Read The Reading Lessons Online
Authors: Carole Lanham
Hadley had asked Lucinda about her “m” one afternoon while debating a vexing line from their current V.I.L.E. selection in which Gringoire says of Esmeralda;
“She is a salamander, she is a nymph, she is a goddess, she is a bacchante of the Menelean Mount!”
Hadley thought a
bacchante
must be some sort of ancient flower. “He’s saying she’s beautiful. Like a flower,” Hadley said. Flowers were the most beautiful things in the world, but Lucinda was certain that the
Menelean Mount
was a volcano she’d once read about in a school book.
“Gringoire is enchanted, yes, but it’s fiercer than that.
Bacchante
is the fire that rains down from the heavens when the inside of the world erupts. Esmeralda is no flower.”
Lucinda wore a bracelet with three gold charms shaped like a small “m”, a big “L”, and a little “b.” Hadley watched them jangle when she touched her hair. Seeing the little “m,” he forgot all about
bacchantes
and
Menelean Mounts
. He swept the charm into his palm. “What does this stand for, Lucinda?”
Lucinda took hold of his pointer finger and touched it to the gold letter. She whispered the secret word against his cheek, “Maribel.”
Ever since that day, Hadley had been murmuring it to himself. Lucinda
Maribel
Browning—Nymph. Salamander. Igniter of all heavenly fire!
Loomis stared at him expectantly, but Hadley didn’t want to share Lucinda’s middle name.
At Maple Lawn, he’d once missed dinner for saying Penrod’s name by accident. “House boys are not to act familiar with Tweebs,” Sargent had scolded.
Lucinda let him hold her charm in the cup of his hand. She breathed Maribel-shaped breaths against his cheek. Somehow, he feared that if Loomis learned what the letter stood for, he would feel that hot tickle of pleasure against his own cheek, and Hadley had no desire to share such pleasures with Loomis, the hoeboy.
“It stands for her middle name,” he said.
“Good guess, moron,” Loomis snorted.
“It’s a secret,” Hadley said, his ears heating up. Outside of Lucinda’s daddy, he felt sure he was the only one in all of Lucinda’s Empire who knew the secret meaning of her “m.”
Loomis didn’t have a clue. He didn’t understand what it was like to sleep with dirty books in your bed. Every night, Hadley nodded off with names like Mr. Thwackum and Hester Prynne still shaping his lips. His ribs were poked by pointy buckram corners, causing him to dream of pitchforks and fingernails. Mornings, he woke with gilt-pocked cheeks, and his torch rolled off across the floor, its dim beam trained on an empty wall. This was his world.
For all his years, Hadley had been plagued by the notion that his life had yet to begin. Everything he’d ever done was just part of a boring prologue. Real life was still a page or two away, but it was coming. He could feel it! Every time he took up one side of a book, and she took up the other—he could feel it.
All that was missing now was some sort proof to validate that he’d arrived. A person with a real life had stuff to show for it. They had clutter they wished they could pitch or burn, but they didn’t pitch it, and they didn’t burn it because, in the end, it was everything. It meant too much. When a person with a real life passed on, no one else had any use for their junk or even knew what it all meant. If Hadley died, there would be no evidence to show that he’d had a life at all. That was how he knew that he’d not really been born yet.
Slip the loop off the acorn button on Mama’s sewing box, and you would find so much proof, whole hours would be lost just sorting through it all. Even the smell spoke of living galore. The felt lining was rubbed thin and stamped with the earthy scents of collected feathers and dried petals and the tang of old coins. It smelled like Mama’s pearly hand lotion. It smelled like withered paper.
In a compartment meant for sewing needles was an embroidered handkerchief folded in fourths. A lock of hair, nine baby teeth, and a tarnished silver spoon were wrapped up inside like a present. A pair of gloves occupied a little button drawer, the soft fingers coiled into tight musty fists. And in a bigger drawer that was long and slender and molded to the shape of scissors, there were two pocket bibles, one black and one white, a photograph of Grammy Talitha as a fat tintype baby, and a water-stained brochure for
P. Dewrights Cemetery Plots & Ornamental Urns
. Mama kept a few regular things in the box too, like a chain of safety pins and a spool of white thread, but those were purely disposable. What made Mama drag that old sewing box through the years was a Sunday School medal, a pineapple doily, and a curl of Hadley’s hair. Hadley himself had an old tackle box that he tossed junk in, but he it didn’t seem like the same thing. A boy didn’t keep a squirrel bone for any better reason than the fact that he was a boy.
