Excerpt from
CHAPTER ONE
This
will be a good weekend for reading. I picked up a dozen of Vernie
Crabtree's killer chocolate chip cookies at the French Club bake
sale yesterday. (I don't know what she puts in them, but they're
chewy and crispy at the same time.) Those, a pot of coffee, and
a good book are all I will need for the rainy weekend rolling in.
It's early September in our mountains, so it's warm during the day,
but tonight will bring a cool mist to remind us that fall is right
around the corner.
The Wise County Bookmobile
is the one of the most beautiful sights in the world to me. When
I see it lumbering down the mountain road like a tank, then turning
wide and easing onto Shawnee Avenue, I flag it down like an old
friend. I've waited on this corner every Friday since I can remember.
The Bookmobile is just a government truck, but to me it's a glittering
royal coach delivering stories and knowledge and life itself. I
even love the smell of books. People have often told me that one
of their strongest childhood memories is the scent of their grandmother's
house. I never knew my grandmothers, but I could always count on
the Bookmobile.
The most important thing
I ever learned, I learned from books. Books have taught me how to
size people up. The most useful book I ever read taught me how to
read faces, an ancient Chinese art called siang mien, in which the
size of the eyes, curve of the lip, and height of the forehead are
important clues to a person's character. The placement of ears indicates
intelligence. Chins that stick out reflect stubbornness. Deep-set
eyes suggest a secretive nature. Eyebrows that grow together may
answer the question Could that man kill me with his bare hands?
(He could.) Even dimples have meaning. I have them, and according
to face reading, something wonderful is supposed to happen to me
when I turn thirty-five. (It's been four months since my birthday,
and I'm still waiting.)
If you were to read my
face, you would find me a comfortable person with brown eyes, good
teeth, nice lips, and a nose that folks, when they are being kind,
refer to as noble. It's a large nose, but at least it's straight.
My eyebrows are thick, which indicates a practical nature. (I'm
a pharmacistóhow much more practical can you get?) I have
a womanly shape, known around here as a mountain girl's body, strong
legs, and a flat behind. Jackets cover it quite nicely.
This morning the idea
of living in Big Stone Gap for the rest of my life gives me a nervous
feeling. I stop breathing, as I do whenever I think too hard. Not
breathing is very bad for you, so I inhale slowly and deeply. I
taste coal dust. I don't mind; it assures me that we still have
an economy. Our town was supposed to become the "Pittsburgh
of the South" and the "Coal Mining Capital of Virginia."
That never happened, so we are forever at the whims of the big coal
companies. When they tell us the coal is running out in these mountains,
who are we to doubt them?
It's pretty here. Around
six o'clock at night everything turns a rich Crayola midnight blue.
You will never smell greenery so pungent. The Gap definitely has
its romantic qualities. Even the train whistles are musical, sweet
oboes in the dark. The place can fill you with longing.
The Bookmobile is at
the stoplight. The librarian and driver is a good-time gal named
Iva Lou Wade. She's in her forties, but she's yet to place the flag
on her sexual peak. She's got being a woman down. If you painted
her, she'd be sitting on a pink cloud with gold-leaf edges, showing
a lot of leg. Her perfume is so loud that when I visit the Bookmobile,
I wind up smelling like her for the bulk of the day. (It's a good
thing I like Coty's Emeraude.) My father used to say that that's
how a woman ought to be. "A man should know when there's a
woman in the room. When Iva Lou comes in, there ain't no doubt."
I'd just say nothing and roll my eyes.
Iva Lou's having a tough
time parking. A mail truck has parked funny in front of the post
office, taking up her usual spot, so she motions to me that she's
pulling into the gas station. That's fine with the owner, Kent Vanhook.
He likes Iva Lou a lot. What man doesn't? She pays real nice attention
to each and every one. She examines men like eggs, perfect specimens
created by God to nourish. And she hasn't met a man yet who doesn't
appreciate it. Luring a man is a true talent, like playing the piano
by ear. Not all of us are born prodigies, but women like Iva Lou
have made it an art form.
The Bookmobile doors
open with a whoosh. I can't believe what Iva Lou's wearing: Her
ice-blue turtleneck is so tight it looks like she's wearing her
bra on the outside. Her Mondrian-patterned pants, with squares of
pale blue, yellow, and green, cling to her thighs like crisscross
ribbons. Even sitting, Iva Lou has an unbelievable shape. But I
wonder how much of it has to do with all the cinching. Could it
be that her parts are so well-hoisted and suspended, she has transformed
her real figure into a soft hourglass? Her face is childlike, with
a small chin, big blue eyes, and a rosebud mouth. Her eyeteeth snaggle
out over her front teeth, but on her they're demure. Her blond hair
is like yellow Easter straw, arranged in an upsweep you can see
through the set curls. She wears lots of Sarah Coventry jewelry,
because she sells it on the side.
