Almost Heaven

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Almost Heaven Page 10

by Chris Fabry


  I sighed. “We’ve been over this. I took all of your accounts and moved them into one.”

  “You have no right to do that.”

  “Yes, I do. You gave me the power to take care of you. I’m trying to do what’s best. What happened to Callie? You didn’t run her off, did you?”

  “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Mama spat. “But I know this: if you don’t get out of here, I’m going to blow you to kingdom come.”

  The phone rang and when I moved to it, she raised the gun. I ignored her and went for the black phone that had hung on the kitchen wall for years. It was caked with dust and grease and felt like an old friend when I picked it up. They don’t make phones like that anymore.

  “Billy?” Callie said when I answered. Her voice was strained, like she was trying to hold something in a gunnysack that wanted out. “You need to get out of there.”

  “What’s wrong, Callie?”

  “It’s your mama! Is she still in the house?”

  “Yeah, I hope so. She doesn’t have a stitch of clothes on.” I heard movement behind me but didn’t turn around.

  “Billy, she found the box of shells. I don’t know how she did it, but she found them and loaded that .22 and took a few shots at me before I got out of there.”

  I noticed a couple of holes in the plaster by the phone.

  “She’s not well. You have to do something. But first, get out of there.”

  “I’ll take care of it.”

  “I love her like she was my own mother, but I think she’s going to hurt somebody.”

  “Thank you, Callie.”

  Callie said something else but I only heard her voice breaking into a cry as I reached to hang up the phone.

  “I’m going to blow your head off, you lying cheat.”

  “That might be the best thing you could do for me, Mama.”

  “You’re selling my antiques, aren’t you?” she seethed. “I can’t find any of my cutlery. And the car’s gone. You sold it right out from under me.”

  I was still speaking to the holes in the wall, trying to keep my voice calm. “Mama, I sold your car because you can’t drive safely anymore. You took out every mailbox from here to Benedict Road. I’m using the money to take care of you and pay for the medication you flush down the toilet.”

  “You’re trying to drug me. That Callie is in on it with you!”

  “Callie just cares. And the cutlery’s stored away so you don’t hurt yourself. We’ve been over this.”

  “Stay right where you are!” she yelled.

  I sat down at the kitchen table and stared at the casserole.

  “You never did love me,” she said. “I saw the papers you had drawn up! I saw them in your shop! And don’t try to tell me you didn’t. I read the whole thing.”

  “I showed you the papers myself. You signed them of your own free will back when you were in your right mind.”

  “Oh yeah? Well, I have something to say to you, Mr. High-and-Mighty. I’m taking back that power of attorney, and you’ll be out on the street! How do you like them apples? All of a sudden the shoe’s on the other foot and it don’t feel so good, does it?”

  “Mama, calm down and get your robe on.”

  She moved closer and poked the gun in my face. “You don’t boss me around anymore. You’re not the man of this house. You killed the man of this house.”

  Her venom finally struck and I looked up, wounded.

  “That’s right,” she said. “I figured it out. You knew your daddy was having troubles. You knew how fragile his mind was. So you sneaked and got that .410 and some shells and put it where he could reach it when he got low. And when he was in the ground, you never cried like somebody who loved their daddy. You just went on as if it never happened. Just picked up the next day and kept moving. I should have seen it at the time, but I didn’t.”

  “Mama, you don’t know what you’re saying.”

  “If you had loved your daddy, you would have helped him. You would have become a better man!”

  She was shouting now and it was all I could do to resist grabbing the barrel of the gun and ripping it from her hands. She looked like she didn’t have the strength to pull the trigger, but the holes in the wall betrayed that thought.

  “Mama, you’re not thinking straight. Now get your robe on and let’s talk about this.”

  “Talk, talk, talk,” she snapped. “That time is over. You’ve been talking with those nursing home people. You’ve been talking with the county. Don’t think I can’t hear you on the phone.”

  I had tried to keep my conversations with the authorities as discreet as possible. It had been a long series of delayed decisions and questions about the cost and the logistics of such a move. I hadn’t made the final decision because the house was my mother’s castle. She lived for that house, as old and broken-down as it was.

  “We’ve been talking about what’s best for you.”

  “What’s best for me? You can’t even run your own life, let alone mine. You go running after a split-tail bed thrasher and then boohoo about it, moping around here like some wounded dog. Just get up and get out. And don’t come back.”

  Blue and white lights flashed over the hill, and I put my face in my hands. “Mama, get dressed; the police are coming.”

  “You called the police?” she shouted.

  “No, I think Callie probably did after you used her for target practice. Now unless you want the sheriff or one of his deputies seeing you in your birthday suit, you’d better give me the gun and get your robe on.”

  She turned and looked out the window, and if the scene hadn’t been so serious, I would have laughed at the sight of her jiggly, saggy bottom. She glanced back at me with an icy stare. “I can’t believe you called the cops on me. That just proves what kind of low-life scum you’ve turned out to be. Billy, you are the worst son a mother could ever have. I hope you know that.”

  “Yeah, I know it, Mama. You tell me that every day.” I stood and walked out the door without looking back.

