“I'm positive. Coming here has been good, no matter what all's gone on. My guess is any day now.”
“What's any day now? Is there something gonna happen?” But I realized they weren't even talking about me or to me anymore, so I stomped away, right through the house to the front porch.
Standing there, leaning over the railing and looking at that old lady across the street at the yellow house, I realized I'd become invisible, hopelessly invisible. What to do about Mama's new baby had consumed everybody, even me. But I was done with it. I crumpled my list and threw it hard into the lawn. It was white on green and stuck out like a bat in daytime. I didn't care I'd just littered. So what if it was against the law? I didn't like laws anymore. They had nothing to do with right or wrong. Looking at those dead baby pictures had taught me all I needed to know about the law.
I turned around and firmed my shoulders. I was going up to that attic. I was not going to be afraid anymore. I was going to see what was up there, like it or not, and if a ghost just happened to be there, then she best not mess with me.
“Come on, Rain, let's go in the attic.” She was on the other side of the porch in the gazebo. She'd found a gold beetle and was sticking it in a tissue box. Bugs seemed to calm her, and since we'd come back to the house she'd been outdoors with a small butterfly net, searching, scrambling for peace. Rainey looked up at me proud and showing off her find, then her forehead wrinkled. “The attic? Uh-uh. Ghost up there.”
“There's no ghost. Don't you see? There never has been a ghost. They just told us that so we'd be scared and not go up there. But I got a feeling there's more they haven't told us. I think everybody's hiding something in this family, and I'm gonna find out. You coming or not?”
I didn't leave her much choice. She put the lid on her beetle and stuck it under her arm. Her face was different than I'd ever seen it. I could tell she was working hard not to think about those baby pictures too. I wondered how she could even process something so awful. It wasn't in her brainwork to think on things that weren't good and beautiful.
I took her hand and said, “It's just you and me. We're sisters. We'll always be together. No matter what.”
“Okay,” she said, and we went in the front door. Beside me, Rainey climbed the steps, somber but with purpose. Then she took the lead. I watched her and marveled. I was filled with admiration. For the first time ever, Rainey was setting out to face her fears instead of running to a tree hollow to squelch them away. It was the first time I thought I might have a lot to learn from my big sister, Rainey Dae Macy.
The original staircase leading to the attic in the 1870s Victorian was removed in the 1920s and replaced with a spiral one, or so Poppy had told me. At the top was a narrow door. Rainey and I climbed around and around the stairs with nervous stomachs. We'd never seen a ghost before. What if Gertrude was angry we were coming up? What if she was bent on protecting family secrets? When we got to the top, we swallowed hard because the door was already open.
The first thing I noticed about the attic was the change in heat. The air was steamy-hot from summer.
“Mama?” said Rainey.
My mother looked at us, and a bead of sweat ran alongside her face.
“What are you doing up here?” she asked.
“Janie want to come.”
“Oh, I see. Janie. Well, I thought I told you girls that this attic was no place for you.”
Mama was on the floor, legs spread out with books in front of her. “What are you looking at?” I asked.
“Come here, honey, let me show you some photographs of your family. There are some of me when I was little.”
We sat down on the heart pine floor beside her, and I looked around. There were beams overhead running the width of the room, and a pointed ceiling. There were small windows on the front, side, and back of the house. Boxes and dust were stacked in the corners, and under the back window I saw an old loom, a fake Christmas tree, and two mannequin busts.
“Have you seen the ghost?” I whispered. Rainey looked at me and then around the attic room.
“Mama, where the ghost?”
“What ghost? You mean Gertrude?” Rainey nodded, eyes round. “My guess is she left a long time ago. I've been up here a little while and there's no sign of any ghosts. There's nothing to be afraid of, honey. I promise, it's all right.”
No ghost. All that fear for nothing? I was almost disappointed. I looked up at the rafters and imagined a pot of boiling oil up there, Gertrude waiting for her husband to walk in so she could murder him. I shivered and looked around for a big pot. I saw none. Then I studied the wood on the floor for grease spots, but there were none of those either. Something was fishy. Either the story had been made up or the boards had been replaced. I thought the floor looked younger than one hundred and forty years, so soon my disappointment in not seeing the ghost of Gertrude was replaced with pure relief. I focused on the books and on Mama's face as she flipped through them. They were filled with Polaroid pictures.
“My father was so handsome, don't you think?” Mama said. “Here we are when I was about four or five at Christmas.” She took her time, rolling a finger along each and every picture. “Oh, and look. You see this? This is when I learned to ride a bike. It was right out there on Vinca Lane.”
“Where Grandma Mona?” Rainey asked.
Mama turned some more pages. The photos were all of her and Poppy. “I don't know, honey. Maybe, maybe she was the one taking all these pictures. Huh. Come on, it's hot in here.”
So we took the photo albums down to Mama's room and spent the next hour looking over them under a cool fan. I learned more about Mama, seeing her as a child. Seeing her with no stress on her face, just happiness. Children were supposed to be that way, happy, I thought. No worries. I watched my mother's face and saw that something was changing. She was settling into this house, sharing her life, her past with us. She was remembering what it felt like to be happy. And in that hour, sitting on the bed next to her, I almost felt close to her again. Almost. She was still only in her own little world.
I wasn't angry anymore about my daddy, though, or about Mama not telling me he'd been back a month ago. She was a grown-up, and grown-ups had reasons for doing things I couldn't understand. I got that. “When did life get so complicated?” Mama said at one point.
I told her I didn't know, but it must be sometime after eight and a half.