"I'll trade you.
Shampoo for a best-seller." I give Iva Lou a sack of shampoo
samples from my pharmacy, Mulligan's Mutual.
"You got a deal." Iva Lou grabs the sack and starts sorting
through the samples. She indicates the shelf of new arrivals. "Ave
Maria, honey, you have got to read The Captains and the Kings that
just came out. I know you don't like historicals, but this one's
got sex."
"How much more romance can you handle, Iva Lou? You've got
half the men in Big Stone Gap tied up in knots."
She snickers. "Half?
Oh well, I'm-a gonna take that as a compliment-o anyway." I'm
half Italian, so Iva Lou insists on ending her words with vowels.
I taught her some key phrases in Italian in case international romance
was to present itself. It wasn't very funny when Iva Lou tried them
out on my mother one day. I sure got in some Big Trouble over that.
Iva Lou has a goal. She wants to make love to an Italian man, so
she can decide if they are indeed the world's greatest lovers. "Eye-talian
men are my Matta-horn, honey," she declares. Too bad there
aren't any in these parts. The people around here are mainly Scotch-Irish,
or Melungeon (folks who are a mix of Turkish, French, African, Indian,
and who knows what; they live up in the mountain hollers and stick
to themselves). Zackie Wakin, owner of the town department store,
is Lebanese. My mother and I were the only Italians; and then about
five years ago we acquired one Jew, Lewis Eisenberg, a lawyer from
Woodbury, New York.
"You always sit
in the third snap stool. How come?" Iva Lou asks, not looking
up as she flips through a new coffee-table book about travel photography.
"I like threes."
"Sweetie-o, let me tell you something." Iva Lou gets a
faraway, mystical twinkle in her eye. Then her voice lowers to a
throaty, sexy register. "When I get to blow this coal yard,
and have my big adventure, I sure as hell won't waste my time taking
pictures of the Circus Maximus. I am not interested in rocks 'n'
ruins. I want to experience me some flesh and blood. Some magnificent,
broad-shouldered hunk of a European man. Forget the points of interest,
point me toward the men. Marble don't hug back, baby." Then
she breathes deeply, "Whoo."
Iva Lou fixes herself
a cup of Sanka and laughs. She's one of those people who are forever
cracking themselves up. She always offers me a cup, and I always
decline. I know that her one spare clean Styrofoam cup could be
her entrÈe to a romantic rendezvous. Why waste it on me?
"I found you that
book on wills you wanted. And here's the only one I could find on
grief." Iva Lou holds up As Grief Exits as though she's modeling
it. The pretty cover has rococo cherubs and clouds on it. The angels'
smiles are instantly comforting. "How you been getting along?"
I look at Iva Lou's face. Her innocent expression is just like the
cherub's. She really wants to know how I am.
My mother died on August
2, 1978, exactly one month ago today. It was the worst day of my
life. She had breast cancer. I never thought cancer would get both
of my parents, but it did. Mama was fifty-two years old, which suddenly
seems awfully young to me. She was only seventeen when she came
to America. My father taught her English, but she always spoke with
a thick accent. One of the things I miss most about her is the sound
of her voice. Sometimes when I close my eyes I can hear her.
"You always sit
in the third snap stool. How come?" Iva Lou asks, not looking
up as she flips through a new coffee-table book about travel photography.
"I like threes."
"Sweetie-o, let me tell you something." Iva Lou gets a
faraway, mystical twinkle in her eye. Then her voice lowers to a
throaty, sexy register. "When I get to blow this coal yard,
and have my big adventure, I sure as hell won't waste my time taking
pictures of the Circus Maximus. I am not interested in rocks 'n'
ruins. I want to experience me some flesh and blood. Some magnificent,
broad-shouldered hunk of a European man. Forget the points of interest,
point me toward the men. Marble don't hug back, baby." Then
she breathes deeply, "Whoo."
Iva Lou fixes herself
a cup of Sanka and laughs. She's one of those people who are forever
cracking themselves up. She always offers me a cup, and I always
decline. I know that her one spare clean Styrofoam cup could be
her entrÈe to a romantic rendezvous. Why waste it on me?
"I found you that
book on wills you wanted. And here's the only one I could find on
grief." Iva Lou holds up As Grief Exits as though she's modeling
it. The pretty cover has rococo cherubs and clouds on it. The angels'
smiles are instantly comforting. "How you been getting along?"
I look at Iva Lou's face. Her innocent expression is just like the
cherub's. She really wants to know how I am.
My mother died on August
2, 1978, exactly one month ago today. It was the worst day of my
life. She had breast cancer. I never thought cancer would get both
of my parents, but it did. Mama was fifty-two years old, which suddenly
seems awfully young to me. She was only seventeen when she came
to America. My father taught her English, but she always spoke with
a thick accent. One of the things I miss most about her is the sound
of her voice. Sometimes when I close my eyes I can hear her.
