Nicholas Sparks
Chapter 1
In 1958, Beaufort, North Carolina, which
is located on the coast near Morehead City, was a place like many other small
southern towns. It was the kind of place where the humidity rose so high in the
summer that walking out to get the mail made a person feel as if he needed a
shower, and kids walked around barefoot from April through October beneath oak
trees draped in Spanish moss. People waved from their cars whenever they saw
someone on the street whether they knew him or not, and the air smelled of
pine, salt, and sea, a scent unique to the Carolinas. For many of the people
there, fishing in the Pamlico Sound or crabbing in the Neuse
River was a way of life, and boats were moored wherever you saw the
Intracoastal Waterway. Only three channels came in on the television, though
television was never important to those of us who grew up there. Instead our
lives were centered around the churches, of which there were eighteen within
the town limits alone. They went by names like the Fellowship Hall Christian
Church, the Church of the Forgiven People, the Church of Sunday Atonement, and
then, of course, there were the Baptist churches. When I was growing up, it was
far and away the most popular denomination around, and there were Baptist
churches on practically every corner of town, though each considered itself
superior to the others. There were Baptist churches of every type—Freewill
Baptists, Southern Baptists, Congregational Baptists, Missionary Baptists,
Independent Baptists . . . well, you get the picture.
Back then, the big event of the year was
sponsored by the Baptist church downtown—Southern, if you really want to
know—in conjunction with the local high school. Every year they put on their
Christmas pageant at the Beaufort Playhouse, which was
actually a play that had been written by Hegbert Sullivan, a minister who’d
been with the church since Moses parted the Red Sea. Okay, maybe he wasn’t that
old, but he was old enough that you could almost see through the guy’s skin. It
was sort of clammy all the time, and translucent—kids would swear they actually
saw the blood flowing through his veins—and his hair was as white as those
bunnies you see in pet stores around Easter.
Anyway, he wrote this play called The
Christmas Angel, because he didn’t want to keep on performing that old
Charles Dickens classic A Christmas Carol. In his mind Scrooge was a
heathen, who came to his redemption only because he saw ghosts, not angels—and
who was to say whether they’d been sent by God, anyway? And who was to say he
wouldn’t revert to his sinful ways if they hadn’t been sent directly from
heaven? The play didn’t exactly tell you in the end—it sort of plays into faith
and all—but Hegbert didn’t trust ghosts if they weren’t actually sent by God,
which wasn’t explained in plain language, and this was his big problem with it.
A few years back he’d changed the end of the play—sort of followed it up with
his own version, complete with old man Scrooge becoming a
preacher and all, heading off to Jerusalem to find the place where Jesus once
taught the scribes. It didn’t fly too well—not even to the congregation, who
sat in the audience staring wide-eyed at the spectacle—and the newspaper said
things like “Though it was certainly interesting, it wasn’t exactly the play
we’ve all come to know and love. . . .”
So Hegbert decided to try his hand at
writing his own play. He’d written his own sermons his whole life, and some of
them, we had to admit, were actually interesting, especially when he talked
about the “wrath of God coming down on the fornicators” and all that good
stuff. That really got his blood boiling, I’ll tell you, when he talked about
the fornicators. That was his real hot spot. When we were younger, my friends
and I would hide behind the trees and shout, “Hegbert is a fornicator!” when we
saw him walking down the street, and we’d giggle like idiots, like we were the
wittiest creatures ever to inhabit the planet.
Old Hegbert, he’d stop dead in his tracks
and his ears would perk up—I swear to God, they actually moved—and he’d turn
this bright shade of red, like he’d just drunk gasoline, and the big green
veins in his neck would start sticking out all over, like those maps of the Amazon River that you see in National Geographic. He’d
peer from side to side, his eyes narrowing into slits as he searched for us,
and then, just as suddenly, he’d start to go pale again, back to that fishy
skin, right before our eyes. Boy, it was something to watch, that’s for sure.
So we’d be hiding behind a tree and
Hegbert (what kind of parents name their kid Hegbert, anyway?) would stand
there waiting for us to give ourselves up, as if he thought we’d be that
stupid. We’d put our hands over our mouths to keep from laughing out loud, but
somehow he’d always zero in on us. He’d be turning from side to side, and then
he’d stop, those beady eyes coming right at us, right through the tree. “I know
who you are, Landon Carter,” he’d say, “and the Lord knows, too.” He’d let that
sink in for a minute or so, and then he’d finally head off again, and during
the sermon that weekend he’d stare right at us and say something like “God is
merciful to children, but the children must be worthy as well.” And we’d sort
of lower ourselves in the seats, not from embarrassment, but to hide a new
round of giggles. Hegbert didn’t understand us at all, which was really sort of
strange, being that he had a kid and all. But then again, she
was a girl. More on that, though, later.
Anyway, like I said, Hegbert wrote The
Christmas Angel one year and decided to put on that play instead.
The play itself wasn’t bad, actually, which surprised everyone the first year
it was performed. It’s basically the story of a man who had lost his wife a few
years back. This guy, Tom Thornton, used to be real religious, but he had a
crisis of faith after his wife died during childbirth. He’s raising this little
girl all on his own, but he hasn’t been the greatest father, and what the little
girl really wants for Christmas is a special music box with an angel engraved
on top, a picture of which she’d cut out from an old catalog. The guy searches
long and hard to find the gift, but he can’t find it anywhere. So it’s
Christmas Eve and he’s still searching, and while he’s out looking through the
stores, he comes across a strange woman he’s never seen before, and she
promises to help him find the gift for his daughter. First, though, they help
this homeless person (back then they were called bums, by the way), then they
stop at an orphanage to see some kids, then visit a lonely old woman who just
wanted some company on Christmas Eve. At this point the mysterious woman asks Tom Thornton what he wants for Christmas, and he says that he
wants his wife back. She brings him to the city fountain and tells him to look
in the water and he’ll find what he’s looking for. When he looks in the water,
he sees the face of his little girl, and he breaks down and cries right there.
While he’s sobbing, the mysterious lady runs off, and Tom Thornton searches but
can’t find her anywhere. Eventually he heads home, the lessons from the evening
playing in his mind. He walks into his little girl’s room, and her sleeping
figure makes him realize that she’s all he has left of his wife, and he starts
to cry again because he knows he hasn’t been a good enough father to her. The
next morning, magically, the music box is underneath the tree, and the angel
that’s engraved on it looks exactly like the woman he’d seen the night before.
So it wasn’t that bad, really. If truth be
told, people cried buckets whenever they saw it. The play sold out every year
it was performed, and due to its popularity, Hegbert eventually had to move it
from the church to the Beaufort Playhouse, which had a lot more seating. By the
time I was a senior in high school, the performances ran twice to packed
houses, which, considering who actually performed it, was a
story in and of itself.
You see, Hegbert wanted young people to
perform the play—seniors in high school, not the theater group. I reckon he
thought it would be a good learning experience before the seniors headed off to
college and came face-to-face with all the fornicators. He was that kind of
guy, you know, always wanting to save us from temptation. He wanted us to know
that God is out there watching you, even when you’re away from home, and that
if you put your trust in God, you’ll be all right in the end. It was a lesson
that I would eventually learn in time, though it wasn’t Hegbert who taught me.
As I said before, Beaufort was fairly
typical as far as southern towns went, though it did have an interesting
history. Blackbeard the pirate once owned a house there, and his ship, Queen
Anne’s Revenge, is supposedly buried somewhere in the sand just offshore.
Recently some archaeologists or oceanographers or whoever looks for stuff like
that said they found it, but no one’s certain just yet, being that it sank over
250 years ago and you can’t exactly reach into the glove compartment and check
the registration. Beaufort’s come a long way since the 1950s,
but it’s still not exactly a major metropolis or anything. Beaufort was, and
always will be, on the smallish side, but when I was growing up, it barely
warranted a place on the map. To put it into perspective, the congressional
district that included Beaufort covered the entire eastern part of the
state—some twenty thousand square miles—and there wasn’t a single town with
more than twenty-five thousand people. Even compared with those towns, Beaufort
was regarded as being on the small side. Everything east of Raleigh and north
of Wilmington, all the way to the Virginia border, was the district my father
represented.
I suppose you’ve heard of him. He’s sort
of a legend, even now. His name is Worth Carter, and he was a congressman for
almost thirty years. His slogan every other year during the election season was
“Worth Carter represents ———,” and the person was supposed to fill in the city
name where he or she lived. I can remember, driving on trips when me and Mom
had to make our appearances to show the people he was a true family man, that
we’d see those bumper stickers, stenciled in with names like Otway and
Chocawinity and Seven Springs. Nowadays stuff like that
wouldn’t fly, but back then that was fairly sophisticated publicity. I imagine
if he tried to do that now, people opposing him would insert all sorts of foul
language in the blank space, but we never saw it once. Okay, maybe once. A
farmer from Duplin County once wrote the word shit in the blank space,
and when my mom saw it, she covered my eyes and said a prayer asking for
forgiveness for the poor ignorant bastard. She didn’t say exactly those words,
but I got the gist of it.
So my father, Mr. Congressman, was a
bigwig, and everyone but everyone knew it, including old man Hegbert. Now, the
two of them didn’t get along, not at all, despite the fact that my father went
to Hegbert’s church whenever he was in town, which to be frank wasn’t all that
often. Hegbert, in addition to his belief that fornicators were destined to
clean the urinals in hell, also believed that communism was “a sickness that
doomed mankind to heathenhood.” Even though heathenhood wasn’t a word—I can’t
find it in any dictionary—the congregation knew what he meant. They also knew that
he was directing his words specifically to my father, who would sit with his
eyes closed and pretend not to listen. My father was on one
of the House committees that oversaw the “Red influence” supposedly
infiltrating every aspect of the country, including national defense, higher
education, and even tobacco farming. You have to remember that this was during
the cold war; tensions were running high, and we North Carolinians needed
something to bring it down to a more personal level. My father had consistently
looked for facts, which were irrelevant to people like Hegbert.
Afterward, when my father would come home after the service, he’d
say something like “Reverend Sullivan was in rare form today. I hope you heard
that part about the Scripture where Jesus was talking about the poor.
. . .”
Yeah, sure, Dad. . . .
My father tried to defuse situations
whenever possible. I think that’s why he stayed in Congress for so long. The
guy could kiss the ugliest babies known to mankind and still come up with
something nice to say. “He’s such a gentle child,” he’d say when a baby had a
giant head, or, “I’ll bet she’s the sweetest girl in the world,” if she had a
birthmark over her entire face. One time a lady showed up with a kid in a
wheelchair. My father took one look at him and said, “I’ll bet you ten to one
that you’re smartest kid in your class.” And he was! Yeah,
my father was great at stuff like that. He could fling it with the best of ’em,
that’s for sure. And he wasn’t such a bad guy, not really, especially if you
consider the fact that he didn’t beat me or anything.
But he wasn’t there for me growing up. I
hate to say that because nowadays people claim that sort of stuff even if their
parent was around and use it to excuse their behavior. My dad
. . . he didn’t love me . . . that’s why I became a
stripper and performed on The Jerry Springer Show. . . . I’m not
using it to excuse the person I’ve become, I’m simply saying it as a fact. My
father was gone nine months of the year, living out of town in a Washington, D.C.,
apartment three hundred miles away. My mother didn’t go with him because both
of them wanted me to grow up “the same way they had.”
Of course, my father’s father took him
hunting and fishing, taught him to play ball, showed up for birthday parties,
all that small stuff that adds up to quite a bit before adulthood. My father,
on the other hand, was a stranger, someone I barely knew at all. For the first
five years of my life I thought all fathers lived somewhere else. It wasn’t
until my best friend, Eric Hunter, asked me in kindergarten who
that guy was who showed up at my house the night before that I realized
something wasn’t quite right about the situation.
“He’s my father,” I said proudly.
“Oh,” Eric said as he rifled through my
lunchbox, looking for my Milky Way, “I didn’t know you had a father.”
Talk about something whacking you straight
in the face.
So, I grew up under the care of my mother.
Now she was a nice lady, sweet and gentle, the kind of mother most people dream
about. But she wasn’t, nor could she ever be, a manly influence in my life, and
that fact, coupled with my growing disillusionment with my father, made me
become something of a rebel, even at a young age. Not a bad one, mind you. Me
and my friends might sneak out late and soap up car windows now and then or eat
boiled peanuts in the graveyard behind the church, but in the fifties that was
the kind of thing that made other parents shake their heads and whisper to
their children, “You don’t want to be like that Carter boy. He’s on the fast
track to prison.”
Me. A bad boy. For eating boiled peanuts
in the graveyard. Go figure.
Anyway, my father and Hegbert didn’t get along, but it wasn’t only because of politics. No, it seems
that my father and Hegbert knew each other from way back when. Hegbert was
about twenty years older than my father, and back before he was a minister, he
used to work for my father’s father. My grandfather—even though he spent lots
of time with my father—was a true bastard if there ever was one. He was the
one, by the way, who made the family fortune, but I don’t want you to imagine
him as the sort of man who slaved over his business, working diligently and
watching it grow, prospering slowly over time. My grandfather was much shrewder
than that. The way he made his money was simple—he started as a bootlegger,
accumulating wealth throughout Prohibition by running rum up from Cuba. Then he
began buying land and hiring sharecroppers to work it. He took ninety percent
of the money the sharecroppers made on their tobacco crop, then loaned them
money whenever they needed it at ridiculous interest rates. Of course, he never
intended to collect the money—instead he would foreclose on any land or
equipment they happened to own. Then, in what he called “his moment of
inspiration,” he started a bank called Carter Banking and Loan. The only other bank in a two-county radius had mysteriously burned
down, and with the onset of the Depression, it never reopened. Though everyone
knew what had really happened, not a word was ever spoken for fear of
retribution, and their fear was well placed. The bank wasn’t the only building
that had mysteriously burned down.
His interest rates were outrageous, and
little by little he began amassing more land and property as people defaulted
on their loans. When the Depression hit hardest, he foreclosed on dozens of
businesses throughout the county while retaining the original owners to
continue to work on salary, paying them just enough to keep them where they
were, because they had nowhere else to go. He told them that when the economy
improved, he’d sell their business back to them, and people always believed
him.
Never once, however, did he keep his
promise. In the end he controlled a vast portion of the county’s economy, and
he abused his clout in every way imaginable.
I’d like to tell you he eventually went to
a terrible death, but he didn’t. He died at a ripe-old age while sleeping with
his mistress on his yacht off the Cayman Islands. He’d outlived
both his wives and his only son. Some end for a guy like that, huh? Life, I’ve
learned, is never fair. If people teach anything in school, that should be it.
But back to the story. . . .
Hegbert, once he realized what a bastard my grandfather really was, quit
working for him and went into the ministry, then came back to Beaufort and
started ministering in the same church we attended. He spent his first few
years perfecting his fire-and-brimstone act with monthly sermons on the evils
of the greedy, and this left him scant time for anything else. He was
forty-three before he ever got married; he was fifty-five when his daughter,
Jamie Sullivan, was born. His wife, a wispy little thing twenty years younger
than he, went through six miscarriages before Jamie was born, and in the end she
died in childbirth, making Hegbert a widower who had to raise a daughter on his
own.
Hence, of course, the story behind the
play.
People knew the story even before the play
was first performed. It was one of those stories that made its rounds whenever
Hegbert had to baptize a baby or attend a funeral. Everyone knew about it, and
that’s why, I think, so many people got emotional whenever they saw the
Christmas play. They knew it was based on something that
happened in real life, which gave it special meaning.
Jamie Sullivan was a senior in high
school, just like me, and she’d already been chosen to play the angel, not that
anyone else even had a chance. This, of course, made the play extra special
that year. It was going to be a big deal, maybe the biggest ever—at least in
Miss Garber’s mind. She was the drama teacher, and she was already glowing
about the possibilities the first time I met her in class.
Now, I hadn’t really planned on taking
drama that year. I really hadn’t, but it was either that or chemistry II. The
thing was, I thought it would be a blow-off class, especially when compared
with my other option. No papers, no tests, no tables where I’d have to memorize
protons and neutrons and combine elements in their proper formulas
. . . what could possibly be better for a high school senior? It
seemed like a sure thing, and when I signed up for it, I thought I’d just be
able to sleep through most every class, which, considering my late night peanut
eating, was fairly important at the time.
On the first day of class I was one of the
last to arrive, coming in just a few seconds before the bell rang, and I took a
seat in the back of the room. Miss Garber had her back
turned to the class, and she was busy writing her name in big cursive letters,
as if we didn’t know who she was. Everyone knew her—it was impossible not to.
She was big, at least six feet two, with flaming red hair and pale skin that
showed her freckles well into her forties. She was also overweight—I’d say
honestly she pushed two fifty—and she had a fondness for wearing
flower-patterned muumuus. She had thick, dark, horn-rimmed glasses, and she
greeted every one with, “Helloooooo,” sort of singing the last syllable. Miss
Garber was one of a kind, that’s for sure, and she was single, which made it
even worse. A guy, no matter how old, couldn’t help but feel sorry for a gal
like her.
Beneath her name she wrote the goals she
wanted to accomplish that year. “Self-confidence” was number one, followed by
“Self-awareness” and, third, “Self-fulfillment.” Miss Garber was big into the
“self” stuff, which put her really ahead of the curve as far as psychotherapy
is concerned, though she probably didn’t realize it at the time. Miss Garber
was a pioneer in that field. Maybe it had something to do with the way she
looked; maybe she was just trying to feel better about
herself.
But I digress.
It wasn’t until the class started that I
noticed something unusual. Though Beaufort High School wasn’t large, I knew for
a fact that it was pretty much split fifty-fifty between males and females,
which was why I was surprised when I saw that this class was at least ninety
percent female. There was only one other male in the class, which to my
thinking was a good thing, and for a moment I felt flush with a “look out
world, here I come” kind of feeling. Girls, girls, girls . . . I
couldn’t help but think. Girls and girls and no tests in sight.
Okay, so I wasn’t the most
forward-thinking guy on the block.
So Miss Garber brings up the Christmas
play and tells everyone that Jamie Sullivan is going to be the angel that year.
Miss Garber started clapping right away—she was a member of the church, too—and
there were a lot of people who thought she was gunning for Hegbert in a
romantic sort of way. The first time I heard it, I remember thinking that it
was a good thing they were too old to have children, if they ever did get
together. Imagine—translucent with freckles? The very
thought gave everyone shudders, but of course, no one ever said anything about
it, at least within hearing distance of Miss Garber and Hegbert. Gossip is one
thing, hurtful gossip is completely another, and even in high school we weren’t
that mean.
Miss Garber kept on clapping, all alone
for a while, until all of us finally joined in, because it was obvious that was
what she wanted. “Stand up, Jamie,” she said. So Jamie stood up and turned
around, and Miss Garber started clapping even faster, as if she were standing
in the presence of a bona fide movie star.
Now Jamie Sullivan was a nice girl. She
really was. Beaufort was small enough that it had only one elementary school,
so we’d been in the same classes our entire lives, and I’d be lying if I said I
never talked to her. Once, in second grade, she’d sat in the seat right next to
me for the whole year, and we’d even had a few conversations, but it didn’t
mean that I spent a lot of time hanging out with her in my spare time, even
back then. Who I saw in school was one thing; who I saw after school was
something completely different, and Jamie had never been on my social calendar.
It’s not that Jamie
was unattractive—don’t get me wrong. She wasn’t hideous or anything like that.
Fortunately she’d taken after her mother, who, based on the pictures I’d seen,
wasn’t half-bad, especially considering who she ended up marrying. But Jamie
wasn’t exactly what I considered attractive, either. Despite the fact that she
was thin, with honey blond hair and soft blue eyes, most of the time she looked
sort of . . . plain, and that was when you noticed her at all.
Jamie didn’t care much about outward appearances, because she was always
looking for things like “inner beauty,” and I suppose that’s part of the reason
she looked the way she did. For as long as I’d known her—and this was going way
back, remember—she’d always worn her hair in a tight bun, almost like a
spinster, without a stitch of makeup on her face. Coupled with her usual brown
cardigan and plaid skirt, she always looked as though she were on her way to
interview for a job at the library. We used to think it was just a phase and
that she’d eventually grow out of it, but she never had. Even through our first
three years of high school, she hadn’t changed at all. The only thing that had
changed was the size of her clothes.
But it wasn’t just
the way Jamie looked that made her different; it was also the way she acted.
Jamie didn’t spend any time hanging out at Cecil’s Diner or going to slumber
parties with other girls, and I knew for a fact that she’d never had a
boyfriend her entire life. Old Hegbert would probably have had a heart attack
if she had. But even if by some odd turn of events Hegbert had allowed it, it
still wouldn’t have mattered. Jamie carried her Bible wherever she went, and if
her looks and Hegbert didn’t keep the boys away, the Bible sure as heck did.
Now, I liked the Bible as much as the next teenage boy, but Jamie seemed to
enjoy it in a way that was completely foreign to me. Not only did she go to
vacation Bible school every August, but she would read the Bible during lunch
break at school. In my mind that just wasn’t normal, even if she was the
minister’s daughter. No matter how you sliced it, reading Paul’s letters to the
Ephesians wasn’t nearly as much fun as flirting, if you know what I mean.
But Jamie didn’t stop there. Because of
all her Bible reading, or maybe because of Hegbert’s influence, Jamie believed
it was important to help others, and helping others is exactly what she did. I
knew she volunteered at the orphanage in Morehead City, but
for her that simply wasn’t enough. She was always in charge of one fund-raiser
or another, helping everyone from the Boy Scouts to the Indian Princesses, and
I know that when she was fourteen, she spent part of her summer painting the
outside of an elderly neighbor’s house. Jamie was the kind of girl who would
pull weeds in someone’s garden without being asked or stop traffic to help
little kids cross the road. She’d save her allowance to buy a new basketball
for the orphans, or she’d turn around and drop the money into the church basket
on Sunday. She was, in other words, the kind of girl who made the rest of us
look bad, and whenever she glanced my way, I couldn’t help but feel guilty,
even though I hadn’t done anything wrong.
Nor did Jamie limit her good deeds to
people. If she ever came across a wounded animal, for instance, she’d try to
help it, too. Opossums, squirrels, dogs, cats, frogs . . . it didn’t
matter to her. Dr. Rawlings, the vet, knew her by sight, and he’d shake his
head whenever he saw her walking up to the door carrying a cardboard box with
yet another critter inside. He’d take off his eyeglasses and wipe them with his
handkerchief while Jamie explained how she’d found the poor
creature and what had happened to it. “He was hit by a car, Dr. Rawlings. I
think it was in the Lord’s plan to have me find him and try to save him. You’ll
help me, won’t you?”
With Jamie, everything was in the Lord’s
plan. That was another thing. She always mentioned the Lord’s plan whenever you
talked to her, no matter what the subject. The baseball game’s rained out? Must
be the Lord’s plan to prevent something worse from happening. A surprise
trigonometry quiz that everyone in class fails? Must be in the Lord’s plan to
give us challenges. Anyway, you get the picture.
Then, of course, there was the whole
Hegbert situation, and this didn’t help her at all. Being the minister’s
daughter couldn’t have been easy, but she made it seem as if it were the most
natural thing in the world and that she was lucky to have been blessed in that
way. That’s how she used to say it, too. “I’ve been so blessed to have a father
like mine.” Whenever she said it, all we could do was shake our heads and
wonder what planet she actually came from.
