Jan Karon's Mitford Years

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Jan Karon's Mitford Years Page 66

by Jan Karon

“I can’t take it all in, I’ll be crawling around under here for days.” She returned to her hands and knees; Barnabas trotted in and lay behind the angel.

  “One more visitor to the stable!” he announced. “Where the deuce is Violet?”

  “On top of the refrigerator. Leave well enough alone.”

  The refrigerator! “I’m hungry as a bear,” he said. “I’ll fix us something; how about a bowl of cereal?”

  “I can’t wait another minute to give you yours, Timothy. Then I’ll fix us both a bowl of cereal. Help me up!”

  “Ah, but who will help me up?” His knees creaked like the hinges of a loose shutter.

  “You can’t look,” she said, as he hauled her to her feet.

  “I promise.” He loved it when someone had a secret thing to present, and asked him not to look, and he had to promise he wouldn’t.

  “By the way, the angel is glorious. Was there only one to gaze down upon this wondrous assembly?”

  He faced the tree and, as an extra precaution, shut his eyes. “There were two, but . . . I dropped the other one and broke it.” He hated the thought even now.

  He heard her slippers whisper across the hall and back again.

  “Timothy . . .”

  “Yes?”

  “You said you broke the other angel?”

  “Yes,” he said, feeling oddly sad and repentant.

  “Would this be it?” she asked.

  He turned and saw the angel with the serene countenance and slender feet held close, and complete, in Cynthia’s arms.

  His breath went out of him.

  “Your broken angel is made whole,” she said.

  It was that time before sunrise that elderly people in the coves around Mitford still called “first light.” Nothing at all could be seen of the sun; the winter sky and snow-covered mountains beneath were gray as stone.

  At the town museum, Uncle Billy Watson shuffled along the dark hallway in his bathrobe, carrying the tray under his arm and thanking the Good Lord the paint had dried overnight. He would set out her Santy and mix up the pancake batter, and, in a little bit, go wake her up.

  His heart was pounding with pure excitement. “Th’ way my ticker’s a-goin’,” he muttered, “th’ gover’ment’s gittin’ its money’s worth out of them pills.”

  He fumbled for the switch plate inside the door of the kitchen. As three hundred watts blazed into the room, he nearly jumped out of his skin.

  “Law help!” he hollered, surprised by his wife, whom he’d thought still sleeping. She sat in her chair looking mad as a wet hen, her white, uncombed hair standing ever’whichaway.

  “Rose!” he said, concealing the tray behind his back.

  “What?”

  “I didn’t know you was up!” He’d decided to talk plenty loud this morning so she could understand every word. After all, it was Christmas.

  She scowled, pulling together dark, heavy eyebrows that looked like two woolly worms. “Here it is daylight,” she squawked, “and not hide nor hair of Santy!”

  He’d seen her mad plenty of times, but this was one for the dadgum books. He wanted to run down the hall and jump out the window in his stocking feet.

  “It’s snowin’ out!” He was going to keep the peace today if it killed him. “He’ll be along directly!”

  “Everybody knows Santy never comes after daylight!”

  “Ever’body knows he don’t come a’tall if you’re settin’ there f’r ’im t’ stumble over!”

  “I just sat down here, Bill Watson. I was hiding by the Kelvinator ’til a minute ago.”

  “I reckon he must’ve got a look at you somehow.” Boys howdy, if that was a fact, ol’ Santy had took off a-runnin’, an’ by now he’d made it to th’ other side of th’ mountain. He continued to hold the tray behind his back, though it made his arm tremble.

  “What he’s done is not show up at all, just like people have said all along. And after you poked a stick up the chimney and made that awful mess!”

  Still facing his wife, he maneuvered to the table they’d started housekeeping with, the cherrywood table he’d made with his own hands all those years ago. He slid the tray onto the table without making a sound, then turned around and looked at it sitting there on the checked oilcloth with the red bow taped to a handle. Keeping his back to his wife, he slipped the envelope from his pocket and onto the tray.

  “Law help, Rose, looky here!”

  “What?”

