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Authors: Bobbie Ann Mason

Clear Springs (35 page)

BOOK: Clear Springs
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“Mama, what do you remember of your father?” I ask.

She’s busy dusting the ceiling with a towel pinned onto the broom. I remember how she used to pin a diaper on the broom and swab the cobwebs away.

“He never loved me,” she says, with a bitterness that could etch stone.

“How do you know?”

“I just do.” She sets the broom down and fiddles with a pillow tassel.

“What about your mother?” I ask. “I don’t remember ever seeing a picture of her.”

“There’s a big portrait of her in the attic at the other house,” Mama
says. “It got accidentally walled up behind some insulation, and I never could get it out.”

“Oh, can we find it?”

“There won’t be no use trying to get it out now,” she says. “There won’t be nothing left.”

“How do you know?”

“We had another picture like it, and it crumbled to nothing years ago. I’m sure it’s all crumbled to dust by now,” she says, busying herself with a mob of worn dishrags.

I wish I could see that picture. Maybe the special conditions in the nest of insulation protected it. Maybe it survived. Maybe there would still be a ghostly impression of my grandmother Eunice’s face—the grandmother I never knew.

A while later, Mama hands me a box of loose pictures. “I think there may be a picture of my mama in there. I don’t know if you ever saw these.”

It is a candy box. I remember how Daddy always assaulted a box of chocolates, punching down the centers to find the ones with nuts in them.

The large photograph on top is a school picture, in which parents are posing with their small children in front of a large two-room plank building with a dogtrot breezeway.

“That’s Mammy Hicks holding my mother,” Mama says, touching two small figures in the second row.

Mammy Hicks—my great-grandmother—appears thin and old, with fair hair pulled back tight. Her daughter Eunice is in her lap. She’s a chubby little girl with long, dark curls. She is about six.

“That’s your mother!”

“They said I had her black hair. She had a Burnett face, round and fat. They said she was the prettiest thing and she loved to laugh and she had little fat hands.”

Mama shows me a thumbnail photo, the kind made in a booth at the dime store.

“That’s my mother on the right and my Aunt Hattie on the left,” she says, sitting down on the couch beside me.

I can barely make out two tiny, round faces with pompadoured hair. I need a magnifying glass—or perhaps a floodlight. I remember the searchlight at the county fair when I was growing up, how it would play across the sky like a giant windshield wiper. Looking for enlightenment here in these bits of the past is like playing that light across the
night heavens. It blanks out the stars, but it seems to be looking for something significant to alight on. Of course, the searchlight at the fair was merely waving its big arm of light in order to be seen from afar. But I really am looking for anything that will illuminate the pathways from the past to my own psyche. I know how one set of grandparents helped form me, but the other set was always missing.

“Tell me more about your parents, Mama,” I say. “What were they like? Could they sing or play the fiddle? What was your life like when you were growing up?”

“Oh, I can’t remember.” She laughs. “I declare, my mind’s not two inches long.” She jumps up and starts packing some pillows into a toilet-paper carton from the grocery.

Of course, all my life I’ve known the bare outline of her story. It was like a tree that had lost its leaves. Hanging from its bare branches was the lone orange that she received for Christmas one year. My mother always gave us more than we deserved, slathering love on us in compensation for her own deprived childhood. The night before Easter, she labored at her sewing machine long after supper, finishing our Easter outfits for church. Christmas was an extravagant production, with scads of presents—toys and books and clothes, usually including an outfit she had sewn for each of us. And she stuffed treats into our Christmas knee-socks hanging from the door facing—apples, Brazil nuts, chocolate creams, peppermint sticks. That Christmas orange was on her mind.

Drawing on the theory of chaos, I imagine how the Christmas orange comes down to me. In chaos theory, the smallest incident has far-reaching consequences. The ripple effect of the exhaust fan of an air conditioner in Paducah, say, may eventually affect a storm in Padua. I like to imagine how generations of the attitudes and behaviors of country people—a legacy of paucity and small shadings of pride and resistance and shame—intertwined and radiated down through time in increasingly complicated shapes. There is much more to my mother’s story than the orange. I want to know the details. I want to color in the outline.

Later in the day, after I keep pestering her, Mama sinks down onto the couch again. “Where do you want me to start?” she asks.