Despite all these other strikes, though,
the one thing that really drove me crazy about her was
the fact that she was always so damn cheerful, no matter what was happening
around her. I swear, that girl never said a bad thing about anything or anyone,
even to those of us who weren’t that nice to her. She would hum to herself as
she walked down the street, she would wave to strangers driving by in their
cars. Sometimes ladies would come running out of their house if they saw her
walking by, offering her pumpkin bread if they’d been baking all day or
lemonade if the sun was high in the sky. It seemed as if every adult in town
adored her. “She’s such a nice young lady,” they’d say whenever Jamie’s name
came up. “The world would be a better place if there were more people like
her.”
But my friends and I didn’t quite see it
that way. In our minds, one Jamie Sullivan was plenty.
I was thinking about all this while Jamie
stood in front of us on the first day of drama class, and I admit that I wasn’t
much interested in seeing her. But strangely, when Jamie turned to face us, I
kind of got a shock, like I was sitting on a loose wire or something. She wore
a plaid skirt with a white blouse under the same brown cardigan sweater I’d
seen a million times, but there were two new bumps on her
chest that the sweater couldn’t hide that I swore hadn’t been there just three
months earlier. She’d never worn makeup and she still didn’t, but she had a
tan, probably from Bible school, and for the first time she looked—well, almost
pretty. Of course, I dismissed that thought right away, but as she looked
around the room, she stopped and smiled right at me, obviously glad to see that
I was in the class. It wasn’t until later that I would learn the reason why.
After high school I planned to go to the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. My father wanted me to go to
Harvard or Princeton like some of the sons of other congressmen did, but with
my grades it wasn’t possible. Not that I was a bad student. I just didn’t focus
on my studies, and my grades weren’t exactly up to snuff for the Ivy Leagues.
By my senior year it was pretty much touch and go whether I’d even get accepted
at UNC, and this was my father’s alma mater, a place where he could pull some
strings. During one of his few weekends home, my father came up with the plan
to put me over the top. I’d just finished my first week of
school and we were sitting down for dinner. He was home for three days on
account of Labor Day weekend.
“I think you should run for student body
president,” he said. “You’ll be graduating in June, and I think it would look
good on your record. Your mother thinks so, too, by the way.”
My mother nodded as she chewed a mouthful
of peas. She didn’t speak much when my father had the floor, though she winked
at me. Sometimes I think my mother liked to see me squirm, even though she was
sweet.
“I don’t think I’d have a chance at
winning,” I said. Though I was probably the richest kid in school, I was by no
means the most popular. That honor belonged to Eric Hunter, my best friend. He
could throw a baseball at almost ninety miles an hour, and he’d led the
football team to back-to-back state titles as the star quarterback. He was a
stud. Even his name sounded cool.
“Of course you can win,” my father said
quickly. “We Carters always win.”
That’s another one of the reasons I didn’t
like spending time with my father. During those few times he was home, I think
he wanted to mold me into a miniature version of himself.
Since I’d grown up pretty much without him, I’d come to resent having him
around. This was the first conversation we’d had in weeks. He rarely talked to
me on the phone.
“But what if I don’t want to?”
My father put down his fork, a bite of his
pork chop still on the tines. He looked at me crossly, giving me the once-over.
He was wearing a suit even though it was over eighty degrees in the house, and
it made him even more intimidating. My father always wore a suit, by the way.
“I think,” he said slowly, “that it would
be a good idea.”
I knew that when he talked that way the
issue was settled. That’s the way it was in my family. My father’s word was
law. But the fact was, even after I agreed, I didn’t want to do it. I didn’t
want to waste my afternoons meeting with teachers after school—after
school!—every week for the rest of the year, dreaming up themes for school
dances or trying to decide what colors the streamers should be. That’s really
all the class presidents did, at least back when I was in high school. It
wasn’t like students had the power to actually decide anything meaningful.
But then again, I
knew my father had a point. If I wanted to go to UNC, I had to do something. I
didn’t play football or basketball, I didn’t play an instrument, I wasn’t in
the chess club or the bowling club or anything else. I didn’t excel in the
classroom—hell, I didn’t excel at much of anything. Growing despondent, I
started listing the things I actually could do, but to be honest, there really
wasn’t that much. I could tie eight different types of sailing knots, I could
walk barefoot across hot asphalt farther than anyone I knew, I could balance a
pencil vertically on my finger for thirty seconds . . . but I didn’t
think that any of those things would really stand out on a college application.
So there I was, lying in bed all night long, slowly coming to the sinking
realization that I was a loser. Thanks, Dad.
The next morning I went to the principal’s
office and added my name to the list of candidates. There were two other people
running—John Foreman and Maggie Brown. Now, John didn’t stand a chance, I knew
that right off. He was the kind of guy who’d pick lint off your clothes while
he talked to you. But he was a good student. He sat in the front row and raised
his hand every time the teacher asked a question. If he was called to give the answer, he would almost always give the right one, and
he’d turn his head from side to side with a smug look on his face, as if
proving how superior his intellect was when compared with those of the other
peons in the room. Eric and I used to shoot spitballs at him when the teacher’s
back was turned.
Maggie Brown was another matter. She was a
good student as well. She’d served on the student council for the first three
years and had been the junior class president the year before. The only real
strike against her was the fact that she wasn’t very attractive, and she’d put
on twenty pounds that summer. I knew that not a single guy would vote for her.
After seeing the competition, I figured
that I might have a chance after all. My entire future was on the line here, so
I formulated my strategy. Eric was the first to agree.
“Sure, I’ll get all the guys on the team
to vote for you, no problem. If that’s what you really want.”
“How about their girlfriends, too?” I
asked.
That was pretty much my entire campaign.
Of course, I went to the debates like I was supposed to, and I passed out those
dorky “What I’ll do if I’m elected president” fliers, but in the end it was
Eric Hunter who probably got me where I needed to be.
Beaufort High School had only about four hundred students, so getting the
athletic vote was critical, and most of the jocks didn’t give a hoot who they
voted for anyway. In the end it worked out just the way I planned.
I was voted student body president with a
fairly large majority of the vote. I had no idea what trouble it would
eventually lead me to.
When I was a junior I went steady with a
girl named Angela Clark. She was my first real girlfriend, though it lasted for
only a few months. Just before school let out for the summer, she dumped me for
a guy named Lew who was twenty years old and worked as a mechanic in his
father’s garage. His primary attribute, as far as I could tell, was that he had
a really nice car. He always wore a white T-shirt with a pack of Camels folded
into the sleeve, and he’d lean against the hood of his Thunderbird, looking
back and forth, saying things like “Hey, baby” whenever a girl walked by. He
was a real winner, if you know what I mean.
Well, anyway, the homecoming dance was
coming up, and because of the whole Angela situation, I still didn’t have a
date. Everyone on the student council had to attend—it was mandatory.
I had to help decorate the gym and clean up the next day—and besides, it was
usually a pretty good time. I called a couple of girls I knew, but they already
had dates, so I called a few more. They had dates, too. By the final week the
pickings were getting pretty slim. The pool was down to the kinds of girls who
had thick glasses and talked with lisps. Beaufort was never exactly a hotbed
for beauties anyway, but then again I had to find somebody. I didn’t want to go
to the dance without a date—what would that look like? I’d be the only student
body president ever to attend the homecoming dance alone. I’d end up being the
guy scooping punch all night long or mopping up the barf in the bathroom.
That’s what people without dates usually did.
Growing sort of panicky, I pulled out the
yearbook from the year before and started flipping through the pages one by
one, looking for anyone who might not have a date. First I looked through the
pages with the seniors. Though a lot of them were off at college, a few of them
were still around town. Even though I didn’t think I had much of a chance with
them, I called anyway, and sure enough, I was proven right. I couldn’t find
anyone, at least not anyone who would go with me. I was
getting pretty good at handling rejection, I’ll tell you, though that’s not the
sort of thing you brag about to your grandkids. My mom knew what I was going
through, and she finally came into my room and sat on the bed beside me.
“If you can’t get a date, I’ll be happy to
go with you,” she said.
“Thanks, Mom,” I said dejectedly.
When she left the room, I felt even worse than
I had before. Even my mom didn’t think I could find somebody. And if I showed
up with her? If I lived a hundred years, I’d never live that down.
There was another guy in my boat, by the
way. Carey Dennison had been elected treasurer, and he still didn’t have a
date, either. Carey was the kind of guy no one wanted to spend time with at
all, and the only reason he’d been elected was because he’d run unopposed. Even
then I think the vote was fairly close. He played the tuba in the marching
band, and his body looked all out of proportion, as if he’d stopped growing
halfway through puberty. He had a great big stomach and gangly arms and legs,
like the Hoos in Hooville, if you know what I mean. He also had a high-pitched
way of talking—it’s what made him such a good tuba player, I
reckon—and he never stopped asking questions. “Where did you go last weekend?
Was it fun? Did you see any girls?” He wouldn’t even wait for an answer, and
he’d move around constantly as he asked so you had to keep turning your head to
keep him in sight. I swear he was probably the most annoying person I’d ever
met. If I didn’t get a date, he’d stand off on one side with me all night long,
firing questions like some deranged prosecutor.
So there I was, flipping through the pages
in the junior class section, when I saw Jamie Sullivan’s picture. I paused for
just a second, then turned the page, cursing myself for even thinking about it.
I spent the next hour searching for anyone halfway decent looking, but I slowly
came to the realization that there wasn’t anyone left. In time I finally turned
back to her picture and looked again. She wasn’t bad looking, I told myself,
and she’s really sweet. She’d probably say yes, I thought. . . .
I closed the yearbook. Jamie Sullivan?
Hegbert’s daughter? No way. Absolutely not. My friends would roast me alive.
But compared with dating your mother or
cleaning up puke or even, God forbid . . . Carey Dennison?
I spent the rest of
the evening debating the pros and cons of my dilemma. Believe me, I went back and
forth for a while, but in the end the choice was obvious, even to me. I had to
ask Jamie to the dance, and I paced around the room thinking of the best way to
ask her.
It was then that I realized something
terrible, something absolutely frightening. Carey Dennison, I suddenly
realized, was probably doing the exact same thing I was doing right now. He was
probably looking through the yearbook, too! He was weird, but he wasn’t the
kind of guy who liked cleaning up puke, either, and if you’d seen his mother,
you’d know that his choice was even worse than mine. What if he asked Jamie
first? Jamie wouldn’t say no to him, and realistically she was the only option
he had. No one besides her would be caught dead with him. Jamie helped
everyone—she was one of those equal opportunity saints. She’d probably listen
to Carey’s squeaky voice, see the goodness radiating from his heart, and accept
right off the bat.
So there I was, sitting in my room,
frantic with the possibility that Jamie might not go to the dance with me. I
barely slept that night, I tell you, which was just about the strangest thing
I’d ever experienced. I don’t think anyone ever fretted
about asking Jamie out before. I planned to ask her first thing in the morning,
while I still had my courage, but Jamie wasn’t in school. I assumed she was
working with the orphans over in Morehead City, the way she did every month. A
few of us had tried to get out of school using that excuse, too, but Jamie was
the only one who ever got away with it. The principal knew she was reading to
them or doing crafts or just sitting around playing games with them. She wasn’t
sneaking out to the beach or hanging out at Cecil’s Diner or anything. That
concept was absolutely ludicrous.
“Got a date yet?” Eric asked me in between
classes. He knew very well that I didn’t, but even though he was my best
friend, he liked to stick it to me once in a while.
“Not yet,” I said, “but I’m working on
it.”
Down the hall, Carey Denison was reaching
into his locker. I swear he shot me a beady glare when he thought I wasn’t
looking.
That’s the kind of day it was.
The minutes ticked by slowly during my
final class. The way I figured it—if Carey and I got out at the same time, I’d
be able to get to her house first, what with those gawky legs and all. I
started to psych myself up, and when the bell rang, I took
off from school running at a full clip. I was flying for about a hundred yards
or so, and then I started to get kind of tired, and then a cramp set in. Pretty
soon all I could do was walk, but that cramp really started to get to me, and I
had to bend over and hold my side while I kept moving. As I made my way down
the streets of Beaufort, I looked like a wheezing version of the Hunchback of
Notre Dame.
Behind me I thought I heard Carey’s
high-pitched laughter. I turned around, digging my fingers into my gut to
stifle the pain, but I couldn’t see him. Maybe he was cutting through someone’s
backyard! He was a sneaky bastard, that guy. You couldn’t trust him even for a
minute.
I started to stumble along even faster,
and pretty soon I reached Jamie’s street. By then I was sweating all over—my
shirt was soaked right through—and I was still wheezing something fierce. Well,
I reached her front door, took a second to catch my breath, and finally
knocked. Despite my fevered rush to her house, my pessimistic side assumed that
Carey would be the one who opened the door for me. I imagined him smiling at me
with a victorious look in his eye, one that essentially
meant “Sorry, partner, you’re too late.”
But it wasn’t Carey who answered, it was
Jamie, and for the first time in my life I saw what she’d look like if she were
an ordinary person. She was wearing jeans and a red blouse, and though her hair
was still pulled up into a bun, she looked more casual than she usually did. I
realized she could actually be cute if she gave herself the opportunity.
“Landon,” she said as she held open the
door, “this is a surprise!” Jamie was always glad to see everyone, including
me, though I think my appearance startled her. “You look like you’ve been
exercising,” she said.
“Not really,” I lied, wiping my brow.
Luckily the cramp was fading fast.
“You’ve sweat clean through your shirt.”
“Oh, that?” I looked at my shirt. “That’s
nothing. I just sweat a lot sometimes.”
“Maybe you should have it checked by a
doctor.”
“I’ll be okay, I’m sure.”
“I’ll say a prayer for you anyway,” she
offered as she smiled. Jamie was always praying for someone. I might as well
join the club.
“Thanks,” I said.
She looked down and sort of shuffled her feet for a moment. “Well, I’d invite you in, but my father
isn’t home, and he doesn’t allow boys in the house while he’s not around.”
“Oh,” I said dejectedly, “that’s okay. We
can talk out here, I guess.” If I’d had my way, I would have done this inside.
“Would you like some lemonade while we
sit?” she asked. “I just made some.”
“I’d love some,” I said.
“I’ll be right back.” She walked back into
the house, but she left the door open and I took a quick glance around. The
house, I noticed, was small but tidy, with a piano against one wall and a sofa
against the other. A small fan sat oscillating in the corner. On the coffee
table there were books with names like Listening to Jesus and Faith
Is the Answer. Her Bible was there, too, and it was opened to the chapter
on Luke.
A moment later Jamie returned with the
lemonade, and we took a seat in two chairs near the corner of the porch. I knew
she and her father sat there in the evenings because I passed by their house
now and then. As soon as we were seated, I saw Mrs. Hastings, her neighbor
across the street, wave to us. Jamie waved back while I sort of scooted my
chair so that Mrs. Hastings couldn’t see my face. Even though
I was going to ask Jamie to the dance, I didn’t want anyone—even Mrs.
Hastings—to see me there on the off chance that she’d already accepted Carey’s
offer. It was one thing to actually go with Jamie, it was another thing to be
rejected by her in favor of a guy like Carey.
“What are you doing?” Jamie asked me.
“You’re moving your chair into the sun.”
“I like the sun,” I said. She was right,
though. Almost immediately I could feel the rays burning through my shirt and
making me sweat again.
“If that’s what you want,” she said,
smiling. “So, what did you want to talk to me about?”
Jamie reached up and started to adjust her
hair. By my reckoning, it hadn’t moved at all. I took a deep breath, trying to
gather myself, but I couldn’t force myself to come out with it just yet.
“So,” I said instead, “you were at the
orphanage today?”
Jamie looked at me curiously. “No. My
father and I were at the doctor’s office.”
“Is he okay?”
She smiled. “Healthy as can be.”
I nodded and glanced across the street.
Mrs. Hastings had gone back inside, and I couldn’t see
anyone else in the vicinity. The coast was finally clear, but I still wasn’t
ready.
“Sure is a beautiful day,” I said,
stalling.
“Yes, it is.”
“Warm, too.”
“That’s because you’re in the sun.”
I looked around, feeling the pressure
building. “Why, I’ll bet there’s not a single cloud in the whole sky.”
This time Jamie didn’t respond, and we sat
in silence for a few moments.
“Landon,” she finally said, “you didn’t
come here to talk about the weather, did you?”
“Not really.”
“Then why are you here?”
The moment of truth had arrived, and I
cleared my throat.
“Well . . . I wanted to know if
you were going to the homecoming dance.”
“Oh,” she said. Her tone made it seem as
if she were unaware that such a thing existed. I fidgeted in my seat and waited
for her answer.
“I really hadn’t planned on going,” she
finally said.
“But if someone asked you to go, you
might?”
It took a moment for her to answer.
“I’m not sure,” she said, thinking
carefully. “I suppose I might go, if I got the chance. I’ve
never been to a homecoming dance before.”
“They’re fun,” I said quickly. “Not too
much fun, but fun.” Especially when compared to my other options, I didn’t
add.
She smiled at my turn of phrase. “I’d have
to talk to my father, of course, but if he said it was okay, then I guess I
could.”
In the tree beside the porch, a bird
started to chirp noisily, as if he knew I wasn’t supposed to be here. I
concentrated on the sound, trying to calm my nerves. Just two days ago I
couldn’t have imagined myself even thinking about it, but suddenly there I was,
listening to myself as I spoke the magic words.
“Well, would you like to go to the dance
with me?”
I could tell she was surprised. I think
she believed that the little lead-up to the question probably had to do with
someone else asking her. Sometimes teenagers sent their friends out to “scout
the terrain,” so to speak, so as not to face possible rejection. Even though
Jamie wasn’t much like other teenagers, I’m sure she was familiar with the
concept, at least in theory.
Instead of answering right away, though,
Jamie glanced away for a long moment. I got a sinking
feeling in my stomach because I assumed she was going to say no. Visions of my
mother, puke, and Carey flooded through my mind, and all of a sudden I
regretted the way I’d behaved toward her all these years. I kept remembering
all the times I’d teased her or called her father a fornicator or simply made
fun of her behind her back. Just when I was feeling awful about the whole thing
and imagining how I would ever be able to avoid Carey for five hours, she
turned and faced me again. She had a slight smile on her face.
“I’d love to,” she finally said, “on one
condition.”
I steadied myself, hoping it wasn’t
something too awful.
“Yes?”
“You have to promise that you won’t fall
in love with me.”
I knew she was kidding by the way she
laughed, and I couldn’t help but breathe a sigh of relief. Sometimes, I had to
admit, Jamie had a pretty good sense of humor.
I smiled and gave her my word.
As a general rule, Southern Baptists don’t
dance. In Beaufort, however, it wasn’t a rule that was ever strictly enforced.
The minister before Hegbert—don’t ask me what his name was—took sort of a lax
view about school dances as long as they were chaperoned, and because of that,
they’d become a tradition of sorts. By the time Hegbert came along, it was too
late to change things. Jamie was pretty much the only one who’d never been to a
school dance and frankly, I didn’t know whether she even knew how to dance at
all.
I admit that I also had some concerns
about what she would wear, though it wasn’t something I
would tell her. When Jamie went to the church socials—which were encouraged by
Hegbert—she usually wore an old sweater and one of the plaid skirts we saw in
school every day, but the homecoming dance was supposed to be special. Most of
the girls bought new dresses and the boys wore suits, and this year we were
bringing in a photographer to take our pictures. I knew Jamie wasn’t going to
buy a new dress because she wasn’t exactly well-off. Ministering wasn’t a
profession where people made a lot of money, but of course ministers weren’t in
it for monetary gain, they were in it for the long haul, if you know what I
mean. But I didn’t want her to wear the same thing she wore to school every
day, either. Not so much for me—I’m not that cold-hearted—but because of what
others might say. I didn’t want people to make fun of her or anything.
The good news, if there was any, was that
Eric didn’t rib me too bad about the whole Jamie situation because he was too
busy thinking about his own date. He was taking Margaret Hays, who was the head
cheerleader at our school. She wasn’t the brightest bulb on the Christmas tree,
but she was nice in her own way. By nice, of course, I’m talking about her
legs. Eric offered to double-date with me, but I turned him
down because I didn’t want to take any chances with Eric teasing Jamie or
anything like that. He was a good guy, but he could be kind of heartless
sometimes, especially when he had a few shots of bourbon in him.
The day of the dance was actually quite
busy for me. I spent most of the afternoon helping to decorate the gym, and I
had to get to Jamie’s about a half hour early because her father wanted to talk
to me, though I didn’t know why. Jamie had sprung that one on me just the day
before, and I can’t say I was exactly thrilled by the prospect of it. I figured
he was going to talk about temptation and the evil path it can lead us to. If
he brought up fornication, though, I knew I would die right there on the spot.
I said small prayers all day long in the hope of avoiding this conversation,
but I wasn’t sure if God would put my prayers on the front burner, if you know
what I mean, because of the way I’d behaved in the past. I was pretty nervous
just thinking about it.
After I showered I put on my best suit,
swung by the florist to pick up Jamie’s corsage, then drove to her house. My
mom had let me borrow the car, and I parked it on the street directly in front
of Jamie’s house. We hadn’t turned the clocks back yet, so
it was still light out when I got there, and I strolled up the cracked walkway
to her door. I knocked and waited for a moment, then knocked again. From behind
the door I heard Hegbert say, “I’ll be right there,” but he wasn’t exactly
racing to the door. I must have stood there for two minutes or so, looking at
the door, the moldings, the little cracks in the windowsills. Off to the side
were the chairs that Jamie and I had sat in just a few days back. The one I sat
in was still turned in the opposite direction. I guess they hadn’t sat there in
the last couple of days.
Finally the door creaked open. The light
coming from the lamp inside shadowed Hegbert’s face slightly and sort of
reflected through his hair. He was old, like I said, seventy-two years by my
reckoning. It was the first time I’d ever seen him up close, and I could see
all the wrinkles on his face. His skin really was translucent, even more so
than I’d imagined.
“Hello, Reverend,” I said, swallowing my
trepidation. “I’m here to take Jamie to the homecoming dance.”
“Of course you are,” he said. “But first,
I wanted to talk with you.”
“Yes, sir, that’s why I came early.”
In church Hegbert was a fairly snappy
dresser, but right now he looked like a farmer, dressed in overalls and a
T-shirt. He motioned for me to sit on the wooden chair he’d brought in from the
kitchen. “I’m sorry it took a little while to open the door. I was working on
tomorrow’s sermon,” he said.
I sat down.
“That’s okay, sir.” I don’t know why, but
you just had to call him “sir.” He sort of projected that image.
“All right, then, so tell me about
yourself.”
I thought it was a fairly ridiculous
question, with him having such a long history with my family and all. He was
also the one who had baptized me, by the way, and he’d seen me in church every
Sunday since I’d been a baby.
“Well, sir,” I began, not really knowing
what to say, “I’m the student body president. I don’t know whether Jamie
mentioned that to you.”
He nodded. “She did. Go on.”
“And . . . well, I hope to go to
the University of North Carolina next fall. I’ve already received the
application.”
He nodded again. “Anything else?”
