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Authors: Sharon Dennis Wyeth

Orphea Proud (19 page)

BOOK: Orphea Proud
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There is a run of mint in our garden

Holding back the fallen leaves

Yesterday I saw a footstep there

Just your size I tracked you

To a well and peered down

The sight of a bucket to pull

Made me thirsty

So I filled it with water

Instead of seeing your face reflected

The face I saw on the surface was mine

When I am old a part of me

Will always be sixteen

SAVED

You’re
probably thinking the show should be over. But how did we get to Club Nirvana? I can’t leave that part out. If you want to know, it started with a preacher named Isaiah Robinson.

Isaiah Robinson, the preacher, is Rupert’s distant cousin on his mother’s side. I didn’t know all that when he came to the store. Isaiah is young with big muscles, smooth cheeks, great cologne, and an incredible rumbling voice, which gives him an air of
authority beyond his years. When he stopped by, Aunt Cleo and Aunt Minerva really put the dog on for him: homemade peach pie with peach ice cream. I’m kind of skittish when it comes to preachers; probably some buried memory of the backs of my knees sticking to the front pew in Daddy’s church for the first seven years of my life. But this guy was genuinely friendly. He seemed to know all about me, for some reason.

“I bet you’re a literary type.” He had a roguish gleam in his eye.

“I do write poetry.”

“I do a lot of writing myself, preparing sermons and such. I’m working on one inspired by the prodigal son. Familiar with the parable?”

“Sure.”

“A wandering child pops up on his family’s doorstep, and the entire community celebrates the visit. That’s why I’m here today,” said Isaiah, “to invite you to the Homecoming.”

“Homecoming?”

“Minnie and I go every year,” Aunt Cleo chimed in. “Lola gives us a ride.”

“This year I’ll go with you, then.”

“Folks will be glad to welcome you,” said Isaiah, cutting his pie carefully. “You’re famous, you know. You were in the newspaper.”

The day of the Homecoming was a peak day in terms of nature: flowers bloomed along the road, birds chirped, and I’d never seen so many butterflies. As Ray helped me settle my aunts in the back of Lola’s car along with the baskets of food they were bringing for the supper after the Homecoming service, I felt as cheerful as one of Aunt Minnie’s new chicks. After months of mourning Lissa, a dark cloud was beginning to lift.

Going to church was exciting not because it was church, actually, but because there were so many people. Over the winter it had begun to feel as if my two aunts, Ray, Lola, and I were the only inhabitants in the world. Things had picked up when customers began coming to the store, especially after we went into the portrait and poetry business. But the Homecoming was something else again! The parking lot was packed to overflowing and young and old were dressed in their best. Folks’ relatives had come from all over the country for the occasion. Aunt Cleo and Aunt Minnie were beaming. It was the first time in years they’d had another family member attending the service. Even Ray, who had gone along to help out with Aunt Cleo’s chair, looked excited, though he did opt for hanging out in the car while the four of us went into church.

The church building itself was so sweet and small, with polished dark wood walls and windows banked with fragrant red lilies. Everybody in the world seemed to be nodding our way. We stopped in a room
in back of the chapel that was set with long tables, so that Aunt Minnie could drop off her food. The spread was out of sight, roasts and chickens and dishes of vegetables and macaroni and cheese and fifty or sixty cakes and pies. The smell of it all! My stomach was rumbling—you get the idea. When I snuggled down next to Aunt Minnie in the fourth pew, I felt so at home. I was sitting in the very same church that Nadine had come to when she was a little girl, where she had sung “His Eye Is on the Sparrow” in the choir. And when Isaiah Robinson got up into the pulpit, I surprised myself by thinking of Daddy, and how he’d once been a young preacher standing in that very spot. I rested my head on Aunt Minnie’s shoulder and Aunt Cleo squeezed my hand. I glanced over my shoulder to the back of the church and caught sight of Lola, her elbow leaning against one of the flower-laden windowsills.

Then in one of the very front pews on the other side of the church, I saw the back of a very familiar neck. It was during Isaiah’s sermon. At first I couldn’t believe it—Rupert was there! Nodding to beat the band, testifying under his breath, muttering something that sounded like “Preach it, man!”