21

At twenty-one, Eunice Hicks was afraid she was going to be an old maid. One of her sisters, Hattie, was already an old maid; nobody would marry her because she had fits. Another sister, Rosie, did not marry until she was thirty. Having children so late in life was risky; Eunice and her sisters knew of women who had died from bearing children too late.

Eunice was aware of the wild, red-headed youth up the Clear Springs Road, the rough, flirty boy who acted older than his years—Robert E. Lee. She liked the way he laughed and joked around. They had attended different schools, but she had seen him working in the fields, or hanging around the general store at Clear Springs. She had seen him driving down the road from the store to the river bottom in a mule-drawn wagon with his father. The sight of Robert Lee whipped her up inside like someone beating egg whites.

Eunice, who lived with her mother and raised tobacco and calves, had good things to start out married life with. She possessed a smart buggy and a healthy, fine-looking horse—a sign of status and prosperity. She owned a Hoosier pantry—a staple kitchen item of the time, a wooden unit of cupboards with a built-in flour dispenser funnel and a porcelain countertop. As a young woman of means, she was in a position to attract a respectable husband who owned some land. But instead, Eunice married the good-looking neighbor with the sexy swagger and not a penny to his name. The marriage was an immediate disaster, lasting less than a year. Robert Lee abandoned Eunice before their baby was born. He fled the county, driving off in Eunice’s horse and buggy. Possibly they were legally his property, through marriage, but no one in Eunice’s family saw it that way. He was a thief. And they never forgave him.

“You go straight to the courthouse,” her mother told her when she
straggled home in a neighbor’s wagon, cradling her big belly. Divorce was uncommon in the 1920s, but Eunice, humiliated and angry, immediately filed the papers. Her mother and sisters all said she had married beneath her, and she realized it was true. Robert Lee hadn’t even given her a real home, just a corner in his parents’ house. He didn’t own a farm. All he could do was hire out as a laborer. Everybody in the neighborhood let her know what a big mistake she had made. “You grabbed the first trifling tramp to come sashaying down the road,” they said. “You’re lucky your mama let you come back home after he run off.”

Eunice gave birth to her baby and resumed life with her mother and her sister Hattie. Before long, Luther Moore, an older man with grown children, noticed her at a church supper. Luther had recently lost his wife. He was the opposite of Robert Lee—a respectable landowner. When her divorce was final, Eunice married him. With her baby, Christy, Eunice moved to Luther’s pleasant cabin-style house, down the Panther Creek Road. Finally, she felt settled and provided for.

Christy’s earliest memories are of living there with her mother and Luther Moore. She can recall the layout of the house, the long porch facing the road, the cistern at the back door. She remembers creeping into the bedroom and seeing her mother and Luther Moore in bed together. When she tried to crawl into bed with them, they pushed her away. Eunice said, “Now go to your room, go on,” in a shushing tone, her hand shooing. And Christy retains another glimpse of the past: her stepfather went outside behind the shed, and Eunice told her child, “Don’t go out there.” Hushed warnings and secret loss were at the heart of Christy’s closeness to her mother.

When Christy was four, Eunice grew big and Charley was born. Christy remembers the little baby and how afterwards her mother was wild with fever. Neighbors and kinfolks fluttered in and out as Eunice lay in bed suffering. She had convulsions. Christy was stowed in Luther’s wagon on a pile of tow sacks and driven up Panther Creek Road to her grandmother’s house. She didn’t see her mother alive again. Later, everybody said, “Your mama oughtn’t to have died. She wasn’t tended to right.” One neighbor told her years later, “I was there, and that doctor pummeled on her stomach. I saw him. He got up on the bed on his knees and worked his fists on her. That’s what killed her.”

Eunice’s death unhinged the whole Hicks family and neighborhood. They couldn’t stop talking about it, searching to cast blame. Rumors floated around, stories compounded out of fear and grief. A conspiracy
theory evolved. A lame man in the neighborhood was reported missing—murder was suspected—and somehow he got worked into the speculations about Eunice’s death. Maybe she was murdered because she knew something about the lame man’s disappearance. Maybe Robert Lee was in on it. Eunice had been wronged once by Robert Lee, and there was talk that she had been betrayed again. People whispered and buzzed. It was a hot summer, good for porch gossip. Rumors were built on a purloined tarpaulin and a truck leaving out in the night. Someone heard the ghostly footsteps of the missing man—his hobbled leg thumping. Someone else saw a woman carrying a bushel of leaves to a cistern in the moonlight. All of these stray tidbits grew into a garbled suspicion of adultery and murder and a body dumped in that cistern. Who did what to whom isn’t clear. There was likely little to any of this, just talk and superstition. But over the years, the suspicions spread like fungus creeping outward from the basic wrongs done to Eunice—abandonment, betrayal, death.

