch of her hair washings
when done for cleansing and not for killing lice. With my head upside down, I saw two yellow balls plop into the tub and the
warm water splashed into my eyes.

Cut the lemons and pour the juice in her hair.

“Oh, thank you!” Mother appreciated the Spirit’s gift, for though she used lemons in the summer to part the tangles and add
the shine, in my birthday season they were a rarity.

“I will squeeze ’em down, Miz Lucy.” Chloe finished straining the juice just as Mother finished pouring the rinse water over
my head.

“Close your eyes,” she warned me, and I felt the cold tickle and smelled the tart juice of the lemons running over my scalp.
She rinsed it once more, then Mother had me dry my head, and sit in the chair. Her wooden comb slipped easily through my wet
locks, the strands separating like threads in the loom.

“Open up the door, Chloe, for it looks to be a lovely day outside.” With the door open I could see into Mother’s garden where
the sky was blue and bright with spring sunshine and all the trees of the orchard had opened their blossoms delighting in
the onslaught of buzzing bees and pale new butterflies.

“It is near time for your friends to arrive. Go and dress, Miss Betsy, for Chloe and I must ready the table.” I jumped with
excitement from the chair, happy my special day was to be so beautiful.

Thenny and Becky arrived together, accompanied by their mothers, and I greeted them in the hall.

“Betsy, how it does become you!” When I heard Thenny compliment the job I had done on my dress, I knew she was sincerely impressed.

“Will you turn a circle, slowly?” Becky did not remove her coat before expressing her admiration. “In France there can be
none finer!”

“ ’Tis so, because our Betsy is here.” Mother joined in the compliments.

“May I?” Becky ran her hand along the bodice seam admiring the tailored fit I had achieved. All my other dresses were the
old style, the bodice done up in smocking or darted pleats, but this one had a smooth fit across my bosom, and the lace Mother
had made was featured prominently at the edges.

“How ever did you make the pattern for it, Lucy?” Mrs. Thorn was an excellent seamstress and was interested in the new style.
“So many tiny pleats.”

“I shall show you the paper after our meal, Helen,” said Mother, promising to give her the secret.

We moved into the dining room and my hem swayed like a bell over my petticoats, exactly as Mother had promised it would. I
felt very proud to have made it myself. We sat at the dining table laid with a brocade cloth and Mother’s special china. Chloe
served cold sliced ham, wild turkey, hot corn biscuits, grits and beans, and the conversation divided into two, one amongst
the mothers, of dress styles and fashions from the French Almanac, and one amongst us girls.

“Betsy, last week when lessons started up again Josh Gardner came to the schoolhouse each day his responsibilities allowed,
his only hope that
you
would be present. He told me so. He is for certain sweet on you.” Thenny went straight to the heart of every matter and Becky
giggled, keeping her eyes riveted to my response. I felt my face grow hot.

“Thenny!” I admonished her presumptive nature but I could not keep from smiling.

Other books

A Sister to Honor by Lucy Ferriss
The Complete Short Stories of Mark Twain by Mark Twain, Charles Neider
In Perpetuity by Ellis Morning
Church of the Dog by Kaya McLaren
Geeks by Jon Katz
Our Love by Binkley, Sheena
Once a Runner by John L Parker
Messenger in the Mist by Aubrie Dionne