Color the Sidewalk for Me (43 page)

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Authors: Brandilyn Collins

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BOOK: Color the Sidewalk for Me
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There's no good way to say it. I've been with a girl. Rachel. I never meant to. I don't love her and I want nothing else to do with her, ever. It just happened, Celia, that's all. We were on a beach at night, and I was wishing I was with you, thinking about our wedding night.

I'm dying, telling you this. Only a month to go, and I've gone and shamed myself like my daddy never could. Can you ever forgive me? I pray to God that you will. And will you still come? I'm going crazy waiting for your answer. Please say yes. I love you.

After the third reading I lay staring at the ceiling, Danny's letter having slipped from my hand onto the carpet. At first I felt nothing. Then I shook with rage and jealousy, burying my face in my pillow to cover the racking sobs. How could he? Our love had been so special, so perfect. We'd saved ourselves for our marriage, knowing it was the right thing to do. Now our wedding night could never be the same.
Danny, I cried, you've taken what we could have had, white and beautiful, and trashed it, dragging it through the mud.
I thought I would die. I sobbed all night, gasping, until the tears dried up. And I shook my fist at God, long and hard. Where had he been that night on the beach? How could he let this happen?

I did not attend school the next morning, did not venture from my room all day. “I'm sick,” I called to Mama from behind my door, picturing her face, thinking surely she'd last seen me with a letter in my hand.
But you were wrong after all, weren't you, Mama?
I raged inwardly. Danny hadn't broken my heart by skipping off to distant lands. He'd broken it in the arms of someone else.

All that day and the next I did not eat. Daddy knocked on my door, begging to come in. “I can't talk, Daddy,” I said, choking on tears. “Please.” And dear Kevy tried and tried until I finally relented on the second day, sobbing against his thin, boyish arms.

Finally I was spent. I could feel no more, cry no more. I stopped railing at God; I didn't want to talk to him at all. An eerie calm settled over me, spreading like a thick blanket that enveloped me. And from somewhere deep within, somewhere dark and dismal, a new emotion arose. It seeped into my heart and mind; it fisted my hands and stiffened my legs. I didn't even try to push it away; instead I mucked in it until all other thought fled from me. Consciously I swept God aside, telling myself that he'd done little for me anyway. Then, free to do as I pleased, I planned my revenge. Not once did I stop to consider that I would hurt innocent people.

That evening, with purpose, I took a long bath. Naturally, I dressed in what I'd worn my last night with Danny. The blue top, the skirt and sandals. Ignoring my mother's hawklike expression, the curious stares of my brother and daddy, I marched to the phone and dialed Bobby Delham's number. He needed no prompting, this young man of whom my parents approved. “I'm goin' out,” I informed them. Mama stared at me, astounded, a cold light dawning in her eyes.

I didn't lead Bobby to the oak tree canopy; that I could not do. I guided him instead to the rutted road where Mary Lee had taken Danny and me forever ago. We sat in the car, waiting for dark, and I watched him watch me with disbelieving anticipation. I did not care that I was about to destroy him, hoping only to destroy the one who had hurt me so much. When night fell, I urged Bobby into the field, where I seduced him, the boyfriend of my best friend. Even as he poured out I-love-you's, I felt nothing.

There is an emptiness worse than being alone.

Within two days a remorse-stricken Bobby would confess his sin to Melissa and stop dating her. “He loves you,” she would whisper bitterly. “You ruined him for me. You, of all people.”

When I got back home that night, clothes wrinkled and hair disheveled, Mama was still up. She took one look at me, at the blend of defiance and guilt on my face, and knew. I tried to slide past her but she caught my arm. “What have you done?” she hissed.

“Nothin'.” My voice was flat.

Her fingers dug into my skin. “Tell me it's not what it looks like, Celia.”

Not a word from me.

“Why?” she demanded. “How could you? After the way you've been raised!”

I wrenched free.

“What are we supposed to do now? The whole town'll know and you don't even care. Is this what Danny's done to you? Is this what he's taught you?”

With a sob I fled to my room, my soul blackened and sick to the core. I could not answer her question. Because the answer was yes.

Behind my locked door, hands shaking, I took paper and pen and told Danny everything.

chapter 49

May 16

Dear Celia,

I am dead inside. I know you did it only to hurt me, as I have hurt you. Now I feel the same pain. Let's forgive each other and go on. I love you with all my heart. Let's not do this to each other. You'll graduate in just two weeks. Come to me, Celia.

Even as I write this, I feel so mad—madder than I ever was at my daddy. Bobby's there with you. You're rich. You two could buy a fancy house, have a good life.

If you choose that, there will be nothing left for me here. I'll take that job on the ship to Greece, and when we get there, Mama and I will stay. There's passage and jobs for us; Rachel has arranged it. There's a job waiting for you too, if only you'll come. The ship leaves in three weeks on June 7. Until then I'll be at port here in Miami. This new job is a chance of a lifetime, and if I don't hear from you, I'm not going to lose it. But I don't want to go without you. I want you. Can you hear how bad I feel? God can help us through this if we'll only forgive each other. Will you forgive me, Celia? Will you forgive yourself? Will you come? Please. We had everything.

W
asn't life ironic? Danny and I had made it through three years of Bradleyville's trying to keep us apart. Now we could finally be together forever, and we were wrenching ourselves from each other as the town never had.