Mama didn't want to die
because she didn't want to leave me here alone. I have no brothers
or sisters. The roots in the Mulligan family are strong, but at
this point, the branches are mostly dead. My mother never spoke
of her family over in Italy, so I assume they died in the war or
something. The only relative I have left is my aunt, Alice Mulligan
Lambert. She is a pill. Her husband, my Uncle Wayne, has spent his
life trying not to make her angry, but he has failed. Aunt Alice
has a small head and thin lips. (That's a terrible combination.)
"I'm gonna take a smoke, honey-o." Iva Lou climbs down
the steps juggling two coffees and her smokes. In under fifteen
seconds, Kent Vanhook comes out from the garage, wiping his hands
on a rag. Iva Lou gives Kent the Styrofoam cup, which looks tiny
in his big hands. They smoke and sip. Kent Vanhook is a good-looking
man of fifty, a tall, easygoing cowboy type. He looks like the great
Walter Pidgeon with less hair. As he laughs with Iva Lou, twenty
years seem to melt off of his face. Kent's wife is a diabetic who
stays at home and complains a lot. I know this because I drop off
her insulin once a month. But with Iva Lou, all Kent does is laugh.
I like to be alone on
the Bookmobile. It gives me a chance to really examine the new arrivals.
I make a stack and then look through the old selections. I pick
up my old standby, The Ancient Art of Chinese Face-Reading, and
think of my father, Fred Mulligan. When he died thirteen years ago,
I thought I would grieve, but to this day I haven't. We weren't
close, but it wasn't from my lack of trying. From the time I can
remember, he just looked through me, the way you would look through
the thick glass of a jelly jar to see if there's any jelly left.
Many nights when I was young I cried about him, and then one day
I stopped expecting him to love me and the pain went away. I stuck
by him when he got sick, though. All of a sudden, my father, who
had always separated himself from people, had everything in common
with the world. He was in pain and would inevitably die. The suffering
gave him some humility. It's sad that my best memories of him are
when he was sick. It was then that I first checked out this book
on Chinese face reading.
I thought that if I read
my father's face, I would be able to understand why he was so mean.
It took a lot of study. Dad's face was square and full of angles:
rectangular forehead, sharp jaw, pointy chin. He had small eyes
(sign of a deceptive nature), a bulbous nose (sign of money in midlife,
which he had from owning the Pharmacy), and no lips. Okay, he had
two lips, but the set of the mouth was one tight gray lead-pencil
line. That is a sign of cruelty. When you watch the news on television,
look at the anchor's mouth. I will guaran-damn-tee you that none
of them have upper lips. You don't get on the TV by being nice to
people.
On and off for about
four years straight the face-reading book was checked out in my
name, and my name only. When I went up to Charlottesville on a buying
trip for the Pharmacy, I tried to hunt down a copy to buy. It was
out of print. Iva Lou has tried to give me the book outright many
times. She said she would report it as lost. But I can't do that.
I like knowing it's here, riding around with old Iva Lou.
I guess I'm staring out
the windshield at them, because they're both looking at me. Iva
Lou stomps out her cigarette with her pink Papagallo flat and heads
back toward the Bookmobile. Kent watches her return, drinking her
in like that last sip of rich, black Sanka.
"I'm sorry. Me and
Kent got to talking, and well, you know."
"No problem."
"Face reading again? Don't you have this memorized by now?
Lordy."
Iva stamps the books with her pinky up.
"See you next week."
I wave to Kent casually, just to make him feel that there is absolutely
nothing wrong with talking to single, available, willing Iva Lou
and sharing a smoke. He smiles at me, a little relieved. I think
most folks in Big Stone Gap know their secrets are safe with me.
(God knows I don't get any pleasure in knowing that the town manager
performs self-colonics).
I have a delivery to
make. I promised Mrs. MacóMacChesney is the full surnameóthat
I would bring her a new prescription to tame her high blood pressure.
She is known around here as "Apple Butter Nan" because
nobody cans it better. Her house is way up in Cracker's Neck Holler.
There are lots of twists and turns to get there, and I sort of fly
around the curves like Mario Andretti (another great Eye-talian).
There's an element of danger in mountain roadsóthere are
no guardrails, so it's you and your rack-and-pinion steering. If
you lose your concentration, you could go over the mountain. One
foggy night the Brightwell brothers lost control of their truck
and drove off the cliff.
Luckily, the trees broke
their fall. A state cop found the boys hanging in the branches like
fresh laundry the following morning. They lost their truck, though.
On impact, it fell off of them like pants. Now it rests at the bottom
of Powell Valley Lake.
