Jilted
Page 27
Clyde looked at me out of the corner of his eye. “Just this morning the doc said I was good to go as long as I went home and rested, but I haven’t made it home yet.” He looked over his shoulder at the view. “Unless you count this place.”
I laced my fingers together, then alternated my thumbs. “And aren’t you supposed to keep your leg elevated?”
“Yep. That, too. And I’m supposed to be on crutches for a few weeks.”
I rolled my eyes but didn’t look at him.
“Troy’s got ’em in the tanker.” As if hauling crutches in a vehicle would heal his leg just as quickly as walking with them.
Only a few smoldering piles of debris remained where the old shack had been, and Troy called to Clyde, then swept his palm toward the fire like a beautiful girl presenting a Lamborghini at a car show.
Clyde gestured toward the house, a signal for Troy to spray the place down with water. At first the droplets sizzled and steamed, sending a fresh bundle of smoke and soot into the air, but after only a few minutes, the flames stopped fighting.
“I was sorry to miss Ansel’s funeral,” Clyde said.
“You would have been proud of him.” I chuckled. “He left Dodd with instructions to give the family a guilt trip about church.”
“Naw.” Clyde’s jaw dropped open in a grin. “I didn’t know he was a believer.”
“Just recently, I guess.”
Clyde rubbed his chin. “Well, don’t that beat all.” He faced me then, leaning his side against the car so that he could stare. “What did you think about his challenge, Lyn?”
“It’s only been twenty minutes. I haven’t had much time to think on it.”
He hummed in thought. “If you had to guess, what would you say you’d think about it, once you had time to think?”
I rolled my eyes again. “I might tag along with Velma sometime. She’s been talking about it a little.”
“You’d go with … Velma?” His left eyebrow lifted slightly.
Troy called across the yard, and I welcomed the interruption. “You got it from here, Felton?”
“Sure thing. You go on now.”
“It was a good burn!” Troy yelled.
As the water truck pulled away, I asked, “A good burn?”
Clyde shrugged. “Burning stuff is fun.”
We stood in silence for a few minutes, and then Clyde gazed over the rim of the Cap.
“The town’s a mess, I guess,” he said. “I haven’t been down there yet.”
I followed him to the edge of the drop-off, where we looked down on Trapp. The damage showed even more from this perspective, and I could see how the tornado had hopped from street to street, leaving some houses and taking others. I cringed. So many people were hurt. “Half the buildings are gone. The grain elevator … the elementary school … the United.”
“How’s your house?”
“There’s a chunk out of the backside, and there’s no sign of the carport.” I shrugged. “But I haven’t had anybody look at it yet.” That was Ansel’s job.
“I can take care of it, Lyn.” Clyde put emphasis on the first word, and his eyes bored into mine. “If it’s not too bad, I can fix it up. With JohnScott’s help.” He looked away as though it were settled. “Where are you staying?”
“Dodd and Ruthie’s house. On the couch.” I looked back toward town, my gaze following the path of destruction. “Your trailer’s gone.”
“Gone?”
“I’ve seen parts of it all over town, but not any pieces large enough to keep for a souvenir.” I shivered. “Good thing you were at the Dairy Queen.”
We stood in silence then, looking far below, watching a long line of cars making their way toward the cemetery. The shadow of Ansel’s death washed over me again, but I brushed it aside, unable to dwell on the sadness because of my relief. Relief that Clyde had been saved after being buried alive.
“I guess we’ll have a few more funerals this week,” I said.
“Sorry for those ones.”
“Me, too. Maria Fuentes was a friend of Ruthie’s.” I took a deep breath. “I came here to apologize.”
“Apologize?”
“Is that so hard to believe?”
“Naw, it’s not that,” he said. “It’s just that I’m not sure what you’re apologizing for.”
“Like there are too many things?”
He frowned. “No. Like I’m not sure what you’re apologizing for.”
I walked away from him, stopping a few yards in front of the car, where I could glare at the mounds of steaming ash. “I’m sorry for giving you a hard time about your grandpappy’s house. I’m sorry for turning away from you because of it. I’m sorry for being a basket case.”
“Well …”—he studied me from where he stood at the edge of the cliff—“I’m sorry you thought I was dead. I don’t plan on ever leaving you again.”
“You better not,” I called. “I’ve decided to need you.”
“No way.”
“And I’ve decided to let you take care of me.”
Laughter boomed from deep in his chest. “Come back over here, Lyn.”
“No.” I raised my chin. “You come over here.”
He did nothing except smile, and his shoulders shook silently.
I pouted, wishing he would come where I was. Wishing I didn’t have to go to him. Wishing he would do everything in the world to make my life easier.
He shook his head and held his hands out as he did so often for Nathan, and the action sent my heart into a tailspin. Satin cords pulled me toward his open arms, so ready to shelter me, comfort me, want me. I took three steps and melted into his embrace.
“Thank you for burning your stupid house.” I rubbed my cheek against his chest. “I can’t believe you did that.”
“I got the idea from you.”