Things were changing though. Hadley was beginning to gather proof of a life he might soon have. Shortly after the reading lessons began, it became necessary to slash the mattress of his cot. When no one was looking, he stuffed purple notes into the ticking.
###
During summer vacation, “lesson” time was after lunch. Usually Hadley and Lucinda spent the time reading. On a few occasions, Hadley helped Lucinda practice pinochle so she could join Laura Haney-Wayne’s fancy card-playing club. Hadley loved pinochle and was pretty tough to beat. Other days, they stretched out across the grape vine rug on the Log Cabin floor and talked until it was time for Hadley to go back to being a house boy. On these days, Lucinda forgot to be allergic to the simpler things in life.
“Why is your skin that color?” she asked him on one such
talking-instead-of-reading
day. She lay beside him, crossing and uncrossing her ankles, her eyes fixed on his skin. There was a book opened in front of her called
How to Be Plump
but
she was still on Page One.
Hadley was consumed with the new oxblood marble he’d won off Loomis that morning.
“Dirt,” he said, with regard to his color. He rubbed the marble on his shirt and held it up to the light, examining for defects. It was perfect.
Loomis had named the oxblood the
Bloody Lime
because it was a limeade marble with red swirls. Hadley had been trying to win it for months, but Loomis wasn’t often inclined to play for keepsies. The boy had been downright unsporting when Hadley took it from him, shouting
bastardwhoreshit
at the top of his lungs while Hadley twisted it out of his fingers. They exchanged a few punches before Mr. Sweet came stomping out of the house and told them to get back to picking the mealy bugs off of Mr. Browning’s vines.
Now that it officially belonged to him, Hadley ran the Bloody Lime around the vines on the rug, pretending his new marble was Barney Oldfield in his amazing Peerless Green Dragon. The Dragon took the curves at full speed, the carpet whorls transformed into the flinty narrows and quicksand washes of the death-defying
Cactus Run
. . .
“What about under the dirt?” Lucinda said. She stretched her arm out next to Hadley’s, obliterating his racetrack with her sailor sleeve. “I look like milk, and you look like cocoa, even in the places where your skin isn’t smudged.”
Hadley shrugged. He didn’t think they looked so different except Lucinda was pretty, and he was a boy.
“Daddy says it’s because you got a nigger in your wood pile.”
“That’s funny,” Hadley said, reaching under her armpit to retrieve his prize. “I don’t even have a wood pile.”
“Daddy says you’re what people call a mule auto. He’s always asking me if I’ve managed to teach that little mule auto how to read yet.”
Hadley had a notion that saying mule auto was a lot like saying
bastardwhoreshit
. “I don’t know about that,” he told her. “But my fifteen-year-old grandad was a USDA Certified slave.”
USDA Certified
was what Mama always said.
“You can’t have a grandad who’s fifteen,” Lucinda told him. “I don’t think they let you be a grandad unless you’re old.”
Hadley dropped the Bloody Lime in his pocket. “Well my grandad was fifteen, and he got beat to death just for kissing my grammy.”
Lucinda stared at him in such a way, he wished he could take the words back. He was pretty sure his fifteen-year-old grandad was supposed to be a secret. Mama always talked about Winner Purdy in the quietest of whispers. She always called him Winner Purdy or Grandad, never Daddy, and the words came out quiet and shaky every time.
“The only thing I ever saw of Winner Purdy is a stick-cross on Slave Hill and the tears that dripped off Grammy’s chin every year on my birthday,” Mama had said.
Lucinda’s eyes were round as marbles. “That is
sooooo
romantic.”
“It is?”
“Your grandmother must have been a princess or a ballerina or something important like that if they killed a slave boy over her.”
Hadley nodded. “She was a spinning girl.”
Lucinda picked up Hadley’s arm and started drawing circles with her fingertip around the bones of his wrist. “I wonder if it tastes any different.”
“You can taste me if you want to,” he offered.
Lucinda waggled her tongue over his skin, searching for the cleanest part. She settled for a place on the inside of his wrist.
“What do I taste like?” Hadley asked.
She licked his skin. She licked hers. It took several licks to decide. “Poor,” she said. “Your skin tastes poor. My skin doesn’t.”