  “Here on th’ table!” He yelled over his shoulder, hoarse as a frog, “Hit’s y’r Santy!”

  The tray was beauteous, it truly was, and the handle pull on each side was just the trick for picking it up and carrying it around. He hoped she wouldn’t recognize the pulls under their coat of green paint.

  “What is it?”

  “Wellsir, I reckon hit’s a tray f’r earbobs an’ brooch pins an’ whatnot, like you been a-needin’.” He went to her, leaning on his cane and carrying the tray.

  Her face lit up. “A jewelry tray! I vow I always wanted a jewelry tray!”

  “Santy must’ve come while we was sleepin’.” He stood by her chair, presenting the tray. His right hand shook, which made the bow jump around.

  “Why, Bill Watson! It’s real nice—I declare it is!”

  “Ol’ Santy done pretty good, I reckon.” His heart was about to bust.

  “What’s that lying on it?”

  “Y’r tray’s got a letter with it, looks like.”

  Carefully, he stooped and placed the tray in her lap, and, for that moment, his arthritis didn’t bother him at all.

  As good as he could hear, his wife could see. She picked up the envelope and, squinting through second-hand glasses from the Lion’s Club, examined the inscription.

  She caught her breath.

  “I’ll make us a pancake,” he said, swallowing hard.

  But his feet wouldn’t move. Instead, he watched his helpmeet of more than fifty years, she the rose and he the thorn, as tears of happiness streamed along her wrinkled cheeks.

  She took the letter from the envelope, unfolded it, and read aloud, lingering over the words as if each were a gift in itself.

  “ ‘My . . . dear . . . little . . . sister . . .’ ”

  As his wife sounded out the words, he discovered a wonderful thing—he wadn’t jealous n’ more, not even a whit.

  “ ‘You . . . please me . . . very much . . . with . . . your . . . fine reading, . . .’ ”

  He wiped his eyes on his sleeve, ashamed that he’d ever harbored a bitter thought toward Willard Porter, and, right then and there, without speaking his petition aloud, asked the Good Lord to forgive him.

  In the small house in the pines at the end of the road, the coffeemaker kicked on and brewed four cups of Wal-Mart’s breakfast blend as Lew Boyd slept warm next to his wife. Beyond the window, snow swirled as in a miniature globe.

  He gave a loud snort, which startled him awake, and looked about as if uncertain of his surroundings. Then he saw Earlene nestled into the crook of his right arm.

  His heart flooded with a joy he hadn’t known before, not even on their furtive honeymoon to Dollywood. He gazed at the streaks of gray in her chestnut hair, and the little lines at the corners of her eyes and mouth, and felt the love beat up in him, and the thanksgiving, and didn’t mind that his arm had gone numb as a two-by-four—nossir, he wouldn’t disturb this moment for anything.

  He remembered last night, how they’d gone to church down at First Baptist, and how he could hardly believe he was standing next to her, singing his heart out and hearing her voice lift onto the high notes. The sound was almost more than he could bear and keep his eyes dry.

  He’d been awful proud to introduce Earlene around, and he’d never seen such a swarm of flabbergasted people. Some hugged her neck right off the bat, and everybody said they were mighty happy for him. A few said they figured something was going on with those visits to his old aunt in Tennessee.

  Afterward, they’d jumpe
d over to Wesley for Chinese take-out, and come home and sat down to eat at the kitchen table like normal people. As far as he could recall, he’d mostly gobbled his dinner at the kitchen sink since Juanita passed.

  Then they hauled the fake tree from the corner of the dining room where it had stood against the wall for seven years, mashing one side completely flat.

  They set it in a stand by the front window and went after it like a house afire, weaving six strings of colored lights among the branches and decorating with everything they could find in the long-neglected boxes. As they did this, the flat side fluffed out—the plastic branches fell into place, one by one, until the tree looked good as new. He and Earlene stood there like little young ’uns and clapped their hands.

  The very thought made him grin like a monkey, and he turned his head and nuzzled his wife’s hair, and offered a silent prayer.

  Thank you. . . .