The Gap, or "down in town" as the holler folks call it,
is in the valley. The hollers are little communities nestled in
the sides of the Blue Ridge Mountains. I couldn't give you directions
to places up in the mountains, but I could take you there. There
are no signs anywhere; you have to know your way. When you climb
to the highest peak around here, you are standing on the borders
of five states: Virginia, Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee, and
West Virginia. You can't actually see the divider lines of course;
you just know that you're standing in five states because there's
a plaque that says so and because we were taught that in school.
Tiny Miss Callahan, my fourth-grade teacher, would be very happy
that I retained this information and shared it.
Each holler has its own
name and singular history. Families found pockets that suited them
in these hills and never left. Where people settle tells a lot about
them. This is the only place I've ever lived, except for college.
I went away to school, all the way up to South Bend, Indiana, to
Saint Mary's, a small women's college. It was just big enough for
me. When I got my B.S., I came home and took over management of
the Pharmacy. I was needed here. My father had gotten sick and had
to quit, and Mama couldn't handle it alone. It wasn't that she was
a weak woman; she just couldn't handle change.
I've made it up to Cracker's
Neck in record time. The MacChesney homestead sits in a clearing.
It's a square stone house with four chimneys. Hearth fires smell
better in stone houses, and Mrs. Mac always has one going. I park
and wait for the dogs to circle. We have hundreds of wild dogs in
the mountains, and they travel in packs. Most aren't rabid, and
when they are, they get shot. I count six thin dogs sniffing my
wheels. Buying time, I unzip my window and toss out the sign that
identifies me to customers. It's a white plastic square that says:
the medicine dropper. (I sprung for the extra artwork, a silhouette
of a nurse in a rush.)
I usually find the guts
to get out of the Jeep when I see Mrs. Mac peeking out of her window.
The last thing I want to appear to customers is chicken. Truth is,
I appreciate her watching out for me as I open the door and swing
my legs out. Ever so casually I pull myself to a rigid standing
position and walk confidently through the yard to the front door,
like Maureen O'Hara in every movie she ever made with John Wayne.
Maureen O'Hara is short-waisted like me. She is my inspiration in
wardrobe and courage. I've even taken to wearing my hair like herósimple
and long in a neat braid. I pack less punch though; my hair is brown,
hers lustrous red.
The porch is freshly
painted gray without a speck of dirt anywhere. The firewood is stacked
neatly to the side of the house in a long row, in a lattice design.
I try not to have favorites, but Mrs. Mac and her orderly home definitely
top my list.
"Took you long enough!"
Mrs. Mac exclaims as she snaps open the screen door.
"Iva Lou and I were chatting."
"I done figured that." Mrs. Mac points to the fire. "Is
that a good un, or is that a good un?" The flames lick the
grid in hungry yellow bursts.
"That is the best fire I have ever seen." And I mean it.
"Come on back. I made corn bread."
I follow Mrs. Mac to
the kitchen, a sunny, spacious room with exposed oak beams on the
ceiling. I hear a noise behind me. Praying that it's not another
dog, I slowly turn and look, first low, then eye level. It's not
a dog. It's a man. Mrs. Mac's son, Jack MacChesney, in his underwear,
a faded-to-pink union suit that sticks to him like a leotard. We
look at each other, and both our faces turn the color of his underwear
before it fadedóblood red.
"Jesus Christmas, Jack. Put some clothes on," Mrs. Mac
demands.
"Yes, ma'am,"
he says to his mother, as if on automatic. "Good morning, Ave
Maria," he says to me, and goes. I can't help it, I watch the
man go. He has a fine, high rear end. I wish I did. I pull my belted
CPO jacket down over my flat behind and follow Mrs. Mac into the
kitchen.
Mrs. Mac and I cross
the kitchen to the big table by the windows, where she pours me
a cup of hot black coffee that smells like heaven. She serves me
fresh cream and snow-white sugar, which I dump into the mug. "So
what's happening in town?" Mrs. Mac asks. She has a mountain-girl
faceóa fine nose you could draw with a compass, shiny green
button eyes, Cupid bow lips, smooth cheeks. You can tell that she
was a great beauty in her youth, and she still is.
"Is ëNan' short
for anything?" I ask her.
"What? You mean my name?" Mrs. Mac cuts the corn bread
in the iron skillet into neat triangles. "My mamaw's name was
Nan. My middle name is Bluebell because that field was covered with
'em when I got born." She points out the window with her spatula
to indicate the field in the back.
"Nan Bluebell. Pretty. What was your maiden name?"
"God-a-mighty, you got a lot of questions this here morning.
Gilliam. Nan Bluebell Gilliam."
"I like it,"
I say as I sip my coffee.
Jack stands in the doorway.
He lingers there for a moment, as if to assess the situation. Or
maybe he doesn't want to interrupt our conversation. In town he
is known as Jack Mac. He's a little over six feet but seems shorter
because he's all neck and torso. His face is round and soft, with
a determined chin. He has thin, straight eyebrows and hazel eyes.
