Katie's Dream (20 page)

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Authors: Leisha Kelly

BOOK: Katie's Dream
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I called the boys from the barn—they were a filthy sight, but it didn't take them long to clean up. They'd been working so hard, I was glad to give them a good meal and a break.

Whiskers was getting excited about the chicken smell. Poor dog. I'd forgotten the turtle bones. But he'd have chicken bones soon enough. Robert shut him in the barn to keep him away from our plates.

Samuel and Edward came from the car in silence as I was setting the last of the food down in the middle of the blanket.

“Something smells good,” Edward said, picking up a plate. He was about to help himself when Sarah spoke up.

“We need to say grace.”

I could see Edward's stormy eyes turn to Samuel. But Samuel only waited a second for all the children to be still, and then he prayed.

“Heavenly Father, we thank you for the food you have provided. We thank you for the families you've given us, to love and to honor. Guide us in your will, Lord, that we may be pleasing in your eyes.”

As soon as he'd closed his prayer, the boys were ready to grab what they could. Especially the chicken. And they were entitled to it, I figured.

“We have a new tradition,” I said quickly. “The children get to choose their pieces first.”

Samuel glanced my way, but I only smiled and passed the chicken carefully to Sarah and Katie. Once every child had a piece, I let Edward take what he wanted. Samuel had a wing. Edward ate the rest.

Of course, there weren't enough potatoes to go around, but I split one between Rorey and Katie and gave the rest to the men and boys. Sarah wasn't very fond of them cooked that way, so she and I did without. I filled my plate with turnip greens and the lily mixture and sat back and watched everybody eat.

“This is mighty good,” Joe remarked. “Ain't had this kinda meal since Easter.”

“Good chicken,” Edward agreed, in the middle of a bite. “Good pickles.”

My eyes met Samuel's as he was passing around the eggs. He didn't say a word, but his look was enough. I knew I'd done the right thing.

“Want some daylily buds?” Sarah asked her uncle sweetly. “I helped pick 'em.”

“What is it?” he asked, a little uncertain.

“Daylily. If they don't get picked, they open into a big orange flower.”

“Oh. We're eatin' flowers.”

Sarah smiled so innocently. “Flowers is good. I like the little violets that grow in the yard, and the sorrel ones too, that's yellow as the sun an' taste like pickle.”

Edward looked around at our faces. “You always eat like this?”

“No, sir,” Robert answered. “This is the biggest, fanciest we've had in a long time. An' it ain't even a holiday.”

For a moment I thought Edward was going to stop eating; he looked a little surprised and solemn. Maybe he'd thought we bought more food, I don't know. Maybe he
thought he could never live like this, never in a million years.

Sarah suddenly smiled wider. “It's a Jesus holiday,” she declared. “It's a holiday for Daddy's brother and Jesus.”

Edward furrowed his brow and bit into his chicken. But Sarah was not to be stopped. “Did you know Jesus loves you? He got killed a long time ago, and then he came alive again and we get to be forgiven.”

“That don't make much sense,” he told her. “Even comin' from you, sweetheart.”

“You have to know why he died,” Franky added. “He was bein' punished instead a' us. That's why we're forgiven. We're not guilty no more if the price is already paid. Wipes it all away, you know?”

Edward stared over at him, chewing furiously in silence. Finally he spoke. “What's done is done. You can't make it undone.”

And he wouldn't hear another word.

With the meal behind us, I cleaned up the dishes. Robert and Joe had gone back to the barn, and the little girls helped me for a little while and then went to play beneath the lilac bush. Samuel and Edward were back at the car, still not saying very much. Franky stood beside me, thinking, I knew. Finally he spoke.

“He just don't unnerstand. Why don't he let us tell him some more about Jesus? I think he knows he's sinned. He oughta want to be forgiven.”

“We can't make him open his heart,” I told the boy.

“Yeah. But ain't there somethin' we can do to get him thinkin'?”

“The only thing I know is to show him as much of the love of God as we can. Pastor Jones said once that it's the goodness of God that draws men to him.”

Franky was quiet again, and then he seemed to brighten.

“What if I washed off his car for him? It sure does need it. It's just full a' dust.”

“Are you sure you want to do that?”

“Yes, ma'am. If he asks me how come, I'll tell him 'cause Jesus loves him. Can I use a bucket a' water?”

“I suppose so,” I answered, too surprised to know what else to say. Franky had his bucket filled quickly and was soon started on the job. I watched to see Edward's reaction. Franky said something I couldn't hear, and Edward shook his head, turning his attention back to his motor.

The next time I looked up, Samuel was talking and Edward was looking angry. They were having words. I should've called Franky back, but I didn't think of it in time.

“You can fool the whole blame countryside if you want!” Edward yelled. “But it ain't fooling me! You're a dirty liar, and that's all I have to say about it!”

It happened so fast. He started his car in less than two shakes, and almost at the same time Samuel yelled, fierce and loud enough to make me jump. The car jerked backward several feet. Franky screamed. And I dropped the fry pan and went running.

Samuel fell to his knees beside Edward's car. Franky was lying so still. I could feel my heart pounding. How could this happen? How could Edward hit the boy? When Franky was only doing him a good turn, how could he back up and run right into him?

I rushed forward, and Samuel looked up at me. Edward didn't even get out of the car.

The boy's legs were halfway under the car, bent. He held his eyes squeezed shut. I could see the pain in his face.

“D-did the wheel go over him?” I gasped. Behind me I heard one of the girls crying, but I didn't turn to look.

Samuel nodded, looking absolutely broken. He was
holding Franky's head, calling his name, and the boy's eyes popped open.

“Can you move?” Samuel asked him.

