1
I’m a loaded gun.
Henry knows. He thinks he and Jesus can save me from myself.
“Catrina, what you want is discipline.” Henry pushes aside the new issue of Farmer’s Almanac on the breakfast table instead of picking it up like usual, to show the gravity of the situation. “I know you were wasting time daydreaming in the woods yesterday and up in the cave again last night.”
If he knew I wasn’t daydreaming but creating my wild work in the woods, it wouldn’t make any difference. He’d still call it a waste of time.
“If Father won’t tend to you, somebody has to. Whoever heard of a girl roaming up and down the hills at all hours? Look at you—wearing boys’ pants and your hair hanging loose and tangled. It’s not proper.”
I don’t give a damn about being proper. It’s just a mess of rules that people make up so they can have a say in other people’s business. But I don’t waste my words on Henry. I tear off pieces of my biscuit and crumble them in my fist while he preaches his sermon. Since Papa’s off working in the barn, I’m the only one left in Henry’s congregation.
He crosses his arms over his chest, looking at me like I’m dirt on a stick. If the high slant of his cheekbones and the soft curve of his lips didn’t belong to our dead mother, I would slap his face. Mother had never minded what I wore and would never have talked to me this way.
“Plenty of girls are courted or already married at seventeen, but there’s not a man in his right mind who’d want to chase down and tame a wildcat like you. You should be here at home.” He tilts his chin up as he talks so the righteousness he spouts will fall on me like manna from Heaven. “When you feel troubled or restless, you should turn your idle thoughts to the Bible and your idle hands to work. That’ll sweep the wickedness out of any girl’s heart.” He nods, agreeing with himself.
But Henry and Jesus don’t know a thing about a girl’s heart. And they don’t know what it feels like to have a soul bent on wandering through dark places, looking for the missing piece of itself. They can’t help me.
“You’ll stay home today and set your mind toward improvement.” Mistaking my silence for acceptance, Henry opens the Almanac and shuts the invisible door between us. He doesn’t realize his words are bullets dropping into the barrel of my soul. I wonder what he’ll do if someone pulls the trigger.
Henry didn’t always treat me like the enemy. Less than a year ago, Abraham Lincoln was elected president of the United States, and Mother left the land of the living. That’s when Henry pulled away from me and Papa, just like the southern states drew away from the Union. Last year, the old Henry had a bright look on his face when I showed him the new weather vane I designed for our barn. Instead of making a horse or a rooster, I made two naked wind nymphs soaring on the breeze, their wings outstretched. Back then Henry didn’t call me wicked—he called me clever. Seems ages and ages ago.
I make a decision. If Henry glances at me over the top of the Almanac, I’ll smile at him. If he lowers theAlmanac and smiles, too, then that means there’s a chance we can find our way back to how we used to be before Mother died. I stare hard at the cover of the Almanac and chant inside my head, Look at me, look at me, look at me. I don’t take my eyes away from him so I won’t miss my chance. But Henry’s already forgotten about me. He finishes his coffee, biscuits, and molasses without glancing up.
“I’m traveling to Rolla today to get the papers and see how things are. We should be hearing more about the battle at Lexington by now. Damned Confederates and their Missouri Guard—they’re ripping the state in half. And not a hundred miles northwest of Roubidoux Hollow!” He slaps the Almanac down as he shoves away from the table. Dirty dishes are women’s work.
Right now I’d rather jump off a cliff than scrape another plate, churn another tub of butter, or scrub one more load of wash. A lump grows in my throat and I can hardly swallow. When the back door shuts behind Henry, I stretch my arm across the table and slide it over the surface in a great wave. The wave pushes the Almanac and the clattering tin plates and cups over the edge like God sweeping the Egyptians into the Red Sea. They tumble to the floor with a crash. I step over them and out the door. By the time Henry gets a quarter of the way to Rolla, I’ll be sitting on top of the world in a place where dishes, Bibles, and battles don’t exist.
* * *
The fresh scent of rain and wet cedar fills the air from a late-night shower that scrubbed the earth clean. It’s September, that twilight month between the heat of summer and the chill of autumn. In my mind I think of it like Missouri, the hazy border between the northern and southern states. They are uncertain, in-between times and places that aren’t quite one thing or the other. Yet.
I part the bushes at the edge of the ravine, and a small flock of thistle birds takes flight. The flutter of their wings sets the pace of my heart. A rush of cold dank air from the cleft in the rock lifts the hairs on my arms and finds its way under my clothes like icy fingers. I shiver and close my eyes, imagining the lonesome spirit of a dead man sliding its hands over my body, beckoning me inside the cave like a long-lost lover. The rim of the cave is as high as my hips, but I pull myself up easy without any fool skirts to tangle my legs.
