Part II: Journeys (Chapter 23)
Sheldon parks the car in front of the small rock house, just outside Timber City.
There are no other houses in
sight.
The sun, just setting.
A chorus of peepers and
katydids, in a call and response, chirp to each other.
A tension – maybe static – seems
to crackle around us.
Sheet lightning in the
distance. A hot night, the humidity hanging in the air like a damp towel. I had
heard about the humidity here, how it clings to you, but I never realized how
it could sit on you and make you beg for relief. Half moons of sweat drip under
my armpits, and my skin feels hot and scratchy and raw.
Later, I’ll find out about the
chiggers, how they get on your skin and stick to you until they get what they
need.
My sister’s thin silhouette
poses in the doorway, long cigarette in hand.
My stomach suddenly churns; I
don’t want her to see me like this, fat and bloated.
I want to be thin like her,
thin like the rest of the world. Why, for our first meeting, does she have to
see me like this? Why couldn’t I lose this weight, at least for this first meeting?
Why can’t I exercise willpower
like other people?
I feel trapped in this body, a
body I had never asked for or wanted.
I’m a prisoner of biology.
I want to jump into the car and
race back to Pennsylvania. Instead, Sheldon takes my hand and leads me toward
the house.
As we walk through the yard, I
begin to see Ruby’s features better, her short auburn hair, high cheekbones,
blue eyes. She wears a Razorback tee-shirt, faded baggy jeans, and sandals.
“Come in,” Ruby says in a
southern drawl. She takes a deep drag from her cigarette, a Virginia Slims 100,
and blows the smoke toward the ceiling.
When Sheldon sees the cigarette
dangling from Ruby’s fingers, he gives me “that” look.
I want to say I had no idea
about the smoking. How was I supposed to know, anyway?
A man, also with a cigarette in
his hand, and two kids come into the living room.
“This here’s Raymond, Tessie,
and the baby, Stevie.”
Raymond nods to me; he looks
just like his photograph – longish brown hair, sharp blue eyes (perhaps a bit
on the sardonic side), lopsided grin – except now, he’s in his work clothes, a
green mechanic’s jump suit with “Ray” embossed on the pocket.
In the picture I have at home,
he and Ruby are dressed up in Sunday clothes; he wears a striped Qiana shirt
and she a red sweater.
“Hi,” I say.
The kids hide their faces in Ray’s
pant legs.
If my Pappa were still alive, I
might want to hide my face in his pant leg as well.
The little girl peeks from
behind her father; she looks just like her mother’s First Communion photograph.
“They’ll come around,” Ruby
says, steering us toward the dining room table. We all sit down and stare
across the table at each other.
I don’t know these people!
Ruby lights another cigarette. “I’ve got an idea,” she says, “let’s play some cards. You know Gin Rummy?”
“Yeah,” I say.
Better than staring at each
other, groping for something to say.
Besides, you get to know people
fast when you play cards with them. Auntie had taught me that.
While Ruby pours sodas all
around – she doesn’t offer anything alcoholic – I begin the deal.
By the third or fourth hand,
Ruby and Ray have revealed themselves as casual players, a relief. They slap
cards down willy-nilly and don’t pay attention to what has been played,
laughing when someone, mostly Shel, “rums” them.
I’m glad, because serious players can be a bore, taking just about everything in life, including themselves, too seriously.
Shel is one of those people; he
plays cut-throat Rummy, swooping up piles of cards and imperiously slapping
down books and runs. He gloats when he wins and sulks when he loses.
Soon, growing tired of Shel’s petulance,
we stop playing.
To fill the silence, I broach
the awkward topic of the past, those few months together, long, long ago.
Ruby doesn’t remember anything;
I must sound silly going on and on about baby stuff, a one-way memoir about a
time and people alien to my captive listeners.
Even when Ruby yawns, I can’t
seem to stop talking, I’m trapped in this loop, and my mouth won’t stop, I need
to talk through those times and hope that a hint of recognition passes on
Ruby’s face.
But nothing.
I can’t relate to this grown-up
Ruby, I just want to go back and start over, find my little sister again, make
my Nana and Pappa listen to me, and if that doesn’t work –
We’ll just run away from
L.A. and hitch a train to Sioux City, like old bums...
– There’s no place in Ruby’s
life for me anymore.
In stages, the kids come
closer: first, Tessie peeks out from behind her father, and then hides again.
Stevie mimics his big sister. Soon, both kids are sitting at my feet, staring
up at me. Tessie even touches my pant leg and then tugs at my jeans.
She giggles when I ruffle her
strawberry hair.
“They don’t see too many
strangers,” Ruby says, flicking an ash into a crystal ashtray.
For a second, I see echoes of
Mother, the languor, even the drawl. Mother slurred her words when she was
drunk, and I just hope Ruby hasn’t inherited the family problem. But, so far,
I’ve seen no evidence of empty beer cans, no Hamms in the refrigerator, no hard
liquor bottles in view.
A curl of smoke wafts around
Shel; he clears his throat and coughs a little.
I tap his shin under the table.
“Ouch!” he yelps a little.
“Sorry, honey,” I say sweetly.
I nod toward Ruby and Ray. “Very sensitive bones.”
“I’m allergic to cigarette
smoke,” Shel says, batting away another puff.
Now I kick him hard. “Sheldon!”
“Oh,” Ruby says, stubbing out
her butt, “I’m sorry.”
Ray follows suit. Both swat at
the air.
“Wouldn’t want y’all to get
sick,” she says, getting up to empty the ashtray.
“I get very ill when I inhale
the stuff. Can’t breathe.”
“Never knew anyone like that,”
Ray says.
“It’s getting more common,”
Shel says, sniffling. “Environmental diseases.”
Ray nods. “Environmental
diseases,” he repeats.
“Yes. That’s right.”
“You Yankees sure do have some
strange ailments.”
“Raymond!”
I can almost see Ruby kicking
her husband under the table.
“Sorry.”
“It’s okay. But you know, some
people are even allergic to perfume,” Shel says. “I have a ‘no smoking’ and ‘no
perfume’ practice. It’s the new thing now in therapy. Specializing. Clients
know what to expect upfront, and I don’t have to breathe pollutants.”
I want him to stop this right
now, I don’t want my sister mad at me for such silliness, so I kick him again.
Shel sits up straight, but he
can’t seem to stop once he’s gotten going: “Just means one less confrontation
in therapy. Not that all confrontation’s all bad, it’s part of the Gestalt
approach, but it’s got to be an important confrontation, not a minor one about
smoking or perfume.”
“Well, I’ll be,” Ray says,
nodding his head.
“Mind you, I’m not allergic to
perfume – in fact, I rather like it –”
“Wouldn’t know it,” Ray says,
sniffing the air.
“Please, Ray...”
“Just makin’ a little joke,
honey.”
“It’s okay, folks,” Shel says,
a nervous flutter in his voice. “Quite funny, Ray. Really.”
Ray nods, gets up from the
table, and rubs his stomach. “Well, I’m goin’ t’bed. Gotta get up early. Need
help with your suitcases?”
“That would be nice,” Shel
says.
We all troop out to the car to
get some of the luggage. Then Ruby shows us our bedroom, a small room in the
attic. The bed, covered with a homemade quilt, looks a little lumpy, but since
we’re staying only three days....
Shel yawns and says he’s going
to bed too.
Ruby and I go downstairs, where
we sit up all night talking, drinking Cokes.
I tell more stories about our short time together, my sister nodding politely.