I had to admit, I was running out of
things after that. Part of me wanted to pick up the pencil
off the end table and start balancing it, giving him the whole thirty seconds’
worth, but he wasn’t the kind of guy who would appreciate it.
“I guess not, sir.”
“Do you mind if I ask you a question?”
“No, sir.”
He sort of stared at me for a long time,
as if thinking about it.
“Why did you ask my daughter to the
dance?” he finally said.
I was surprised, and I know that my
expression showed it.
“I don’t know what you mean, sir.”
“You’re not planning to do anything to
. . . embarrass her, are you?”
“No, sir,” I said quickly, shocked by the
accusation. “Not at all. I needed someone to go with, and I asked her. It’s as
simple as that.”
“You don’t have any pranks planned?”
“No, sir. I wouldn’t do that to her.
. . .”
This went on for a few more minutes—his
grilling me about my true intentions, I mean—but luckily Jamie stepped out of
the back room, and her father and I both turned our heads at the same moment.
Hegbert finally stopped talking, and I breathed a sigh of relief. She’d put on
a nice blue skirt and a white blouse I’d never seen before.
Fortunately she’d left her sweater in the closet. It wasn’t too bad, I had to
admit, though I knew she’d still be underdressed compared with others at the
dance. As always, her hair was pulled up in a bun. Personally I think it would
have looked better if she’d kept it down, but that was the last thing I wanted
to say. Jamie looked like . . . well, Jamie looked exactly like she
usually did, but at least she wasn’t planning on bringing her Bible. That would
have just been too much to live down.
“You’re not giving Landon a hard time, are
you?” she said cheerfully to her father.
“We were just visiting,” I said quickly
before he had a chance to respond. For some reason I didn’t think he’d told
Jamie about the kind of person he thought I was, and I didn’t think that now
would be a good time.
“Well, we should probably go,” she said
after a moment. I think she sensed the tension in the room. She walked over to
her father and kissed him on the cheek. “Don’t stay up too late working on the
sermon, okay?”
“I won’t,” he said softly. Even with me in
the room, I could tell he really loved her and wasn’t afraid to show it. It was
how he felt about me that was the problem.
We said good-bye,
and on our way to the car I handed Jamie her corsage and told her I’d show her
how to put it on once we got in the car. I opened her door for her and walked
around the other side, then got in as well. In that short period of time, Jamie
had already pinned on the flower.
“I’m not exactly a dimwit, you know. I do
know how to pin on a corsage.”
I started the car and headed toward the
high school, with the conversation I’d just had with Hegbert running through my
mind.
“My father doesn’t like you very much,”
she said, as if knowing what I was thinking.
I nodded without saying anything.
“He thinks you’re irresponsible.”
I nodded again.
“He doesn’t like your father much,
either.”
I nodded once more.
“Or your family.”
I get the picture.
“But do you know what I think?” she asked
suddenly.
“Not really.” By then I was pretty
depressed.
“I think that all this was in the Lord’s
plan somehow. What do you think the message is?”
Here we go, I thought to myself.
I doubt if the
evening could have been much worse, if you want to know the truth. Most of my
friends kept their distance, and Jamie didn’t have many friends to begin with,
so we spent most of our time alone. Even worse, it turned out that my presence
wasn’t even required anymore. They’d changed the rule owing to the fact that
Carey couldn’t get a date, and that left me feeling pretty miserable about the
whole thing as soon as I found out about it. But because of what her father had
said to me, I couldn’t exactly take her home early, now, could I? And more than
that, she was really having a good time; even I could see that. She loved the
decorations I’d helped put up, she loved the music, she loved everything about
the dance. She kept telling me how wonderful everything was, and she asked me whether
I might help her decorate the church someday, for one of their socials. I sort
of mumbled that she should call me, and even though I said it without a trace
of energy, Jamie thanked me for being so considerate. To be honest, I was
depressed for at least the first hour, though she didn’t seem to notice.
Jamie had to be home by eleven o’clock, an
hour before the dance ended, which made it somewhat easier
for me to handle. Once the music started we hit the floor, and it turned out
that she was a pretty good dancer, considering it was her first time and all.
She followed my lead pretty well through about a dozen songs, and after that we
headed to the tables and had what resembled an ordinary conversation. Sure, she
threw in words like “faith” and “joy” and even “salvation,” and she talked
about helping the orphans and scooping critters off the highway, but she was
just so damn happy, it was hard to stay down for long.
So things weren’t too terrible at first
and really no worse than I had expected. It wasn’t until Lew and Angela showed
up that everything really went sour.
They showed up a few minutes after we
arrived. He was wearing that stupid T-shirt, Camels in his sleeve, and a glop
of hair gel on his head. Angela hung all over him right from the beginning of
the dance, and it didn’t take a genius to realize she’d had a few drinks before
she got there. Her dress was really flashy—her mother worked in a salon and was
up on all the latest fashions—and I noticed she’d picked up that ladylike habit
called chewing gum. She really worked that gum, chewing it
almost like a cow working her cud.
Well, good old Lew spiked the punch bowl,
and a few more people started getting tipsy. By the time the teachers found
out, most of the punch was already gone and people were getting that glassy
look in their eyes. When I saw Angela gobble up her second glass of punch, I
knew I should keep my eye on her. Even though she’d dumped me, I didn’t want
anything bad to happen to her. She was the first girl I’d ever French-kissed, and
even though our teeth clanked together so hard the first time we tried it that
I saw stars and had to take aspirin when I got home, I still had feelings for
her.
So there I was, sitting with Jamie, barely
listening as she described the wonders of Bible school, watching Angela out of
the corner of my eye, when Lew spotted me looking at her. In one frenzied
motion he grabbed Angela around the waist and dragged her over to the table,
giving me one of those looks, the one that “means business.” You know the one
I’m talking about.
“Are you staring at my girl?” he asked,
already tensing up.
“No.”
“Yeah, he was,”
Angela said, kind of slurring out the words. “He was staring right at me. This
is my old boyfriend, the one I told you about.”
His eyes turned into little slits, just
like Hegbert’s were prone to do. I guess I have this effect on lots of people.
“So you’re the one,” he said, sneering.
Now, I’m not much of a fighter. The only
real fight I was ever in was in third grade, and I pretty much lost that one
when I started to cry even before the guy punched me. Usually I didn’t have
much trouble staying away from things like this because of my passive nature,
and besides, no one ever messed with me when Eric was around. But Eric was off
with Margaret somewhere, probably behind the bleachers.
“I wasn’t staring,” I said finally, “and I
don’t know what she told you, but I doubt if it was true.”
His eyes narrowed. “Are you calling Angela
a liar?” he sneered.
Oops.
I think he would have hit me right there,
but Jamie suddenly worked her way into the situation.
“Don’t I know you?” she said cheerfully, looking right at him. Sometimes Jamie seemed oblivious of
situations that were happening right in front of her. “Wait—yes, I do. You work
in the garage downtown. Your father’s name is Joe, and your grandma lives out
on Foster Road, by the railroad crossing.”
A look of confusion crossed Lew’s face, as
though he were trying to put together a puzzle with too many pieces.
“How do you know all that? What he’d do,
tell you about me, too?”
“No,” Jamie said, “don’t be silly.” She
laughed to herself. Only Jamie could find humor at a time like this. “I saw
your picture in your grandma’s house. I was walking by, and she needed some
help bringing in the groceries. Your picture was on the mantel.”
Lew was looking at Jamie as though she had
cornstalks growing out of her ears.
Meanwhile Jamie was fanning herself with
her hand. “Well, we were just sitting down to take a breather from all that
dancing. It sure gets hot out there. Would you like to join us? We’ve got a
couple of chairs. I’d love to hear how your grandma is doing.”
She sounded so happy about it that Lew
didn’t know what to do. Unlike those of us who were used to
this sort of thing, he’d never come across someone like Jamie before. He stood
there for a moment or two, trying to decide if he should hit the guy with the
girl who’d helped his grandma. If it sounds confusing to you, imagine what it
was doing to Lew’s petroleum-damaged brain.
He finally skulked off without responding,
taking Angela with him. Angela had probably forgotten how the whole thing
started anyway, owing to the amount she’d had to drink. Jamie and I watched him
go, and when he was a safe distance away, I exhaled. I hadn’t even realized I’d
been holding my breath.
“Thanks,” I said mumbled sheepishly,
realizing that Jamie—Jamie!—was the one who’d saved me from grave bodily harm.
Jamie looked at me strangely. “For what?”
she asked, and when I didn’t exactly spell it out for her, she went right back
into her story about Bible school, as if nothing had happened at all. But this
time I found myself actually listening to her, at least with one of my ears. It
was the least I could do.
It turns out that it wasn’t the last we
saw of either Lew or Angela that evening. The two glasses of punch had really
done Angela in, and she threw up all over the ladies’ rest
room. Lew, being the classy guy he was, left when he heard her retching, sort
of slinking out the way he came in, and that was the last I saw of him. Jamie,
as fate would have it, was the one who found Angela in the bathroom, and it was
obvious that Angela wasn’t doing too well. The only option was to clean her up
and take her home before the teachers found out about it. Getting drunk was a
big deal back then, and she’d be looking at suspension, maybe even expulsion,
if she got caught.
Jamie, bless her heart, didn’t want that
to happen any more than I did, though I would have thought otherwise if you’d
asked me beforehand, owing to the fact that Angela was a minor and in violation
of the law. She’d also broken another one of Hegbert’s rules for proper
behavior. Hegbert frowned on law-breaking and drinking, and though it
didn’t get him going like fornication, we all knew he was deadly serious, and
we assumed Jamie felt the same way. And maybe she did, but her helper instinct
must have taken over. She probably took one look at Angela and thought “wounded
critter” or something like that and took immediate charge of the situation. I went off and located Eric behind the bleachers,
and he agreed to stand guard at the bathroom door while Jamie and I went in to
tidy it up. Angela had done a marvelous job, I tell you. The puke was
everywhere except the toilet. The walls, the floor, the sinks—even on the
ceiling, though don’t ask me how she did that. So there I was, perched on all
fours, cleaning up puke at the homecoming dance in my best blue suit, which was
exactly what I had wanted to avoid in the first place. And Jamie, my date, was
on all fours, too, doing exactly the same thing.
I could practically hear Carey laughing a
squeaky, maniacal laugh somewhere in the distance.
We ended up sneaking out the back door of
the gym, keeping Angela stable by walking on either side of her. She kept
asking where Lew was, but Jamie told her not to worry. She had a real soothing
way of talking to Angela, though Angela was so far gone, I doubt if she even
knew who was speaking. We loaded Angela into the backseat of my car, where she
passed out almost immediately, although not before she’d vomited once more on
the floor of the car. The smell was so awful that we had to roll down the
windows to keep from gagging, and the drive to Angela’s
house seemed extra long. Her mother answered the door, took one look at her
daughter, and brought her inside without so much as a word of thanks. I think
she was embarrassed, and we really didn’t have much to say to her anyway. The
situation pretty much spoke for itself.
By the time we dropped her off it was ten
forty-five, and we drove straight back to Jamie’s. I was really worried when we
got there because of the way she looked and smelled, and I said a silent prayer
hoping that Hegbert wasn’t awake. I didn’t want to have to explain this to him.
Oh, he’d probably listen to Jamie if she was the one who told him about it, but
I had the sinking feeling that he’d find a way to blame me anyway.
So I walked her to the door, and we stood
outside under the porchlight. Jamie crossed her arms and smiled a little,
looking just as if she’d come in from an evening stroll where she’d
contemplated the beauty of the world.
“Please don’t tell your father about
this,” I said.
“I won’t,” she said. She kept on smiling
when she finally turned my way. “I had a good time tonight.
Thank you for taking me to the dance.”
Here she was, covered in puke, actually
thanking me for the evening. Jamie Sullivan could really drive a guy crazy
sometimes.
In the two weeks following the homecoming
dance, my life pretty much returned to normal. My father was back in
Washington, D.C., which made things a lot more fun around my house, primarily
because I could sneak out the window again and head to the graveyard for my
late night forays. I don’t know what it was about the graveyard that attracted
us so. Maybe it had something to do with the tombstones themselves, because as
far as tombstones went, they were actually fairly comfortable to sit on.
We usually sat in a small plot where the
Preston family had been buried about a hundred years ago. There were eight
tombstones there, all arranged in a circle, making it easy
to pass the boiled peanuts back and forth between us. One time my friends and I
decided to learn what we could about the Preston family, and we went to the
library to find out if anything had been written about them. I mean, if you’re
going to sit on someone’s tombstone, you might as well know something about
them, right?
It turns out that there wasn’t much about
the family in the historical records, though we did find out one interesting
tidbit of information. Henry Preston, the father, was a one-armed lumberjack,
believe it or not. Supposedly he could cut down a tree as fast as any two-armed
man. Now the vision of a one-armed lumberjack is pretty vivid right off the
bat, so we talked about him a lot. We used to wonder what else he could do with
only one arm, and we’d spend long hours discussing how fast he could pitch a
baseball or whether or not he’d be able to swim across the Intracoastal
Waterway. Our conversations weren’t exactly highbrow, I admit, but I enjoyed
them nonetheless.
Well, Eric and me were out there one
Saturday night with a couple of other friends, eating boiled peanuts and talking
about Henry Preston, when Eric asked me how my “date” went
with Jamie Sullivan. He and I hadn’t seen much of each other since the
homecoming dance because the football season was already in the playoffs and
Eric had been out of town the past few weekends with the team.
“It was okay,” I said, shrugging, doing my
best to play it cool.
Eric playfully elbowed me in the ribs, and
I grunted. He outweighed me by at least thirty pounds.
“Did you kiss her good-night?”
“No.”
He took a long drink from his can of Budweiser
as I answered. I don’t know how he did it, but Eric never had trouble buying
beer, which was strange, being that everyone in town knew how old he was.
He wiped his lips with the back of his
hand, tossing me a sidelong glance.
“I would have thought that after she
helped you clean the bathroom, you would have at least kissed her good night.”
“Well, I didn’t.”
“Did you even try?”
“No.”
“Why not?”
“She’s not that kind of girl,” I said, and
even though we all knew it was true, it still sounded like I
was defending her.
Eric latched on to that like a leech.
“I think you like her,” he said.
“You’re full of crap,” I answered, and he
slapped my back, hard enough to force the breath right out of me. Hanging out
with Eric usually meant that I’d have a few bruises the following day.
“Yeah, I might be full of crap,” he said,
winking at me, “but you’re the one who’s smitten with Jamie Sullivan.”
I knew we were treading on dangerous
ground.
“I was just using her to impress
Margaret,” I said. “And with all the love notes she’s been sending me lately, I
reckon it must have worked.”
Eric laughed aloud, slapping me on the
back again.
“You and Margaret—now that’s funny.
. . .”
I knew I’d just dodged a major bullet, and
I breathed a sigh of relief as the conversation spun off in a new direction. I
joined in now and then, but I wasn’t really listening to what they were saying.
Instead I kept hearing this little voice inside me that made me wonder about
what Eric had said.
The thing was, Jamie
was probably the best date I could have had that night, especially considering
how the evening turned out. Not many dates—heck, not many people, period—would
have done what she did. At the same time, her being a good date didn’t mean I
liked her. I hadn’t talked to her at all since the dance, except when I saw her
in drama class, and even then it was only a few words here and there. If I
liked her at all, I told myself, I would have wanted to talk to her. If I liked
her, I would have offered to walk her home. If I liked her, I would have wanted
to bring her to Cecil’s Diner for a basket of hushpuppies and some RC cola. But
I didn’t want to do any of those things. I really didn’t. In my mind, I’d
already served my penance.
The next day, Sunday, I was in my room,
working on my application to UNC. In addition to the transcripts from my high
school and other personal information, they required five essays of the usual
type. If you could meet one person in history, who would that person be and
why? Name the most significant influence in your life and why you feel that
way. What do you look for in a role model and why? The essay questions were
fairly predictable—our English teacher had told us what to
expect—and I’d already worked on a couple of variations in class as homework.
English was probably my best subject. I’d
never received anything lower than an A since I first started school, and I was
glad the emphasis for the application process was on writing. If it had been on
math, I might have been in trouble, especially if it included those algebra
questions that talked about the two trains leaving an hour apart, traveling in
opposite directions at forty miles an hour, etc. It wasn’t that I was bad in
math—I usually pulled at least a C—but it didn’t come naturally to me, if you
know what I mean.
Anyway, I was writing one of my essays
when the phone rang. The only phone we had was located in the kitchen, and I
had to run downstairs to grab the receiver. I was breathing so loudly that I
couldn’t make out the voice too well, though it sounded like Angela. I
immediately smiled to myself. Even though she’d been sick all over the place
and I’d had to clean it up, she was actually pretty fun to be around most of
the time. And her dress really had been something, at least for the first hour.
I figured she was probably calling to thank me or even to
get together for a barbecue sandwich and hushpuppies or something.
“Landon?”
“Oh, hey,” I said, playing it cool,
“what’s going on?”
There was a short pause on the other end.
“How are you?”
It was then that I suddenly realized I
wasn’t speaking to Angela. Instead it was Jamie, and I almost dropped the
phone. I can’t say that I was happy about hearing from her, and for a second I
wondered who had given her my phone number before I realized it was probably in
the church records.
“Landon?”
“I’m fine,” I finally blurted out, still
in shock.
“Are you busy?” she asked.
“Sort of.”
“Oh . . . I see . . .
,”she said, trailing off. She paused again.
“Why are you calling me?” I asked.
It took her a few seconds to get the words
out.
“Well . . . I just wanted to
know if you wouldn’t mind coming by a little later this afternoon.”
“Coming by?”
“Yes. To my house.”
“Your house?” I
didn’t even try to disguise the growing surprise in my voice. Jamie ignored it
and went on.
“There’s something I want to talk to you
about. I wouldn’t ask if it wasn’t important.”
“Can’t you just tell me over the phone?”
“I’d rather not.”
“Well, I’m working on my college
application essays all afternoon,” I said, trying to get out of it.
“Oh . . . well . . .
like I said, it’s important, but I suppose I can talk to you Monday at school.
. . .”
With that, I suddenly realized that she
wasn’t going to let me off the hook and that we’d end up talking one way or the
other. My brain suddenly clicked through the scenarios as I tried to figure out
which one I should do—talk to her where my friends would see us or talk at her
house. Though neither option was particularly good, there was something in the
back of my mind, reminding me that she’d helped me out when I’d really needed
it, and the least I could do was to listen to what she had to say. I may be
irresponsible, but I’m a nice irresponsible, if I do say so myself.
Of course, that didn’t mean everyone else
had to know about it.
“No,” I said, “today
is fine. . . .”
We arranged to meet at five o’clock, and
the rest of the afternoon ticked by slowly, like the drips from Chinese water
torture. I left my house twenty minutes early, so I’d have plenty of time to
get there. My house was located near the waterfront in the historic part of
town, just a few doors down from where Blackbeard used to live, overlooking the
Intracoastal Waterway. Jamie lived on the other side of town, across the
railroad tracks, so it would take me about that long to get there.
It was November, and the temperature was
finally cooling down. One thing I really liked about Beaufort was the fact that
the springs and falls lasted practically forever. It might get hot in the
summer or snow once every six years, and there might be a cold spell that
lasted a week or so in January, but for the most part all you needed was a
light jacket to make it through the winter. Today was one of those perfect
days—mid-seventies without a cloud in the sky.
I made it to Jamie’s house right on time
and knocked on her door. Jamie answered it, and a quick peek inside revealed
that Hegbert wasn’t around. It wasn’t quite warm enough for sweet tea or
lemonade, and we sat in the chairs on the porch again,
without anything to drink. The sun was beginning to lower itself in the sky,
and there wasn’t anyone on the street. This time I didn’t have to move my
chair. It hadn’t been moved since the last time I’d been there.
“Thank you for coming, Landon,” she said.
“I know you’re busy, but I appreciate your taking the time to do this.”
“So, what’s so important?” I said, wanting
to get this over with as quickly as possible.
Jamie, for the first time since I’d known
her, actually looked nervous as she sat with me. She kept bringing her hands
together and pulling them apart.
“I wanted to ask you a favor,” she said
seriously.
“A favor?”
She nodded.
At first I thought she was going to ask me
to help her decorate the church, like she’d mentioned at homecoming, or maybe
she needed me to use my mother’s car to bring some stuff to the orphans. Jamie
didn’t have her license, and Hegbert needed their car anyway, being that there
was always a funeral or something he had to go to. But it still took a few
seconds for her to get the words out.
She sighed, her
hands coming together again.
“I’d like to ask you if you wouldn’t mind
playing Tom Thornton in the school play,” she said.
Tom Thornton, like I said before, was the
man in search of the music box for his daughter, the one who meets the angel.
Except for the angel, it was far and away the most important role.
“Well . . . I don’t know,” I
said, confused. “I thought Eddie Jones was going to be Tom. That’s what Miss
Garber told us.”
Eddie Jones was a lot like Carey Dennison,
by the way. He was really skinny, with pimples all over his face, and he
usually talked to you with his eyes all squinched up. He had a nervous tic, and
he couldn’t help but squinch his eyes whenever he got nervous, which was
practically all the time. He’d probably end up spouting his lines like a
psychotic blind man if you put him in front of a crowd. To make things worse,
he had a stutter, too, and it took him a long time to say anything at all. Miss
Garber had given him the role because he’d been the only one who offered to do
it, but even then it was obvious she didn’t want him either. Teachers were
human, too, but she didn’t have much of an option, since no
one else had come forward.
“Miss Garber didn’t say that exactly. What
she said was that Eddie could have the role if no one else tried out for it.”
“Can’t someone else do it instead?”
But there really wasn’t anyone else, and I
knew it. Because of Hegbert’s requirement that only seniors perform, the play
was in a bind that year. There were about fifty senior boys at the high school,
twenty-two of whom were on the football team, and with the team still in the
running for the state title, none of them would have the time to go to the
rehearsals. Of the thirty or so who were left, more than half were in the band and
they had after-school practice as well. A quick calculation showed that there
were maybe a dozen other people who could possibly do it.
Now, I didn’t want to do the play at all,
and not only because I’d come to realize that drama was just about the most boring
class ever invented. The thing was, I’d already taken Jamie to homecoming, and
with her as the angel, I just couldn’t bear the thought that I’d have to spend
every afternoon with her for the next month or so. Being seen with her once was bad enough . . . but being seen with her
every day? What would my friends say?
But I could tell this was really important
to her. The simple fact that she’d asked made that clear. Jamie never asked
anyone for a favor. I think deep down she suspected that no one would ever do
her a favor because of who she was. The very realization made me sad.
“What about Jeff Bangert? He might do it,”
I offered.
Jamie shook her head. “He can’t. His
father’s sick, and he has to work in the store after school until his father
gets back on his feet.”
“What about Darren Woods?”
“He broke his arm last week when he
slipped on the boat. His arm is in a sling.”
“Really? I didn’t know that,” I said,
stalling, but Jamie knew what I was doing.
“I’ve been praying about it, Landon,” she
said simply, and sighed for the second time. “I’d really like this play to be
special this year, not for me, but because of my father. I want it to be the
best production ever. I know how much it will mean to him to see me be the
angel, because this play reminds him of my mother. . . .” She paused,
collecting her thoughts. “It would be terrible if the play was a
failure this year, especially since I’m involved.”