  He didn’t know whether to say “Thank you, God” or “Thank you, Lord,” or “Thank you, Father.” Down at church, Preacher Sprouse said all three at one time or another, even “Yaweh.” Harley Welch called Him “Lord an’ Master,” sometimes talkin’ about Him as if He was standin’ right there, and Father Tim prayed like him and God was old friends, kind of like, “Hey, buddy, how’s it goin’?”

  It was hard to think about something new, like what to call the Almighty. He hadn’t exactly closed his mind in church, but he hadn’t exactly paid attention, either; he’d been bad to think about business when sitting in the pew—was gasoline goin’ up or was it goin’ down? Why couldn’t this country find its own instead of leanin’ on the Middle East? And why were customers so dadblame hard to please?

  Then there was the EPA—the worst torment a man could have in this life. Forget down yonder, they made it hell enough right here! Every ten years, regular as clockwork, they checked him out, and ten years ago, they’d tore up his tanks and jackhammered his concrete pads an’ dug down t’ Beijing, an’ th’ mess they found had cost him thirty thousand smackers.

  He thought he’d just let th’ whole dadgum thing go south, but he’d tightened his belt and held on for everything he was worth, and somehow he’d made it through. Others hadn’t been so lucky; he’d watched the EPA shut down his competition ’til he was the only gas station left open for eight miles to th’ north an’ six to th’ south. Trouble was, in just three months, his ten years were up, and they’d be knockin’ on his door again.

  He felt his temples pounding just thinkin’ about the gover’ment. . . . Nossir, he didn’t want to do that, his blood pressure would shoot out th’ roof, wake up Earlene, and set th’ neighbor’s dogs to barkin’.

  He guessed th’ only time he really paid attention in church was when it was time to sing. He’d heard enough preachin’ to know that pride goeth before a fall, and he was prideful about his voice, he admitted it. As he was th’ only bass at First Baptist, his singin’ stood out, causing people to turn their heads and look, and sometimes even smile or give him a thumbs-up.

  But th’ bottom line was, he hadn’t done right by God. Or th’ Lord. Or th’ Heavenly Father. Not that he’d killed anybody or coveted anybody’s wife or anything like that, but, all his life, he’d gone on his merry way, doin’ his own thing. To tell th’ truth, he’d like to give it all to somebody bigger an’ smarter than him.

  One of these days, maybe he would pray that other prayer, after all. Something deep inside had shifted in a way he couldn’t explain. He couldn’t remember all the words Father Kavanagh had said, except the part about surrendering his life. That didn’t seem so frightening now, with Earlene lying beside him and the snow brushing against the window and piling up on the railing outside.

  He just couldn’t imagine what possible interest Almighty God could have in his life . . . but . . .

  He lay still for a long time, scarcely breathing, before finishing that thought.

  . . . but if He wanted it, He could have it.

  Hope stood at the windows looking down on Main Street. In truth, one could hardly tell there was a street there at all. The tracks of the snowplow, made less than an hour ago, were vanishing under fresh snow.

  “Thank you, Lord!” she whispered, glad for the beauty and peace of this morning.

  Since she had prayed that prayer last September, a lot of things had changed. It was easier and easier to blurt something out to God, or ask Him for guidance, or, right on the spot, thank Him for the simplest things.

  The midnight service at Lord’s Chapel had been transporting; she had never attended such a service. The smell of the cedar and pine . . . the lovely and moving voices of the choir, often singing a cappella in the candlelit church . . . and her hand warm in Scott’s hand . . .

  She knew she had never done anything to deserve any of this, which made God’s love for her all the more amazing and inexplicable.

  Walking toward the hot plate where she would soon prepare her first Christmas breakfast for company, she recognized the deep fatigue she felt from the long weeks of not knowing, and the lack of help with the rare-books business, and the loss . . . But it was Christmas, and she mustn’t think of loss.

  She felt compelled to turn and look at the light spilling through the lace.

  “Mother!”

  The grief was sharp and sudden, and she put her head in her hands and wept, feeling, even in her sorrow, an assurance she could not define.

  “We need a carrot!”

  “We ain’t got any carrots, I looked!”

  “Dooley says don’t say ‘ain’t’!”

