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Authors: Chana Wilson

BOOK: Riding Fury Home
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The first Christmas after Dad was elected, we received an invitation to the yearly Christmas party at the Stevenses' house. Mr. Stevens was some big shot at Squibb Pharmaceuticals, and his house was the grandest in town.
On the day of the party, Dad and I walked through the gate in the white picket fence and up the snowy walk. We waited at the
front door for someone to answer the doorbell, staring at a holly wreath with red berries. From inside came the muffled plunks of a piano and voices singing “We Three Kings.”
The door swung open, and we stepped into the living room. We'd never been to anything like this, but it was a scene made familiar from picture books at my school, and Christmas advertising images. Christmas cards lined the Stevens' fireplace mantel, stockings hung above a fire, and an enormous Christmas tree stood in one corner. The guests were gathered around the grand piano, where Mrs. Stevens was playing carols. Everyone held glasses of eggnog and was singing along. We joined the group.
I loved to sing, and of course had learned all the carols in school over the years. My parents had never said I couldn't sing them, but somehow I felt there was a line I shouldn't cross: I would not say the word “Christ” or “Jesus.” This meant that I would be singing along with gusto, and then suddenly mumble or drop out on the forbidden word. Here, among all these tall adults, no one seemed to notice a child going mute in the midst of a song.
I looked over at Dad. He was belting out “Silent Night” along with the rest, word for word:
Christ the savior is born; Chri-ist the savior is born.
 
 
THE FOLLOWING SPRING, AS a present for my eighth birthday, Dad brought a puppy home from work. Dad's coworker had a scientist wife who worked at a drug company where they used dogs in experiments. She'd rescued one puppy from a lab litter for Dad.
“What should we name him?” Dad asked as he handed me the ball of short brown, black, and white fur. I hugged him to my chest and smelled his puppy breath. With no hesitation, I said, “Happy.”
I was naming him after my favorite stuffed animal, the battered tan dog.
Happy was a foxhound. As he grew, his hunting instincts emerged; he loved to root around, nose close to the earth. Often, he would dig up moles from our backyard, legs frantically pawing the earth, dirt flying. Once he caught it, Happy would hold the mole gently in his teeth and then flip it in the air, breaking its neck. I felt sorry for those little moles, blind to the sun, flying into the light, and sometimes yelled at Happy to
quit that,
but I must admit, it was a sight to see.
The following summer, when Happy was one, Dad and I were swimming in the river. We waded in from our next-door neighbors' yard because they had a sandbar that made getting in easier. I was near the shore when I heard Happy's deep low growl, and I scrambled out of the river. His warning sound made my bones quiver, but the brambles along the river edge were too thick and I couldn't see him. I was wearing only my wet bathing suit, leaving my exposed legs too vulnerable to go plunging through the blackberry thorns. Then I heard another sound—the snarls of some strange, unseen animal—followed by a yelp that sent my breast pounding: Happy's cry of pain. What animal had he cornered? “Happy, here boy,
COME HERE!”
I called desperately.
I looked up to see the Reformed Church minister approaching. It was his yard, two over from ours, where Happy was engaged in battle. The minister wasn't wearing his black suit with the white collar today, just an ordinary shirt and work pants.
“Reverend Reverend (I wasn't sure what you called a minister, but it was the closest I could think of). My dog's fighting some animal . . . can you see?” The minister pushed his way partly into the undergrowth, disappeared for a couple minutes, and then reappeared