She stopped again before going on, her
voice becoming more emotional as she went on.
“I know Eddie would do the best he could,
I really do. And I’m not embarrassed to do the play with him, I’m really not.
Actually, he’s a very nice person, but he told me that he’s having second
thoughts about doing it. Sometimes people at school can be so . . .
so . . . cruel, and I don’t want Eddie to be hurt. But
. . .” She took a deep breath, “but the real reason I’m asking is
because of my father. He’s such a good man, Landon. If people make fun
of his memory of my mother while I’m playing the part . . . well,
that would break my heart. And with Eddie and me . . . you know what
people would say.”
I nodded, my lips pressed together,
knowing that I would have been one of those people she was talking about. In
fact, I already was. Jamie and Eddie, the dynamic duo, we called them after
Miss Garber had announced that they’d be the ones doing the roles. The very
fact that it was I who had started it up made me feel terrible, almost sick to
my stomach.
She straightened up
a little in her seat and looked at me sadly, as if she already knew I was going
to say no. I guess she didn’t know how I was feeling. She went on.
“I know that challenges are always part of
the Lord’s plan, but I don’t want to believe that the Lord is cruel, especially
to someone like my father. He devotes his life to God, he gives to the
community. And he’s already lost his wife and has had to raise me on his own.
And I love him so much for it. . . .”
Jamie turned away, but I could see the
tears in her eyes. It was the first time I’d ever seen her cry. I think part of
me wanted to cry, too.
“I’m not asking you to do it for me,” she
said softly, “I’m really not, and if you say no, I’ll still pray for you. I
promise. But if you’d like to do something kind for a wonderful man who means
so much to me . . . Will you just think about it?”
Her eyes looked like those of a cocker
spaniel that had just messed on the rug. I looked down at my feet.
“I don’t have to think about it,” I
finally said. “I’ll do it.”
I really didn’t have a choice, did I?
The next day I talked to Miss Garber, went
through the audition, and got the part. Eddie, by the way, wasn’t upset at all.
In fact, I could tell he was actually relieved about the whole thing. When Miss
Garber asked him if he’d be willing to let me play the role of Tom Thornton,
his face sort of relaxed right there and one of his eyes popped back open.
“Y-y-yes, a-a-absolutely,” he said, stuttering. “I—I—I un-un-understand.” It
took him practically ten seconds to get the words out.
For his generosity, however, Miss Garber
gave him the role of the bum, and we knew he’d do fairly well in that role. The
bum, you see, was completely mute, but the angel always knew
what he was thinking. At one point in the play she has to tell the mute bum
that God will always watch out for him because God especially cares for the
poor and downtrodden. That was one of the tip-offs to the audience that she’d
been sent from heaven. Like I said earlier, Hegbert wanted it to be real clear
who offered redemption and salvation, and it certainly wasn’t going to be a few
rickety ghosts who just popped up out of nowhere.
Rehearsals started the next week, and we
rehearsed in the classroom, because the Playhouse wouldn’t open their doors for
us until we’d got all the “little bugs” out of our performance. By little bugs,
I mean our tendency to accidentally knock over the props. The props had been
made about fifteen years ago, when the play was in its first year, by Toby
Bush, a sort of roving handyman who had done a few projects for the Playhouse
in the past. He was a roving handyman because he drank beer all day long while
he worked, and by about two o’clock or so he’d really be flying. I guess he
couldn’t see straight, because he’d accidentally whack his fingers with the
hammer at least once a day. Whenever that happened, he’d throw down the hammer
and jump up and down, holding his fingers, cursing everyone
from his mother to the devil. When he finally calmed down, he’d have another
beer to soothe the pain before going back to work. His knuckles were the size
of walnuts, permanently swollen from years of whacking, and no one was willing
to hire him on a permanent basis. The only reason Hegbert had hired him at all
was because he was far and away the lowest bidder in town.
But Hegbert wouldn’t allow drinking or
cursing, and Toby really didn’t know how to work within such a strict
environment. As a result, the work was kind of sloppy, though it wasn’t obvious
right off the bat. After a few years the props began to fall apart, and Hegbert
took it upon himself to keep the things together. But while Hegbert was good at
thumping the Bible, he wasn’t too good at thumping nails, and the props had
bent, rusty nails sticking out all over, poking through the plywood in so many
places that we had to be careful to walk exactly where we were supposed to. If
we bumped them the wrong way, we’d either cut ourselves or the props would topple
over, making little nail holes all over the stage floor. After a couple of
years the Playhouse stage had to be resurfaced, and though they
couldn’t exactly close their doors to Hegbert, they made a deal with him to be
more careful in the future. That meant we had to practice in the classroom
until we’d worked out the “little bugs.”
Fortunately Hegbert wasn’t involved with
the actual production of the play, because of all his ministering duties. That
role fell to Miss Garber, and the first thing she told us to do was to memorize
our lines as quickly as possible. We didn’t have as much time as was usually
allotted for rehearsals because Thanksgiving came on the last possible day in
November, and Hegbert didn’t want the play to be performed too close to Christmas,
so as not to interfere with “its true meaning.” That left us only three weeks
to get the play just right, which was about a week shorter than usual.
The rehearsals began at three o’clock, and
Jamie knew all her lines the first day there, which wasn’t really surprising.
What was surprising was that she knew all my lines, too, as well as everyone
else’s. We’d be going over a scene, she’d be doing it without the script, and
I’d be looking down at a stack of pages, trying to figure out what my next line
should be, and whenever I looked up she had this real shiny look about her, as
if waiting for a burning bush or something. The only lines I
knew were the mute bum’s, at least on that first day, and all of a sudden I was
actually envious of Eddie, at least in that regard. This was going to be a lot
of work, not exactly what I’d expected when I’d signed up for the class.
My noble feelings about doing the play had
worn off by the second day of rehearsals. Even though I knew I was doing the
“right thing,” my friends didn’t understand it at all, and they’d been riding
me since they’d found out. “You’re doing what?” Eric asked when he learned
about it. “You’re doing the play with Jamie Sullivan? Are you insane or just
plain stupid?” I sort of mumbled that I had a good reason, but he wouldn’t let
it drop, and he told everyone around us that I had a crush on her. I denied it,
of course, which just made them assume it was true, and they’d laugh all the
louder and tell the next person they saw. The stories kept getting wilder,
too—by lunchtime I’d heard from Sally that I was thinking of getting engaged. I
actually think Sally was jealous about it. She’d had a crush on me for years,
and the feeling might have been mutual except for the fact that she had a glass
eye, and that was something I just couldn’t ignore. Her bad eye reminded me of something you’d see stuffed into the head of a mounted owl in a
tacky antique shop, and to be honest, it sort of gave me the willies.
I guess that was when I started to resent
Jamie again. I know it wasn’t her fault, but I was the one who was taking the
arrows for Hegbert, who hadn’t exactly gone out of his way the night of
homecoming to make me feel welcome. I began to stumble through my lines in
class for the next few days, not really even attempting to learn them, and
occasionally I’d crack a joke or two, which everyone laughed at, except for
Jamie and Miss Garber. After rehearsal was over I’d head home to put the play
out of my mind, and I wouldn’t even bother to pick up the script. Instead I’d
joke with my friends about the weird things Jamie did and tell fibs about how
it was Miss Garber who had forced me into the whole thing.
Jamie, though, wasn’t going to let me off
that easy. No, she got me right where it hurts, right smack in the old ego.
I was out with Eric on Saturday night
following Beaufort’s third consecutive state championship in football, about a
week after rehearsals had started. We were hanging out at the waterfront
outside of Cecil’s Diner, eating hushpuppies and watching people cruising in their cars, when I saw Jamie walking down the
street. She was still a hundred yards away, turning her head from side to side,
wearing that old brown sweater again and carrying her Bible in one hand. It
must have been nine o’clock or so, which was late for her to be out, and it was
even stranger to see her in this part of town. I turned my back to her and
pulled the collar up on my jacket, but even Margaret—who had banana pudding
where her brain should have been—was smart enough to figure out who she was
looking for.
“Landon, your girlfriend is here.”
“She’s not my girlfriend,” I said. “I
don’t have a girlfriend.”
“Your fiancée, then.”
I guess she’d talked to Sally, too.
“I’m not engaged,” I said. “Now knock it
off.”
I glanced over my shoulder to see if she’d
spotted me, and I guess she had. She was walking toward us. I pretended not to
notice.
“Here she comes,” Margaret said, and
giggled.
“I know,” I said.
Twenty seconds later she said it again.
“She’s still coming.” I told you she was
quick.
“I know,” I said
through gritted teeth. If it wasn’t for her legs, she could almost drive you as
crazy as Jamie.
I glanced around again, and this time
Jamie knew I’d seen her and she smiled and waved at me. I turned away, and a
moment later she was standing right beside me.
“Hello, Landon,” she said to me, oblivious
of my scorn. “Hello, Eric, Margaret . . .” She went around the group.
Everyone sort of mumbled “hello” and tried not to stare at the Bible.
Eric was holding a beer, and he moved it behind
his back so she wouldn’t see it. Jamie could even make Eric feel guilty if she
was close enough to him. They’d been neighbors at one time, and Eric had been
on the receiving end of her talks before. Behind her back he called her “the
Salvation Lady,” in obvious reference to the Salvation Army. “She would have
been a brigadier general,” he liked to say. But when she was standing right in
front of him, it was another story. In his mind she had an in with God, and he
didn’t want to be in her bad graces.
“How are you doing, Eric? I haven’t seen
you around much recently.” She said this as if she still talked to him all the
time.
He shifted from one
foot to the other and looked at his shoes, playing that guilty look for all it
was worth.
“Well, I haven’t been to church lately,”
he said.
Jamie smiled that glittery smile. “Well,
that’s okay, I suppose, as long as it doesn’t become a habit or anything.”
“It won’t.”
Now I’ve heard of confession—that thing
when Catholics sit behind a screen and tell the priest about all their sins—and
that’s the way Eric was when he was next to Jamie. For a second I thought he
was going to call her “ma’am.”
“You want a beer?” Margaret asked. I think
she was trying to be funny, but no one laughed.
Jamie put her hand to her hair, tugging
gently at her bun. “Oh . . . no, not really . . . thank
you, though.”
She looked directly at me with a really
sweet glow, and right away I knew I was in trouble. I thought she was going to
ask me off to the side or something, which to be honest I thought would turn
out better, but I guess that wasn’t in her plans.
“Well, you did really well this week at rehearsals,” she said to me. “I know you’ve got a lot of lines
to learn, but I’m sure you’re going to get them all real soon. And I just
wanted to thank you for volunteering like you did. You’re a real gentleman.”
“Thanks,” I said, a little knot forming in
my stomach. I tried to be cool, but all my friends were looking right at me,
suddenly wondering if I’d been telling them the truth about Miss Garber forcing
it on me and everything. I hoped they missed it.
“Your friends should be proud of you,”
Jamie added, putting that thought to rest.
“Oh, we are,” Eric said, pouncing. “Very
proud. He’s a good guy, that Landon, what with his volunteering and all.”
Oh no.
Jamie smiled at him, then turned back to
me again, her old cheerful self. “I also wanted to tell you that if you need
any help, you can come by anytime. We can sit on the porch like we did before
and go over your lines if you need to.”
I saw Eric mouth the words “like we did
before” to Margaret. This really wasn’t going well at all. By now the pit in my
stomach was as big as Paul Bunyan’s bowling ball.
“That’s okay,” I mumbled, wondering how I could squirm my way out of this. “I can learn them at home.”
“Well, sometimes it helps if someone’s
there to read with you, Landon,” Eric offered.
I told you he’d stick it to me, even
though he was my friend.
“No, really,” I said to him, “I’ll learn
the lines on my own.”
“Maybe,” Eric said, smiling, “you two should
practice in front of the orphans, once you’ve got it down a little better. Sort
of a dress rehearsal, you know? I’m sure they’d love to see it.”
You could practically see Jamie’s mind
start clicking at the mention of the word orphans. Everyone knew what
her hot button was. “Do you think so?” she asked.
Eric nodded seriously. “I’m sure of it.
Landon was the one who thought of it first, but I know that if I was an orphan,
I’d love something like that, even if it wasn’t exactly the real thing.”
“Me too,” Margaret chimed in.
As they spoke, the only thing I could
think about was that scene from Julius Caesar where Brutus stabs him in
the back. Et tu, Eric?
“It was Landon’s idea?” she asked, furrowing her brow. She looked at me, and I could tell she was
still mulling it over.
But Eric wasn’t about to let me off the
hook that easy. Now that he had me flopping on the deck, the only thing left to
do was gut me. “You’d like to do that, wouldn’t you, Landon?” he said. “Helping
the orphans, I mean.”
It wasn’t exactly something you could
answer no to, was it?
“I reckon so,” I said under my breath,
staring at my best friend. Eric, despite the remedial classes he was in, would
have been one hell of a chess player.
“Good, then, it’s all settled. That’s if
it’s okay with you, Jamie.” His smile was so sweet, it could have flavored half
the RC cola in the county.
“Well . . . yes, I suppose I’ll
have to talk to Miss Garber and the director of the orphanage, but if they say
it’s okay, I think it would be a fine idea.”
And the thing was, you could tell she was
really happy about it.
Checkmate.
The next day I spent fourteen hours
memorizing my lines, cursing my friends, and wondering how my life had spun so
out of control. My senior year certainly wasn’t turning out
the way I thought it would when it began, but if I had to perform for a bunch
of orphans, I certainly didn’t want to look like an idiot.
The first thing we did was talk to Miss
Garber about our plans for the orphans, and she thought it was a marvelous
idea. That was her favorite word, by the way—marvelous—after she’d
greeted you with “Hellooooo.” On Monday, when she realized that I knew all my
lines, she said, “Marvelous!” and for the next two hours whenever I’d finish up
a scene, she’d say it again. By the end of the rehearsal, I’d heard it about
four zillion times.
But Miss Garber actually went our idea one
better. She told the class what we were doing, and she asked if other members
of the cast would be willing to do their parts as well, so that
the orphans could really enjoy the whole thing. The way she asked meant that
they really didn’t have a choice, and she looked around the class, waiting for
someone to nod so she could make it official. No one moved a muscle, except for
Eddie. Somehow he’d inhaled a bug up his nose at that exact moment, and he
sneezed violently. The bug flew out his nose, shot across his desk, and landed on
the floor right by Norma Jean’s leg. She jumped out of her chair and screamed
out loud, and the people on either side of her shouted, “Eww . . .
gross!” The rest of the class started looking around and craning their necks,
trying to see what happened, and for the next ten seconds there was total
pandemonium in the classroom. For Miss Garber, that was as good of an answer as
she needed.
“Marvelous,” she said, closing the
discussion.
Jamie, meanwhile, was getting really
excited about performing for the orphans. During a break in rehearsals she
pulled me aside and thanked me for thinking of them. “There’s no way you would
know,” she said almost conspiratorially, “but I’ve been wondering what to do
for the orphanage this year. I’ve been praying about it for months now because
I want this Christmas to be the most special one of all.”
“Why is this
Christmas so important?” I asked her, and she smiled patiently, as if I’d asked
a question that didn’t really matter.
“It just is,” she said simply.
The next step was to talk it over with Mr.
Jenkins, the director of the orphanage. Now I’d never met Mr. Jenkins before,
being that the orphanage was in Morehead City, which was across the bridge from
Beaufort, and I’d never had any reason to go there. When Jamie surprised me
with the news the following day that we’d be meeting him later that evening, I
was sort of worried that I wasn’t dressed nice enough. I know it was an
orphanage, but a guy wants to make a good impression. Even though I wasn’t as
excited about it as Jamie was (no one was as excited as Jamie), I didn’t want
to be regarded as the Grinch who ruined Christmas for the orphans, either.
Before we went to the orphanage for our
meeting, we had to walk to my house to pick up my mom’s car, and while there, I
planned on changing into something a little nicer. The walk took about ten
minutes or so, and Jamie didn’t say much along the way, at least until we got
to my neighborhood. The homes around mine were all large and well kept, and she
asked who lived where and how old the houses were. I
answered her questions without much thought, but when I opened the front door
to my house, I suddenly realized how different this world was compared with her
own. She had a shocked expression on her face as she looked around the living
room, taking in her surroundings.
No doubt it was the fanciest home she’d
ever been in. A moment later I saw her eyes travel to the paintings that lined
the walls. My ancestors, so to speak. As with many southern families, my entire
lineage could be traced in the dozen faces that lined the walls. She stared at
them, looking for a resemblance, I think, then turned her attention to the
furnishings, which still looked practically new, even after twenty years. The
furniture had been handmade, assembled or carved from mahogany and cherry, and
designed specifically for each room. It was nice, I had to admit, but it
wasn’t something I really thought about. To me, it was just a house. My
favorite part of it was the window in my room that led to the porch on the upper
level. That was my escape hatch.
I showed her around, though, giving her a
quick tour of the sitting room, the library, the den, and the family room,
Jamie’s eyes growing wider with each new room. My mom was out
on the sun porch, sipping a mint julep and reading, and heard us poking around.
She came back inside to say hello.
I think I told you that every adult in
town adored Jamie, and that included my mom. Even though Hegbert was always
giving the kinds of sermons that had our family’s name written all over them,
my mom never held it against Jamie, because of how sweet she was. So they
talked while I was upstairs rifling through my closet for a clean shirt and a
tie. Back then boys wore ties a lot, especially when they were meeting someone
in a position of authority. When I came back down the stairs fully dressed,
Jamie had already told my mom about the plan.
“It’s a wonderful idea,” Jamie said,
beaming at me. “Landon’s really got a special heart.”
My mom—after making sure she’d heard Jamie
correctly—faced me with her eyebrows raised. She stared at me like I was an
alien.
“So this was your idea?” my mom asked.
Like everyone else in town, she knew Jamie didn’t lie.
I cleared my throat, thinking of Eric and
what I still wanted to do to him. It involved molasses and fire ants, by the
way.
“Kind of,” I said.
“Amazing.” It was
the only word she could get out. She didn’t know the details, but she knew I
must have been boxed into a corner to do something like this. Mothers always
know stuff like that, and I could see her peering closely at me and trying to
figure it out. To escape her inquisitive gaze, I checked my watch, feigned
surprise, and casually mentioned to Jamie that we’d better be going. My mom got
the car keys from her pocketbook and handed them to me, still giving me the
once-over as we headed out the door. I breathed a sigh of relief, imagining
that I’d somehow gotten away with something, but as I walked Jamie to the car,
I heard my mother’s voice again.
“Come on over anytime, Jamie!” my mom
shouted. “You’re always welcome here.”
Even mothers could stick it to you
sometimes.
I was still shaking my head as I got in
the car.
“Your mother’s a wonderful lady,” Jamie
said.
I started the engine. “Yeah,” I said, “I
guess so.”
“And your house is beautiful.”
“Uh-huh.”
“You should count your blessings.”
“Oh,” I said, “I do.
I’m practically the luckiest guy alive.”
Somehow she didn’t catch the sarcastic
tone of my voice.
We got to the orphanage just about the
time it was getting dark. We were a couple of minutes early, and the director
was on the phone. It was an important call and he couldn’t meet with us right
away, so we made ourselves comfortable. We were waiting on a bench in the
hallway outside his door, when Jamie turned to me. Her Bible was in her lap. I
guess she wanted it for support, but then again, maybe it was just her habit.
“You did really well today,” she said.
“With your lines, I mean.”
“Thanks,” I said, feeling proud and
dejected at exactly the same time. “I still haven’t learned my beats, though,”
I offered. There was no way we could practice those on the porch, and I
hoped she wasn’t going to suggest it.
“You will. They’re easy once you know you
all the words.”
“I hope so.”
Jamie smiled, and after a moment she
changed the subject, sort of throwing me off track. “Do you
ever think about the future, Landon?” she asked.
I was startled by her question because it
sounded . . . so ordinary.
“Yeah, sure. I guess so,” I answered
cautiously.
“Well, what do you want to do with your
life?”
I shrugged, a little wary of where she was
going with this. “I don’t know yet. I haven’t figured that part out. I’m going
to UNC next fall, at least I hope so. I have to get accepted first.”
“You will,” she said.
“How do you know?”
“Because I’ve prayed for that, too.”
When she said it, I thought we were
heading into a discussion about the power of prayer and faith, but Jamie tossed
yet another curveball at me.
“How about after college? What do you want
to do then?”
“I don’t know,” I said, shrugging. “Maybe
I’ll be a one-armed lumberjack.”
She didn’t think it was funny.
“I think you should become a minister,”
she said seriously. “I think you’re good with people, and they’d respect what
you have to say.”
Though the concept was absolutely ridiculous, with her I just knew it came from the heart and she
intended it as a compliment.
“Thanks,” I said. “I don’t know if I’ll do
that, but I’m sure I’ll find something.” It took a moment for me to realize
that the conversation had stalled and that it was my turn to ask a question.
“How about you? What do you want to do in
the future?”
Jamie turned away and got a far-off gaze
in her eyes, making me wonder what she was thinking, but it vanished almost as
quickly as it came.
“I want to get married,” she said quietly.
“And when I do, I want my father to walk me down the aisle and I want everyone
I know to be there. I want the church bursting with people.”
“That’s all?” Though I wasn’t averse to
the idea of marriage, it seemed kind of silly to hope for that as your life’s
goal.
“Yes,” she said. “That’s all I want.”
The way she answered made me suspect that
she thought she’d end up like Miss Garber. I tried to make her feel better,
even though it still seemed silly to me.
“Well, you’ll get married someday. You’ll
meet some guy and the two of you will hit it off, and he’ll
ask you to marry him. And I’m sure that your father will be happy to walk you
down the aisle.”
I didn’t mention the part about having a
big crowd in the church. I guess it was the one thing that even I couldn’t
imagine.
Jamie thought carefully about my answer,
really pondering the way I said it, though I didn’t know why.
“I hope so,” she said finally.
I could tell she didn’t want to talk about
it anymore, don’t ask me how, so I moved on to something new.
“So how long have you been coming to the
orphanage?” I asked conversationally.
“Seven years now. I was ten years old the
first time I came. I was younger than a lot of the kids here.”
“Do you enjoy it, or does it make you
sad?”
“Both. Some of the children here came from
really horrible situations. It’s enough to break your heart when you hear about
it. But when they see you come in with some books from the library or a new
game to play, their smiles just take all the sadness away. It’s the greatest
feeling in the world.”
She practically glowed when she spoke.
Though she wasn’t saying it to make me feel guilty, that
was exactly the way I felt. It was one of the reasons it was so hard to put up
with her, but by then I was getting fairly used to it. She could twist you
every way but normal, I’d come to learn.
At that moment, Mr. Jenkins opened the
door and invited us in. The office looked almost like a hospital room, with
black-and-white tiled floors, white walls and ceilings, a metal cabinet against
the wall. Where the bed would normally have been, there was a metal desk that
looked like it had been stamped off the assembly line. It was almost
neurotically clean of anything personal. There wasn’t a single picture or
anything.
Jamie introduced me, and I shook Mr.
Jenkins’s hand. After we sat down, Jamie did most of the talking. They were old
friends, you could see that right off, and Mr. Jenkins had given her a big hug
as soon as she’d entered. After smoothing out her skirt, Jamie explained our
plan. Now, Mr. Jenkins had seen the play a few years back, and he knew exactly
what she was talking about almost as soon as she started. But even though Mr.
