Iâd like ya to meet my little brothaâs, Mike and James, and my sistaâ, Puddinâ.â
Mike, the oldest, stepped forward and held out his hand. âPleased ta meetcha.â He puffed out his chest and mashed my hand in his, so that I stepped back and said, âOuch!â
âMike, watch yoreseâf, boy!â Carl remonstrated in a voice that was very different from the one he used when he talked to me. Then he said, âExcuse us, Mary Swan. Heâs mighty full of himself for a twelve-year-old, but heâs all right.â
âNice to meet you, Mike,â I said. âGood grip youâve got there.â
Immediately the other boy rushed over to shake my hand. âIâm James and Iâm ten.â
I regarded him warily with a sliver of a smile on my lips. âGood to meet you too. Be careful with my hand, please.â
He opened his mouth in a smile, took my hand, and pumped it up and down several times. I pulled my hand away and shook it down by my side, pretending to be in pain. The boys stared at me silently. Then I winked at them, and they burst into laughter.
The little girl gazed at me timidly. âIâm Puddinâ, and I ainât never heard a name like Mary Swan before!â
I bent down to her level and shrugged. âI know. Itâs kinda weird. Family name.â
Their eyes got wide at that comment, and James said, âYou mean theyâs lotsa folks in yore family called Swan?â
I laughed. âNo. Thatâs not what I meant.â
But Carl brushed it aside and said, âWhy donât yâall take Mary Swan to the kitchen, and weâll fix her some iced tea?â
Puddinâ took my hand in hers and said, âCome on in our front room.â We left the porch and went through the âfront room,â which looked to me just like a bedroom. A table in the corner was piled with newspapers and old magazines, the floor had a dirty rug and a dirtier dog on it, and a skinny woman with droopy eyes that followed my every move sat on an unmade bed.
âAfternoon, maâam,â she said with a scowl on her face.
âGood afternoon,â I replied and licked my dry lips.
âThatâs my aunt Neta,â Puddinâ confided as she led me through the front room and into the kitchen. Mike opened the fridge, and James gave me a big grin and pointed to a chair. I sat down and tried my hardest not to stare at the flies that were swarming around several crusty plates beside the sink. I could hear Carl whispering something unintelligible to his aunt.
Mike placed a glass of iced tea on the table, and Puddinâ whined, âI want some too, Michael. You bettaâ fix me some right now.â Then she stood behind me and started twisting my hair around her fingers.
James gave her a hard look and said, âStop it, Puddinâ! Ainât polite.â
âOh no, itâs fine,â I said and winked at Puddinâ. âDo you think you could braid it for me one day?â
Puddinâ scrunched up her nose, looking unconvinced. Then she giggled. âI could try, I guess. Shore feels funny, yore hair, Mary Swan.
All thin and straight.â She giggled again.
For some reason, I pulled her into my lap and started tickling her the way I used to tickle Lucy, Trixieâs daughter, when she was younger.
Puddinâ howled with delight, and Carl came into the kitchen to see what was going on. When he saw Puddinâ squirming happily on my lap, he nodded at me in approval.
So I stayed at Carlâs house for about an hour and listened to the kids babbling about their dog and their friends and their school, and I forgot all about Buckhead and Mama and Oakland Cemetery. And when Carl said we needed to be getting back to the church so that Ella Mae wouldnât worry, I didnât really want to leave. I felt all warm inside and nervous, sort of the way Iâd felt when Iâd been given the
Sidney Sheldon
Unknown Author
James Carroll
Gail Jones
Felicity Pulman
Trinity Blacio
Malorie Blackman
Fran Hurcomb
Philip K. Dick
Brian Garfield