“Sorry, little lady, I don’t set the price. Three-fifty. You want a ticket or not?”
I take my coin purse out, my insides burning at the words “little lady.” I empty all the quarters out on the counter. “There. That’s all I’ve got. See?” I show him the insides of the purse. “I was going to save these for phone calls. If I can use your phone, I’ll call the hospital and get someone to come bring me some more money.”
Cigar man gets his wallet, pulls out a couple of bills and slaps them down. “I don’t make a habit of doing this,” he says, “but something about you looks desperate, little lady.”
“I am not desperate,” I say, “and my name is ‘Elizabeth,’ not little lady. But thank you, sir, thank you for the ticket. If you’ll write your address down, I’ll pay you back.”
Cigar man waves his hand, as if brushing me away. “Bus’ll be here about ten minutes.”
I nod a thank-you, pick up Daddy’s army bag just like I have come away from a war somewhere, and walk real fast over to the long bench that looks very much like a church pew, and I sink down on it; my body feels as heavy as a cannonball and at the same time as light and airy as an eagle soaring up in the skies.
I look over at the old, dried-up woman sitting just down the bench from me. Her hair, a mass of brown frizzy curls, looks like someone has left the permanent solution on too long and fried her. But, unlike Mama, she doesn’t seem to mind. She is cheerful enough regardless of a frizzed-up head.
“Where you going?” she chirps, sparrowlike, her cornflower blue eyes just beaming delight.
For a moment the question startles me, I guess because that’s what my mind was spinning around and around on like a spinning top—where, where, where am I going, where, where, where am I going? and I don’t know where, where, where am I going. So, it takes me a while to answer her.
“I’m sorry,” I apologize, “I’m not quite myself right now . . . if you know what I mean.”
“Oh, I know all right,” she says, her eyes sparkling clear, in spite of their years. “Oh, yes I know, I’m not quite myself either. I’m waiting for Grade, my daughter. Haven’t seen her in near about a year. A year! Can you believe it? Grade’s coming!” She looks at her black-band watch. “In just a few minutes, Gracie’ll be getting off the bus. I couldn’t sleep last night,” she says, shrugging her happiness into herself, “couldn’t sleep at all, thinking about Grade coming.”
All the bus waiters have grown silent, as if paying some kind of holy tribute to the old woman’s excitement. Sensing the mood she has created, she settles back onto the bench and grows quiet until everyone starts up to talking again.
“Where does Grade live?” I ask.
“Texas,” she says, her eyes brightening again, “Dallas, Texas. She’s just finished med school out there. She’s going to be a doctor out there. Can you believe it? My Grade, a doctor, a pediatrician—that’s a doctor who takes care of little children, you know.”
“Yes Ma’am,” I say.
“And you? Where are you going?”
“Home,” I say, “home for a while, just long enough to—”
“There’s Grade!” she says, jumping up, as the “Blue Highways” bus comes thundering into the station, a stream of hot, oily-smelling gray smoke billowing out all around it.
I take my time about getting out to the bus, waiting for all the people to pile off it, waiting, mostly, I guess, like the old mother, waiting for Grade.
Mother and Grade hug and cry and cry and hug, and I know it’s not proper, but I can’t help it, I just stand and stare at them so glad to see each other.
When their rejoicing finally calms down and they start away, the mother waves and calls out to me, just as I am about to climb up the steps of the bus.
“Bye, bye, honey,” she says, “I know your mama’s gonna be so proud to see you.” Grade, too, waves, and although I lift my hand to wave back, it doesn’t do any waving, just kind of hangs there in suspension, just like my whole entire body and self, until, finally, the bus driver calls out, “Let’s get moving, young lady, got a long way to go.”
I climb on up the steps, give him my ticket, and find an empty seat toward the back of the bus, a seat where I can sit all by myself and look out through the window and still see Grade and her mother, see them taking on over each other, while I, Elizabeth, just watch and wait, watch Grade and her mother and wait for the “Blue Highways” bus to start up and get going, to get on moving along and take me anywhere. Anywhere I want to go.
Published by
Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
Post Office Box 2225
Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27515-2225
a division of
Workman Publishing Company, Inc.
225 Varick Street
New York, New York 10014
© 1993 by Joyce Durham Barrett. All rights reserved.
Printed in the United States of America.
Design by Sara Smith.
Excerpt from “The Green Door” by Marvin J. Moore and Bob Davie © 1956 Trio Music Co., Inc. & Alley Music Corp. (renewed). All rights reserved. Excerpts from “I Want to Be Free” by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller © 1957 Jerry Leiber Music & Mike Stoller Music (renewed). All rights reserved. Used by permission.
This is a work of fiction. All names, characters, places, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. No reference to any real person is intended or should be inferred.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.
E-book ISBN 978-1-61620-290-3
Quiet-Crazy Page 21