Product Details
Margaret K. McElderry Books, May 2010
Trade Paperback, 240 pages
ISBN-10: 1442414375
ISBN-13: 9781442414372
Grades: 7 and up
Chapter Two
LISTEN TO YOUR FATHER WHO BEGOT YOU.
-- Proverbs
We leave the next morning in our broken-down car. Pa says we need to find a town where there's a factory and workers. After a day of labor, a paycheck in their pockets, their stomachs full, they will look for another need met. God as savior. God as entertainment. "This will be our best revival yet," Pa says.
It's a funny word, revival. It reminds me of a drowned lady having air blown into her mouth. We never go to the same place twice. What is there to revive?
The streets are dark with rain, but the sky itself is clear. We live our life by weather. We have been snowed in, rained out, and dusted over one time when the dust storm was so heavy we couldn't make our way in the car. Today, the fear is that if the rain starts up again, the road will turn to mud.
Rhett stands on the running board. He watches for signs that might direct our travels. From the look on his face, you'd think that he was skiing at a fancy resort instead of being blown around by an icy wind.
Once we've navigated our course, Rhett climbs back in the car and plops down next to me. He smiles and does tricks with string before falling into a deep sleep. Sometimes he mumbles from within his dreams; it is the only way I know that he has a voice.
I look out the back window at the few shops that aren't boarded shut and the diner where we had dinner, and wave good-bye. It's a habit I have. I pretend that there is someone waving back: a lady standing on a porch in a printed dress and apron, an aunt or grandma, a man in a hat and vest smoking a pipe, a grandpa, a bearded lady.
"Look, there's the school." Ma points as we pass a small white building with a flag. "It looks like a nice one. So many of them have been shut down. I wish..."
That's all she needs to say; Pa knows where she's headed, for she often talks about her enjoyment of school, her belief that I should go too.
"What's she gonna learn? That man is descended from apes?" Pa pounds the dashboard and he is off on one of his favorite subjects; the scientist's attempts to murder God.
I have seen an illustration that shows an ape all slumped over, then slowly standing straighter, looking more and more like a person until he is wearing a suit and hat. Whether we came from apes, or clay -- the hard soil of the earth -- it doesn't seem much different to me; both are miraculous, like there is something else driving life, and that something is invisible.
"That wasn't a bad town." Ma's voice is high, tense. "A person could live in a town like that, get to know people, settle down."
"That town makes Sodom and Gomorrah look like an advertisement for Paradise. It was a sin-pit."
It's hard for me to make a connection, though, between the barbershop and diner and the sinfulness he is going on about. It gets harder and harder to make sense of what he says, and I wonder if Ma feels the same. She told me that when she first met Pa, his voice was sweet as caramel. It sure is sour now.
I put my hands over my ears and lean up against the window. A thin crack runs right down the middle, but somehow it holds together. Ma once told me that there are miracles everywhere; they're just very hard to see. Here is a visible one.
Ma has said that without the car we would be "goners." The car has housed us many times when the weather was bad and we didn't have enough money for a room. And it brings us to places where we are new for a day or two (America loves novelty, Pa says), but the car is getting as tired as Ma. When Pa changes gears there is a grinding sound. The door is rusted and part of the front end has dropped off.
Within a few moments the shops shrink to dollhouse size, then disappear into nothing. The past has just passed again.
In better days, back in the twenties, Pa had bigger crowds; sometimes there were rich people. And he wore a velvet suit. Once, when I was three, an old lady who needed a hand with her soul let us stay in her fancy house for two whole months. She gave Ma a silk dress and put bows in my hair. This was when Ma still sang and she was the attraction, not me.
The rich lady gave Pa the car. She had bought it for her son, to keep him from running off, but he left anyway. She was afraid of the car. She asked Pa, "Do you think it's the devil's work, to come up with something that can move people so fast and far?"
"Let me take it off your hands," Pa said. "I know how to dispose of it."
The rich lady offered to keep me when they left. She said that without her son the house was too quiet and that my gold curls made her think of an angel. Ma considered it. She liked the idea of me living in one place, to grow in any direction that I pleased and not be stopped by the confines of a car or tent, but Pa said no, that Ma's voice was going sour and they would need something else. That something else just might be me, he said.
He had never paid much mind to me until the week before, when a man had come to him and said, "Your daughter is a beauty. Enough to make a believer out of anyone."
"Yeah," Pa had agreed, "I should work her in somehow."
I still remember the first time. I wasn't yet four. Pa tied a rope across two poles. "The air will hold you up. It is made of angel's breath. Just let your feet touch and the rest of you will float."
He was my pa. He wore a blue velvet suit. I believed him, and I did it.
"She's a child," Ma argued, but was silenced by Pa's glare.