Jenkins liked Jamie a lot and knew she meant well, he didn’t think it was a
good idea.
“I don’t think it’s a good idea,” he said.
That’s how I knew
what he was thinking.
“Why not?” Jamie asked, her brow furrowed.
She seemed genuinely perplexed by his lack of enthusiasm.
Mr. Jenkins picked up a pencil and started
tapping it on his desk, obviously thinking about how to explain himself. In
time, he put down the pencil and sighed.
“Even though it’s a wonderful offer and I
know you’d like to do something special, the play is about a father who
eventually comes to realize how much he loves his daughter.” He let that sink
in for a moment and picked up the pencil again. “Christmas is hard enough
around here without reminding the kids of what they’re missing. I think that if
the children see something like that . . .”
He didn’t even have to finish. Jamie put
her hands to her mouth. “Oh my,” she said right away, “you’re right. I hadn’t
thought about that.”
Neither had I, to tell you the truth. But
it was obvious right off the bat that Mr. Jenkins made sense.
He thanked us anyway and chatted for a while
about what he planned to do instead. “We’ll have a small tree and a few gifts—something that all of them can share. “You’re welcome to visit
Christmas Eve. . . .”
After we said our good-byes, Jamie and I
walked in silence without saying anything. I could tell she was sad. The more I
hung around Jamie, the more I realized she had lots of different emotions—she
wasn’t always cheerful and happy. Believe it or not, that was the first time I
recognized that in some ways she was just like the rest of us.
“I’m sorry it didn’t work out,” I said
softly.
“I am, too.”
She had that faraway look in her eyes
again, and it was a moment before she went on.
“I just wanted to do something different
for them this year. Something special that they would remember forever. I
thought for sure this was it. . . .” She sighed. “The Lord seems to
have a plan that I just don’t know about yet.”
She was quiet for a long time, and I
looked at her. Seeing Jamie feeling bad was almost worse than feeling bad
because of her. Unlike Jamie, I deserved to feel bad about myself—I knew what
kind of person I was. But with her . . .
“While we’re here, do you want to stop in
to see the kids?” I asked into the silence. It was the only
thing I could think to do that might make her feel better. “I could wait out
here while you talk to them, or go to the car if you want.”
“Would you visit them with me?” she asked
suddenly.
To be honest, I wasn’t sure I could handle
it, but I knew she really wanted me there. And she was feeling so down that the
words came out automatically.
“Sure, I’ll go.”
“They’ll be in the rec room now. That’s
where they usually are at this time,” she said.
We walked down the corridors to the end of
the hall, where two doors opened into a good-size room. Perched in the far
corner was a small television with about thirty metal folding chairs placed all
around it. The kids were sitting in the chairs, crowded around it, and you
could tell that only the ones in the front row had a good view of the thing.
I glanced around. In the corner was an old
Ping-Pong table. The surface was cracked and dusty, the net nowhere to be seen.
A couple of empty Styrofoam cups sat on top of it, and I knew it hadn’t been
used in months, maybe years. Along the wall next to the Ping-Pong table were a
set of shelves, with a few toys here and there—blocks and
puzzles, a couple of games. There weren’t too many, and the few that were there
looked as if they’d been in this room for a long time. Along the near walls
were small individual desks piled with newspapers, scribbled on with crayons.
We stood in the doorway for just a second.
We hadn’t been noticed yet, and I asked what the newspapers were for.
“They don’t have coloring books,” she
whispered, “so they use newspapers.” She didn’t look at me as she spoke—instead
her attention was directed at the kids. She’d begun to smile again.
“Are these all the toys they have?” I
asked.
She nodded. “Yes, except for the stuffed
animals. They’re allowed to keep those in their rooms. This is where the rest
of the things are kept.”
I guess she was used to it. To me, though,
the sparseness of the room made the whole thing depressing. I couldn’t imagine
growing up in a place like this.
Jamie and I finally walked into the room,
and one of the kids turned around at the sound of our steps. He was about eight
or so, with red hair and freckles, his two front teeth missing.
“Jamie!” he shouted
happily when he saw her, and all of a sudden all the other heads turned. The
kids ranged in age from about five to twelve, more boys than girls. After
twelve they had to be sent to live with foster parents, I later learned.
“Hey, Roger,” Jamie said in response, “how
are you?”
With that, Roger and some of the others
began to crowd around us. A few of the other kids ignored us and moved closer
to the television now that there were free seats in the front row. Jamie
introduced me to one of the older kids who’d come up and asked if I was her
boyfriend. By his tone, I think that he had the same opinion of Jamie that most
of the kids in our high school had.
“He’s just a friend,” she said. “But he’s
very nice.”
Over the next hour, we visited with the
children. I got a lot of questions about where I lived and whether my house was
big or what kind of car I owned, and when we finally had to leave, Jamie
promised that she’d be back soon. I noticed that she didn’t promise I would be
with her.
While we were walking back to the car, I
said, “They’re a nice bunch of kids.” I shrugged awkwardly.
“I’m glad that you want to help them.”
Jamie turned to me and smiled. She knew
there wasn’t much to add after that, but I could tell she was still wondering
what she was going to do for them that Christmas.
By early December, just over two weeks
into rehearsals, the sky was winter dark before Miss Garber would let us leave,
and Jamie asked me if I wouldn’t mind walking her home. I don’t know why she
wanted me to. Beaufort wasn’t exactly a hotbed of criminal activity back then.
The only murder I’d ever heard about had occurred six years earlier when a guy
was stabbed outside of Maurice’s Tavern, which was a hangout for people like
Lew, by the way. For an hour or so it caused quite a stir, and phone lines buzzed
all over town while nervous women wondered about the possibility of a crazed
lunatic wandering the streets, preying on innocent victims.
Doors were locked, guns were loaded, men sat by the front windows, looking for
anyone out of the ordinary who might be creeping down the street. But the whole
thing was over before the night was through when the guy walked into the police
station to give himself up, explaining that it was a bar fight that got out of
hand. Evidently the victim had welshed on a bet. The guy was charged with
second-degree murder and got six years in the state penitentiary. The policemen
in our town had the most boring jobs in the world, but they still liked to
strut around with a swagger or sit in coffee shops while they talked about the “big
crime,” as if they’d cracked the case of the Lindbergh baby.
But Jamie’s house was on the way to mine,
and I couldn’t say no without hurting her feelings. It wasn’t that I liked her
or anything, don’t get the wrong idea, but when you’ve had to spend a few hours
a day with someone, and you’re going to continue doing that for at least
another week, you don’t want to do anything that might make the next day
miserable for either of you.
The play was going to be performed that
Friday and Saturday, and lots of people were already talking about it. Miss
Garber had been so impressed by Jamie and me that she kept
telling everyone it was going to be the best play the school had ever done. She
had a real flair for promotion, too, we found out. We had one radio station in
town, and they interviewed her over the air, not once, but twice. “It’s going
to be marvelous,” she pronounced, “absolutely marvelous.” She’d also called the
newspaper, and they’d agreed to write an article about it, primarily because of
the Jamie– Hegbert connection, even though everyone in town already knew about
it. But Miss Garber was relentless, and just that day she’d told us the
Playhouse was going to bring in extra seats to accommodate the extra-large
crowd expected. The class sort of oohed and aahed, like it was a big deal or
something, but then I guess it was to some of them. Remember, we had guys like
Eddie in class. He probably thought that this would be the only time in his
life when someone might be interested in him. The sad thing was, he was
probably right.
You might think I’d be getting excited
about it, too, but I really wasn’t. My friends were still teasing me at school,
and I hadn’t had an afternoon off in what seemed like forever. The only thing
that kept me going was the fact that I was doing the “right thing.” I know it’s not much, but frankly, it was all I had.
Occasionally I even felt sort of good about it, too, though I never admitted it
to anyone. I could practically imagine the angels in heaven, standing around
and staring wistfully down at me with little tears filling the corners of their
eyes, talking about how wonderful I was for all my sacrifices.
So I was walking her home that first
night, thinking about this stuff, when Jamie asked me a question.
“Is it true you and your friends sometimes
go to the graveyard at night?”
Part of me was surprised that she was even
interested. Though it wasn’t exactly a secret, it didn’t seem like the sort of
thing she’d care about at all.
“Yeah,” I said, shrugging. “Sometimes.”
“What do you do there, besides eat
peanuts?”
I guess she knew about that, too.
“I don’t know,” I said. “Talk
. . . joke around. It’s just a place we like to go.”
“Does it ever scare you?”
“No,” I answered. “Why? Would it scare
you?”
“I don’t know,” she said. “It might.”
“Why?”
“Because I’d worry
that I might do something wrong.”
“We don’t do anything bad there. I mean,
we don’t knock over the tombstones or leave our trash around,” I said. I didn’t
want to tell her about our conversations about Henry Preston because I knew
that wasn’t the sort of thing Jamie would want to hear about. Last week Eric
had wondered aloud how fast a guy like that could lie in bed and
. . . well . . . you know.
“Do you ever just sit around and listen to
the sounds?” she asked. “Like the crickets chirping, or the rustling of leaves
when the wind blows? Or do you ever just lie on your backs and stare at the
stars?”
Even though she was a teenager and had
been for four years, Jamie didn’t know the first thing about teenagers, and
trying to understand teenage boys for her was like trying to decipher
the theory of relativity.
“Not really,” I said.
She nodded a little. “I think that’s what
I’d do if I were there, if I ever go, I mean. I’d just look around to really
see the place, or sit quietly and listen.”
This whole conversation struck me as
strange, but I didn’t press it, and we walked in silence
for a few moments. And since she’d asked a little about me, I sort of felt
obliged to ask her about herself. I mean, she hadn’t brought up the Lord’s plan
or anything, so it was the least I could do.
“So, what do you do?” I asked. “Besides
working with the orphans or helping critters or reading the Bible, I mean?” It
sounded ridiculous, even to me, I admit, but that’s what she did.
She smiled at me. I think she was
surprised by my question, and even more surprised at my interest in her.
“I do a lot of things. I study for my
classes, I spend time with my dad. We play gin rummy now and then. Things like
that.”
“Do you ever just go off with friends and goof
around?”
“No,” she said, and I could tell by the
way she answered that even to her, it was obvious that no one wanted her around
much.
“I’ll bet you’re excited about going off
to college next year,” I said, changing the subject.
It took her a moment to answer.
“I don’t think I’m going to go,” she said
matter-of-factly. Her answer caught me off guard. Jamie had some of the highest
grades in our senior class, and depending on how the last
semester went, she might even end up valedictorian. We had a running pool going
as to how many times she would mention the Lord’s plan in her speech, by the
way. My bet was fourteen, being that she only had five minutes.
“What about Mount Sermon? I thought that’s
where you were planning to go. You’d love a place like that,” I offered.
She looked at me with a twinkle in her
eye. “You mean I’d fit right in there, don’t you?”
Those curveballs she sometimes threw could
smack you right between the eyeballs.
“I didn’t mean it that way,” I said
quickly. “I just meant that I’d heard about how excited you were to be going
there next year.”
She shrugged without really answering me,
and to be honest, I didn’t know what to make of it. By then we’d reached the
front of her house, and we stopped on the sidewalk out front. From where I was
standing, I could make out Hegbert’s shadow in the living room through the
curtains. The lamp was on, and he was sitting on the sofa by the window. His
head was bowed, like he was reading something. I assumed it was the Bible.
“Thank you for walking me home, Landon,” she said, and she glanced up at me for a moment before finally
starting up the walk.
As I watched her go, I couldn’t help but
think that of all the times I’d ever talked to her, this was the strangest
conversation we’d ever had. Despite the oddness of some of her answers, she
seemed practically normal.
The next night, as I was walking her home,
she asked me about my father.
“He’s all right, I reckon,” I said. “But
he’s not around much.”
“Do you miss that? Not growing up with him
around?”
“Sometimes.”
“I miss my mom, too,” she said, “even
though I never even knew her.”
It was the first time I’d ever considered
that Jamie and I might have something in common. I let that sink in for a
while.
“It must be hard for you,” I said
sincerely. “Even though my father’s a stranger to me, at least he’s still
around.”
She looked up at me as we walked, then
faced forward again. She tugged gently at her hair again. I was beginning to
notice that she did this whenever she was nervous or wasn’t sure what to say.
“It is, sometimes.
Don’t get me wrong—I love my father with all my heart—but there are times when
I wonder what it would have been like to have a mother around. I think she and
I would have been able to talk about things in a way that my father and I can’t.”
I assumed she was talking about boys. It
wasn’t until later that I learned how wrong I was.
“What’s it like, living with your father?
Is he like how he is in church?”
“No. He’s actually got a pretty good sense
of humor.”
“Hegbert?” I blurted out. I couldn’t even
imagine it.
I think she was shocked to hear me call
him by his first name, but she let me off the hook and didn’t respond to my
comment. Instead she said, “Don’t look so surprised. You’ll like him, once you
get to know him.”
“I doubt if I’ll ever get to know him.”
“You never know, Landon,” she said,
smiling, “what the Lord’s plan is.”
I hated when she said things like that.
With her, you just knew she talked to the Lord every day, and you never knew
what the “Big Guy upstairs” had told her. She might even have a direct ticket
into heaven, if you know what I mean, being as how good a person she was.
“How would I get to
know him?” I asked.
She didn’t answer, but she smiled to
herself, as if she knew some secret that she was keeping from me. Like I said,
I hated it when she did that.
The next night we talked about her Bible.
“Why do you always carry it with you?” I
asked.
Now, I assumed she carried the Bible
around simply because she was the minister’s daughter. It wasn’t that big of an
assumption, given how Hegbert felt about Scripture and all. But the Bible she
carried was old and the cover was kind of ratty looking, and I figured that
she’d be the kind of person who would buy a new one every year or so just to
help out the Bible publishing industry or to show her renewed dedication to the
Lord or something.
She walked a few steps before answering.
“It was my mother’s,” she said simply.
“Oh. . . .” I said it like I’d
stepped on someone’s pet turtle, squashing it under my shoe.
She looked at me. “It’s okay, Landon. How
could you have known?”
“I’m sorry I asked. . . .”
“Don’t be. You didn’t mean anything by
it.” She paused. “My mother and father were given this
Bible for their wedding, but my mom was the one who claimed it first. She read
it all the time, especially whenever she was going through a hard time in her
life.”
I thought about the miscarriages. Jamie
went on.
“She loved to read it at night, before she
went to sleep, and she had it with her in the hospital when I was born. When my
father found out that she had died, he carried the Bible and me out of the
hospital at the same time.”
“I’m sorry,” I said again. Whenever
someone tells you something sad, it’s the only thing you can think to say, even
if you’ve already said it before.
“It just gives me a way to . . .
to be a part of her. Can you understand that?” She wasn’t saying it sadly, just
more to let me know the answer to my question. Somehow that made it worse.
After she told me the story, I thought of
her growing up with Hegbert again, and I didn’t really know what to say. As I
was thinking about my answer, though, I heard a car blare its horn from behind
us, and both Jamie and I stopped and turned around at the same time as we heard
it pulling over to the side.
Eric and Margaret
were in the car, Eric on the driver’s side, Margaret on the side closest to us.
“Well, lookee who we have here,” Eric said
as he leaned over the steering wheel so that I could see his face. I hadn’t
told him I’d been walking Jamie home, and in the curious way that teenage minds
work, this new development took priority over anything that I was feeling about
Jamie’s story.
“Hello, Eric. Hello, Margaret,” Jamie said
cheerfully.
“Walking her home, Landon?” I could see
the little devil behind Eric’s smile.
“Hey, Eric,” I said, wishing he’d never
seen me.
“It’s a beautiful night for strolling,
isn’t it?” Eric said. I think that because Margaret was between him and Jamie,
he felt a little bolder than he usually was in Jamie’s presence. And there was
no way he could let this opportunity pass without sticking it to me.
Jamie looked around and smiled. “Yes, it
is.”
Eric looked around, too, with this wistful
look in his eyes before taking a deep breath. I could tell he was faking it.
“Boy, it really is nice out there.” He sighed and glanced toward us as he
shrugged. “I’d offer you a ride, but it wouldn’t be half as
nice as actually walking under the stars, and I wouldn’t want you two to miss
it.” He said this like he was doing us both a favor.
“Oh, we’re almost to my house anyway,”
Jamie said. “I was going to offer Landon a cup of cider. Would you like to meet
us there? We have plenty.”
A cup of cider? At her house? She hadn’t
mentioned that. . . .
I put my hands in my pocket, wondering if
this could get any worse.
“Oh, no . . . that’s all right.
We were just heading off to Cecil’s Diner.”
“On a school night?” she asked innocently.
“Oh, we won’t be out too late,” he
promised, “but we should probably be going. Enjoy your cider, you two.”
“Thanks for stopping to say hello,” Jamie
said, waving.
Eric got the car rolling again, but
slowly. Jamie probably thought he was a safe driver. He really wasn’t, though
he was good at getting out of trouble when he’d crashed into something. I
remember one time when he’d told his mother that a cow had jumped out in front
of the car and that’s why the grille and fender were damaged. “It happened so
fast, Mom, the cow came out of nowhere. It just darted out
in front of me, and I couldn’t stop in time.” Now, everyone knows cows don’t
exactly dart anywhere, but his mother believed him. She used to be a
head cheerleader, too, by the way.
Once they’d pulled out of sight, Jamie
turned to me and smiled.
“You have nice friends, Landon.”
“Sure I do.” Notice the careful way I phrased
my answer.
After dropping Jamie off—no, I didn’t stay
for any cider—I started back to my house, grumbling the whole time. By then
Jamie’s story had left me completely, and I could practically hear my friends
laughing about me, all the way from Cecil’s Diner.
See what happens when you’re a nice guy?
By the next morning everyone at school
knew I was walking Jamie home, and this started up a new round of speculation
about the two of us. This time it was even worse than before. It was so bad
that I had to spend my lunch break in the library just to get away from it all.
That night, the rehearsal was at the
Playhouse. It was the last one before the show opened, and
we had a lot to do. Right after school, the boys in drama class had to load all
the props in the classroom into the rented truck to take them to the Playhouse.
The only problem was that Eddie and I were the only two boys, and he’s not
exactly the most coordinated individual in history. We’d be walking through a
doorway, carrying one of the heavier items, and his Hooville body would work
against him. At every critical moment when I really needed his help to balance
the load, he’d stumble over some dust or an insect on the floor, and the weight
of the prop would come crashing down on my fingers, pinching them against the
doorjamb in the most painful way possible.
“S-s-sorry,” he’d say. “D-d-did
. . . th-th-that hurt?”
I’d stifle the curses rising in my throat
and bite out, “Just don’t do it again.”
But he couldn’t stop himself from
stumbling around any more than he could stop the rain from falling. By the time
we’d finished loading and unloading everything, my fingers looked like Toby’s,
the roving handyman. And the worst thing was, I didn’t even get a chance to eat
before rehearsal started. Moving the props had taken three hours, and we didn’t
finish setting them up until a few minutes before everyone
else arrived to begin. With everything else that had happened that day, suffice
it to say I was in a pretty bad mood.
I ran through my lines without even
thinking about them, and Miss Garber didn’t say the word marvelous all
night long. She had this concerned look in her eyes afterward, but Jamie simply
smiled and told her not to worry, that everything was going to be all right. I
knew Jamie was just trying to make things better for me, but when she asked me
to walk her home, I told her no. The Playhouse was in the middle of town, and
to walk her home, I’d have to walk a good distance out of my way. Besides, I
didn’t want to be seen again doing it. But Miss Garber had overheard Jamie’s
request and she said, very firmly, that I’d be glad to do it. “You two can talk
about the play,” she said. “Maybe you can work out the kinks.” By kinks, of
course, she meant me specifically.
So once more I ended up walking Jamie
home, but she could tell I wasn’t really in the mood to talk because I walked a
little bit in front of her, my hands in my pockets, without even really turning
back to see whether she was following. It went this way for the first few
minutes, and I hadn’t said a word to her.
“You’re not in a
very good mood, are you?” she finally asked. “You didn’t even try tonight.”
“You don’t miss a thing, do you?” I said
sarcastically without looking at her.
“Maybe I can help,” she offered. She said
it kind of happily, which made me even a little angrier.
“I doubt it,” I snapped.
“Maybe if you told me what was wrong—”
I didn’t let her finish.
“Look,” I said, stopping, turning to face
her. “I’ve just spent all day hauling crap, I haven’t eaten since lunch, and
now I have to trek a mile out of my way to make sure you get home, when we both
know you don’t even need me to do it.”
It was the first time I’d ever raised my
voice to her. To tell you the truth, it felt kind of good. It had been building
up for a long time. Jamie was too surprised to respond, and I went on.
“And the only reason I’m doing this is
because of your father, who doesn’t even like me. This whole thing is dumb, and
I wish I had never agreed to do it.”
“You’re just saying this because you’re
nervous about the play—”
I cut her off with a shake of my head.
Once I got on a roll, it was sometimes hard for me to stop.
I could take her optimism and cheerfulness only so long, and today wasn’t the
day to push me too far.
“Don’t you get it?” I said, exasperated.
“I’m not nervous about the play, I just don’t want to be here. I don’t want to
walk you home, I don’t want my friends to keep talking about me, and I don’t
want to spend time with you. You keep acting like we’re friends, but we’re not.
We’re not anything. I just want the whole thing to be over so I can go back to
my normal life.”
She looked hurt by my outburst, and to be
honest, I couldn’t blame her.
“I see,” was all she said. I waited for
her to raise her voice at me, to defend herself, to make her case again, but
she didn’t. All she did was look toward the ground. I think part of her wanted
to cry, but she didn’t, and I finally stalked away, leaving her standing by
herself. A moment later, though, I heard her start moving, too. She was about
five yards behind me the rest of the way to her house, and she didn’t try to
talk to me again until she started up the walkway. I was already moving down
the sidewalk when I heard her voice.
“Thank you for
walking me home, Landon,” she called out.
I winced as soon as she said it. Even when
I was mean to her face and said the most spiteful things, she could find some
reason to thank me. She was just that kind of girl, and I think I actually
hated her for it.
Or rather, I think, I hated myself.
The night of the play was cool and crisp,
the sky absolutely clear without a hint of clouds. We had to arrive an hour
early, and I’d been feeling pretty bad all day about the way I’d talked to
Jamie the night before. She’d never been anything but nice to me, and I knew
that I’d been a jerk. I saw her in the hallways between classes, and I wanted
to go up to apologize to her for what I’d said, but she’d sort of slip back
into the crowd before I got the chance.
She was already at the Playhouse by the
time I finally arrived, and I saw her talking to Miss Garber and Hegbert, off
to one side, over by the curtains. Everyone was in motion,
working off nervous energy, but she seemed strangely lethargic. She hadn’t put
on her costume yet—she was supposed to wear a white, flowing dress to give that
angelic appearance—and she was still wearing the same sweater she’d worn at
school. Despite my trepidation at how she might react, I walked up to the three
of them.
“Hey, Jamie,” I said. “Hello, Reverend
. . . Miss Garber.”
Jamie turned to me.
“Hello, Landon,” she said quietly. I could
tell she’d been thinking about the night before, too, because she didn’t smile
at me like she always did when she saw me. I asked if I could talk to her
alone, and the two of us excused ourselves. I could see Hegbert and Miss Garber
watching us as we took a few steps off to the side, out of hearing distance.