from the bushes. “Your dog's cornered a coon. Nothing to be done. They fight to the death, you know.”
The world was spinning, trees and sky, and then I steadied myself with hate, glaring at the minister.
You coward
, I thought,
you're not even going to try to help!
I wheeled then, running to the riverbank to Dad. He hadn't heard Happy's bark when I had taken off to see what that sound was. I hadn't stopped to explain.
I yelled to him about Happy's being in a fight with a raccoon. He treaded water and yelled back, “Run to the Jansens' and ask them for their hunting rifle. Tell them to put the safety on and bring it to me.”
My hummingbird heart thrummed as I ran, dripping river water. Breathless, my tale spilled out to Mrs. Jansen. The small, blond woman bent her face close to mine, then yelled for her husband Malcolm. He was her opposite, a tall giant who strode into the kitchen on his long legs. “We can't give a rifle to an eight-year-old girl!” she said, frowning toward him, not looking at me.
“Please, please, it's for my dad, I'll be careful, I'll be real careful,” I pleaded.
My Happy, don't let him die
.
“Jenny, go get her the gun from the cabinet,” Malcolm commanded. “I'll put the safety on. Abe won't let her get hurt.”
The rifle was almost as long as me. I held it cradled in both arms, hefting the weight that could be my dog's savior. When I got to the brambles, I careened to a halt. Dad was waiting, holding Happy by the collar. “It's okay,” he said. Happy looked fine; only a few drops of blood splattered on one side of his face, red against his white muzzle, and I couldn't tell if they were his or the coon's.
I gave Dad the rifle, sank to my knees next to Happy, my face against his neck, inhaling his sweet dog odor. “You bad dog,” I cried, muffled, into his coat. I squeezed him tighter. “You bad, bad dog.”
Chapter 10. Sweetie
JUST AS I STARTED third grade, the old woman next door, recently widowed, moved out of her big house. When a huge moving van stopped on our street, I stood in our driveway, watching the commotion. A wood-paneled station wagon pulled up behind the moving van; a mom, a dad, and five kids piled out—two girls close to my age and three big teenage boys.
I retreated down our driveway, too shy to meet them. But the next day, when I heard the sound of girls yelling and giggling, I made myself go out and stand by the fence bordering our yards. The sisters stopped their game of tag and came over to the fence to invite me to play with them.
Sharon, eight like me, and Kim, a year older, became my best friends. Dad didn't have to worry anymore about what family I would be staying with after school; I was right next door at the O'Briens' every day when he got home from work.
After school, Kim, Sharon, and I played horses in their backyard. We would drag out three chopped-off sawhorses that their dad
stored in the small barn on their property. We faced the low sawhorses, snorting and pawing the ground with our feet, neighing like wild mares and stallions. One by one, we cantered and leapt over the sawhorses. “Naaaaaay,” we bellowed after each triumphant leap, tossing our heads back.
On Sundays, Dad and I visited Mom. She'd been moved to the county mental hospital after the insurance ran out. Now, all pretext of a country club setting was completely absent. There was a Plexiglas window in the front nurses' station where visitors were required to hand over any bags to be searched. Then we were buzzed through the locked door. Dad and I walked down a long hall reeking of disinfectant to the ward's common room, which was thick with cigarette smoke. All I remember of my mother on those visits were her eyes: dull and glassy, with drooping eyelids. I never spoke to Kim and Sharon about my visits to the mental hospital, and by some unspoken agreement they never asked about my absent mother.
 
