Food was important, though: food for a long winter, one that would follow a bad crop, one in which everything we ate would come from the garden. There was nothing unusual about this, except that there wouldn’t be a spare dime to buy anything but flour, sugar, and coffee. A good crop meant there was a little money tucked away under a mattress, a few bills rolled up and saved and sometimes used for luxuries like Coca-Cola’s, ice cream, saltines, and white bread. A bad crop meant that if we didn’t grow it, we didn’t eat.
In the fall we gathered mustard greens, turnips, and peas, the late-producing vegetables that had been planted in May and June. There were a few tomatoes left, but not many.
The garden changed with each season, except for winter, when it was finally at rest, replenishing itself for the months to come.
Gran was in the kitchen boiling purple hull peas and canning them as fast as she could. My mother was in the garden waiting for me.
“I wanted to go to town,” I said.
“Sorry, Luke. We have to hurry. Much more rain and the greens’ll rot. And what if the water reaches the garden?”
“They gonna buy some paint?”
“I don’t know.”
“I wanted to go buy some more paint.”
“Maybe tomorrow. Right now we have to get these turnips out of the ground.” Her dress was pulled up to her knees.
She was barefoot with mud up to her ankles. I’d never seen my mother so dirty. I fell to the ground and attacked the turnips. Within minutes I was covered in mud from head to foot.
I pulled and picked vegetables for two hours, then cleaned them in the washtub on the back porch. Gran carried them into the kitchen, where they got cooked and packed away in quart jars.
The farm was quiet—no thunder or wind, no Spruills in the front or Mexicans out by the barn. We were alone again, just us Chandlers, left to battle the elements and to try to stay above water. I kept telling myself that life would be better when Ricky came home because I’d have someone to play with and talk to.
My mother hauled another basket of greens to the porch. She was tired and sweating, and she began cleaning herself with a rag and a bucket of water. She couldn’t stand to be dirty, a trait she had been trying to pass along to me.
“Let’s go to the barn,” she said. I hadn’t been in the loft in six weeks, since the Mexicans had arrived.
“Sure,” I said, and we headed that way.
We spoke to Isabel, the milk cow, then climbed the ladder to the hayloft. My mother had worked hard to prepare a clean place for the Mexicans to live. She had
spent the winter collecting old blankets and pillows for them to sleep on. She had taken a fan, one that for years had found good use on the front porch, and placed it in the loft. She had coerced my father into running an electrical line from the house to the barn.
“They’re humans, regardless of what some people around here think,” I’d heard her say more than once.
The loft was as clean and neat as the day they’d arrived. The pillows and blankets were stacked near the fan. The floor had been swept. Not a piece of trash or litter could be found. She was quite proud of the Mexicans. She had treated them with respect, and they had returned the favor.
We shoved open the loft door, the same one Luis had stuck his head through when Hank was bombing the Mexicans with rocks and dirt clods, and we sat on the ledge with our feet hanging down. Thirty feet up, we had the best view of any place on our farm. The tree line far to the west was the St. Francis, and straight ahead, across our back field, was the water from Siler’s Creek.
In places the water was almost to the tops of the cotton stalks. From this view we could much better appreciate the advancing flood. We could see it between the perfect rows running directly toward the barn, and we could see it over the main field road, seeping into the back forty.
If the St. Francis River left its banks, our house would be in danger.
“I guess we’re done pickin’,” I said.
“Sure looks like it,” she said, just a little sad.
“Why does our land flood so quick?”
“Because it’s low and close to the river. It’s not very good land, Luke, never will be. That’s one reason we’re leavin’ here. There’s not much of a future.”
“Where we goin’?”
“North. That’s where the jobs are.”
“How long—”
“Not long. We’ll stay until we can save some money. Your father’ll work in the Buick plant with Jimmy Dale. They’re payin’ three dollars an hour. We’ll make do, tough it out, you’ll be in a school up there, a good school.”
“I don’t want to go to a new school.”
“It’ll be fun, Luke. They have big, nice schools up North.”