He has even lipsóthe top and bottom one match (very rare)óand
a nose that suits his faceóit's a strong nose, one that doesn't
break where it's connected between his eyes but shoots out like
a clean wedge. He has a defined jawline, which means he goes after
what he wants in life and gets it. Jack Mac is dressed now, in a
flannel shirt and old blue jeans. His hair is slicked down wet;
in the sunlight it is gray and going. Jack Mac and I are the same
age, but he looks a lot older than me. I don't think he said two
words in four years of high school; he's one of those quiet types.
Mrs. Mac pours her son
coffee. "Sit down youngun," she says to him with great
affection. "I was just asking Miss Ave here about the goings-on
in town."
"Jack Mac ought to know more than me. After all, musicians
get all the dirt."
"We do, eh?" Jack Mac says and laughs. "You're the
big director, you're in charge of the flow of information."
Jack Mac is referring
to my "job" (volunteer, of course) as director of our
musical Outdoor Drama The Trail of the Lonesome Pine. A mountain
love story, or so the poster says. The Drama was put together sixteen
summers ago. There's a lot of dramatic and musical talent in the
area, so local leaders decided to capitalize on it. We figure tourism
will be a good business alternative if the coal mining dries up.
The Outdoor Drama draws audiences from all over the mid-South.
"Hi-dee, Ave Maria," she barks.
"Nice do, Fleetsie," and I mean it; she just had her hair
put up.
"I copied Jeanne Pruett's upsweep." Fleeta pats the spit
curls gently. "I wish I could sing like her, too."
"Singing isn't the be-all. I bet she can't name all the wrestlers
on the world-federation roster."
"You got you a point there."
"Busy morning." I clear the register.
"I need to declare
me some sort of moratorium on these damn fund-raising jars,"
Fleeta complains. "I can't hardly ring up a sale without flippin'
one over."
She's right. Our counter is overrun with homemade jars that have
coin slots cut into their lids. Kids bring them by from school to
raise money for all sorts of things. They glue their school pictures
to the front of the jar with their names and a handwritten slogan
to solicit funds. Right now the competition is heating up for Halloween
prince and princess at the grade school, and I don't like to play
favorites, so anybody who makes a jar can leave one. Teena Lee Ball,
a cute second-grader, stands by the register. Teena Lee looks at
Fleeta and thinks better of asking her for a favor, so she turns
to me.
"Miss Mulligan,
my mamaw said you'd put my jar on the counter 'cause we trade here."
"Your mamaw is a smart woman, and she's got a point. It's called
ëturnabout fair trade.' You put your jar on the counter. Maybe
we'll raise a million dollars for your campaign!"
Teena Lee smiles and shows the space where her front teeth should
be. She scoots the jar in front of the others and goes.
"You're too much
of a soft touch. Let me handle them kids that come in here. If it
wasn't for me, people'd run all over you all day long. I'll tell
them damn kids to take their jars to the Piggly Wiggly. We ain't
got the room; they do. They got three register lanes over there.
We've only got the one."
I lift a jar off the
counter. "Did that Coomer boy ever get his kidney?"
"I think it was in the paper that he did."
I unscrew the Coomer boy's jar and pour the coins into the March
of Dimes canister.
"Lew Eisenberg wants you to come see him over to his office.
And I'm quitting."
"You're kidding."
"Ave, honey, I'm sick of people. I want to set home and watch
me some TV. Portly has his Black Lung comin' through. It's time
to enjoy life."
Obviously, Fleeta hasn't let herself make the connection that in
order to collect Black Lung benefits from the coal company, her
husband has to be sick. This isn't exactly the time for celebration.
"I don't want you to go." I sound pitiful, not like a
boss at all.
"You'll get over it. I ain't met nobody yet who ain't replaceable."
"It won't be the same."
"It's time for a change is all," Fleeta announces like
a Greek philosopher. Change. Why does that word send a chill through
me?
Lew Eisenberg's office
is next door to the Pharmacy on Main Street. I sort of dread going
in there, the place is so cluttered. Inez, Lew's wife, is also his
secretary. They met when Lew came down to do some legal work for
Westmoreland Coal Company. Inez had just graduated high school.
They had a romance and she got pregnant. Lew did the right thing
and married her. (Well, the right thing for Inez, that is).
"He's inside,"
Inez says without looking up. Inez still has a pretty face, but
she has gained about a hundred pounds since they married. It's been
frustrating for her, since she was known for her gorgeous figure
when she was a cheerleader. Now she's always on a diet. She's tried
Metracal shakes, AYDS, the reducing-plan candy, and Figurine Wafers
(I carry all flavors)ónothing has done the trick.
Lew sits behind his desk,
smoking a cigarette. His round pumpkin head looks large atop his
thin frame. He has small brown eyes behind thick glasses and a space
between his front teeth (the Chinese call these lucky teeth). I
haven't seen the space recently; Lew rarely smiles.
