“I said I want coffee and biscuit! I want soak! Granny lets me have it.”
“Watch your tone, son,” Victor said.
“I reckon a little coffee won’t hurt him none.” Momma got a cup and set it down in front of me. Her hand trembled. She filled the cup halfway with coffee.
The mole next to Victor’s nose glowed like a little slicked over hill. He pushed himself away from the table and got up. Momma kissed him on the lips. I felt like throwing coffee at the both of them. Victor grabbed Momma’s butt and squeezed her to him. “You shouldn’t let the boy talk to you that way baby.”
“I know. We’ll talk about it later.”
“I love you Momma.” He squeezed her butt again and kissed her on the lips. Then he went out the door.
Momma sat down in Victor’s chair, smiling to herself. She reached and got one of the biscuits and cut it in half. Then she reached for the blackberry jam. She scooped the jam out with a spoon onto half of the biscuit, put the other half on top and bit off a piece. Her hands trembled. “These is the best blackberries I ever eat,” she said as she chewed. “You and Granny get these?”
I got a biscuit and crumbled it in my coffee, pushed it down in there with a tablespoon. I mixed in two big tablespoons of sugar.
“Have a little coffee with your sugar,” Momma said.
I dug out a spoonful of the soak and put it in my mouth.
“I know what you’re thinking,” Momma said. “People can change though. Victor can change.”
We sat there a little bit, Momma with her biscuit, me with my soak. I got another tablespoon of sugar. I watched it fall out of the spoon a little bit at a time into my cup.
Momma said, “You can see how he’s changed can’t you?”
I kept watching the sugar. “Your the one always changing Momma. Victor’s always the same.”
Momma almost dropped her biscuit. “I’ll wear you out boy! Talking to me like that!” Momma grabbed the spoon away. Sugar went everywhere all over the table. She grabbed the cup away too. “You know better than to act this way! Look here now.” She put the spoon in the cup and set it down on the table next to her. “Yes, it’s true. We’re going to try again; Victor and me are. He’s made mistakes but he’s changed now. You can’t just give up on people Orbie.” She took hold of my hand and looked me direct in the eye. “We got to be good to one another from now on.”
“I hate him Momma! I wish he was dead!” I jerked my hand loose. “I hate you too! Your just stupid is all! Stupid! Stupid! Stupid!” I jumped down out of my chair, slammed through the screen door, ran out down the steps and under the house — into the crawl space underneath. I sat, crying and kicking at the dirt, staring at the shadows, at the old cans and rocks and tobacco sticks that were scattered all about.
I had me a shoebox there in a hole under a board. I slid the board away, got out the box and opened it. It was lined with some of Granny’s store bought cotton. Granpaw’s tobacco pouch lay in there with the Rain Skull inside. There was Granny’s butcher knife too, its point bent to one side. Still crying, I took it up from the box and looked at its long gray blade. I remembered how it had glowed with the blue light. I remembered the voice, the lightning, the tree branch cracking down with the tire in the swimming hole. The Circle Stump Boys running away.
I laid the point of the butcher knife on a piece of orange brick and pounded it flat with another. I got Granpaw’s pouch with the Rain Skull and put it around my neck. I held the knife blade up in front of my face, the point now straight and sharp. I could hear Momma above, boohooing at the kitchen table.
“In thy blood,” I whispered. “In thy blood, live!”
Momma went on like usual, talking about the Lord and how He’d made everything all right, how He changed Victor, made him into a good person again — a better person.
Victor brought all his stuff from the motel he was staying at in Glasgow — his tan suitcase and green file box — and moved into the trailer with Momma. Soon as Momma was ready, he said, we’d all go back to Detroit, take care of our business there, sell the house and move down to Florida — where the sun always shines and the fishing is always good.
“Oh I know he won’t never be good as Jessie,” Momma would say to Granny. “You can’t have everything perfect though.”
Granny would just crack her gum. “You both growed up people. I reckon ya’ll can handle your own business.” Usually she had a lot more to say than that, no matter whose business it was. I figured she was just too busy what with Granpaw and there being a million things to do around the farm and all. The ‘L’ brothers helped with the fields. Miss Alma brought over pies and occasionally did things around the house. Said there wasn’t as much housework at Moses’ place anymore. “He gone. He do dat way. Mmmm. Go off, not tell a soul.”
I hadn’t seen Moses since the time in the cave. He’d finished painting Granny and Granpaw’s house except for one little triangle-shaped patch under the roof above the attic window. Willis and me would look up there from time to time just to see if he had come to finish it.
Granny got Willis to stay with us while Moses was gone. I was glad about that. We slept in Granny’s big feather bed together. Sometimes we’d laugh and talk so much that Granny’d have to holler up the ladder hole just to quiet us down.
Granpaw’s wall was still up against Victor. Granny told him it wasn’t none of his business — or hers — what decisions Victor and Momma made together. “It would just confuse things if we was to interfere,” Granny said. “I think he’s trying, Victor is. I really do.”
“Trying my patience is what he’s doing,” Granpaw said.
Victor was all smiles and smooth words, trying to get along with everybody, even with Granpaw. One time I was standing next to the rain barrel at the side of the house, watching Granpaw use his jackknife to cut yellow callus away from his thumb. Victor came around the front of the house, this time a fat new unlit cigar stuck out the corner of his mouth. When he saw Granpaw, he got a big smile on his face. “Another miserable day in paradise, hey Mr. Wood? Glad to see you up and around!”
“Uh huh.” Granpaw sliced a thin piece of callus away from his thumb.
“Is it always like this?” Victor asked. “Muggy and rainless, I mean?”
Granpaw slipped the knifepoint in around his thumbnail. “No. T’ain’t.”
Victor raised the hand with the snake tattoo and took the cigar away. “I thought you were some sort of meteorologist.”
Granpaw cocked an eyebrow at Victor. “A what?”
“A meteorologist. You know, a weatherman. A meteorologist loves to talk about the weather.”
Granpaw went back, working on his thumb. “Well I ain’t one of them.”
“That’s not what I hear, but all right. Anyway, I’m glad to see you up and about.” Victor’s eyes warmed over with friend-liness. “Orbie here thinks the world of you. Don’t you son?”
I kept quiet.
“His Momma says he does,” Victor said.
“He don’t have to repeat it then, does he?” Granpaw said, still working on his thumb.
“I know that. That’s not what I meant.” A cloud passed over Victor’s face, but then he caught himself and smiled. “You be careful with that knife now, Mr. Wood! With skin that tough, you might dull the blade!” He reassigned the cigar to the corner of his mouth and walked off toward the trailer.
“Dumb ass City Slicker,” Granpaw said under his breath, but then he looked at me. “I ought not have said that. Ought I?”