away.â
Â
Later on, Mama took out the hot comb and heated it on the stove. She sat me in the kitchen chair.
âBend your head and hold your ear,â she said when she thought the comb had heated enough. I held my ear and my breath at the same time. When the heavy iron comb was that close to my face, I was afraid to breathe. It sizzled as Mama slid it through a place where the hair was still damp. âThis part ainât dry enough,â she said.
I stayed quiet. I wasnât going to chance a word. Iâd been burned on the ear too many times from making an unexpected move. âBend your head way down,â she said. âTouch your chin to your chest.â
I arched my head down as far as I could and felt the heat close in on the nape of my neck. The kitchen, Mama called it. The hardest part to straighten. Each time the heat moved awayâthe comb being placed on the fire againâI exhaled deeply and relaxed until Mama reached for it again to hold against the cloth to see if it was too hot, hot enough to leave brown teeth marks on the cloth. Then she waved it slowly through the air to cool it, her eyes far-off and patient. Thinking of Daddy coming tomorrow, I bet.
That night, in bed, I smelled vanilla. Mama must have put a couple of dabs behind her ears.
Â
The morning was full of anticipation. While Mama pumped the water for boiling feathers off the chicken, she squinted up the road. As she stoked the fire in the stove, a noise outside made her move quickly to the porch to look out. She sewed a new patch on Prezâs pants, and her eyes were constantly moving to the open door to look down Three Notch Road. Each time she turned from the door, or the window, or stepped back into the house, a flash of disturbance showed on her face that I didnât like.
I watched her closely and carried the weight of Mamaâs waiting as well as my own. Soon I couldnât stand it
any longer. I had to get out. Iâd go and pick flowers for the Sunday pitcher. Mama used it as a vase because it had a chip on its lip. âGet the watermelon out the creek,â Mama called after me as I skipped down the steps. She had me put one in there the day before, so it could get cool.
Prez came along and we walked in silence. Then he piped up with, âWhat you think Daddy is gonna bring us from the road?â
âI donât know.â I was busy wondering if maybe we should take this opportunity to search around for Jesse.
âYou think some of them red swizzle sticks with the little monkeys on them?â
âI said I didnât know.â He was quiet then, sulking. âMaybe some of them little soaps shaped like seashells like he brought us once,â I said to make him feel better.
âI donât want no soap.â
We closed in on the place where wildflowers grew in abundance. We picked black-eyed Susans and coneflowers and some goldenrod. Just as I was leading the way into the woods for some nice fern, Perry called out to us from the road. He had his fishing pole and a bucket of bait. Without even a word to me, Prez laid his flowers at his feet and started to trot off toward Perry.
âYou better ask Mama about going fishing,â I called after him. I was angry that he was running off and deserting me.
âMama wonât care.â
âAsk her, then.â
He was only a few minutes in the house. Then he was out again, running up the road with Perry, laughing and waving back at me. I could have slapped him. The only reason Mama was letting him go, I knew, was because she was wound up and she wouldnât have the quiet of mind she needed, having Prez underfoot asking when was Daddy coming.
Dry grass whipped at my ankles as I climbed down a small slope that led to some flowers I wanted that grew at the bottom. I forgot what they were called, but I loved how each green thistle shot out its furl of lavender like a bright promise.
The sunâs rays warmed
Deborah Hale
Warren Adler
Dan Johnston
Howard Jacobson
Jennifer Foor
Marion Meade
Harvey Swados
Amy Patricia Meade
Cathy McDavid
W. Michael Gear, Kathleen O'Neal Gear