I glanced around the stage nervously.
“I’m sorry about those things I said last
night,” I began. “I know they probably hurt your feelings, and I was wrong to
have said them.”
She looked at me, as if wondering whether
to believe me.
“Did you mean those
things you said?” she finally asked.
“I was just in a bad mood, that’s all. I
get sort of wound up sometimes.” I knew I hadn’t really answered her question.
“I see,” she said. She said it as she had
the night before, then turned toward the empty seats in the audience. Again she
had that sad look in her eyes.
“Look,” I said, reaching for her hand, “I
promise to make it up to you.” Don’t ask me why I said it—it just seemed like
the right thing to do at that moment.
For the first time that night, she began
to smile.
“Thank you,” she said, turning to face me.
“Jamie?”
Jamie turned. “Yes, Miss Garber?”
“I think we’re about ready for you.” Miss
Garber was motioning with her hand.
“I’ve got to go,” she said to me.
“I know.”
“Break a leg?” I said. Wishing someone
luck before a play is supposed to be bad luck. That’s why everyone tells you to
“break a leg.”
I let go of her hand. “We both will. I
promise.”
After that, we had
to get ready, and we went our separate ways. I headed toward the men’s dressing
room. The Playhouse was fairly sophisticated, considering that it was located
in Beaufort, with separate dressing rooms that made us feel as if we were
actual actors, as opposed to students.
My costume, which was kept at the
Playhouse, was already in the dressing room. Earlier in the rehearsals we’d had
our measurements taken so that they could be altered, and I was getting dressed
when Eric walked in the door unannounced. Eddie was still in the dressing room,
putting on his mute bum’s costume, and when he saw Eric he got a look of terror
in his eyes. At least once a week Eric gave him a wedgie, and Eddie kind of
hightailed it out of there as fast as he could, pulling one leg up on his
costume on the way out the door. Eric ignored him and sat on the dressing table
in front of the mirror.
“So,” Eric said with a mischievous grin on
his face, “what are you going to do?”
I looked at him curiously. “What do you
mean?” I asked.
“About the play, stupid. You gonna flub up
your lines or something?”
I shook my head. “No.”
“You gonna knock the
props over?” Everyone knew about the props.
“I hadn’t planned on it,” I answered
stoically.
“You mean you’re going to do this thing
straight up?”
I nodded. Thinking otherwise hadn’t even
occurred to me.
He looked at me for a long time, as if he
were seeing someone he’d never seen before.
“I guess you’re finally growing up,
Landon,” he said at last. Coming from Eric, I wasn’t sure whether it was
intended as a compliment.
Either way, though, I knew he was right.
In the play, Tom Thornton is amazed when
he first sees the angel, which is why he goes around helping her as she shares
Christmas with those less fortunate. The first words out of Tom’s mouth are,
“You’re beautiful,” and I was supposed to say them as if I meant them from the
bottom of my heart. This was the pivotal moment in the entire play, and it sets
the tone for everything else that happens afterward. The problem, however, was
that I still hadn’t nailed this line yet. Sure, I said the words, but they
didn’t come off too convincingly, seeing as I probably said the words like anyone would when looking at Jamie, with the exception of
Hegbert. It was the only scene where Miss Garber had never said the word marvelous,
so I was nervous about it. I kept trying to imagine someone else as the
angel so that I could get it just right, but with all the other things I was
trying to concentrate on, it kept getting lost in the shuffle.
Jamie was still in her dressing room when
the curtains finally opened. I didn’t see her beforehand, but that was okay.
The first few scenes didn’t include her anyway—they were mainly about Tom
Thornton and his relationship with his daughter.
Now, I didn’t think I’d be too nervous
when I stepped out on stage, being that I’d rehearsed so much, but it hits you
right between the eyes when it actually happens. The Playhouse was absolutely
packed, and as Miss Garber had predicted, they’d had to set up two extra rows
of seats all the way across the back. Normally the place sat four hundred, but
with those seats there were at least another fifty people sitting down. In
addition, people were standing against the walls, packed like sardines.
As soon as I stepped on stage, everyone
was absolutely quiet. The crowd, I noticed, was mainly old
ladies of the blue-haired type, the kind that play bingo and drink Bloody Marys
at Sunday brunch, though I could see Eric sitting with all my friends near the
back row. It was downright eerie, if you know what I mean, to be standing in
front of them while everyone waited for me to say something.
So I did the best I could to put it out of
my mind as I did the first few scenes in the play. Sally, the one-eyed wonder,
was playing my daughter, by the way, because she was sort of small, and we went
through our scenes just as we’d rehearsed them. Neither of us blew our lines,
though we weren’t spectacular or anything. When we closed the curtains for act
two, we had to quickly reset the props. This time everyone pitched in, and my
fingers escaped unscathed because I avoided Eddie at all costs.
I still hadn’t seen Jamie—I guess she was
exempt from moving props because her costume was made of light material and
would rip if she caught it on one of those nails—but I didn’t have much time to
think about her because of all we had to do. The next thing I knew, the curtain
was opening again and I was back in Hegbert Sullivan’s world, walking past
storefronts and looking in windows for the music box my
daughter wants for Christmas. My back was turned from where Jamie entered, but
I heard the crowd collectively draw a breath as soon as she appeared on stage.
I thought it was silent before, but now it went absolutely hush still. Just
then, from the corner of my eye and off to the side of the stage, I saw
Hegbert’s jaw quivering. I readied myself to turn around, and when I did, I finally
saw what it was all about.
For the first time since I’d known her,
her honey-colored hair wasn’t pulled into a tight bun. Instead it was hanging
loosely, longer than I imagined, reaching below her shoulder blades. There was a
trace of glitter in her hair, and it caught the stage lights, sparkling like a
crystal halo. Set against her flowing white dress tailored exactly for her, it
was absolutely amazing to behold. She didn’t look like the girl I’d grown up
with or the girl I’d come recently to know. She wore a touch of makeup, too—not
a lot, just enough to bring out the softness of her features. She was smiling
slightly, as if she were holding a secret close to her heart, just like the
part called for her to do.
She looked exactly like an angel.
I know my jaw dropped a little, and I just
stood there looking at her for what seemed like a long
time, shocked into silence, until I suddenly remembered that I had a line I had
to deliver. I took a deep breath, then slowly let it out.
“You’re beautiful,” I finally said to her,
and I think everyone in the whole auditorium, from the blue-haired ladies in
front to my friends in the back row, knew that I actually meant it.
I’d nailed that line for the very first
time.
To say that the play was a smashing
success was to put it mildly. The audience laughed and the audience cried,
which is pretty much what they were supposed to do. But because of Jamie’s
presence, it really became something special—and I think everyone in the cast
was as shocked as I was at how well the whole thing had come off. They all had
that same look I did when I first saw her, and it made the play that much more
powerful when they were performing their parts. We finished the first
performance without a hitch, and the next evening even more people showed up,
if you can believe it. Even Eric came up to me afterward
and congratulated me, which after what he’d said to me before was somewhat of a
surprise.
“The two of you did good,” he said simply.
“I’m proud of you, buddy.”
While he said it, Miss Garber was crying
out, “Marvelous!” to anyone who would listen to her or who just happened to be
walking past, repeating it over and over so much that I kept on hearing it long
after I went to bed that night. I looked for Jamie after we’d pulled the
curtains closed for the final time, and spotted her off to the side, with her
father. He had tears in his eyes—it was the first time I’d ever seen him
cry—and Jamie went into his arms, and they held each other for a long time. He
was stroking her hair and whispering, “My angel,” to her while her eyes were
closed, and even I felt myself choking up.
The “right thing,” I realized, wasn’t so
bad after all.
After they finally let go of each other,
Hegbert proudly motioned for her to visit with the rest of the cast, and she
got a boatload of congratulations from everyone backstage. She knew she’d done
well, though she kept on telling people she didn’t know what all the fuss was
about. She was her normal cheerful self, but with her
looking so pretty, it came across in a totally different way. I stood in the
background, letting her have her moment, and I’ll admit there was a part of me
that felt like old Hegbert. I couldn’t help but be happy for her, and a little
proud as well. When she finally saw me standing off to one side, she excused
herself from the others and walked over, finally stopping when she was close.
Looking up at me, she smiled. “Thank you,
Landon, for what you did. You made my father very happy.”
“You’re welcome,” I said, meaning it.
The strange thing was, when she said it, I
realized that Hegbert would be driving her home, and for once I wished that I
would have had the opportunity to walk her there.
The following Monday was our last week of
school before Christmas break, and finals were scheduled in every class. In
addition, I had to finish my application for UNC, which I’d sort of been
putting off because of all the rehearsals. I planned on hitting the books
pretty hard that week, then doing the application at night before I went to
bed. Even so, I couldn’t help but think about Jamie.
Jamie’s transformation during the play had
been startling, to say the least, and I assumed it had
signaled a change in her. I don’t know why I thought that way, but I did, and
so I was amazed when she showed up our first morning back dressed like her
usual self: brown sweater, hair in a bun, plaid skirt, and all.
One look was all it took, and I couldn’t
help but feel sorry for her. She’d been regarded as normal—even special—over
the weekend, or so it had seemed, but she’d somehow let it slip away. Oh,
people were a little nicer to her, and the ones who hadn’t talked to her yet
told her what a good job she’d done, too, but I could tell right off that it
wasn’t going to last. Attitudes forged since childhood are hard to break, and
part of me wondered if it might even get worse for her after this. Now that
people actually knew she could look normal, they might even become more
heartless.
I wanted to talk to her about my
impressions, I really did, but I was planning to do so after the week was over.
Not only did I have a lot to do, but I wanted a little time to think of the
best way to tell her. To be honest, I was still feeling a little guilty about
the things I’d said to her on our last walk home, and it wasn’t just because
the play had turned out great. It had more to do with the fact that in all our
time together, Jamie had never once been anything but kind,
and I knew that I’d been wrong.
I didn’t think she wanted to talk to me,
either, to tell you the truth. I knew she could see me hanging out with my
friends at lunch while she sat off in the corner, reading her Bible, but she
never made a move toward us. But as I was leaving school that day, I heard her
voice behind me, asking me if I wouldn’t mind walking her home. Even though I
wasn’t ready to tell her yet about my thoughts, I agreed. For old times’ sake,
you see.
A minute later Jamie got down to business.
“Do you remember those things you said on
our last walk home?” she asked.
I nodded, wishing she hadn’t brought it
up.
“You promised to make it up to me,” she
said.
For a moment I was confused. I thought I’d
done that already with my performance in the play. Jamie went on.
“Well, I’ve been thinking about what you
could do,” she continued without letting me get a word in edgewise, “and this
is what I’ve come up with.”
She asked if I wouldn’t mind gathering the
pickle jars and coffee cans she’d set out in businesses all over town early in
the year. They sat on the counters, usually near the cash
registers, so that people could drop their loose change in. The money was to go
to the orphans. Jamie never wanted to ask people straight out for the money,
she wanted them to give voluntarily. That, in her mind, was the Christian thing
to do.
I remembered seeing the containers in
places like Cecil’s Diner and the Crown Theater. My friends and I used to toss
paper clips and slugs in there when the cashiers weren’t looking, since they
sounded sort of like a coin being dropped inside, then we’d chuckle to
ourselves about how we were putting something over on Jamie. We used to joke
about how she’d open one of her cans, expecting something good because of the
weight, and she’d dump it out and find nothing but slugs and paper clips.
Sometimes, when you remember the things you used to do, it makes you wince, and
that’s exactly what I did.
Jamie saw the look on my face.
“You don’t have to do it,” she said,
obviously disappointed. “I was just thinking that since Christmas is coming up
so quickly and I don’t have a car, it’ll simply take me too long to collect
them all. . . .”
“No,” I said
cutting her off, “I’ll do it. I don’t have much to do anyway.”
So that’s what I did starting Wednesday,
even though I had tests to study for, even with that application needing to be
finished. Jamie had given me a list of every place she’d placed a can, and I
borrowed my mom’s car and started at the far end of town the following day.
She’d put out about sixty cans in all, and I figured that it would take only a
day to collect them all. Compared to putting them out, it would be a piece of
cake. It had taken Jamie almost six weeks to do because she’d first had to find
sixty empty jars and cans and then she could put out only two or three a day
since she didn’t have a car and could carry only so many at a time. When I
started out, I felt sort of funny about being the one who picked up the cans
and jars, being that it was Jamie’s project, but I kept telling myself that
Jamie had asked me to help.
I went from business to business,
collecting the cans and jars, and by end of the first day I realized it was
going to take a little longer than I’d thought. I’d picked up only about twenty
containers or so, because I’d forgotten one simple fact of life in Beaufort. In
a small town like this, it was impossible to simply run
inside and grab the can without chatting with the proprietor or saying hello to
someone else you might recognize. It just wasn’t done. So I’d sit there while
some guy would be talking about the marlin he’d hooked last fall, or they’d ask
me how school was going and mention that they needed a hand unloading a few
boxes in the back, or maybe they wanted my opinion on whether they should move
the magazine rack over to the other side of the store. Jamie, I knew, would
have been good at this, and I tried to act like I thought she would want me to.
It was her project after all.
To keep things moving, I didn’t stop to
check the take in between the businesses. I just dumped one jar or can into the
next, combining them as I went along. By the end of the first day all the
change was packed in two large jars, and I carried them up to my room. I saw a
few bills through the glass—not too many—but I wasn’t actually nervous until I
emptied the contents onto my floor and saw that the change consisted primarily
of pennies. Though there weren’t nearly as many slugs or paper clips as I’d
thought there might be, I was still disheartened when I counted up the money.
There was $20.32. Even in 1958 that wasn’t a lot of money,
especially when divided among thirty kids.
I didn’t get discouraged, though. Thinking
that it was a mistake, I went out the next day, hauled a few dozen boxes, and
chatted with another twenty proprietors while I collected cans and jars. The
take: $23.89.
The third day was even worse. After
counting up the money, even I couldn’t believe it. There was only $11.52. Those
were from the businesses down by the waterfront, where the tourists and
teenagers like me hung out. We were really something, I couldn’t help but
think.
Seeing how little had been collected in
all—$55.73—made me feel awful, especially considering that the jars had been
out for almost a whole year and that I myself had seen them countless times.
That night I was supposed to call Jamie to tell her the amount I’d collected,
but I just couldn’t do it. She’d told me how she’d wanted something extra
special this year, and this wasn’t going to do it—even I knew that. Instead I
lied to her and told her that I wasn’t going to count the total until the two
of us could do it together, because it was her project, not mine. It was just
too depressing. I promised to bring over the money the following
afternoon, after school let out. The next day was December 21, the shortest day
of the year. Christmas was only four days away.
“Landon,” she said to me after counting it
up, “this is a miracle!”
“How much is there?” I asked. I knew
exactly how much it was.
“There’s almost two hundred and
forty-seven dollars here!” She was absolutely joyous as she looked up at me.
Since Hegbert was home, I was allowed to sit in the living room, and that’s
where Jamie had counted the money. It was stacked in neat little piles all over
the floor, almost all quarters and dimes. Hegbert was in the kitchen at the
table, writing his sermon, and even he turned his head when he heard the sound
of her voice.
“Do you think that’s enough?” I asked
innocently.
Little tears were coming down her cheeks
as she looked around the room, still not believing what she was seeing right in
front of her. Even after the play, she hadn’t been nearly this happy. She
looked right at me.
“It’s . . . wonderful,” she
said, smiling. There was more emotion than I’d ever heard in
her voice before. “Last year, I only collected seventy dollars.”
“I’m glad it worked out better this year,”
I said through the lump that had formed in my throat. “If you hadn’t placed
those jars out so early in the year, you might not have collected nearly as
much.”
I know I was lying, but I didn’t care. For
once, it was the right thing to do.
I didn’t help Jamie pick out the toys—I
figured she’d know better what the kids would want anyway—but she’d insisted
that I go with her to the orphanage on Christmas Eve so that I could be there
when the children opened their gifts. “Please, Landon,” she’d said, and with
her being so excited and all, I just didn’t have the heart to turn her down.
So three days later, while my father and
mother were at a party at the mayor’s house, I dressed in a houndstooth jacket
and my best tie and walked to my mom’s car with Jamie’s present beneath my arm.
I’d spent my last few dollars on a nice sweater because that was all I could
think to get her. She wasn’t exactly the easiest person to shop for.
I was supposed to be at the orphanage at
seven, but the bridge was up near the Morehead City port,
and I had to wait until an outbound freighter slowly made its way down the
channel. As a result, I arrived a few minutes late. The front door was already
locked by that time, and I had to pound on it until Mr. Jenkins finally heard
me. He fiddled through his set of keys until he found the right one, and a
moment later he opened the door. I stepped inside, patting my arms to ward off
the chill.
“Ah . . . you’re here,” he said
happily. “We’ve been waiting for you. C’mon, I’ll take you to where everyone
is.”
He led me down the hall to the rec room,
the same place I’d been before. I paused for just a moment to exhale deeply
before finally heading in.
It was even better than I’d imagined.
In the center of the room I saw a giant
tree, decorated with tinsel and colored lights and a hundred different handmade
ornaments. Beneath the tree, spread in all directions, were wrapped gifts of every
size and shape. They were piled high, and the children were on the floor,
sitting close together in a large semicircle. They were dressed in their best
clothes, I assumed—the boys wore navy blue slacks and white collared shirts,
while the girls had on navy skirts and long-sleeved blouses. They all looked as if they’d cleaned up before the big event, and most
of the boys had had their hair cut.
On the table beside the door, there was a
bowl of punch and platters of cookies, shaped like Christmas trees and
sprinkled with green sugar. I could see some adults sitting with the children;
a few of the smaller kids were sitting on the adults’ laps, their faces rapt
with attention as they listened to “ ’Twas the Night Before Christmas.”
I didn’t see Jamie, though, at least not
right off the bat. It was her voice that I recognized first. She was the one
reading the story, and I finally located her. She was sitting on the floor in
front of the tree with her legs bent beneath her.
To my surprise, I saw that tonight her
hair hung loosely, just as it had the night of the play. Instead of the old
brown cardigan I’d seen so many times, she was wearing a red V-neck sweater
that somehow accentuated the color of her light blue eyes. Even without
sparkles in her hair or a long white flowing dress, the sight of her was
arresting. Without even noticing it, I’d been holding my breath, and I could
see Mr. Jenkins smiling at me out of the corner of my eye.
I exhaled and smiled, trying to regain control.
Jamie paused only once to look up from the
story. She noticed me standing in the doorway, then went back to reading to the
children. It took her another minute or so to finish, and when she did, she
stood up and smoothed her skirt, then walked around the children to make her
way toward me. Not knowing where she wanted me to go, I stayed where I was.
By then Mr. Jenkins had slipped away.
“I’m sorry we started without you,” she
said when she finally reached me, “but the kids were just so excited.”
“It’s okay,” I said, smiling, thinking how
nice she looked.
“I’m so glad you could come.”
“So am I.”
Jamie smiled and reached for my hand to
lead the way. “C’mon with me,” she said. “Help me hand out the gifts.”
We spent the next hour doing just that,
and we watched as the children opened them one by one. Jamie had shopped all
over town, picking up a few things for each child in the room, individual gifts
that they’d never received before. The gifts that Jamie bought weren’t the only ones the children received, however—both the orphanage
and the people who worked there had bought some things as well. As paper was
tossed around the room in excited frenzy, there were squeals of delight
everywhere. To me, at least, it seemed that all of the children had received
far more than they’d expected, and they kept thanking Jamie over and over.
By the time the dust had finally settled
and all the children’s gifts were opened, the atmosphere began to calm down.
The room was tidied up by Mr. Jenkins and a woman I’d never met, and some of
the smaller children were beginning to fall asleep beneath the tree. Some of
the older ones had already gone back to their rooms with their gifts, and
they’d dimmed the overhead lights on the way out the door. The tree lights cast
an ethereal glow as “Silent Night” played softly on a phonograph that had been
set up in the corner. I was still sitting on the floor next to Jamie, who was
holding a young girl who’d fallen asleep in her lap. Because of all the
commotion, we hadn’t really had a chance to talk, not that either of us had
minded. We were both gazing up at the lights on the tree, and I wondered what
Jamie was thinking. If truth be told, I didn’t know, but
she had a tender look about her. I thought—no, I knew—she was pleased
with how the evening had gone, and deep down, so was I. To this point it was
the best Christmas Eve I’d ever spent.
I glanced at her. With the lights glowing
on her face, she looked as pretty as anyone I’d ever seen.
“I bought you something,” I finally said
to her. “A gift, I mean.” I spoke softly so I wouldn’t wake the little girl,
and I hoped it would hide the nervousness in my voice.
She turned from the tree to face me,
smiling softly. “You didn’t have to do that.” She kept her voice low, too, and
it sounded almost musical.
“I know,” I said. “But I wanted to.” I’d
kept the gift off to one side, and I reached for it, handing the gift-wrapped
package to her.
“Could you open it for me? My hands are
kind of full right now.” She looked down at the little girl, then back to me.
“You don’t have to open it now, if you’d
rather not,” I said, shrugging, “it’s really not that big of a deal.”
“Don’t be silly,” she said. “I would only
open it in front of you.”
To clear my mind, I looked at the gift and
started opening it, picking at the tape so that it wouldn’t
make much noise, then unwrapping the paper until I reached the box. After
setting the paper off to the side, I lifted the cover and pulled out the
sweater, holding it up to show her. It was brown, like the ones she usually
wore. But I figured she could use a new one.
Compared with the joy I’d seen earlier, I
didn’t expect much of a reaction.
“See, that’s all. I told you it wasn’t
much,” I said. I hoped she wasn’t disappointed in it.
“It’s beautiful, Landon,” she said
earnestly. “I’ll wear it the next time I see you. Thank you.”
We sat quietly for a moment, and once
again I began to look at the lights.
“I brought you something, too,” Jamie
finally whispered. She looked toward the tree, and my eyes followed her gaze.
Her gift was still beneath the tree, partially hidden by the stand, and I
reached for it. It was rectangular, flexible, and a little heavy. I brought it
to my lap and held it there without even trying to open it.
“Open it,” she said, looking right at me.
“You can’t give this to me,” I said
breathlessly. I already knew what was inside, and I couldn’t
believe what she had done. My hands began to tremble.
“Please,” she said to me with the kindest
voice I’d ever heard, “open it. I want you to have it.”
Reluctantly I slowly unwrapped the
package. When it was finally free of the paper, I held it gently, afraid to
damage it. I stared at it, mesmerized, and slowly ran my hand over the top, brushing
my fingers over the well-worn leather as tears filled my eyes. Jamie reached
out and rested her hand on mine. It was warm and soft.
I glanced at her, not knowing what to say.
Jamie had given me her Bible.
“Thank you for doing what you did,” she whispered
to me. “It was the best Christmas I’ve ever had.”
I turned away without responding and
reached off to the side where I’d set my glass of punch. The chorus of “Silent
Night” was still playing, and the music filled the room. I took a sip of the
punch, trying to soothe the sudden dryness in my throat. As I drank, all the
times I’d spent with Jamie came flooding into my mind. I thought about the
homecoming dance and what she’d done for me that night. I thought about the
play and how angelic she’d looked. I thought about the
times I’d walked her home and how I’d helped collect jars and cans filled with
pennies for the orphans.