"Coffee or tea or
something?" Lew asks. He always sounds agitated, but it doesn't
make him unpleasant. You can see he's a sweetie underneath.
"No thanks." Lew looks relieved that I don't want anything;
the less contact with Inez, the better. He closes the door and sits
in the chair next to me. He has never done that. "We need to
talk." He is quiet for a few seconds, but it seems much longer.
He stands and paces. "I finished up your mother's paperwork.
Her will. The house, the Pharmacy, the life insuranceóall
that goes to you. Essentially, my job is done. Except for one thing."
He stands at the window, flicking the blinds.
A floorboard creaks outside
the office door, sounding like two hundred tiptoeing pounds. We
look at each other. Lew turns on the radio for privacyóInez
has a reputation for snoopingóand sits down next to me again.
"There's a letter."
Lew gives me a large
manila envelope. It is addressed to me in care of Lewis Eisenberg.
In the upper left-hand corner it says, "From Fiametta Vilminore
Mulligan." I'm one of those folks who opens her mail as she
stands at the mailbox, so I rip into the envelope immediately and
unfold the letter. I see my mother's handwriting. (The letter is
written in English; I assume it's because Lew would have needed
to read it, too.)
My dear Ave Maria,
When you read this letter,
I will have left you. There are things I could never tell you about
myself. Many times, I tried. But then, I would think better of unburdening
myself and stay quiet. The first thing I want you to know is that
you are the best thing that ever happened to me.
At this point, my heart
is pounding so hard it's moving the buttons on my shirt. I look
over at Lew, who is now lying down on the floor, smoking and staring
up at the ceiling.
"Did you read this, Lew?"
"Yup. Don't mind me, my back's out."
When I was seventeen,
I was a very happy girl. I worked as a seamstress in my father's
shop in Bergamo. My mother was beautiful, and my father a very respected
man. A boy used to stop by the shop, his name was Mario Barbari.
He came from a good family from Schilpario, a small town in the
mountains. He was quite handsome and made me laugh. One time, my
father had business in Schilpario. I begged him to let me ride along.
I hoped I would see Mario, and as luck would have it, I did. Once
he took care of business, Papa decided to stay in Schilpario and
play cards. Mario offered to show me the town. He showed me the
church, the waterwheel, the school. I felt like I had known him
all of my life. I fell in love with him that day.
"May I have some
water, please?" I swallow hard. Inez enters with water. Lew
and I look at each other. Inez goes.
Mario came down to Bergamo
to see me. My father found out about our friendship and forbade
me to see him because I was too young to court. I did what no good
daughter would do: I defied him and would sneak out to see Mario.
I was so happy whenever I was with him. We shared such good, happy
times. I knew I wanted to spend my life with him. We made a plan
to run away together. He was to meet me at the Bergamo station and
we would take the first train to Milan. I waited and waited but
he never came. A courier arrived with a letter from him explaining
that he could not meet me that day. I was going to tell Mario that
I was expecting you so we could marry immediately. I am sure that
he was not suspicious of my condition or he would have kept our
appointment.
I knew that I must leave
my home or the shame of what I had done would never be resolved.
I remembered that we had a cousin in Lake Maggiore. I bought a ticket
to go there, hopeful she would take me in. When I arrived in Lake
Maggiore, I could not find my cousin. I had no place to go. My heart
was broken. But I thought of you. I had to take care of you. Then,
something very lucky happened to me. I returned to the train station.
Everyone rushing around,
having somewhere to go, comforted me. I sat alone on a bench. I
fell asleep. When I woke up, a beautiful lady was sitting next to
me. I will never forget what she looked like. She was tall, slim,
and wore a blue coat. The buttons were blue jewels. And on her head
was a hat, exquisite blue velvet with peacock feathers and tiny
blue stars. Her face was creamy pink; she smelled like garden flowers.
She offered me a sweet roll. I was so hungry, I took it. She said,
"Now, my dear, what shall we do?" "I have no place
to go," I said to her. "But of course you do. You're coming
with me. I am going to America. You will stay with me. And when
we get there, we will find you a position." I was so afraid.
But this woman smiled at me and I knew we would be all right.
I am crying. Lew stands and stretches. He comes over to me, puts
a limp hand on one of my shoulders, and pats me like an old dog.
I asked the beautiful
lady what her name was. She said, "Ave Maria Albricci."
I told her that she had a beautiful name and she laughed. She thought
it too ornate. I told her when I had my baby I would name her Ave
Maria. She laughed again. She asked me how I knew I was going to
have a girl. I told her I just knew. The ride on the ship was lovely.
Ave Maria had a beautiful cabin. Servants laid our clothes out.
