him, but by now I knew his teasing was perfectly harmless.
âAnd over thereâs the Rite Price Laundromat where me and my friends hang out on the weekends.â
We must have been walking for at least fifteen minutes, and I was beginning to wonder if I should have come with him. âAre we almost there?â
âNot far now, Mary Swan. Over thereâs the cemeteryâthey call it Oakland. Right famous place,â he commented.
Oakland Cemetery! Way across the street, I could see a tall redbrick gateway rising in three arches with wrought-iron gates marking the entrance. Carved in the stone above the main arch was the word Oakland .
I nodded in the direction of the cemetery and said, âThatâs where my mom is going to be buried.â
âGo on. Ya donât mean it?â
âSure I do.â
âShe hasnât been buried yet?â
âNo. Daddy and the rest of the people who lost family members in the crash are dealing with lots of red tape in getting the bodies back to the States. Most of the funerals are just now taking place. Mamaâs is scheduled for next Saturday.â I suddenly felt a funny catch in my throat.
He walked with me to the entrance to Oakland, and I peeked through the gate. Tall oaks and magnolias lined a narrow red-brick cobbled road with stone monuments on each side. âHave you ever been inside, Carl?â
âYep. Lotsa times. Big ole place, sprawlinâ out all over. Kinda rundown now. But mighty lot of famous folks are buried in there.â He got this distraught look on his face, just for a second, and then he turned away from the cemetery and kept sauntering down the street.
I watched him take his long, nonchalant strides. I wondered if he just liked to wander around in cemeteries, or if he went in there to attend funerals of people he knew. I was finding it hard to swallow. My head felt light, and I wanted to sit down on the curb, but Carl was already halfway down the street. I felt an awful aching inside for my dead mother, but even more so for this boy who was an orphan, who attended a run-down church and had a night job and had missed two years of school so he could help care for his siblings. I had to jog to catch up with him, and when I did, I was sweating and out of breath from the thick heat.
âIt must be really hard to be a Negro,â I said softly. Then I wished I hadnât.
He looked over at me, wrinkled his brow, and shrugged. âIâm used to it.â
We walked a little farther without saying a word. The houses on this street were small, wood clapboard, different colors, mostly with peeling paint. Many had little porches on the front, and on some of those porches men and women sat rocking back and forth, fanning themselves and staring at me as if I were a Martian. And I guess I stared back, all the while thinking to myself, This is what poverty looks like .
It wasnât so much the unkempt homes or the sparse grass and trash along the route. It was the people. The children with a kind of dirtiness that meant they hadnât taken a bath for weeks. The men with toothless smiles and the wide women wearing clothes that looked like theyâd picked them out of a rummage sale with their eyes closed. It was something I couldnât quite defineâsomething that made me feel sad.
âHereâs where I live,â Carl said. He stopped in front of a white wooden house. Its yard was neat with potted flowers on the front porch. I couldnât help but notice the contrast with several of the surrounding homes, which had car carcasses in the front yards.
As soon as he opened the screen door, his siblings came to greet us.
âCarlâs here,â one of the boys called out. âHe done brought a friend. A white girl!â
The two boys studied me solemnly at first. The little girl, who couldnât have been more than seven or eight, stood beside Carl and gave me a shy smile.
âMary Swan,
Dean Koontz
James A. Hillebrecht
Amity Cross
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Dorothy Cannell
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Susannah McFarlane