After Eunice died, her children were separated. The new baby, Charley, was raised by Luther Moore and his mother, and Christy stayed with her grandmother, Susan Hicks, known as “Mammy Hicks,” the woman who would ruin her good knife skinning a mole. Mammy Hicks and her daughter Hattie, who still lived at home, looked for signs of Eunice in the little girl. They shortened her name, Bernice Christianna, to Chris. In her hair and her cheekbones, Chris favored Eunice, but now and then they glimpsed sinister traces of Robert Lee in her.

In her new home, Chris traipsed off to explore the fields and the outbuildings, until someone ran to catch her. The new place, with its vast fields and choked fencerows, seemed to swallow her up. Mammy Hicks owned sixty-two acres, with a good barn and a stable, an orchard, a smokehouse, and a henhouse. She even had a telephone, and she had once had an elegant two-story house, but it burned, destroying most of her fine furniture. A widow, she managed well with the help of her brother and her grown sons, who rebuilt the house and did the heavier farm work. The farm was a lonely place, though, for the only child, a spirited four-year-old.

She played alone, with the meager playthings that had been scrounged up for her. Her aunt Rosie gave her a little duck, and she treated it like a doll. She talked to it and carried it around.

“Chris wooled her duck to death,” Mammy told her daughter Rosie later. “It liked to broke her heart when that little duck died.”

“That’ll learn her,” Rosie said.

Chris played with the pig. Mammy always kept a pig named Pet—a new one each year. Pet was never penned up, and he would hang around the yard, waiting for scraps. Chris would scratch him on the belly and he’d fall over and raise his leg in ecstasy. But one hard-cold day in the late fall, the men would help Mammy string him up, slit his throat, bleed him, and butcher him. She smoked the hams and sides and shoulders in her smokehouse. She made sausage with her meat grinder and packed it into homemade sacks that were like sleeves.

Mammy Hicks was a practical-minded farm woman in a long dress and apron and a bonnet with a brim as deep as an awning, but she also aspired to refinement. She was literate when most women of her generation and place were not. She made sure her six children went to school, and she purchased a mail-order organ so they could be musical, like the Hurt family. Dr. Hurt boarded a piano teacher at his fine house for his six daughters. Mammy Hicks felt she was just as good as the Hurts, with their wraparound verandah and crystal chandeliers. So the affront to her dignity when no-good Robert Lee abandoned her daughter was immeasurable.

Mammy and Aunt Hatt decided that Chris was too little to send to school the first year. Even after she started to school, they wouldn’t let her walk there by herself. And whenever there was something catching going around, they kept her at home. Chris’s grandmother and aunt watched over her, but they were not affectionate with her. She longed for them to hug her or pet her, as her mother had done. Chris remembered wallowing in her mother’s lap, daring to slide off until she was caught by the legs. Perhaps she reminded Mammy and Hattie too much of Eunice’s shame? Did they see too much of Robert Lee in her? She had an independent spirit and was scampish. In a second-grade photograph, her head is cocked shyly, but there is an internal mischief bubbling, and a sly sense of privacy in her eyes.

As she grew older, Chris overheard the talk about her father, and she wondered about him. She wondered if he thought about her at all. He was worthless, a rascally snake-in-the-grass, everyone said. He was double-dealing and black-hearted and violent. He was rumored to have joined the Army. Once, Chris saw a group of uniformed soldiers trudging along the road. “They’re just getting home from the war,” Hattie said. “It takes a long time for them to make their way home.” Chris heard people talking about the Blue and the Gray. The Civil War and the Great War ran together in her mind. She formed a
picture of her father in a uniform, off in a war. She heard he had married again. She heard he was working on the river as a deckhand on a towboat. She knew he came to Clear Springs now and then. He hadn’t disappeared entirely. His family was here, and he returned occasionally from the river, or some war, to visit them. But whenever Chris asked about him, Mammy Hicks would say “Hush!” and find a chore for her to do.

BOOK: Clear Springs
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ads

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