The cave’s main tunnel is long and winding and leads to my secret place, a small opening high in the bluff overlooking Roubidoux Hollow. Henry doesn’t understand the darkness that settles over me, and why I need to come here, but Papa does. When Papa needs to escape his pain, he locks himself in his study with the books Mr. Lenox orders for him—they come all the way from St. Louis. Most people in Roubidoux only read if they have to—the Almanac, the newspaper, or the Bible sometimes—but Papa has always had his stories and poetry, and I have my tunnel to the sky.
Henry doesn’t open Papa’s books or climb into my cave to learn where it goes because he doesn’t own the patience or curiosity for it. Not anymore, anyway. Ever since Mother died, he doesn’t like to think too hard about anything he doesn’t understand. If he can’t wrap his mind around an idea in a heartbeat or see all there is to see of a thing in a glance, he can’t abide it. That’s why he’s turned cold toward me—he knows I’m a quiet cave with secret tunnels and open rooms beneath my stone face—dark places he doesn’t want to find. And Lord, how I want to be found. I ache for it. But not by a coward like Henry. I want someone who will climb right into me and explore every inch, knowing they might never find their way out.
I breathe in the smell of cool wet rock and mud as I crawl in the dark to my secret place. Nobody knows about it but me. Well, a couple years ago, Frank Louis, who’s older than me and mean enough to bite himself, followed me to the cave opening without me knowing. But I threw rocks at him and he ran away bleeding. Now I make sure nobody follows me.
I creep up through the muck and mire till I see a blue spot of shining sky. When I reach the opening on the edge of the high bluff, I lean against the damp wall of the tunnel. No one can see me way up here. Cold water drips from the top ledge onto my eyelid and slides down my cheek.
The gray snaky curves of Roubidoux Creek glint silver as the sun climbs over the hills. The stream winds around the slope of Hudgens Cemetery and slips through our cedar grove toward Stone Field, where our sorghum cane grows.
But I don’t look at the grove or the field. Today I see only the cemetery.
My eyes linger on Mother’s small mound of earth. Last night when I went there, a silver-dollar moon floated over the graveyard, casting black shadows and blue light around her grave marker. I considered getting a shovel and digging a tunnel down to her coffin. I wanted to break it open and crawl in beside her like I used to climb into her bed after I had a bad dream. Even though her arms are cold and stiff now, I still want them around me. I want to believe she forgives me for being the one who killed her. Papa says it was an accident. But I was still the cause of it. That was the day my darkness settled over me.
I thought about throwing myself in the ground with her. But it wasn’t the fear of going down into the grave that kept me from getting the shovel—I was afraid I might decide to never come back up. And I don’t want to break what’s left of Papa’s heart.
Soon the worms that have slipped into her coffin will chew her body into dirt. I imagine them crawling through her crow-colored hair that looks like mine and eating away her lovely skin that was once smooth and white as a new-laid egg. My friend Effie Lenox thinks I shouldn’t say such things. I said, if the truth is wrong, then what the Hell is right? Effie thinks I should imagine Mother in the next world, Heaven, dancing around on streets of gold. I love Effie and know she’s sharp as needles, but that’s bull.
When I die, I’d rather wake up here inside this world, become a part of it like the roots of the black walnut trees. Like the wild pawpaws and persimmons with their sweet smell as they rot in the ground, turning back into dirt, becoming something different, something new. I’d be the creek water that changes into mist and lingers in the hills, then rains on the fields, trickling down into the cracks where all the seeds hide. I don’t want to leave this world. I want to go deeper into it.
Two hawks swoop over the rocky ledge above. They call to each other like old friends or lovers and glide in circles together over the valley, picking out their breakfast down below. Their hungry cries pierce me near the heart in the spot behind my ribs where my loneliness festers. Watching them soar side by side makes the wound throb, and I screech my own wild birdcall into the sky. It ricochets off the hills.
Then, down below in Stone Field, someone returns my birdcall. I about jump out of my skin. When I look toward the sorghum crop, my heart stops beating. I forget how to breathe. I’m struck like a slap to the cheek when I see the field.
I blink, but it’s not my imagination. Great swirling lines curve and spiral through the rows of stalks as if God’s played a boys’ game, drawing giant circles in the cane field with His finger. The design stretches across five acres, as if it were meant to be seen from somewhere up high. It’s beautiful and terrible at the same time. I wonder—did I make it myself when my mind was too dark last night to think straight? I don’t think so. What does it mean?
My breath escapes me. A stranger sits on the black boulder in the middle of Stone Field, surrounded by cane. He’s naked as Adam and Eve. And he’s staring straight at me.
Text copyright © 2016 by Christy Lenzi