It didn’t sound like fun. My friends were in Black Oak. Other than Jimmy Dale and Stacy, I didn’t know a soul up North. My mother put her hand on my knee and rubbed it, as if this would make me feel better.
“Change is always difficult, Luke, but it can also be excitin’. Think of it as an adventure. You wanna play baseball for the Cardinals, don’t you?”
“Yes ma’am.”
“Well, you’ll have to leave home and go up North, live in a new house, make new friends, go to a new church. That’ll be fun, won’t it?”
“I guess so.”
Our bare feet were dangling, gently swinging back and forth. The sun was behind a cloud, and a breeze shifted into our faces. The trees along the edge of our field were changing colors to yellow and crimson, and leaves were falling.
“We can’t stay here, Luke,” she said softly, as if her mind were already up North.
“When we come back what’re we gonna do?”
“We’re not gonna farm. We’ll find a job in Memphis or Little Rock, and we’ll buy us a house with a television and a telephone. We’ll have a nice car in the driveway, and you can play baseball on a team with real uniforms. How does that sound?”
“Sounds pretty good.”
“We’ll always come back and visit Pappy and Gran and Ricky. It’ll be a new life, Luke, one that’s far better than this.” She nodded toward the field, toward the ruined cotton out there drowning.
I thought of my Memphis cousins, the children of my father’s sisters. They rarely came to Black Oak, only for funerals and maybe for Thanksgiving, and this was fine with me because they were city kids with nicer clothes and quicker tongues. I didn’t particularly like them, but I was envious at the same time. They weren’t rude or snobbish, they were just different enough to make me ill at ease. I decided then and there that when I lived in Memphis or Little Rock I would not, under any circumstances, act like I was better than anybody else.
“I have a secret, Luke,” my mother said.
Not another one. My troubled mind could not hold another secret. “What is it?”
“I’m goin’ to have a baby,” she said and smiled at me.
I couldn’t help but smile, too. I enjoyed being the only child, but, truth was, I wanted somebody to play with.
“You are?”
“Yes. Next summer.”
“Can it be a boy?”
“I’ll try, but no promises.”
“If you gotta have one, I’d like a little brother.”
“Are you excited?”
“Yes ma’am. Does Daddy know about it?”
“Oh yes, he’s in on the deal.”
“Is he happy, too?”
“Very much so.”
“That’s good.” It took some time to digest this, but I knew right away that it was a fine thing. All of my friends had brothers and sisters.
An idea hit, one that I couldn’t shake. Since we were on the subject of having babies, I was overcome with an urge to unload one of my secrets. It seemed like a harmless one now, and an old one, too. So much had happened since Tally and I sneaked off to the Latchers’ house that the episode was now sort of funny.
“I know all about how babies are born,” I said, a little defensively.
“Oh you do?”
“Yes ma’am.”
“How’s that?”
“Can you keep a secret, too?”
“I certainly can.”
I began the story, laying sufficient blame on Tally for everything that might get me in trouble. She’d planned it. She’d begged me to go. She’d dared me. She’d done this and that. Once my mother realized where the story was leading, her eyes began to dance, and she said every so often, “Luke, you didn’t!”
I had her. I embellished here and there, to help move the story and build tension, but for the most part I stuck to the facts. She was hooked.
“You saw me in the window?” she asked in disbelief.
“Yes ma’am. Gran, too, and Mrs. Latcher.”
“Did you see Libby?”
“No ma’am, but we sure heard her. Does it always hurt like that?”
“Well, not always. Keep going.”
I spared no detail. As Tally and I raced back to the farm, the headlights in pursuit, my mother clutched my elbow almost hard enough to break it. “We had no idea!” she said.
“Of course not. I barely beat y’all in the house. Pappy was still snorin’, and I was afraid y’all would come check on me and see that I was covered with sweat and dirt.”
“We were too tired.”
“It was a good thing. I slept about two hours, then Pappy woke me up to go to the fields. I’ve never been so sleepy in my life.”
“Luke, I can’t believe you did that.” She wanted to scold, but she was too caught up in the story.
“It was fun.”
“You shouldn’t have.”
“Tally made me do it.”
“Don’t blame Tally.”
“I wouldn’t’ve done it without her.”