  “We could use a stick for ’is nose. I guess there’s plenty of sticks around.”

  “Yeah, but how can you see where they’re at under th’ snow?”

  In the yard of the small house in the laurels, Poo and Jessie Barlowe built a snowman that they planned to top off with their stepfather’s yellow hard hat. Dooley would come over today, and they would go with him to the preacher’s house for Christmas dinner, where they’d see their other brother, Sammy, and get presents. Then, maybe everybody would drive by their house and see their snowman. This possibility was so exciting they couldn’t eat breakfast, though each had ventured out into the cold and snowy morning with a pocketful of M&M’s.

  “How can we make ’im smile?”

  “Little rocks, like from a driveway. We could stick ’em in ’is face in a little curve.”

  “We don’t have no driveway.”

  Jessie thought hard, her breath clouding the air in short puffs. “We could use M&M’s!”

  “I ain’t usin’ mine.”

  “I can’t believe how selfish you are! Don’t you know it’s Christmas? Plus everybody might ride over to see.”

  “OK,” said Poo, emptying his pocket.

  She had never made an omelet using a two-burner hot plate, but Scott cheered her on, and with the salsa and toast and plum jam and tea, it all seemed magical. Sitting in her new home with Scott, his dogs sleeping on the old rug she loved, she felt suddenly grown-up and invincible, taller, even.

  “Merry Christmas!” she said, overcome by his presence across her small table.

  “Merry Christmas,” he said, taking her hand.

  She’d certainly had dreams of romance, sometimes even foolish dreams about men on moors, usually on horseback, with their capes blown by some stern highland wind. But never had she dreamed she might know someone so peaceable and kind, so genuine and true. She pressed his hand, unable to speak, and again felt tears shining in her eyes.

  He settled back in the chair, looking easy and relaxed. “Tell me—what is your chief desire for Happy Endings?”

  She thought for a moment. “I’d like my bookstore to be a place where people feel truly at home.”

  He smiled. “Your bookstore.”

  “Yes!” she said, marveling. “My bookstore!”

  “You know what?”

  “What?”

  “Your bookstore is living up to its name.”

  It felt wonderful to laugh,
as if the sound were coming from a new person, someone she was excited about getting to know. The dogs jumped up and ran to her at once, as if called by her laughter.

  She looked into their brown and eager eyes. “May I give them a bite of toast with jam?”

  “They’d like that.”

  She felt their soft, nuzzling way of taking the toast from her hand.

  “Beautiful!” Scott said, with special tenderness. “Sparkling!”

  She touched the small diamonds at her ears. “They’re wonderful, I love them!”

  He grinned. “I wasn’t talking about the earrings,” he said.

  On the deck of Esther and Gene Bolick’s green cottage east of Main Street, fourteen terra-cotta flowerpots filled with snow, and mounded like ice cream cones.

  Beyond the sliding doors, Esther and Gene sat by the fireplace in their twin recliners, drinking coffee and opening presents. The fake fireplace, which Gene had given her ten Christmases ago, featured a forty-watt bulb that glowed through a revolving sheet of red cellophane, a setup that Esther had often pronounced “cozy.”

  “I can’t believe this!” said Esther.

  “What?” Gene had just opened a can of nuts from a pal at the Legion hut, and was searching for a cashew.

  “This laundry bag with the B monogram! From Hessie Mayhew!”

  “What about it?”

  Incredulous, Esther held the gift aloft. “I put this old thing in th’ Bane an’ Blessin’ a hundred years ago!”

  “Well, I’ll be,” said Gene, trying to sound interested.

  Esther dropped the laundry bag into her lap and sat frozen with disbelief. “And to think I gave her a two-layer marmalade.”

  “Th’ poor woman has a gimp leg, Esther, which don’t leave much room for shoppin’. Besides, why did you put it in th’ Bane an’ Blessin’? It looks perfectly good to me.”

  “Well, yes,” said Esther, examining it more carefully. “After I put it in, I wished I hadn’t.”

  “See?” said her husband, hammering down on a couple of cashews. “What goes around comes around.”

 

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