The food was plentiful, even with the war on; I felt you healthy
and happy inside of me. Four weeks passed and we arrived in New
York City. Ave Maria's relatives greeted us at the port. We took
the train to Hoboken, New Jersey. Ave Maria bought the Italia Oggi,
the newspaper. We read the want ads. In those days, immigrants were
cheap labor and would work in exchange for room and board. "What
is Virginia?" I asked the Albriccis. They laughed. I responded
to the ad:
"SEAMSTRESS WANTED:
MINING TOWN: BIG STONE GAP, VIRGINIA. GOOD PAY."
Mama had taped the actual
ad to the back of the letter to verify her story.
I knew this job was a good opportunity. I wrote a letter. The gentleman
that placed the ad owned a dress shop in the town. He hired me immediately
based upon my letter. By chance, his friend, a merchant from Big
Stone Gap, was in New York City on a buying trip. His name was Fred
Mulligan, of the Mutual Pharmacy. Would I like an escort on the
trip to Virginia? I was so happy. Fred Mulligan took the train to
meet me. I was surprised. He was young, like me. He understood Italian,
having studied it at the University of Virginia. I liked him. He
told me later that for him it was love at first sight. In truth,
he suspected my condition and knew it would be easier on me if I
was married. I agreed to marry him. It was an arranged marriage;
I arranged it.
I never heard from Ave Maria Albricci again. I sent many letters
to her family in Hoboken through the years; all were returned. I
prayed for her every day of my life, though, never forgetting her
kindness. Whenever I spoke your name, I thought of her and how she
helped me. She was an angel.
I felt you should know
the truth. I hope I made the right decision in telling you this.
I asked Mr. Eisenberg to be present with you. I love you, my darling
girl.
Mama
I turn the envelope upside
down and shake it to make sure I haven't missed anything. A small,
square lace-edged black-and-white photograph falls into my lap.
In gold letters it says, "Ti Amo, Mario." On the back,
in my mother's handwriting, "Mario da Schilpario Italia 1942."
The picture fits in my palm. The man in the picture looks to be
about seventeen. He has black hair and a trim physique. He is laughing.
This is my father.
Inez stands in the doorway. "Ave, they need you up to the school.
There's been an incident." The floorboards creak as Inez ambles
toward me.
"Ave, you need to
get up to the school. Principal called." Lew's voice brings
me back to earth. "They need the Rescue Squad."
Besides being a pharmacist,
I am chief of the Rescue Squad. Doc Daugherty roped me into the
job a couple of years back. We're a volunteer emergency-response
teamóthe team is the fire chief, Spec Broadwater, and me.
We handle everything from car wrecks to removing buttons from kids'
noses, and once we even resuscitated Faith Cox's cat.
"Spec's outside
waiting fer you," Inez says, a touch too impatiently.
Spec is wedged into the driver's seat of Rescue Squad Unit One,
a white station wagon with bright orange trim. I don't know why
he's called Spec; he is the opposite of a speck, he's a giant, the
tallest man in the Gap, at six feet seven. I climb into the car.
Fleeta runs out of the Pharmacy and hands me my emergency kit through
the window. Spec steps on the gas so fast, Fleeta practically loses
her hand. I hear her curse at Spec in the distance as we pull away.
Spec shoves a blue siren onto the roof of the car through the driver's-side
window.
"Problem up to the
school." Spec offers me a cigarette. I must look like I need
one. My face is puffy from crying.
"It's bad for you, Spec."
"Self-medication. When they come up with a healthy way for
me to calm my nerves, I'll quit."
Powell Valley High School is a stylish, brand-new red brick structure
that sits back off the main road, in a wide field. It is the jewel
of this town, built with monies from the War on Poverty of the late
1960s. Spec ignores all traffic laws and careens up the circular
driveway in the wrong direction.
"Problem's in the West Wing," he explains.
The principal, Dale Herron,
meets us in front of the school. The kids call him Lurch. I sort
of see whyóhe's slope-shouldered and his head juts forward.
Lurch leads us inside to a rest room marked boys. The building is
dead quiet.
"Where are the students?" I ask.
"In the auditorium," the principal says. "Miss Mulligan,
I think you ought to wait out here."
"I'll handle it," Spec says, patting me like a Pekinese.
The men disappear into
the rest room. A few moments pass. I hear mumbling from the lavatory.
Finally, the two men emerge.
"Let's go," Lurch says, pointing toward the assembly down
the hall.
We follow the angry principal into the auditorium. Every seat is
filled. The teachers line the side aisles like guards. There are
some whispers but not many. Onstage is a lectern and two students
squirming in chairs: the student-body president, a young man with
a long Renaissance curl, and the chaplain, a pudgy girl with thick
glasses. Lurch takes the stage.
"Good afternoon, students. That greeting right there is for
the ninety-eight percent of you who are law-abiding kids. I'll get
to the remaining two percent here in a minute. I have called this
emergency assembly to alert y'all that there is a sicko among us.