  * * *

  The squad car pulled into the driveway and sank. I leaned against my truck and watched Sheriff Hadley Preston put on his hat and step out.

  “How goes the battle, Billy?” Sheriff Preston said.

  “You chose the right words, Sheriff. I’m all right. Yourself?”

  “I’d be a lot better if I was back in the kitchen eating trout. My wife knows what to do with a rainbow and some red potatoes.”

  “Sorry to set your weekend off to a bad start,” I said. “You can go back home. I think the worst is over.”

  “From what Callie Reynolds told the dispatcher, she’s lucky to be alive.”

  I nodded toward the back window of the house. “And there she stands, Grandma Rambo.”

  Sheriff Preston stared at the window and made a face. “Nice outfit. I thought you kept the guns locked up.”

  “And the bullets, too. Somehow she got into both. That won’t happen again.”

  “Billy, you know how much Macel and I love your mother. We’d crawl all over this hill to help her in any way we could.”

  “And you have, Sheriff. She can’t tell you herself, but I know she’d be grateful for all you’ve done.”

  “Well, she ought to be grateful to you. You’ve been the best son anybody could hope to have. But you know somebody’s going to get hurt if you don’t do something.”

  “She found out I was having her committed. That’s what triggered this.”

  “Is that so.” He took in a breath and just stood there. “When?”

  “I’ll do it Monday. I can take the day off work and get the county people to come in the morning.”

  “Custer’s last stand,” the sheriff said.

  “Can’t say I blame her. I don’t think she really understands what’s going on. She went off her medication. Knows something is about to change. She’s just scared.”

  Sheriff Preston nodded. “I think we all have an internal detector of so
rts that helps us know when things are about to change. Good or bad, it’s there. Wish I’d have listened to mine a time or two.”

  “This is the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do.”

  “I expect it is.”

  “But I did it to the letter with the lawyer. Crossed every t and dotted every i.”

  “Have you actually talked with her about it?”

  “I’ve tried to. She signed the power of attorney a year ago when she seemed in a better place. But every time I try to bring up her moving to the home, it’s like talking to a stone that wants to argue about the weather. Nothing that comes back makes any sense.”

  “Poor thing.” He said it with a bit of compassion that choked me up.

  “Yeah,” I said, looking at her. Mama had pulled a couple of the chairs from the dinner table against the back door and then sat down next to the stove and stared out the window. She was in such a mind that she didn’t realize the door opened out and the chairs would be of no use.

  “Maybe they can give her some help in there. Get her on something that will help right the ship.”

  “I’m afraid the ship has turned over on its side, Sheriff. I should have done this a long time ago, but I just couldn’t. She gave her whole life for me. Least I could do was hang in there with her to the end. But I guess that won’t happen.”

  “You’ll still visit her. She’ll come around.”

  “Yeah, but it won’t be the same. She won’t be here. This house was everything to her. After you lose everything, any little thing means a lot. This was all she had after Buffalo Creek. It wasn’t much, but it was hers, even with all the bad memories of my daddy.”

  He shifted and the leather on his holster creaked. “Hard times notwithstanding, she shot at Callie.”

  “You know Callie won’t press charges.”

  Sheriff Preston pushed back his hat and scratched his head. “You’re right. That woman would slog through hell and back for your mother. And I think she’d do it because of you.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “She’s sweet on you, Billy. You can’t see that?”

  I waved him off. “She’s just a good friend.”

  He rolled his eyes and sighed. “Well, Callie wanted to make sure you and the neighbors were safe from Annie Oakley over there. All you’d need is for her to take potshots at the neighbor kids like she was shooting ducks at the carnival. We need to get that gun away from her.”

  “I can get it.”

  “Why haven’t you?”

  “I didn’t want to scare her. Plus, maybe I thought I’d get lucky and she’d actually hit me.”

  “Sometimes I feel the same way. Just put me out of my misery.”

  “Yeah, but then you got that trout waiting back home.”

  “You got a point there. The love and cooking of a good woman will keep you going.” He gave me a long look like he wanted to ask me something else, but he held his tongue. “Well, to be honest with you, Billy, your mother doesn’t seem scared to me. Looks like she’s ready for a fight.”

  “Give me a few minutes. If it works, you come in and get the gun. If it doesn’t, bring a gurney and wheel me out.”

  “I’ll be there,” the sheriff said.

  Using the truck to shield me, I walked unseen to the porch and entered the front door. The floorboards creaked, but I picked my steps to make as little noise as possible. The front room was an office of sorts, with scattered parts of old radios and things I’d worked on over the past few months. My original Atwater Kent I restored when I was thirteen. A couple of CB base stations and my ham radio and straight key, building plans for a radio station I had salvaged, and what would pass as junk to most people but felt like treasure to me. A pastiche of a solitary life of broken dreams and shattered hopes all strewn about on a workbench.

  In the corner, behind a stack of records I hadn’t even looked at in years, was my old friend. I pulled it out and went into the living room and sat in Daddy’s favorite chair. The strings were rusty, but it didn’t take long to get them going. I played her favorite, “In the Garden.” Daddy used to play it for her and she would curl up beside him on the couch and sing along.