At first Pa held my hand. Then, when the tightrope became higher, he used a pole to help me balance. Soon he just walked beside me while I learned to twirl and spin, to drop and rise on the rope as if I had been born on it.
I practiced from the time I woke up until lunchtime. Ma often said that I could walk the tightrope in my sleep. She thought Pa was being mean to me, but I liked the tightrope, then. The things Pa said that made no sense on the ground made more sense in the sky. I could see how angels might hover above the earth, like balloons filled with helium, how they might see everything going on and wish it was better, but not be able to touch the ground.
I could imagine myself any way I wanted up there: getting in my own airplane and flying around like Amelia Earhart, opening my own candy shop, or following the other girls in their blue coats and hats, their satchels, their lunch pails, and entering a schoolhouse where the teacher would slice facts and make them bleed meaning.
I could picture myself like everyone else.
How long ago was this? I've kind of lost track. I guess the passage of time by the weather and the changes in my body, the way flat places are growing rounder even as I sit in the car, and I wonder: How will these changes affect my balance?
"Moses himself couldn't convince me!" Pa erupts. All I know is that if Moses couldn't convince him, then Ma definitely can't.
Moses is one of Pa's heroes because he could walk up to a sea and it would split right open for him.
God came to Moses in a burning bush and told him, "You will lead my people out of slavery," but Moses wondered how he could do that. Who would believe that Moses saw the vision of God? "Besides," Moses told God, "I stutter."
"Take your brother Aaron," God instructed. "He speaks really well."
Moses argued over and over with God. Finally, Moses said, "Please send someone else!"
Pa says Moses didn't want to lead the people out of Egypt because he was too humble to believe that he could do it, but I think maybe he just wasn't happy about spending all those years hiking around in the desert with a bunch of whiners. Or maybe he knew that God would offer him the Promised Land, and then make him die before he set one foot in it.
While Pa is as skinny as Ma, Rhett is beefy. I lean against his big, warm shoulder. "Stay with us, Rhett," I whisper. "I hate it when you leave. It's no fun."
His arm flops over me, but he doesn't wake up.
There have been other folks who have traveled with us. There was once a lady from New Mexico. We met her in Oklahoma. She had a rattlesnake that she kept in a cage. She'd take it out and it would slide around her body, as meek as a kitten. This showed God's favoritism toward her, she said. At anyone else, the snake would strike.
The snake was responsible for the death of two of her three husbands. The third one had just been no good. He had stolen all her turquoise jewelry one night and crept away along the riverbed by the light of the moon. She never heard from him again, although she got a postcard from a friend saying he'd gone to California to build movie sets.
Snake Lady could speak in tongues. Her eyes would roll back in her head and ancient languages would crawl like snakes from her mouth. And she could heal. Pa has never had the healing touch. When he tries, half the time he knocks people over, whacking them on the forehead with the palm of his hand, shouting "Heal" with a Southern accent, even though he's from Chicago. Nothing makes a crowd madder than being promised they'll be cured, then having some preacher knock 'em over and sprain their ankle or their wrist.
But Snake Lady had a softer touch. A boy might come limping up and she'd massage his leg and whisper to him like he was her boyfriend and he'd go skipping away.
Pa said she asked to be dropped off in New Orleans, but Ma said he made her leave because she had the spirit and Pa was jealous of her talents.
Ma admitted to me once that Pa used to have the spirit. At night, he would lie awake, his eyes shining, and recite scripture. It was like he was in a trance, Ma said. In the morning, he didn't remember a thing. And it used to be he'd share what little he had with anyone like he was Jesus or St. Francis. But somewhere on the path between hunger and disappointment the spirit just took a different road and never visited him again. It was then that Pa turned mean.
After Snake Lady, a cousin of Ma's ran away from home and joined us. He was fifteen. His name was Big Ben. The joke of it was that he was about as little as you could get. Fifteen and he was all of four feet high and about sixty pounds. He didn't like being called Big Ben. He said Big Ben was a clock in London, England, and he was no good at telling time. But it was his name and he was stuck with it.
In his sleep, Rhett mumbles. When Aimee Semple McPherson was only nineteen she walked into a church, opened her mouth, and spoke in tongues. She was that filled with the spirit.
Since then she has healed more than five thousand blind, deaf, paralyzed, and heartbroken people. Of these, it must be the heartbroken that are worst off.
From beneath the gray blanket of air, atop the rumbling road, I fall into sleep. Usually, I dream that a voice comes to guide me. When I ask the voice who it is, it answers: a rock, a spiderweb, a branch, a white bead on an abacus. It has never once said God.
But today I dream of falling. I am on the rope when I grow very, very heavy and I fall into the crowd of God-struck people. The pale leaves of their faces tilt up and their white limbs rise to catch me as I am passed among the river of their hands, one to another, am kept by them, am kept.
Copyright © 2004 by Kelly Easton