Franky jerked his head from side to side. “It hurts. It hurts.” Then he shut his eyes again. His hands were already shaped into tight little fists.

“We'll have to get him to a hospital,” Samuel told me. “Can you get something to wrap him and help hold him still?”

“Joe!” Rorey was screaming. “Joe! Get Pa!”

My first thought was George's wagon. Or Barrett Post's truck. And maybe that was Edward's first thought too. “Move him out a ways,” he told Samuel. “I'll go get somebody.”

“No,” Samuel said coolly. “You're taking us.”

I only stayed long enough to catch a glimpse of Edward's pale, ugly expression.

The skunk! The horrid, no-good skunk!

I ran for the house. What could I use to keep Franky still? He wasn't moving now, but in a bouncy car on bumpy roads . . . Oh, it would hurt so bad! I grabbed every pillow and blanket I could carry.

I wanted to go with him in the car. I wanted to hold that little boy I'd come to know so well, kiss him and tell him this would pass, that he'd be okay. But I already knew that I would have to stay home with the other children.

Joe was beside them when I got back. I'd not seen him look so upset, since his mother died last December.

“He'll be okay,” I said as soon as I was close enough. But the words haunted me. I'd said the same about Wilametta, and she hadn't lasted even one more night. But this was different. It was just his legs. So far as I could tell.

“We can stop for your father,” Samuel was saying, and Joe gave his solemn nod. “But you ride along. If he's in the field, we won't be able to wait for him. We'll take
Lizbeth, and you can send him after us and stay with the little ones.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Can I come?” Rorey asked.

Samuel glanced at her, but I answered for him quickly. “No. You stay with me.”

I dropped everything I was carrying at Franky's side. He winced when we moved him. He squeezed his skinny arms tight to his chest and bit his lip to keep from crying, but he cried out anyway.

I wrapped a blanket around his legs as firmly as I dared, wondering how they'd manage him in the car.

“Help me with him, Joe,” Samuel said. “It'll be easier if I get in the back and just hold him. Then you can pad all around us, Juli. As much as you can.”

It was Sarah crying, I realized. But I didn't see her. Or Katie. I wondered where they'd gone. Robert was suddenly beside us, holding the car door and helping his father maneuver. I put one blanket down beneath where Franky would be. Edward still hadn't moved.
Like a stubborn, stinking old billy goat,
I thought.
And it's all his fault.

I stuffed the pillows around Franky as carefully as I could, then kissed his forehead and clasped his hand as Joe squeezed his long and lanky frame between his little brother and the back of the front seat.

“Do exactly what I say,” Samuel ordered Edward. “Drive not too fast, not too slow.”

“I didn't see him,” Edward whined. “I didn't know he was still up so close. Fool kid—”

At that moment my anger at Edward seethed raw, but it was Samuel who yelled. “Shut up! I don't care what you didn't know! Shut up and drive!”

With Samuel sitting and holding Franky's chest and head and Joe leaning into the pillows to keep his legs from bouncing, they started away. I could see the tears
on Franky's cheeks. But he was being so quiet. So brave. Managing to take it better than I could have.

Edward, on the other hand, was mumbling as he turned the car around right over top of Emma's irises. Something about Samuel. And something about Katie.

I would have kicked him if I could.

TWELVE

Samuel

As we drove up, George was in the yard rounding up goats. Joe started yelling, and George and Lizbeth both came running, leaving Willy chasing a goat out of the garden.

“Lordy!” George said when we told him what happened. “Lordy be! I shouldn't a' left him with you. He gets to daydreamin'—”

“It wasn't his fault,” I said quickly, incensed at George for daring to blame his son. “We need to go. Are you coming?”

“Yeah. Yeah, I'm comin'.”

“You want me to stay?” Joe asked his father. “Or come along?”

“You better stay. Lizbeth is gonna need more help gettin' them goats in, or we'll lose the veg'table patch. The rest a' the big boys is in the field.”

“Pa,” Lizbeth said, reaching her hand to Franky's hair.
Franky looked up at her, crying just a little. The poor kid. I could feel him all tense in my arms. Shaking. I knew at least one of those legs was broken.

“You gotta stay, Lizbeth,” George said. “Won't be nothin' you can do there yet, anyhow.” He climbed in the front seat as Joe got out of the back.

“Pa—” Lizbeth protested again.

“We can get the goats in without her, Pa,” Joe said quickly. “I can watch the little ones too. Where's Emmie Grace?”

“Nappin',” Lizbeth answered.

“Let her go, Pa,” Joe begged. “He might need her there, since he ain't got Mama.”

George didn't say anything more. He only nodded, rather reluctantly, and Lizbeth hurried in the back where Joe had been, looking scared but relieved to be going.

“Go to Mcleansboro,” George ordered. “It's a sight closer'n Mt. Vernon.”

“I didn't see him,” Edward started in right away as soon as we were moving again. “Didn't know he was so close.”

“Just a accident,” George replied, looking tense.

“Turn east at the next road,” I told Edward, knowing he wasn't used to these parts. He did as I said, and kept quiet.

I wondered at both of them. At George, who had climbed in front without leaning close to his son for even a second, without even speaking to him. And at Edward, who kept excusing himself and had never once asked how bad it might be. I guessed Edward was just too hard and detached to care. But George . . . George would have reacted differently if it had been his oldest son. Or his youngest. Maybe any of the others but Franky.

With Franky, George's first thought was of it being the boy's own fault. He worked Franky along with the rest, but he didn't trust him to work alone; he didn't seem to
see the boy's accomplishments. He only wagged his head at Franky's failures in school.

“Can't figger how he come to be stupid,” he'd told me once. “He don't appear stupid, to look at him.”

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