 
THAT WINTER, KIM GOT the most incredible birthday present: an actual horse. Sweetie was a chestnut quarter horse, so ancient that her spine was deeply swayback. She was stabled in their barn. After school, the three of us cleaned the stable and gave Sweetie fresh hay, feed, and water, currying her while she docilely chomped her oats. I loved the pungent horse smell as I brushed her, leaning my face close to her warm, brown coat.
Sweetie was so old that Kim's parents said only Kim was allowed to ride her, for fear that if we all took turns, we might give the poor horse a heart attack. Sharon and I would watch mournfully as Kim astride Sweetie disappeared slowly down the path to the river, and then we would go off and play our pretend horse game.
 
 
THE NEXT SUMMER, BETWEEN third and fourth grade, Kim, Sharon, and I got the idea of putting on a circus, inspired by the swaybacked Sweetie, who was to be our star attraction. We recruited Barbie, a girl who lived two houses down. Barbie's backyard had the perfect circus setting: a large, flat meadow. Barbie also had a hand-me-down drum majorette costume with a yellow and maroon pleated miniskirt and a tall hat with a grand yellow plume. That outfit earned her the honor of being the ringmaster.
Kim, Sharon, Barbie, and I practiced in Barbie's meadow. We enlisted Cheryl Ann, Barbie's younger sister, to be our percussionist; her job was to beat on a bongo drum with a stick. We made tickets on colored construction paper and walked door-to-door through town, selling them to other kids and a few parents.
The day of the circus we were all in a frenzy, barely able to contain ourselves. “Hurry up! Hurry up!” we yelled to each other as we ran back and forth from the shed to the adjacent meadow, setting up folding chairs in a circle. In Barbie's kitchen, we made two pitchers of Minute Maid frozen lemonade and cooked four pans of Jiffy Pop over her mom's stovetop. The kitchen was thick with the smell of burnt popcorn kernels. Barbie's younger brother, Bob Junior, would be selling our refreshments at a wobbly folding table just outside the circle of chairs.
We each tore home to put on our costumes. I was playing Weary Willie, the sad clown, a hobo in tattered clothing with a forlorn face. I'd seen the famous Emmett Kelly play him at Ringling Brothers Circus one time. Now, I raced in our front door and down the hall into the living room.
Dad had told me Mom would be coming home on a weekend pass, and when I got there, Mom was sitting on the couch.
“Honey, go get your outfit on, and then I'll put on your clown face,” Mom said.
I nodded, and bolted up the stairs. Dad had given me an old shirt and pants of his, and had helped me cut the sleeves and legs shorter; then we'd shredded the remaining arms and legs in strips to make a tramp costume. I tucked in the shirt and clipped red suspenders onto the oversize pants to hold them up.
Downstairs, Mom took me into our tiny half-bathroom. She set her lit cigarette in an ashtray balanced on the corner of the sink. Smoke spiraled up in a gray wisp. While I sat on the toilet, she leaned in close. Her hands shook, but she got my frown on okay. I leapt up to stare in the mirror and pop on my red clown nose. Around this mother who'd become a stranger, I stayed withdrawn. “Thanks, Mom,” I mumbled as I raced from the house.
 
 
BARBIE STOOD POISED in the center of the ring in her drum majorette outfit, her baton raised. “Ladies and gentlemen, we present to you the Greatest Show on Earth! And for our first act we bring you, straight from Barnum and Bailey Circus: Weary Willie!”
I stepped into the ring, and for a moment just looked around. Every seat was filled, and there were even some parents standing behind their kid's chairs. The squirming kids with their hands deep in bags of popcorn got still and stared in my direction. The hush of the audience's attention hit me like an electric charge. I marched to the center, where a bucket waited. I jammed my foot into the plastic bucket, then tried to walk, dragging it along. Giggles erupted around me. I tried to shake the bucket off, tripped, rolled around on the ground, and staggered up with it still on my foot, throwing my hands in the air. From all sides came loud
ha ha has
! Elated, I plunged into a double somersault, then limped off, bucket still attached.
After several other acts came our finale: Kim riding Sweetie bareback. Flutophone blast, drum-banging hailed our pièce de ré-sistance: Kim hoisted herself to kneel on Sweetie's bare back, arms raised triumphantly, while Sweetie walked once around the ring, our spectators clapping and whistling.
All the performers gathered in the center of the ring, grabbed hands, and took our bows. As the audience rose and began milling around, Kim and Sharon and I kept laughing and banging each other on our backs. We had done it!
 
 
DURING THE WINTER holiday came terrible news: Mr. O'Brien, Kim and Sharon's dad, was taking a new job in California. It was a mythic place as far away from New Jersey as Oz, and I would lose my friends to the land of Hollywood and orange groves. Kim's parents told her some other horrible news: She couldn't bring Sweetie. They sold Sweetie to another family, along with her gear and the horse trailer. Sharon and I stood on either side of a sobbing Kim, crying ourselves, as we watched Sweetie get loaded into the trailer and hauled away.
Just before Valentine's Day, the moving van pulled up outside their house. Kim and Sharon and I had given each other our Valentine's cards the week before. We stood next to their car, hugging each other and crying, when Mr. O'Brien yelled, “Let's get going!”
I watched the O'Briens pile into their station wagon and head for the sun.
Chapter 11. Mom Returns
THE MOTHER WHO CAME home after more than two years away was terribly altered from the mother I had known, although I could barely remember that mother. I was in the middle of fourth grade when she returned. Her body was a different shape: The slender, petite mom was now fat and puffy from drugs. She was sent home with a pharmacy-load of pills: barbiturates, tranquilizers, and sleeping pills. I learned words like “Miltown,” “Librium,” “Doriden.” She staggered around the house, eyelids drooping, slurring her words when she did speak, but more often silently puffing on a cigarette.

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