As these images were going through my
head, my breathing suddenly went still. I looked at Jamie, then up to the
ceiling and around the room, doing my best to keep my composure, then back to
Jamie again. She smiled at me and I smiled at her and all I could do was wonder
how I’d ever fallen in love with a girl like Jamie Sullivan.
I drove Jamie home from the orphanage
later that night. At first I wasn’t sure whether I should pull the old yawn
move and put my arm around her shoulder, but to be honest, I didn’t know
exactly how she was feeling about me. Granted, she’d given me the most
wonderful gift I’d ever received, and even though I’d probably never open it
and read it like she did, I knew it was like giving a piece of herself away.
But Jamie was the type of person who would donate a kidney to a stranger she
met walking down the street, if he really needed one. So I wasn’t exactly sure
what to make of it.
Jamie had told me
once that she wasn’t a dimwit, and I guess I finally came to the conclusion
that she wasn’t. She may have been . . . well, different
. . . but she’d figured out what I’d done for the orphans, and
looking back, I think she knew even as we were sitting on the floor of her
living room. When she’d called it a miracle, I guess she was talking specifically
about me.
Hegbert, I remembered, came into the room
as Jamie and I were talking about it, but he really didn’t have much to say.
Old Hegbert hadn’t been himself lately, at least as far as I could tell. Oh,
his sermons were still on the money, and he still talked about the fornicators,
but lately his sermons were shorter than usual, and occasionally he’d pause
right in the middle of one and this strange look would come over him, kind of
like he was thinking of something else, something sad.
I didn’t know what to make of it, being
that I really didn’t know him that well. And Jamie, when she talked about him,
seemed to describe someone else entirely. I could no more imagine Hegbert with
a sense of humor than I could imagine two moons in the sky.
So anyway, he came into the room while we
counted the money, and Jamie stood up with those tears in
her eyes, and Hegbert didn’t even seem to realize I was there. He told her that
he was proud of her and that he loved her, but then he shuffled back to the
kitchen to continue working on his sermon. He didn’t even say hello. Now, I
knew I hadn’t exactly been the most spiritual kid in the congregation, but I
still found his behavior sort of odd.
As I was thinking about Hegbert, I glanced
at Jamie sitting beside me. She was looking out the window with a peaceful look
on her face, kind of smiling, but far away at the same time. I smiled. Maybe
she was thinking about me. My hand started scooting across the seat closer to
hers, but before I reached it, Jamie broke the silence.
“Landon,” she finally asked as she turned
toward me, “do you ever think about God?”
I pulled my hand back.
Now, when I thought about God, I usually
pictured him like those old paintings I’d seen in churches—a giant hovering
over the landscape, wearing a white robe, with long flowing hair, pointing his
finger or something like that—but I knew she wasn’t talking about that. She was
talking about the Lord’s plan. It took a moment for me to answer.
“Sure,” I said. “Sometimes, I reckon.”
“Do you ever wonder
why things have to turn out the way they do?”
I nodded uncertainly.
“I’ve been thinking about it a lot
lately.”
Even more than usual? I wanted to ask, but
I didn’t. I could tell she had more to say, and I stayed quiet.
“I know the Lord has a plan for us all,
but sometimes, I just don’t understand what the message can be. Does that ever
happen to you?”
She said this as though it were something
I thought about all the time.
“Well,” I said, trying to bluff, “I don’t
think that we’re meant to understand it all the time. I think that sometimes we
just have to have faith.”
It was a pretty good answer, I admit. I
guess that my feelings for Jamie were making my brain work a little faster than
usual. I could tell she was thinking about my answer.
“Yes,” she finally said, “you’re right.”
I smiled to myself and changed the
subject, since talking about God wasn’t the sort of thing that made a person
feel romantic.
“You know,” I said casually, “it sure was
nice tonight when we were sitting by the tree earlier.”
“Yes, it was,” she
said. Her mind was still elsewhere.
“And you sure looked nice, too.”
“Thank you.”
This wasn’t working too well.
“Can I ask you a question?” I finally
said, in the hopes of bringing her back to me.
“Sure,” she said.
I took a deep breath.
“After church tomorrow, and, well
. . . after you’ve spent some time with your father . . . I
mean . . .” I paused and looked at her. “Would you mind coming over
to my house for Christmas dinner?”
Even though her face was still turned
toward the window, I could see the faint outlines of a smile as soon as I’d
said it.
“Yes, Landon, I would like that very
much.”
I sighed with relief, not believing I’d
actually asked her and still wondering how all this had happened. I drove down
streets where windows were decorated with Christmas lights, and through the
Beaufort City Square. A couple of minutes later when I reached across the seat,
I finally took hold of her hand, and to complete the perfect evening, she
didn’t pull it away.
When we pulled up
in front of her house, the lights in the living room were still on and I could
see Hegbert behind the curtains. I supposed he was waiting up because he wanted
to hear how the evening went at the orphanage. Either that, or he wanted to
make sure I didn’t kiss his daughter on the doorstep. I knew he’d frown on that
sort of thing.
I was thinking about that—what to do when
we finally said good-bye, I mean—when we got out of the car and started toward
the door. Jamie was quiet and content at the same time, and I think she was
happy that I’d asked her to come over the next day. Since she’d been smart
enough to figure out what I’d done for the orphans, I figured that maybe she’d
been smart enough to figure out the homecoming situation as well. In her mind,
I think even she realized that this was the first time I’d actually asked her
to join me of my own volition.
Just as we got to her steps, I saw Hegbert
peek out from behind the curtains and pull his face back. With some parents,
like Angela’s, for instance, that meant they knew you were home and you had
about another minute or so before they’d open the door. Usually that gave you
both time to sort of bat your eyes at each other while each of you worked up the nerve to actually kiss. It usually took about
that long.
Now I didn’t know if Jamie would kiss me;
in fact, I actually doubted that she would. But with her looking so pretty,
with her hair down and all, and everything that had happened tonight, I didn’t
want to miss the opportunity if it came up. I could feel the little butterflies
already starting to form in my stomach when Hegbert opened the door.
“I heard you pull up,” he said quietly.
His skin was that sallow color, as usual, but he looked tired.
“Hello, Reverend Sullivan,” I said
dejectedly.
“Hi, Daddy,” Jamie said happily a second
later. “I wish you could have come tonight. It was wonderful.”
“I’m so glad for you.” He seemed to gather
himself then and cleared his throat. “I’ll give you a bit to say good night.
I’ll leave the door open for you.”
He turned around and went back into the
living room. From where he sat down, I knew he could still see us. He pretended
to be reading, though I couldn’t see what was in his hands.
“I had a wonderful
time tonight, Landon,” Jamie said.
“So did I,” I answered, feeling Hegbert’s
eyes on me. I wondered if he knew I’d been holding her hand during the car ride
home.
“What time should I come over tomorrow?”
she asked.
Hegbert’s eyebrow raised just a little.
“I’ll come over to get you. Is five
o’clock okay?”
She looked over her shoulder. “Daddy,
would you mind if I visited with Landon and his parents tomorrow?”
Hegbert brought his hand to his eyes and
started rubbing them. He sighed.
“If it’s important to you, you can,” he
said.
Not the most stirring vote of confidence
I’d ever heard, but it was good enough for me.
“What should I bring?” she asked. In the
South it was tradition to always ask that question.
“You don’t need to bring anything,” I
answered. “I’ll pick you up at a quarter to five.”
We stood there for a moment without saying
anything else, and I could tell Hegbert was growing a little impatient. He
hadn’t turned a page of the book since we’d been standing there.
“I’ll see you
tomorrow,” she said finally.
“Okay,” I said.
She glanced down at her feet for a moment,
then back up at me. “Thank you for driving me home,” she said.
With that, she turned around and walked
inside. I could barely see the slight smile playing gently across her lips as
she peeked around the door, just as it was about to close.
The next day I picked her up right on
schedule and was pleased to see that her hair was down once more. She was
wearing the sweater I’d given her, just like she’d promised.
Both my mom and dad were a little
surprised when I’d asked if it would be all right if Jamie came by for dinner.
It wasn’t a big deal—whenever my dad was around, my mom would have Helen, our
cook, make enough food for a small army.
I guess I didn’t mention that earlier,
about the cook, I mean. In our house we had a maid and a cook, not only because
my family could afford them, but also because my mom wasn’t the greatest
homemaker in the world. She was all right at making sandwiches for my lunch now
and then, but there’d been times when the mustard would stain her nails, and it
would take her at least three or four days to get over it.
Without Helen I would have grown up eating burned mashed potatoes and crunchy
steak. My father, luckily, had realized this as soon as they married, and both
the cook and the maid had been with us since before I was born.
Though our house was larger than most, it
wasn’t a palace or anything, and neither the cook nor the maid lived with us
because we didn’t have separate living quarters or anything like that. My
father had bought the home because of its historical value. Though it wasn’t
the house where Blackbeard had once lived, which would have been more
interesting to someone like me, it had been owned by Richard Dobbs
Spaight, who’d signed the Constitution. Spaight had also owned a farm outside
of New Bern, which was about forty miles up the road, and that was where he was
buried. Our house might not have been as famous as the one where Dobbs Spaight
was buried, but it still afforded my father some bragging rights in the halls
of Congress, and whenever he walked around the garden, I could see him dreaming
about the legacy he wanted to leave. In a way it made me sad, because no matter
what he did, he’d never top old Richard Dobbs Spaight.
Historical events like signing the Constitution come along only once every few
hundred years, and no matter how you sliced it, debating farm subsidies for
tobacco farmers or talking about the “Red influence” was never going to cut it.
Even someone like me knew that.
The house was in the National Historic
Register—still is, I suppose—and though Jamie had been there once before,
she was still kind of awed when she walked inside. My mother and father were
both dressed very nicely, as was I, and my mother kissed Jamie hello on the
cheek. My mother, I couldn’t help but think as I watched her do it, had scored
before I did.
We had a nice dinner, fairly formal with
four courses, though it wasn’t stuffy or anything like that. My parents and
Jamie carried on the most marvelous conversation—think Miss Garber here—and
though I tried to inject my own brand of humor, it didn’t really go over too
well, at least as far as my parents were concerned. Jamie, however, would
laugh, and I took that as a good sign.
After dinner I invited Jamie to walk
around the garden, even though it was winter and nothing was in bloom. After
putting on our coats, we stepped outside into the chilled winter
air. I could see our breaths coming out in little puffs.
“Your parents are wonderful people,” she
said to me. I guess she hadn’t taken Hegbert’s sermons to heart.
“They’re nice,” I responded, “in their own
way. My mom’s especially sweet.” I said this not only because it was true, but
also because it was the same thing that kids said about Jamie. I hoped she
would get the hint.
She stopped to look at the rosebushes.
They looked like gnarled sticks, and I didn’t see what her interest was in
them.
“Is it true about your grandfather?” she
asked me. “The stories that people tell?”
I guess she didn’t get my hint.
“Yes,” I said, trying not to show my
disappointment.
“That’s sad,” she said simply. “There’s
more to life than money.”
“I know.”
She looked at me. “Do you?”
I didn’t meet her eyes as I answered.
Don’t ask me why.
“I know that what my grandfather did was
wrong.”
“But you don’t want to give it back, do
you?”
“I’ve never really
thought about it, to tell you the truth.”
“Would you, though?”
I didn’t answer right away, and Jamie
turned from me. She was staring at the rosebushes with their gnarled sticks
again, and I suddenly realized that she’d wanted me to say yes. It’s what she
would have done without thinking twice about it.
“Why do you do things like that?” I
blurted out before I could stop myself, blood rushing into my cheeks. “Making
me feel guilty, I mean. I wasn’t the one who did it. I just happened to be born
into this family.”
She reached out and touched a branch.
“That doesn’t mean you can’t undo it,” she said gently, “when you get the
opportunity.”
Her point was clear, even to me, and deep
down I knew she was right. But that decision, if it ever came, was a long way
off. To my way of thinking, I had more important things on my mind. I changed
the subject back to something I could relate to better.
“Does your father like me?” I asked. I
wanted to know if Hegbert would allow me to see her again.
It took a moment for her to answer.
“My father,” she
said slowly, “worries about me.”
“Don’t all parents?” I asked.
She looked at her feet, then off to the
side again before turning back to me.
“I think that with him, it’s different
from most. But my father does like you, and he knows that it makes me happy to
see you. That’s why he let me come over to your house for dinner tonight.”
“I’m glad he did,” I said, meaning it.
“So am I.”
We looked at each other under the light of
a waxing crescent moon, and I almost kissed her right then, but she turned away
a moment too soon and said something that sort of threw me.
“My father worries about you, too,
Landon.” The way she said it—it was soft and sad at the same time—let me know
that it wasn’t simply because he thought I was irresponsible, or that I used to
hide behind the trees and call him names, or even that I was a member of the
Carter family.
“Why?” I asked.
“For the same reason that I do,” she said.
She didn’t elaborate any further, and I knew right then that she was holding
something back, something that she couldn’t tell me,
something that made her sad as well. But it wasn’t until later that I learned
her secret.
Being in love with a girl like Jamie
Sullivan was without a doubt the strangest thing I’d ever been through. Not
only was she a girl that I’d never thought about before this year—even though
we’d grown up together—but there was something different in the whole way my
feelings for her had unfolded. This wasn’t like being with Angela, whom I’d
kissed the first time I was ever alone with her. I still hadn’t kissed Jamie. I
hadn’t even hugged her or taken her to Cecil’s Diner or even to a movie. I
hadn’t done any of the things that I normally did with girls, yet somehow I’d
fallen in love.
The problem was, I still didn’t know how
she felt about me.
Oh sure, there were some indications, and
I hadn’t missed them. The Bible was, of course, the biggie, but there was also
the way she’d looked at me when she’d closed the door on Christmas Eve, and
she’d let me hold her hand on the ride home from the orphanage. To my way of
thinking there was definitely something there—I just wasn’t
exactly sure of how to take the next step.
When I’d finally taken her home after
Christmas dinner, I’d asked if it would be okay if I came by from time to time,
and she’d said it would be fine. That’s exactly how she’d said it, too—“That
would be fine.” I didn’t take the lack of enthusiasm personally—Jamie had a
tendency to talk like an adult, and I think that’s why she got along with older
people so well.
The following day I walked to her house,
and the first thing I noticed was that Hegbert’s car wasn’t in the driveway.
When she answered the door, I knew enough not to ask her if I could come in.
“Hello, Landon,” she said as she always
did, as if it were a surprise to see me. Again her hair was down, and I took
this as a positive sign.
“Hey, Jamie,” I said casually.
She motioned to the chairs. “My father’s
not home, but we can sit on the porch if you’d like. . . .”
Don’t even ask me how it happened, because
I still can’t explain it. One second I was standing there in front of her,
expecting to walk to the side of the porch, and in the next second
I wasn’t. Instead of moving toward the chairs, I took a step closer to her and
found myself reaching for her hand. I took it in mine and looked right at her,
moving just a little closer. She didn’t exactly step back, but her eyes widened
just a little, and for a tiny, flickering moment I thought I’d done the wrong
thing and debated going any further. I paused and smiled, sort of tilting my
head to the side, and the next thing I saw was that she’d closed her eyes and
was tilting her head, too, and that our faces were moving closer together.
It wasn’t that long, and it certainly
wasn’t the kind of kiss you see in movies these days, but it was wonderful in
its own way, and all I can remember about the moment is that when our lips
first touched, I knew the memory would last forever.
“You’re the first boy I’ve ever kissed,”
she said to me.
It was a few days before the new year, and
Jamie and I were standing at the Iron Steamer Pier in Pine Knoll Shores. To get
there, we’d had to cross the bridge that spans the Intracoastal Waterway and
drive a little way down the island. Nowadays the place has some of the most
expensive beachfront property in the entire state, but back then it was mainly
sand dunes nestled against the Maritime National Forest.
“I figured I might have been,” I said.
“Why?” she asked innocently. “Did I do it wrong?” She didn’t look like she’d be too upset if I’d said
yes, but it wouldn’t have been the truth.
“You’re a great kisser,” I said, giving her
hand a squeeze.
She nodded and turned toward the ocean,
her eyes getting that far-off look again. She’d been doing that a lot lately. I
let it go on for a while before the silence sort of got to me.
“Are you okay, Jamie?” I finally asked.
Instead of answering, she changed the
subject.
“Have you ever been in love?” she asked
me.
I ran my hand through my hair and gave her
one of those looks. “You mean before now?”
I said it like James Dean would have, the
way Eric had told me to say it if a girl ever asked me that question. Eric was
pretty slick with girls.
“I’m serious, Landon,” she said, tossing
me a sidelong glance.
I guess Jamie had seen those movies, too.
With Jamie, I’d come to realize, I always seemed to be going from high to low
and back to high again in less time than it takes to swat a mosquito. I wasn’t
quite sure if I liked that part of our relationship yet, though to be honest, it kept me on my toes. I was still feeling off balance
as I thought about her question.
“Actually, I have,” I said finally.
Her eyes were still fixed on the ocean. I
think she thought I was talking about Angela, but looking back, I’d realized
that what I’d felt for Angela was totally different from what I was feeling
right now.
“How did you know it was love?” she asked
me.
I watched the breeze gently moving her
hair, and I knew that it was no time to pretend I was something that I actually
wasn’t.
“Well,” I said seriously, “you know it’s
love when all you want to do is spend time with the other person, and you sort
of know that the other person feels the same way.”
Jamie thought about my answer before
smiling faintly.
“I see,” she said softly. I waited for her
to add something else, but she didn’t, and I came to another sudden
realization.
Jamie may not have been all that experienced
with boys, but to tell you the truth, she was playing me like a harp.
During the next two days, for instance,
she wore her hair in a bun again.
On New Year’s Eve I
took Jamie out to dinner. It was the very first real date she’d ever been on,
and we went to a small waterfront restaurant in Morehead City, a place called
Flauvin’s. Flauvin’s was the kind of restaurant with tablecloths and candles
and five different pieces of silverware per setting. The waiters wore black and
white, like butlers, and when you looked out the giant windows that completely
lined the wall, you could watch moonlight reflecting off the slowly moving
water.
There was a pianist and a singer, too, not
every night or even every weekend, but on holidays when they thought the place
would be full. I had to make reservations, and the first time I called they
said they were filled, but I had my mom call them, and the next thing you knew,
something had opened up. I guess the owner needed a favor from my father or
something, or maybe he just didn’t want to make him angry, knowing that my
grandfather was still alive and all.
It was actually my mom’s idea to take
Jamie out someplace special. A couple of days before, on one of those days
Jamie was wearing her hair in a bun, I talked to my mom about the things I was
going through.
“She’s all I think about, Mom,” I
confessed. “I mean, I know she likes me, but I don’t know
if she feels the same way that I do.”
“Does she mean that much to you?” she
asked.
“Yes,” I said quietly.
“Well, what have you tried so far?”
“What do you mean?”
My mom smiled. “I mean that young girls,
even Jamie, like to be made to feel special.”
I thought about that for a moment, a
little confused. Wasn’t that what I was trying to do?
“Well, I’ve been going to her house every
day to visit,” I said.
My mom put her hand on my knee. Even
though she wasn’t a great homemaker and sometimes stuck it to me, like I said
earlier, she really was a sweet lady.
“Going to her house is a nice thing to do,
but it’s not the most romantic thing there is. You should do something that
will really let her know how you feel about her.”
My mom suggested buying some perfume, and
though I knew that Jamie would probably be happy to receive it, it didn’t sound
right to me. For one thing, since Hegbert didn’t allow her to wear makeup—with
the single exception being the Christmas play—I was sure she couldn’t wear
perfume. I told my mom as much, and that was when she’d
suggested taking her out to dinner.
“I don’t have any money left,” I said to
her dejectedly. Though my family was wealthy and gave me an allowance, they
never gave me more if I ran through it too quickly. “It builds responsibility,”
my father said, explaining it once.
“What happened to your money in the bank?”
I sighed, and my mom sat in silence while
I explained what I had done. When I finished, a look of quiet satisfaction
crossed her face, as if she, too, knew I was finally growing up.
“Let me worry about that,” she said
softly. “You just find out if she’d like to go and if Reverend Sullivan will
allow it. If she can, we’ll find a way to make it happen. I promise.”
The following day I went to the church. I
knew that Hegbert would be in his office. I hadn’t asked Jamie yet because I
figured she would need his permission, and for some reason I wanted to be the
one who asked. I guess it had to do with the fact that Hegbert hadn’t exactly
been welcoming me with open arms when I visited. Whenever he’d see me coming up
the walkway—like Jamie, he had a sixth sense about it—he’d
peek out the curtains, then quickly pull his head back behind them, thinking
that I hadn’t seen him. When I knocked, it would take a long time for him to
answer the door, as if he had to come from the kitchen. He’d look at me for a
long moment, then sigh deeply and shake his head before finally saying hello.
His door was partially open, and I saw him
sitting behind his desk, spectacles propped on his nose. He was looking over
some papers—they looked almost financial—and I figured he was trying to figure
out the church budget for the following year. Even ministers had bills to pay.
I knocked at the door, and he looked up
with interest, as if he expected another member of the congregation, then
furrowed his brow when he saw that it was me.
“Hello, Reverend Sullivan,” I said politely.
“Do you have a moment?”
He looked even more tired than usual, and
I assumed he wasn’t feeling well.
“Hello, Landon,” he said wearily.
I’d dressed sharply for the occasion, by
the way, with a jacket and tie. “May I come in?”
He nodded slightly, and I entered the office. He motioned for me to sit in the chair across from his
desk.
“What can I do for you?” he asked.
I adjusted myself nervously in the chair.
“Well, sir, I wanted to ask you something.”
He stared at me, studying me before he
finally spoke. “Does it have to do with Jamie?” he asked.
I took a deep breath.
“Yes, sir. I wanted to ask if it would be
all right with you if I took her to dinner on New Year’s Eve.”
He sighed. “Is that all?” he said.
“Yes, sir,” I said. “I’ll bring her home
any time you’d need me to.”
He took off his spectacles and wiped them
with his handkerchief before putting them back on. I could tell he was taking a
moment to think about it.
“Will your parents be joining you?” he
asked.
“No, sir.”
“Then I don’t think that will be possible.
But thank you for asking my permission first.” He looked down at the papers,
making it clear it was time for me to leave. I stood from my chair and started
toward the door. As I was about to go, I faced him again.
He looked up, surprised I was still there.
“I’m sorry for those things I used to do when I was younger, and I’m sorry that
I didn’t always treat Jamie the way she should have been treated. But from now
on, things will change. I promise you that.”
He seemed to look right through me. It
wasn’t enough.
“I love her,” I said finally, and when I
said it, his attention focused on me again.
“I know you do,” he answered sadly, “but I
don’t want to see her hurt.” Even though I must have been imagining it, I
thought I saw his eyes begin to water.
“I wouldn’t do that to her,” I said.
He turned from me and looked out the
window, watching as the winter sun tried to force its way through the clouds.
It was a gray day, cold and bitter.
“Have her home by ten,” he finally said,
as though he knew he’d made the wrong decision.