  The kitchen light was still on and I could see her reflection in one of the windows. As soon as I started picking out the tune, she sat up and her head cocked like an old dog that smells a coon or a rabbit but doesn’t have the energy to follow the scent. She made it to a standing position by holding the gun out in front of her and came walking, stiff-legged, back through the darkened hallway. I saw the silhouette of an old woman holding a gun across her chest, a geriatric soldier pushing up one more hill. It is one of the endearing images I still have.

  When she got past the bathroom, she stopped and put the gun on the floor. As soon as I heard her voice, I found the spot where she was singing and played along.

  When she got to the third verse, she reached the couch and stretched out.

  “I’d stay in the garden with Him

  Tho’ the night around me be falling,

  But He bids me go;

  thro’ the voice of woe

  His voice to me is calling.”

  By the time she sang the last words, her voice quavered. The back door opened and the sheriff entered.

  “Play it again, Other,” she said. “You play it so pretty.”

  I started over again, and in the little light there was, I pointed to the ground where Sheriff Preston walked. He saw me and picked up the gun.

  Mama sang the words softly again. “‘I come to the garden alone, while the dew is still on the roses.’” I could tell there was something going on with the sheriff. He just stood there looking at the two of us in the darkness, as if this surreal image would be stuck in his mind.

  He moved back to the hallway and mouthed, “I’ll put the gun in your truck.”

  I nodded and kept playing.

  And He walks with me,

  And He talks with me,

  And He tells me I am His own,

  And the joy we share

  as we tarry there,

  None other has ever known.

  She went to sleep on the couch and I brought her covers and put them over her. I slept in the chair beside her in case she woke up and tried to leave.

  10

  On Sunday afternoon I told her we were going for a drive. I dressed her in her best outfit, the same one she had worn to Daddy’s funeral. She had lost so much weight that it just hung on her like a jacket on a scarecrow. I brushed Mama’s hair and tried to tie it in a bun like she always did, but it just came out looking all whopperjawed and I let it hang down her back.

  She didn’t protest or turn mean, and she even took her pills, which was a blessing. I wanted this to be a good day. I helped her out to the car and buckled her in, talking to her and reassuring her that she’d like the surprise.

  We drove to Huntington through the streets that had scared her to navigate when Daddy was having tests and doctors’ appointments nearly every week. To her this was a big city with mysterious, tall buildings. But I had gone to technical school here and had been working in town for years.

  We drove to Sixteenth Street and turned right on Fifth Avenue and worked our way into an industrial area. The smell of chemicals hung heavy. Mama had her window cracked and she sniffed at the air. “Mmm. Smell those hot dogs.”

  Stewarts is one of the landmarks of my childhood, and one of the hot spots in Huntington since 1932. The tiny building that the original owners built in the middle of the Depression still stands. And the secret sauce Grandma Gertrude developed is still hand-cooked.

  Mama once said that the hot dogs were so good here because they rolled each one of them up in a napkin. That kept the bun soft and the sauce warm. I’m not sure whether it was the sauce, the onions, the type of bun or hot dog, or if the whole thing was simply the power of memory over the taste buds, but every bite seemed to bring back something good. There are times when I will pull into this little orange shack and sip fr
om a frosty mug and the tears will roll because of what comes back to me. I think that has less to do with the cuisine than it does the past, but the two seem to be inseparable in my mind.

  We pulled into the Stewarts parking lot, and a young girl came to put a ticket number on our windshield. She looked into the car and smiled. “Welcome to Stewarts. What can I get for you?”

  I ordered five hot dogs for the two of us and a gallon of root beer to go. The girl wrote the order on a green pad and walked off to stick it on the metal wheel inside.

  “Stewarts always made the best hot dogs,” Mama said.

  “Do you remember coming here with Daddy after his doctors’ appointments?”

  She smiled. “He just loved these hot dogs, didn’t he? And you did too. The four of us could go through a dozen of them easy because Harless always had such an appetite.”

  Harless had died long before we ever pulled into the Stewarts parking lot, but I let that go. The girl brought us the jug and a bag of hot dogs.

  “You give that pretty little thing a good tip, Son,” Mama said. “He’s single, you know.”

  The girl bent down and smiled at her. “You have the prettiest hair, ma’am. Just as pretty as a picture.”

  I handed her back some of the ones from my change and she thanked me. We turned around and went back up Third Avenue, the smell of the hot dogs making my mouth water. Marshall University was to our left, and Mama marveled at the stadium and the campus. I turned left on Hal Greer Boulevard and headed back the way we had come, but before we got to the interstate, I turned right and wound through the small, two-lane road that ran to Ritter Park. I found a good place to park near a picnic area and helped Mama out of the car.

  There was a slight breeze, but the sun was out and warmed us. We sat at the table and I poured her some root beer. She took a sip and closed her eyes like she had tasted a fine, aged wine.

  “That’s what I remember,” she said. “Now give me one of those dogs.”

 

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