There is a sign outside this door which reads, united we stand,
divided we fall. The hijinks and shenanigans of a small percentage
of us will cause the whole to suffer. To fall. Mike. Brownie. Bring
up the evidence."
Two young men rise from
their front-row seats and disappear backstage. They enter sheepishly
from the wings. Mike is a small platinum blonde. I recognize him
as the point guard on our championship basketball team. The other
kid is mousy; his diminutive name suits him. They carry a large
tarp between them.
"Dump it,"
the principal barks.
The boys dump the contents of the tarp. White ceramic chunks hit
the stage with a clatter, making a cloud of dust. An intact toilet
seat tumbles out, confirming my suspicions.
"This is what someone setting right here in this auditorium
has done. Destroyed school property. Committed a crime with evil
intent. How? By rigging a sophisticated round of cherry bombs to
a ter-let in the boys' rest room in the West Wing."
A few nervous giggles
escape the student body.
"This is no joke, people." Lurch searches the audience
for the gigglers. Then he pauses. He pounds the podium. "Some
unfortunate young man might have been sitting on that ter-let when
it blew to high heaven. I ask you, what would have happened then?"
"Jesus," Spec says under his breath.
"Anybody actually injured?" I whisper.
Spec ignores me.
"I'm scared," a familiar deep voice says behind me.
"You should be," I whisper back. "The teacher's lounge
is next."
"Dinner tonight? After the show?"
"I'd love to."
The deep voice, and now
my date for the evening, is my best friend, the band and choral
director of Powell Valley High School, Theodore Tipton, formerly
of Scranton, Pennsylvania. Every once in a while the mines or the
school will hire someone from the outside world. Inevitably, they
move in and shake things up. Theodore brought our band back to life
and simultaneously goosed the libidos of all the women in town.
("He's a humdinger," Iva Lou says with relish every time
she sees him. "The man makes a pair of Levis sing.") Theodore
also stars as Preacher Red Fox in the Outdoor Drama. We became friends
when he auditioned nine years ago and I cast him on the first round.
I had to. His face reading told me that he was loyal and true and
fiercely protective. I knew if I cast him we would spend lots of
time together, and we have. His face is square-shaped, with a defined
jaw. He has a firm chin with a dimple in it. He can look strong,
like an Irish pirate, or intellectual, like a preoccupied poet.
He is tall, with blue eyes and a red beard. Even though all the
available women in town chase him (and a few married ones, too),
he spends all of his spare time with me. We're "feriners"óeven
though I was born here, I'm considered a feriner because my mother
was oneóbut that's just the start of what we have in common.
The principal wraps up
the assembly with a couple more threats for the student body. If
the guilty party doesn't fess up, he promises to suspend the smoking
areas outside. This brings a groan from the students. The chaplain
places a shoe box marked anonymous on the podium. Lurch tells the
kids it will be placed in the gym so anyone with tips regarding
the toilet incident can leave them in there. He dismisses the assembly.
The student body rises. As the kids exit in an orderly fashion,
most of them acknowledge Theodore. He is popular and respected,
the perfect reputation for a teacher.
Only one student stops
to speak to me: Pearl Grimes, fifteen years old, a sweet mountain
girl with a weight problem. She often window-shops at the Mutual.
I walk down the hall with my arm around her.
"My skin's done
broke out agin." Pearl hangs her head sadly.
"I got something for that. Come by the Mutual and see me."
"All right." She shrugs. She doesn't believe me.
"Don't you know the more pimples you got now, the less wrinkles
you'll have later?"
Finally, Pearl smiles. Her face, heart-shaped, with a high forehead,
tells me that she is emotional yet fair. Her nose is small and turns
up slightly. Her cheeks are full and roundóthe cheeks of
a monarchówhich means she can handle power.
Pearl blends off into the sea of students. Theodore takes my arm.
"I'll walk you to your car."
"Sure."
"What's new?"
"I'm a bastard."
Theodore laughs, which gets me laughing too. "Did you bust
a shoplifter or something?"
"No. I didn't behave like a bastard. I mean the literal definition."
"What?"
"I settled Mama's
will today. She left me a letter. Fred Mulligan wasn't my father."
Theodore is surprised but remains cool for my benefit. He knows
everything about Fred Mulligan and me. When I shared all those stories,
Theodore always got a look like he'd kill anyone who hurt me. This
new information surprises him.
Theodore leads me out
the front entrance to the car. Spec sits behind the wheel.
"Get in, Ave," Spec grumbles, lighting a cigarette. "That
was a waste of my time."
"See you tonight," Theodore says as he closes the door.
He touches my cheek. I look up to the second-floor science lab.
Pearl Grimes stands in the window, watching us. From here, in the
mellow afternoon light, she has a regal countenance, like a queen
looking down on her subjects. I give her a quick wave good-bye.
She smiles.
From the Hardcover edition.
********************