I started to ask him what he meant, but then I remembered jokingly telling him to tear down the old place. I shuddered. And that night at the diner I said I wouldn’t go there with him. I wanted to blot the memories from my mind—along with my selfishness—but that likely wouldn’t happen. I hadn’t been able to erase any other memories, not completely, but I had been able to let them go. And Clyde would help me.
“I’m a better person with you than I am alone,” I said.
“I could say the same thing. We’re a team.”
He smiled, but he was no longer laughing at me. Instead, he was just happy. Happier than he’d been in years—maybe in his whole life. He held me against his chest and kissed the top of my head. “You don’t leave me either, okay?”
I looked up at him. “Not a chance.”
Epilogue
The following year was full of changes. For starters, Clyde and I got married. We didn’t make a fuss, as that wasn’t our style. We simply got a license and had Dodd speak a few words before we made our promises. Ruthie and Velma stood by me, and Fawn and JohnScott by Clyde, and Nathan toddled back and forth between us. It was a good day. A healing day. Full of recovery and hope.
Clyde had stayed with Troy and Pam after the storm, making the necessary repairs to my house before we married, and then he quietly moved his things in. Not that he had much to move, because everything he owned—including his sedan—had been destroyed in the tornado. He didn’t seem to miss those things, though.
For the first month at least, I hid myself in my bedroom again, but this time with Clyde by my side. It had been built differently than before, with no ghosts or haunts from the past. No clumpy, chipped texture on the walls. It was our room. Mine and Clyde’s. I explored his tattoos, and he kissed away my doubts, and we clung to each other as much as possible, trying to convince ourselves that life was real. That happiness was real. That it wasn’t going to slip away from us again. After years of turmoil, Clyde and I were finally covered with a veil of
peace.
Our little town had its share of lies and secrets, but I got the impression that God—in spite of His infinite love—had grown weary of waiting for the townspeople to acknowledge their faults and had opted instead to blow everything wide open Himself. When that tornado raged through Trapp, it left in its wake a strong group of people dedicated to saving their town. They came together, fighting against the odds, to rebuild and renew, and as they developed a common bond with one another, they gradually began to protect their own with the savage determination of a mother bear.
Clyde, along with the others whose homes were totally destroyed, was showered with food and supplies as well as offers of lodging, transportation, medical care, and anything else he might need. It was as if the storm acted as a great equalizer that leveled the playing field and brought us together.
All of us but one.
Neil had been pulled from the debris at the Dairy Queen and immediately placed in handcuffs and taken away. His trial lasted for months, but according to Hector, there was so much evidence stacked against him, he didn’t stand a chance. Even though his gun was never found, they were able to match the bullet in Hoby’s skull to two dozen others found in the side of the barn on the Blaylocks’ old home place. In the end Neil was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Clyde testified in Neil’s defense, asserting his innocence and relaying all that Neil had confessed to him that night in the freezer. But it didn’t matter. People will believe what they want to believe, regardless of the truth, the jury included. Neil knew that better than anyone. The day Neil’s sentence came down and he was sent to prison for a crime he didn’t commit, Clyde held me in our bedroom, and we wondered at the irony.
“Things always come back around, don’t they?” Clyde said softly.
For some reason I thought of the windmills, spinning constantly round and round, and I nestled closer to my husband. “I guess they do.”
Life had a way of repeating itself—sometimes a comfort and sometimes a curse—but because of the predictability, I’d learned to ride out the storm and let the wind die down. No matter what tempest I came up against, eventually the helter-skelter rotations would calm into gentle spirals that I could handle.
“We’ll need to visit him,” Clyde said.
I nodded reluctantly, not wanting to visit Neil but knowing it needed to be done. “And we need to look out for Susan,” I said.
Clyde pulled me closer and kissed the top of my head, and we lay wrapped in each other’s arms, staring at the ceiling. Waiting for our world to settle.
And eventually it did.
Once Clyde started making decisions, his confidence snowballed until he was firing off orders left and right. Building a restaurant on the Caprock was the biggest decision he made. A horseshoe-shaped deck filled with tables allowed guests to sit right on the rim while they ate, and those who didn’t want to brave the heat and wind could dine inside behind the floor-to-ceiling windows. Clyde and I had more than one debate about which place was the better atmosphere, but even then, I got the feeling he preferred the kitchen.
Every Sunday morning we would set the rolls to rising before we went to worship, and we sneaked out after Dodd’s sermon so Clyde could have lunch ready when church let out. Pretty near the entire congregation would show up, along with others who had just crawled out of bed. Clyde’s down-home hospitality and good food swiftly became legendary, and after a while he was known for more than just his prison term. Hungry patrons came from surrounding towns, and travelers learned that a detour through Trapp would always be worth the extra time.
“This place is good for us, Lyn,” Clyde said one Sunday afternoon. “I’m glad I thought of it.”
I dumped a pan of warm buttered rolls into a basket and covered it with a cloth. “That’s not exactly the way I remember it.”
Nathan ran up to us, bouncing on his tiptoes and stretching his hands above his head. “Clyde! I wanna go up. Up!”
Clyde peered down at the two-year-old. “You know I’m too busy to carry you around.” His mouth quivered in a smile.
“I help you, Clyde.” Nathan stopped his bouncing and worried his brow as though they were sealing a deal on a major investment.