Looking down the tunnel of months and years, I saw only blackness without Danny. Even with what we'd done to each other, I still viewed my graduation as the birth of my new life. A life with him. We could not be apart. I loved him; he still loved me. We would go on, forgive, maybe someday forget. I didn't want Bobby. He didn't want Rachel, however beautiful and rich she might be. He didn't want Greece. He wanted me.

May 21

Dearest Danny,

I'm coming to you. You're right; if God can forgive us both, we can surely forgive one another. Please don't go. Please don't choose the world over me, even after what I've done. What you did with Rachel, you hadn't planned. What I did with Bobby was intentional. I was terribly wrong. I love you. I know you love me. Write back. Tell me you'll wait for me, Danny. Tell me exactly where to come. Wait. Please.

The following afternoon I slipped the letter into the slot at the post office. By the time I received his answer, graduation would be close at hand.

At school I could not bear to look Bobby Delham in the eye.

The days were interminable. I waited. People whispered and stared. Mama's outrage I could handle. Daddy's drawn face and grief were too much to bear. “You've disgraced this family and ruined a good boy,” Mama spat. “The only thing you can do now is marry him quickly.”

“Leave . . . me . . .
alone,”
I warned her, deadly quiet.

Somehow I endured the last two weeks of school. I barely studied for finals. Managed to pass them all. Finally my last day arrived. But I hadn't heard from Danny. Surely with such an important letter, he wouldn't have lost a day in writing back. Danny, Danny, I cried to myself, standing on the sidewalk in front of the school building, a
year ago we planned our night together, right here. Where are you, Danny? Why haven't you written?

I refused to attend my own graduation ceremony. Once again I could not eat. Sleep was beyond my grasp. Some dreadful sense told me that Danny had changed his mind about forgiving me. Unlike his, my sin had been so calculated and vindictive. And surely Rachel was there with him, sweet-talking, with more money than I'd ever have. At night I cried out to Jesus, pleading for him to do something. If he would just put me and Danny back together, I cajoled, I would serve him the rest of my life. I'd never, never take my eyes off him again for as long as I lived.

June 6 came. No letter. June 7—the day the ship sailed to Greece. Deep in my heart I knew Danny was on it, but still I clung desperately to hope. I thought of taking off for Miami to find him, just in case he'd stayed. But Miami was a big place. What if I couldn't find him and meanwhile his letter arrived? We could miss each other completely.

I began daily baby-sitting of the Harding children, a smile pasted on my face, my heart brittle, vacant. Finally the letter came. It was sitting on the dining room table when I got home from work, the small white envelope that would seal my life. Mama hovered as I snatched it up, a small gasp parting my lips. Not until I was in my room did I notice there was no return address. With pounding heart and shaking fingers I tore it open.

Celia,

We've arrived in Greece, Mama and me. And Rachel.

I'm so sorry. I loved you with my life.

Danny

chapter 50

I
n the days that followed I remember only darkness. Scenes of those days flit through my head like phantoms, shadowing despair. Somehow I managed to keep my job at the Hardings', sitting stupefied on their couch while the kids romped. In the evenings I slumped, immobilized, on my bed. Daddy knocked on my door many times but I would not let him in. Kevy grew constantly anxious, upset by the tomblike aura of our home. He tried his best to console me, to calm Mama, and failed at both. As for Mama, I did not think the rift between us could be worse. For in my grief over Danny, I could only lash out at her rebukes, full of my own hatred and spite. Yet if ever I needed her arms around me, it was then. But she offered no consolation, wrapped in her own pain and humiliation over my act with Bobby. I would not have guessed she had a heart to hurt. She seemed no more than a cube of ice, dripping with disdain.

Every moment was plagued with wondering how Danny could have left me. I reeled from blaming myself to blaming Mama to blaming God himself. God had betrayed me—not only with Danny, not only in failing to answer Granddad's biggest prayer, but in my very birth, for he'd placed me in the arms of an indifferent mother. Even Granddad's death seemed a relief to me then, for he would have been so bitterly disappointed in me.

You would think that I had learned enough. That in such grief my rebelliousness finally would have been broken and I would turn to God for rescue. Instead I shook my fist at the heavens, spitting in the very face of God.
Where are your promises to Granddad now? I stormed. Where's your healing for Mama and me?

And then late one afternoon the unthinkable happened. The split-second event that would change our lives forever.

“Everyone's talkin'!” Mama screamed at me that day after I dragged home from work. “I can't take this shame! You must marry Bobby. If he'll still have you.”

I slumped into Granddad's chair at the dining room table, full of grief and guilt and incensed that she spoke of this in front of Kevy. “Stop it, Mama!”

“Stop it? You started it! You've shamed us all.”

Her piety was more than I could bear. “Nobody shames anybody but themselves, Mama!” I cried, pushing out of my chair. “I shamed me. Me, no one else!”

“Yes, you've shamed yourself.” Her voice shook. “And Bobby and Melissa and your entire family. There is only one honorable thing now the two of you can do!”

“No!”

“Celia, Mama”—Kevy leaped up from the couch, tears in his eyes—“don't fight.”

“Kevy, leave me alone,” I spat.

“Please, Celia, don't fight! I can't stand to hear you fight anymore!” “Kevy, get away from me!” I flung out both arms.

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