When it was time for Rainey to go to work at the grocery store, Mama left me and the albums on her bed, and I spent the whole afternoon soaking up my history and feeling I had roots for once. I remember that feeling because it didn't last but for a few daysâwhen everything I thought I knew was finally put to the test.
Chapter Twenty-seven
THE BURDENS OF APPLE SNAILS
We'd settled in to a little routine in the blue house. Mama would wake first and get breakfast started. It was simple, mostly using up the big container of grits in the pantry with little pats of butter on top, or sometimes a piece of toast with jelly. Occasionally, a sausage patty. Mama was happy all of the sandwiches were gone. Rainey and I would wake up smelling Mama's decaf coffee, and every morning we'd have this tinge of excitement itching just under our rib cages. We spent our days exploring the yard because we weren't allowed to leave it on our own. We learned every square inch of the front and sides of that house, but our favorite place was the garden in the back.
One afternoon, Rainey and I were out back with Poppy when I found an apple snail on the trellis. Rainey pulled it off and held it in her hands. She was squealing and cooing and petting the little thing.
“He sure is cute,” I said. “Look at his little eyes, how they poke out. Hey there, buddy, hey there.”
“I gon' name it Snaily,” said Rainey.
“That's a fine name, Rainey,” said Poppy. “And look here. You see this trail of snail slime? He leaves a trail wherever he goes.”
“Why?” I asked.
“Maybe so he can find his way home,” Poppy said, with crinkles at the edges of his eyes.
“Nah-uh,” I said. “Really?”
“I'm just teasing, sweetie.”
“Oh no!” said Rainey. She'd been lifting the snail up to check the slime trail on her finger when she'd dropped it on the walkway. She leaned down and picked it up. “Look!”
That poor snail had lost part of its shell on the back.
“Oh goodness, that's too bad,” said Poppy, studying it. He was so close I could smell his aftershave. Smelled like pine.
“Is it okay?” I asked.
“I'm afraid not for long.”
“Oh no.” Rainey was trying not to drop it again. She was getting ready to tear up and kept hopping from one foot to the next as if she was in pain. “Okay, Snaily, you okay.”
“Poppy? He's gonna be fine,” I said. “See? He's still crawling along.”
“Rainey, honey, you see that? See that hole right there?”
“Uh-huh.”
“Well that's where the snail breathes. Without that shell, he'll suffocate.”
Rainey looked at him like he was speaking a foreign language. She was trying to make sense of this
suffocate
word.
“It means it cain't breathe,” I said. “It's gonna die.”
Rainey starting rocking her arms like she was rocking a baby and not just a slimy snail. It was sad to watch. She never meant anything any harm.
“An apple snail can't survive without its shell,” said Poppy in a slow, smooth voice. “Even though carrying around that big weight on its back looks hard to handle, it's his home. Without it, he'll suffocate and die a slow death.”
“Well, what do we do?” I asked. “Can we take him to the vet? Can we put some tape on it?”
“ 'Fraid not, honey. Best thing to do would be put him in the freezer . . . or smash it with a rock. Put him out of his misery.”
“No, no, no, no!” Rainey started hollering and crying and ran off with that snail in her hand. “I sorry, I sorry, Snaily!” She took off, running around to the front of the house and then down the sidewalk, away from the yellow house and the library. She ran and ran and I ran after her, calling, “Rainey, wait up!” but she wouldn't stop.
Her gait was heavy, so I finally caught up with her. She was already six houses down the street and I said, out of breath, “Rainey, it's me! Hold on. Let me walk with you.”
She had tears all down her face and a fixed grimace on her mouth. She stopped, and I looked at that snail in her hand. With all the running, she'd wadded it up in her fist and completely crushed its shell. When she opened her fingers and saw the poor mangled thing, she wailed and flung it into somebody's grass. She wiped her hand off on her shorts and shirt and looked down at her bare feet. They were filthy from all the running. Then she put her hands up on her ears and closed her eyes.
“Come on, Rain. Let's go on home now. Mama's gonna be worried.”
She shook her head.
“She's gonna be mad too.”
Rainey opened her eyes and searched around. “I go up there,” she said, pointing to a big oak tree. It was plopped smack-dab in the middle of the yard of this gray house with bright white trim. The tree was old and big, and the branches at the top did a loop, so even though there was no hollow in it, there was a place for Rainey to want to crawl into. I thought I understood it, and seeing how upset she was, I thought it wouldn't hurt for her to have a rest and find a quiet place to listen to the wind. And maybe God too.
We climbed that tree. It wasn't easy with no shoes, and it being an oak we didn't know real well. It took some time learning where all the places were to put your feet. The only tree we ever climbed was this one with a low branch on it about a foot off the ground. It was at a playground at the Y back home in Cypresswood. We'd climb up and jump off, over and over. After a few minutes, we were high up in that tree in front of the gray house and watching the cars go by. Rainey was perched on a branch about a gazillion feet up, squatting like a bird. Her head was resting on her knees. I was up one branch from her, sitting with my bare feet dangling by her ears. The height was making me dizzy.
“It was just an accident, Rain. The snail, I mean,” I said.
“Uh-huh. It dead. Bitsy dead. I no like dead.”
“Me neither. I don't ever wanna die. Do you?”
“Huh-uh. I not gonna die.”
“Yeah,” I said. “Me neither.”
We sat in that big tree, for how long, I don't know. But after a while, we heard Mama calling. She was frantic. “Rainey? Rai-ney!” She kept calling and it was getting louder. We knew she'd be up on us any minute.
“Time to get down, I guess,” I said.
“Okay,” said Rainey.
And before I could say boo, she jumped.