“Well, in that case …” Clyde reached down and slowly lifted the child like an elevator going to the top floor while Nathan’s Sunday shoes swung back and forth. He nestled the boy in the crook of one arm and picked up the basket of rolls with the other.
“Hand sanitizer,” I said, squirting a dollop into Nathan’s tiny palm.
As I made my way around the dining room, greeting friends and strangers and offering them menus, I watched my husband with his grandson. Clyde would greet the customers with his booming voice and ask them if they needed a warm-up on their rolls. He held the basket close to Nathan, who would pick up a roll and hand it to the customer. Depending on who was requesting it, Clyde might encourage the boy to pitch it across the table, or keep it to himself, or even take a bite out of it before passing it off.
“You’re teaching that kid to be as ornery as you.” I tried to frown, but my lips wouldn’t cooperate.
“The kid doesn’t need teaching, Lyn.” Clyde winked at me. “He’s a natural.”
I followed them out to the deck, where Dodd and Ruthie sat at a table with Fawn and JohnScott. Velma was there as well, and so was Dodd’s mother. Nathan scrambled out of Clyde’s arms and ran to the side of the deck, where he pressed his palms against the Plexiglas barrier and looked down at the town far below. His long, black curls swished on the breeze.
“Clyde?” JohnScott drawled. “I’ve been telling Fawn the kid needs a haircut, but she won’t listen.”
Fawn smiled. “Just because his grandpappy got a haircut doesn’t mean Nathan needs one.”
“Aw, now,” Clyde said. “I don’t reckon it matters none.”
“He looks like a little girl,” Ruthie quipped. “Just the other day at the Walmart in Lubbock, someone asked Fawn how old her daughter was.”
“But look at these curls.” Fawn reached toward her son and ran her fingers through his hair. “I just can’t.”
Clyde, still holding the basket of rolls, slipped his arm around my waist. It felt good to be with my family, sharing in their banter, but it felt even better to be standing next to Clyde, saying nothing at all. Gently I shifted my hip to bump his thigh, and he nudged me back.
Velma, sitting at the end of the table, shifted in her chair, and I recognized the look on her face. Obviously she had been waiting for the perfect opportunity to say something that needed to be said, and now that it was here, she wasn’t about to miss it. She leveled her gaze at her son. “JohnScott, it’s about time you and Fawn had another baby.” Her lips curved upward. “And try to make it a girl this time so Fawn can play with ribbons and bows.”
My nephew’s cheeks flushed red, but his mouth fell open and he laughed loudly, as did everyone else at the table.
The laughter dwindled, and Dodd cleared his throat. “Actually …” He eased to his feet—the preacher could never say much in a seated position—and he looked right at me. “Actually, Ruthie may be able to help with the ribbons and bows.”
Two long seconds of silence passed, and then the women at the table squealed. Including me.
More laughter followed, and slaps on the back, and question after question for Ruthie.
And I smiled, realizing I was flooded with happiness. Happiness felt so good. How had I ever thought I could live without it?
Clyde leaned over with his lips next to my ear. “You all right with this news?” His palm slid from my waist to my backside, and he squeezed. “Granny?”
“Yes.” Raising up on my tiptoes, I giggled but moved toward his tickling instead of away. “I’m just fine with it.”
And I was.
I had finally realized it didn’t ma
tter if my glass was half full or half empty. That’s not what life was about. What mattered was that God stood behind me with a full pitcher, waiting to refill my plastic tumbler … if only I’d let Him. Since I had discovered that fact, my cup hadn’t ceased to overflow. Not with material possessions or money. Not with promises of fairy tales and happy endings. Not even with a secure knowledge that I would never be hurt again. I might. God simply gave me the hope that I could handle whatever life hurled at me, and then He filled me up with peace, joy, love.
And people.
All the important things.
… a little more …
When a delightful concert comes to an end,
the orchestra might offer an encore.
When a fine meal comes to an end,
it’s always nice to savor a bit of dessert.
When a great story comes to an end,
we think you may want to linger.
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We invite you to stay awhile in the story.
Thanks for reading!
Turn the page for ...
• Note to the Reader
• Acknowledgments
• Book Club Discussion Guide
• About the Author
Note to the Reader
I hope you enjoyed reading about Trapp, Texas, as much as I enjoyed writing about it. As a child I grew up visiting my grandparents on their ranch in West Texas, and my hazy memories turned up all over Jilted, especially at Picnic Hollow. It’s a real place, packed with history and nostalgia, but unfortunately, its sandy walls were relocated to the bottom of Lake Alan Henry when the dam was built in 1993. Nevertheless, I couldn’t bear to leave it down there. Granted, I took creative liberties in my description of the site, but there are a few details that ring true, like the wagon train … and the rattlesnake.
The geographical inaccuracies don’t end there. My version of the wind fields isn’t entirely true to Garza and Scurry Counties, because I shortened the distance between the windmills near Fluvanna and those in the cotton fields of Roscoe. I regret this in a way, because one of the things I love about West Texas is the way everything is spread out. On the other hand, Clyde and Lynda simply didn’t have time for all that driving.