“Is poor bad?” Hadley wanted to know.
“It’s surprising, is what it is,” Lucinda said. “Poor tastes a lot better than I thought.”
###
One morning, Hadley fished a note from a puddle of honey that Lucinda left behind with the crusts of her toast. At the time, they were reading
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
,
but the sticky words did not come from the story.
We need a sharp knife, Hadley.
Hadley was thrilled.
That afternoon, he went to Club with a boning knife slid up his sleeve. The fun came to a stand-still, however, when Lucinda took hold of it and told him to stick out his finger. “We’re going to make a blood pact, just like Tom and Huck.”
In Hadley’s opinion, it was enough that Huck said cusses like
by jingoes
and
damn
. “We don’t need to spill blood over this, Lucinda.”
“That’s easy for you to say. You trust me. I, on the other hand, have no faith in you at all. Unless you’re willing to make a pact that we’ll keep
V.I.L.E
. a secret forever, I’m going to have to ask you to quit the club.”
Hadley gnawed on his lower lip. “Them boys used a needle, as I recall.”
“Needle-dweedle! We’re not such cowards, are we?”
He looked down at his finger. “That knife’s real sharp, Lucinda. I cut up a chicken with it yesterday.”
Lucinda angled the blade so it sparked in the light. “We wouldn’t want a dull knife, would we?”
Hadley thought about this. “Okay, but I’ll cut my own self, if you don’t mind.”
She pressed the knife to his skin. “Oh, but I do mind, Hadley. Now quit your squawking and hold still.”
In retrospect, this wasn’t the smartest moment for him to call her a
Bossy Bessie
, but Hadley didn’t recognize that until
after
she cut him.
“Whoops,” Lucinda said. “You’re quite a bleeder, aren’t you?”
###
Usually the lessons were fun. Hadley particularly liked playing
Great Expectations
and, after they’d finished reading the book, began thinking all his thoughts with an English accent. They’d come up with the game one Monday morning when it was too rainy to work outside, and Mr. Browning suggested they fit in a lesson before the sun came out. Hadley got down on all fours so Lucinda could step on his back and reach down the smelly cardboard box in the hall closet that held her mother’s wedding dress. Lucinda put the dress on a giant stuffed bear she called Thomas. Thusly, Thomas, who was far too agreeable for his own good, became crazy Miss Havisham, and his black button eyes commenced to shine with sick fancy. To complete the effect, china plates were gathered, clocks were stopped at twenty to nine, and Lucinda’s bedroom was transformed into the ripe, candle-lit ruins of Satis House.
Enough House
, Hadley preferred to call it, and even though the bear plotted against him and Lucinda dealt out cards and insults with equal hard-hearted fervor, Hadley enjoyed playing Pip to her Estella. He understood Pip better than any other character in a book.
Two weeks later, when they took up David Copperfield, Lucinda put the dress away and reset the clocks, and Hadley knew to be nervous again. Insults, he could live with, but he had learned that Lucinda was not above taking things too far. He never knew what to expect next.
The following month, when they read
The Count of Monte Cristo
, she convinced him to drink wool dye in order to prove his dedication to
V.I.L.E
. After that, Hadley puked indigo for a day and a half. After that, he quit the club.
“Oh that’s a pity,” Lucinda said, wrapping her index finger with the chain of her tiger tooth necklace. “And we were just about to start
Romeo and Juliet
, too.”
“I know how that story ends,” Hadley scoffed. “You can find yourself another Romeo.”
“It was the kissing part I had in mind to try,” she said, sighing woefully. “Oh well. I guess Loomis Sackett might be interested if you’re not.”
“You wouldn’t kiss a Negro,” Hadley said.
The skin beneath her twisted chain was white as a daisy petal. “At least Loomis Sackett is a
proper
Negro.”
Hadley shook his head once, and then twice. “You wouldn’t kiss Loomis Sackett.”
“I’d rather kiss you.”
“You would?” Somehow he began to forget about that indigo puke.
Lucinda shrugged. “It might be fun.”
“All right,” Hadley said. “But no more poison.”
Lucinda didn’t kiss him, though. She let him lay next to her on the log-cabin-room sofa/burial vault, but they both had to pretend that they were dead. Even so, Hadley reasoned that holding his breath and lying still next to Lucinda was better than nothing at all.