Isaiah had gotten to the high point about the prodigal son’s big celebration when Rupert twisted his neck around and stared. His eyes looked beady with meanness. Sweat popped out all over me. I felt like I might faint. How could he be there? I’d felt so safe. There
hadn’t been a word from him or Ruby. I’d tricked myself into believing that I never had to see them again. A panicky feeling rose up inside of me. Rupert kept staring at me, which made the people sitting next to him turn and stare, too. I glanced around for an escape but I was pinned into the pew between Aunt Minnie and six other people on one side, and on the other side Aunt Cleo’s wheelchair. Rupert stopped staring for a minute and turned around. I fanned myself with a church program. Aunt Minnie and Aunt Cleo hadn’t a clue about what was happening; Aunt Minnie’s eyes were glued to Isaiah and Aunt Cleo had her eyes closed while she swayed back and forth to the rhythm of the choir’s background music. I glanced back to catch Lola’s eye, but she, too, was captivated by the sermon. So I settled back and tried to relax. Maybe I wasn’t the reason Rupert had come to the Homecoming; after all, his mother was from Handsome Crossing. It still seemed suspicious, though, because I’d never known him to go before. Seeing him brought back the rage in his voice on the morning Lissa died; my face experienced a visceral memory of his fist. I gazed up at the preacher for some kind of rescue. Though I wasn’t quite sure what God thought of me, I was pretty certain He wouldn’t let Rupert beat me up again, especially not in a packed church.

Then came the part where Isaiah began saving folks. The sermon was over and the choir was humming loudly. Isaiah had his arms out and folks came
straggling forward. I saw a woman whisper in his ear. He hugged her and said a prayer over her.

“Come and unburden yourselves, children,” he invited us all. “Come home to the place where all is forgiven.”

Rupert turned around again and started eyeballing me. I did my best to ignore him. But it was impossible, especially when Isaiah asked if there was anyone else who needed guidance and my brother announced in a very loud voice:

“Save my sister, Orphea!”

Aunt Minnie sat up and Aunt Cleo’s eyes popped open. Everybody in the whole church turned to me. No wonder—Rupert was pointing his finger at me! The organ began to play faster and faster and the choir kept on humming. I felt myself becoming smaller and smaller. Then Isaiah Robinson called my name.

“Come, Orphea. Don’t be afraid.”

I was like a deer caught in headlights. Then the choir began singing “His Eye Is on the Sparrow,” reminding me of Nadine.

I stuck my tongue out at Rupert and hopped over Aunt Cleo’s wheelchair, hightailing it down the aisle to a chorus of amens. I don’t know about you, but I think a person has the right to decide for herself if she needs to be saved.

My brother followed me out into the parking lot.

“Just a minute. What’s your rush?”

“Leave me alone! Why are you here?”

“It was my duty to come down,” he said, catching
up with me, “when I heard about that picture in the newspaper.”

“What about it?”

His eyes narrowed. “Told you to be quiet about that. Might as well be taking out an ad for your next girlfriend.”

“Get a life, Rupert! Nobody here gives a damn.”

“People aren’t as stupid as you think, Orphea. They put two and two together. Isaiah sent me a copy of the news clipping.”

“And you filled him in?”

“It was my duty. He’s your preacher.”

“I hardly know the man! All you did is humiliate me again, Rupert—that’s what you did. I’m seventeen now. I don’t need you controlling my life.”

“Like hell you don’t! I’m your guardian. I was wrong to think the old ladies would set you straight.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“You can change,” he said, stepping up closer. “You blew it today in the church but you still have a chance.”

“I am who I am, Rupert. You might as well try to change a can of potted meat into a can of tuna.”

“Told you we don’t have those kind of people in our family,” he growled, grabbing me by the collar. “You’re going home with me right this minute.”

“I’m not!” I screamed. “Let go!”

He tried to drag me. I struggled against him.

One second I saw Ray crouched on top of a car. The next second he was on Rupert’s back, yanking at his hair and kicking him.

“Get off, you simpleton!” Rupert screamed. “Get off!”

By now people were running out of the church, Isaiah and Lola in front.

“What’s the disturbance here?” Isaiah’s voice boomed out.

“What are you doing, Ray Grimes?” shrieked Lola.

Rupert had fallen on his knees while Ray clung to his neck fiercely.

“Get this fool off me! He’s choking me.”

“It’s okay, Ray!” I cried.

Ray hopped up abruptly and Rupert fell face-first onto the ground. “Oh, my God!” He grabbed his mouth. “That fool chipped my tooth!”

Some folks in the crowd started tittering, but most just shook their heads. Isaiah came forward to help Rupert. He led him back into the church.

“Let’s go home,” said Aunt Minerva.

Aunt Cleo looked back longingly. “Without supper?”

“I made some extra and left it home. There’s been enough excitement for one day.”

When he got into the car, Ray was grinning. “Did you see me, Orphea?”

“Yeah, Ray. You really did ride him.”

That day changed my mind about going to Queens. I would perform the show I’d been writing and dedicate it to Lissa.

BOOK: Orphea Proud
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