“I can’t believe the two of you did it,” she said, but I could tell she was impressed with the story. She grinned and shook her head in amazement. “How often did y’all go roamin’ around at night?”
“I think that was it.”
“You liked Tally, didn’t you?”
“Yes ma’am. She was my friend.”
“I hope she’s happy.”
“Me too.”
I missed her, but I hated to admit it to myself. “Mom, do you think we’ll see Tally up North?”
She smiled and said, “No, I don’t think so. Those cities up there—St. Louis, Chicago, Cleveland, Cincinnati—have millions of people. We’ll never see her.”
I thought about the Cardinals and the Cubs and the Reds. I thought about Stan Musial racing around the bases in front of thirty thousand fans at Sportsman’s Park. Since the teams were up North, then that was where I was headed anyway. Why not leave a few years early?
“I guess I’ll go,” I said.
“It’ll be fun, Luke,’’ she said again.
⋅ ⋅ ⋅
When Pappy and my father returned from town, they looked as though they’d been whipped. I guess they had. Their labor was gone, their cotton was soaked. If the sun broke through and the floodwaters receded, they didn’t have enough hands to work the fields. And they weren’t sure if the cotton would dry out. This time, the sun was not to be seen, and the water was still rising.
After Pappy went into the house, my father unloaded two gallons of paint and set them on the front porch. He did this without saying a word, though I was watching his every move. When he was finished, he went to the barn.
Two gallons would not paint the front of the house. I was irritated by this, then I realized why my father had not bought more. He didn’t have the money. He
and Pappy had paid the Mexicans, and there was nothing left.
I suddenly felt rotten because I had kept the painting alive after Trot had gone. I had pushed the project along, and in doing so had forced my father to spend what little money he had.
I stared at the two buckets set side by side, and tears came to my eyes. I hadn’t realized how broke we were.
My father had poured his guts into the soil for six months, and now he had nothing to show for it. When the rains came, I, for some reason, had decided that the house should be painted.
My intentions had been good, I thought. So why did I feel so awful?
I got my brush, opened a can, and began the final phase of the job. As I slowly made the short strokes with my right hand, I wiped tears with my left.
Chapter 34
The first frost would kill what was left of our garden. It usually came in the middle of October, though the almanac that my father read as devoutly as he read the Bible had already missed its predicted date twice. Undaunted, he kept checking the almanac every morning with his first cup of coffee. It provided endless opportunities for worry.
Since we couldn’t pick cotton, the garden got our attention. All five of us marched to it just after breakfast. My mother was certain that the frost was coming that very night and, if not, then for sure the next night. And so on.
For a miserable hour I pulled black-eyed peas off vines. Pappy, who hated garden work more than I did, was nearby picking butter beans and doing so with commendable effort. Gran was helping my mother pick the last of the tomatoes. My father hauled baskets back and forth, under the supervision of my mother. When he walked by me, I said, “I really want to go paint.”
“Ask your mother,” he said.
I did, and she said I could after I picked one more basket of peas. The garden was getting harvested like
never before. By noon there wouldn’t be a stray bean anywhere.
I soon returned to the solitude of house painting. With the clear exception of operating a road grader, it was a job I preferred over all others. The difference between the two was that I couldn’t actually operate a road grader, and it would be years before I’d be able to. But I could certainly paint. After watching the Mexicans, I’d learned even more and improved my technique. I applied the paint as thinly as possible, trying my best to stretch the two gallons.
By mid-morning one bucket was empty. My mother and Gran were now in the kitchen, washing and canning the vegetables.
I didn’t hear the man walk up behind me. But when he coughed to get my attention, I jerked around and dropped my paintbrush.
It was Mr. Latcher, wet and muddy from the waist down. He was barefoot, and his shirt was torn. He’d obviously walked from their place to ours.
“Where’s Mr. Chandler?” he asked.
I wasn’t sure which Mr. Chandler he wanted. I picked up my brush and ran to the east side of the house. I yelled for my father, who poked his head through some vines. When he saw Mr. Latcher beside me, he stood up quickly. “What is it?” he asked as he hurried toward us.