I smiled and wanted to thank him, though I
didn’t. I could tell that he wanted to be alone. When I glanced over my
shoulder on my way out the door, I was puzzled to see his face in his hands.
I asked Jamie an hour later. The first
thing she said was that she didn’t think she could go, but I told her that I’d
already spoken to her father. She seemed surprised, and I think it had an
effect on how she viewed me after that. The one thing I didn’t tell her was
that it looked almost as though Hegbert had been crying as I’d made my way out
the door. Not only didn’t I understand it completely, I didn’t want her to
worry. That night, though, after talking to my mom again, she provided me with
a possible explanation, and to be honest, it made perfect sense to me. Hegbert
must have come to the realization that his daughter was growing up and that he
was slowly losing her to me. In a way, I hoped that was true.
I picked her up right on schedule. Though
I hadn’t asked her to wear her hair down, she’d done it for me. Silently we
drove over the bridge, down the waterfront to the restaurant. When we got to
the hostess stand, the owner himself appeared and walked us to our table. It
was one of the better ones in the place.
It was crowded by the time we arrived, and
all around us people were enjoying themselves. On New Year’s people dressed fashionably, and we were the only two teenagers in the place.
I didn’t think we looked too out of place, though.
Jamie had never been to Flauvin’s before,
and it took her just a few minutes to take it all in. She seemed nervously
happy, and I knew right away that my mom had made the right suggestion.
“This is wonderful,” she said to me.
“Thank you for asking me.”
“My pleasure,” I said sincerely.
“Have you been here before?”
“A few times. My mother and father like to
come here sometimes when my father comes home from Washington.”
She looked out the window and stared at a
boat that was passing by the restaurant, its lights blazing. For a moment she
seemed lost in wonder. “It’s beautiful here,” she said.
“So are you,” I answered.
Jamie blushed. “You don’t mean that.”
“Yes,” I said quietly, “I do.”
We held hands while we waited for dinner,
and Jamie and I talked about some of the things that had happened in the past
few months. She laughed when we talked about the homecoming dance, and I
finally admitted the reason I’d asked her in the first place. She
was a good sport about it—she sort of laughed it off cheerfully—and I knew that
she’d already figured it out on her own.
“Would you want to take me again?” she
teased.
“Absolutely.”
Dinner was delicious—we both ordered the
sea bass and salads, and when the waiter finally removed our plates, the music
started up. We had an hour left before I had to take her home, and I offered
her my hand.
At first we were the only ones on the
floor, everyone watching us as we glided around the floor. I think they all
knew how we were feeling about each other, and it reminded them of when they
were young, too. I could see them smiling wistfully at us. The lights were dim,
and when the singer began a slow melody, I held her close to me with my eyes
closed, wondering if anything in my life had ever been this perfect and knowing
at the same time that it hadn’t.
I was in love, and the feeling was even
more wonderful than I ever imagined it could be.
After New Year’s we spent the next week
and a half together, doing the things that young couples did back then, though
from time to time she seemed tired and listless. We spent
time down by the Neuse River, tossing stones in the water, watching the ripples
while we talked, or we went to the beach near Fort Macon. Even though it was
winter, the ocean the color of iron, it was something that both of us enjoyed
doing. After an hour or so Jamie would ask me to take her home, and we’d hold
hands in the car. Sometimes, it seemed, she would almost nod off before we even
got home, while other times she would keep up a stream of chatter all the way
back so that I could barely get a word in edgewise.
Of course, spending time with Jamie also
meant doing the things she enjoyed as well. Though I wouldn’t go to her Bible
study class—I didn’t want to look like an idiot in front of her—we did visit
the orphanage twice more, and each time we went there, I felt more at home.
Once, though, we’d had to leave early, because she was running a slight fever.
Even to my untrained eyes, it was clear that her face was flushed.
We kissed again, too, though not every
time we were together, and I didn’t even think of trying to make it to second
base. There wasn’t any need to. There was something nice when I kissed her,
something gentle and right, and that was enough for me. The
more I did it, the more I realized that Jamie had been misunderstood her entire
life, not only by me, but by everyone.
Jamie wasn’t simply the minister’s
daughter, someone who read the Bible and did her best to help others. Jamie was
also a seventeen-year-old girl with the same hopes and doubts that I had. At
least, that’s what I assumed, until she finally told me.
I’ll never forget that day because of how
quiet she had been, and I had the funny feeling all day long that something
important was on her mind.
I was walking her home from Cecil’s Diner
on the Saturday before school started up again, a day blustery with a fierce,
biting wind. A nor’easter had been blowing in since the previous morning, and
while we walked, we’d had to stand close to each other to stay warm. Jamie had
her arm looped through mine, and we were walking slowly, even more slowly than
usual, and I could tell she wasn’t feeling well again. She hadn’t really wanted
to go with me because of the weather, but I’d asked her because of my friends.
It was time, I remember thinking, that they finally knew about us. The only problem, as fate would have it, was that no one else was
at Cecil’s Diner. As with many coastal communities, things were quiet on the
waterfront in the middle of winter.
She was quiet as we walked, and I knew
that she was thinking of a way to tell me something. I didn’t expect her to
start the conversation as she did.
“People think I’m strange, don’t they,”
she finally said, breaking the silence.
“Who do you mean?” I asked, even though I
knew the answer.
“People at school.”
“No, they don’t,” I lied.
I kissed her cheek as I squeezed her arm a
little tighter to me. She winced, and I could tell that I’d hurt her somehow.
“Are you okay?” I asked, concerned.
“I’m fine,” she said, regaining her
composure and keeping the subject on track. “Will you do me a favor, though?”
“Anything,” I said.
“Will you promise to tell me the truth
from now on? I mean always?”
“Sure,” I said.
She stopped me suddenly and looked right
at me. “Are you lying to me right now?”
“No,” I said defensively, wondering where this was going. “I promise that from now on, I’ll always tell
you the truth.”
Somehow, when I said it, I knew that I’d
come to regret it.
We started walking again. As we moved down
the street, I glanced at her hand, which was looped through mine, and I saw a
large bruise just below her ring finger. I had no idea where it had come from,
since it hadn’t been there the day before. For a second I thought it might have
been caused by me, but then I realized that I hadn’t even touched her there.
“People think I’m strange, don’t they?”
she asked again.
My breath was coming out in little puffs.
“Yes,” I finally answered. It hurt me to
say it.
“Why?” She looked almost despondent.
I thought about it. “People have different
reasons,” I said vaguely, doing my best not to go any further.
“But why, exactly? Is it because of my
father? Or is it because I try to be nice to people?”
I didn’t want anything to do with this.
“I suppose,” was all I could say. I felt a
little queasy.
Jamie seemed disheartened, and we walked a
little farther in silence.
“Do you think I’m
strange, too?” she asked me.
The way she said it made me ache more than
I thought it would. We were almost at her house before I stopped her and held
her close to me. I kissed her, and when we pulled apart, she looked down at the
ground.
I put my finger beneath her chin, lifting
her head up and making her look at me again. “You’re a wonderful person, Jamie.
You’re beautiful, you’re kind, you’re gentle . . . you’re everything
that I’d like to be. If people don’t like you, or they think you’re strange,
then that’s their problem.”
In the grayish glow of a cold winter day,
I could see her lower lip begin to tremble. Mine was doing the same thing, and
I suddenly realized that my heart was speeding up as well. I looked in her
eyes, smiling with all the feeling I could muster, knowing that I couldn’t keep
the words inside any longer.
“I love you, Jamie,” I said to her.
“You’re the best thing that ever happened to me.”
It was the first time I’d ever said the
words to another person besides a member of my immediate family. When I’d
imagined saying it to someone else, I’d somehow thought it would be hard, but it wasn’t. I’d never been more sure of anything.
As soon as I said the words, though, Jamie
bowed her head and started to cry, leaning her body into mine. I wrapped my
arms around her, wondering what was wrong. She was thin, and I realized for the
first time that my arms went all the way around her. She’d lost weight, even in
the last week and a half, and I remembered that she’d barely touched her food
earlier. She kept crying into my chest for what seemed like a long time. I
wasn’t sure what to think, or even if she felt the same way I did. Even so, I
didn’t regret the words. The truth is always the truth, and I’d just promised
her that I would never lie again.
“Please don’t say that,” she said to me.
“Please . . .”
“But I do,” I said, thinking she didn’t
believe me.
She began to cry even harder. “I’m sorry,”
she whispered to me through her ragged sobs. “I’m so, so sorry. . . .”
My throat suddenly went dry.
“Why’re you sorry?” I asked, suddenly
desperate to understand what was bothering her. “Is it because of my friends
and what they’ll say? I don’t care anymore—I really don’t.” I was
reaching for anything, confused and, yes—scared.
It took another long moment for her to
stop crying, and in time she looked up at me. She kissed me gently, almost like
the breath of a passerby on a city street, then ran her finger over my cheek.
“You can’t be in love with me, Landon,” she
said through red and swollen eyes. “We can be friends, we can see each other
. . . but you can’t love me.”
“Why not?” I shouted hoarsely, not
understanding any of this.
“Because,” she finally said softly, “I’m
very sick, Landon.”
The concept was so absolutely foreign that
I couldn’t comprehend what she was trying to say.
“So what? You’ll take a few days
. . .”
A sad smile crossed her face, and I knew
right then what she was trying to tell me. Her eyes never left mine as she
finally said the words that numbed my soul.
“I’m dying, Landon.”
She had leukemia; she’d known it since
last summer.
The moment she told me, the blood drained
from my face and a sheaf of dizzying images fluttered through my mind. It was
as though in that brief moment, time had suddenly stopped and I understood
everything that had happened between us. I understood why she’d wanted me to do
the play: I understood why, after we’d performed that first night, Hegbert had
whispered to her with tears in his eyes, calling her his angel; I understood
why he looked so tired all the time and why he fretted that
I kept coming by the house. Everything became absolutely clear.
Why she wanted Christmas at the orphanage
to be so special . . .
Why she didn’t think she’d go to college
. . .
Why she’d given me her Bible
. . .
It all made perfect sense, and at the same
time, nothing seemed to make any sense at all.
Jamie Sullivan had leukemia
. . .
Jamie, sweet Jamie, was dying
. . .
My Jamie . . .
“No, no,” I whispered to her, “there has
to be some mistake. . . .”
But there wasn’t, and when she told me
again, my world went blank. My head started to spin, and I clung to her tightly
to keep from losing my balance. On the street I saw a man and a woman, walking
toward us, heads bent and their hands on their hats to keep them from blowing
away. A dog trotted across the road and stopped to smell some bushes. A
neighbor across the way was standing on a stepladder, taking down his Christmas
lights. Normal scenes from everyday life, things I would never have noticed
before, suddenly making me feel angry. I closed my eyes, wanting the whole
thing to go away.
“I’m so sorry, Landon,” she kept saying
over and over. It was I who should have been saying it,
however. I know that now, but my confusion kept me from saying anything.
Deep down, I knew it wouldn’t go away. I
held her again, not knowing what else to do, tears filling my eyes, trying and failing
to be the rock I think she needed.
We cried together on the street for a long
time, just a little way down the road from her house. We cried some more when
Hegbert opened the door and saw our faces, knowing immediately that their
secret was out. We cried when we told my mother later that afternoon, and my
mother held us both to her bosom and sobbed so loudly that both the maid and
the cook wanted to call the doctor because they thought something had happened
to my father. On Sunday Hegbert made the announcement to his congregation, his
face a mask of anguish and fear, and he had to be helped back to his seat
before he’d even finished.
Everyone in the congregation stared in
silent disbelief at the words they’d just heard, as if they were waiting for a
punch line to some horrible joke that none of them could believe had been told.
Then all at once, the wailing began.
We sat with Hegbert the day she told me,
and Jamie patiently answered my questions. She didn’t know how long she had
left, she told me. No, there wasn’t anything the doctors could do. It was a
rare form of the disease, they’d said, one that didn’t respond to available
treatment. Yes, when the school year had started, she’d felt fine. It wasn’t
until the last few weeks that she’d started to feel its effects.
“That’s how it progresses,” she said. “You
feel fine, and then, when your body can’t keep fighting, you don’t.”
Stifling my tears, I couldn’t help but
think about the play.
“But all those rehearsals . . .
those long days . . . maybe you shouldn’t have—”
“Maybe,” she said, reaching for my hand
and cutting me off. “Doing the play was the thing that kept me healthy for so
long.”
Later, she told me that seven months had
passed since she’d been diagnosed. The doctors had given her a year, maybe less.
These days it might have been different.
These days they could have treated her. These days Jamie would probably live.
But this was happening forty years ago, and I knew what
that meant.
Only a miracle could save her.
“Why didn’t you tell me?”
This was the one question I hadn’t asked
her, the one that I’d been thinking about. I hadn’t slept that night, and my
eyes were still swollen. I’d gone from shock to denial to sadness to anger and
back again, all night long, wishing it weren’t so and praying that the whole
thing had been some terrible nightmare.
We were in her living room the following
day, the day that Hegbert had made the announcement to the congregation. It was
January 10, 1959.
Jamie didn’t look as depressed as I
thought she would. But then again, she’d been living with this for seven months
already. She and Hegbert had been the only ones to know, and neither of them
had trusted even me. I was hurt by that and frightened at the same time.
“I’d made a decision,” she explained to
me, “that it would be better if I told no one, and I asked my father to do the
same. You saw how people were after the services today. No one would even look
me in the eye. If you had only a few months left to live,
is that what you would want?”
I knew she was right, but it didn’t make
it any easier. I was, for the first time in my life, completely and utterly at
a loss.
I’d never had anyone close to me die
before, at least not anyone that I could remember. My grandmother had died when
I was three, and I don’t remember a single thing about her or the services that
had followed or even the next few years after her passing. I’d heard stories,
of course, from both my father and my grandfather, but to me that’s exactly
what they were. It was the same as hearing stories I might otherwise read in a
newspaper about some woman I never really knew. Though my father would take me
with him when he put flowers on her grave, I never had any feelings associated
with her. I felt only for the people she’d left behind.
No one in my family or my circle of
friends had ever had to confront something like this. Jamie was seventeen, a
child on the verge of womanhood, dying and still very much alive at the same
time. I was afraid, more afraid than I’d ever been, not only for her, but for
me as well. I lived in fear of doing something wrong, of
doing something that would offend her. Was it okay to ever get angry in her
presence? Was it okay to talk about the future anymore? My fear made talking to
her difficult, though she was patient with me.
My fear, however, made me realize
something else, something that made it all worse. I realized I’d never even
known her when she’d been healthy. I had started to spend time with her only a
few months earlier, and I’d been in love with her for only eighteen days. Those
eighteen days seemed like my entire life, but now, when I looked at her, all I
could do was wonder how many more days there would be.
On Monday she didn’t show up for school,
and I somehow knew that she’d never walk the hallways again. I’d never see her
reading the Bible off by herself at lunch, I’d never see her brown cardigan
moving through the crowd as she made her way to her next class. She was
finished with school forever; she would never receive her diploma.
I couldn’t concentrate on anything while I
sat in class that first day back, listening as teacher after teacher told us
what most of us had already heard. The responses were similar to those in
church on Sunday. Girls cried, boys hung their heads, people told stories about
her as if she were already gone. What can we do? they
wondered aloud, and people looked to me for answers.
“I don’t know,” was all I could say.
I left school early and went to Jamie’s,
blowing off my classes after lunch. When I knocked at the door, Jamie answered
it the way she always did, cheerfully and without, it seemed, a care in the
world.
“Hello, Landon,” she said, “this is a
surprise.”
When she leaned in to kiss me, I kissed
her back, though the whole thing made me want to cry.
“My father isn’t home right now, but if
you’d like to sit on the porch, we can.”
“How can you do this?” I asked suddenly.
“How can you pretend that nothing is wrong?”
“I’m not pretending that nothing is wrong,
Landon. Let me get my coat and we’ll sit outside and talk, okay?”
She smiled at me, waiting for an answer,
and I finally nodded, my lips pressed together. She reached out and patted my
arm.
“I’ll be right back,” she said.
I walked to the chair and sat down, Jamie
emerging a moment later. She wore a heavy coat, gloves, and a hat to keep her
warm. The nor’easter had passed, and the day wasn’t nearly
as cold as it had been over the weekend. Still, though, it was too much for
her.
“You weren’t in school today,” I said.
She looked down and nodded. “I know.”
“Are you ever going to come back?” Even
though I already knew the answer, I needed to hear it from her.
“No,” she said softly, “I’m not.”
“Why? Are you that sick already?” I
started to tear up, and she reached out and took my hand.
“No. Today I feel pretty good, actually.
It’s just that I want to be home in the mornings, before my father has to go to
the office. I want to spend as much time with him as I can.”
Before I die, she meant to say but didn’t. I felt
nauseated and couldn’t respond.
“When the doctors first told us,” she went
on, “they said that I should try to lead as normal a life as possible for as
long as I could. They said it would help me keep my strength up.”
“There’s nothing normal about this,” I
said bitterly.
“I know.”
“Aren’t you frightened?”
Somehow I expected her to say no, to
say something wise like a grown-up would, or to explain to
me that we can’t presume to understand the Lord’s plan.
She looked away. “Yes,” she finally said,
“I’m frightened all the time.”
“Then why don’t you act like it?”
“I do. I just do it in private.”
“Because you don’t trust me?”
“No,” she said, “because I know you’re
frightened, too.”
I began to pray for a miracle.
They supposedly happen all the time, and
I’d read about them in newspapers. People regaining use of their limbs after being
told they’d never walk again, or somehow surviving a terrible accident when all
hope was lost. Every now and then a traveling preacher’s tent would be set up
outside of Beaufort, and people would go there to watch as people were healed.
I’d been to a couple, and though I assumed that most of the healing was no more
than a slick magic show, since I never recognized the people who were healed,
there were occasionally things that even I couldn’t explain. Old man Sweeney,
the baker here in town, had been in the Great War fighting with an artillery
unit behind the trenches, and months of shelling the enemy
had left him deaf in one ear. It wasn’t an act—he really couldn’t hear a single
thing, and there’d been times when we were kids that we’d been able to sneak
off with a cinnamon roll because of it. But the preacher started praying
feverishly and finally laid his hand upon the side of Sweeney’s head. Sweeney
screamed out loud, making people practically jump out of their seats. He had a
terrified look on his face, as if the guy had touched him with a white-hot
poker, but then he shook his head and looked around, uttering the words “I can
hear again.” Even he couldn’t believe it. “The Lord,” the preacher had said as
Sweeney made his way back to his seat, “can do anything. The Lord listens to
our prayers.”
So that night I opened the Bible that
Jamie had given me for Christmas and began to read. Now, I’d heard all about
Bible in Sunday school or at church, but to be frank, I just remembered the
highlights—the Lord sending the seven plagues so the Israelites could leave
Egypt, Jonah being swallowed by a whale, Jesus walking across the water or
raising Lazarus from the dead. There were other biggies, too. I knew that
practically every chapter of the Bible has the Lord doing something spectacular, but I hadn’t learned them all. As Christians we
leaned heavily on teachings of the New Testament, and I didn’t know the first
things about books like Joshua or Ruth or Joel. The first night I read through
Genesis, the second night I read through Exodus. Leviticus was next, followed
by Numbers and then Deuteronomy. The going got a little slow during certain
parts, especially as all the laws were being explained, yet I couldn’t put it
down. It was a compulsion that I didn’t fully understand.
It was late one night, and I was tired by
the time I eventually reached Psalms, but somehow I knew this was what I was
looking for. Everyone has heard the Twenty-third Psalm, which starts, “The Lord
is my Shepherd, I shall not want,” but I wanted to read the others, since none
of them were supposed to be more important than the others. After an hour I
came across an underlined section that I assumed Jamie had noted because it
meant something to her. This is what it said:
I cry to you, my Lord, my rock! Do not be
deaf to me, for if you are silent, I shall go down to the pit like the rest.
Hear my voice raised in petition as I cry to you for help, as I
raise my hands, my Lord, toward your holy of holies.
I closed the Bible with tears in my eyes, unable to finish
the psalm.
Somehow I knew she’d
underlined it for me.
“I don’t know what to do,” I said numbly, staring into the
dim light of my bedroom lamp. My mom and I were sitting on my bed. It was
coming up on the end of January, the most difficult month of my life, and I
knew that in February things would only get worse.
“I know this is hard for
you,” she murmured, “but there’s nothing you can do.”
“I don’t mean about Jamie
being sick—I know there’s nothing I can do about that. I mean about Jamie and
me.”
My mother looked at me
sympathetically. She was worried about Jamie, but she was also worried about
me. I went on.
“It’s hard for me to talk to
her. All I can do when I look at her is think about the day when I won’t be
able to. So I spend all my time at school thinking about her, wishing I could
see her right then, but when I get to her house, I don’t
know what to say.”
“I don’t know if there’s
anything you can say to make her feel better.”
“Then what should I do?”
She looked at me sadly and
put her arm around my shoulder. “You really love her, don’t you,” she said.
“With all my heart.”
She looked as sad as I’d
ever seen her. “What’s your heart telling you to do?”
“I don’t know.”
“Maybe,” she said gently,
“you’re trying too hard to hear it.”
The next day I was better with Jamie, though not much.
Before I’d arrived, I’d told myself that I wouldn’t say anything that might get
her down—that I’d try to talk to her like I had before—and that’s exactly how
it went. I sat myself on her couch and told her about some of my friends and
what they were doing; I caught her up on the success of the basketball team. I
told her that I still hadn’t heard from UNC, but that I was hopeful I’d know
within the next few weeks. I told her I was looking forward to graduation. I
spoke as though she’d be back to school the following week,
and I knew I sounded nervous the entire time. Jamie smiled and nodded at the
appropriate times, asking questions every now and then. But I think we both
knew by the time I finished talking that it was the last time I would do it. It
didn’t feel right to either of us.
My heart was telling me
exactly the same thing.
I turned to the Bible again,
in the hope that it would guide me.
“How are you feeling?” I asked a couple of days later.
By now Jamie had lost more
weight. Her skin was beginning to take on a slightly grayish tint, and the
bones in her hands were starting to show through her skin. Again I saw bruises.
We were inside her house in the living room; the cold was too much for her to
bear.
Despite all this, she still
looked beautiful.
“I’m doing okay,” she said,
smiling valiantly. “The doctors have given me some medicine for the pain, and
it seems to help a little.”
I’d been coming by every
day. Time seemed to be slowing down and speeding up at exactly the same time.
“Can I get anything for
you?”
“No,
thank you, I’m doing fine.”
I looked around the room,
then back at her.
“I’ve been reading the
Bible,” I finally said.
“You have?” Her face lit up,
reminding me of the angel I’d seen in the play. I couldn’t believe that only
six weeks had gone by.
“I wanted you to know.”
“I’m glad you told me.”
“I read the book of Job last
night,” I said, “where God stuck it to Job to test his faith.”
She smiled and reached out
to pat my arm, her hand soft on my skin. It felt nice. “You should read
something else. That’s not about God in one of his better moments.”
“Why would he have done that
to him?”
“I don’t know,” she said.
“Do you ever feel like Job?”
She smiled, a little twinkle
in her eyes. “Sometimes.”
“But you haven’t lost your
faith?”
“No.” I knew she hadn’t, but
I think I was losing mine.
“Is it because you think you
might get better?”
“No,” she said, “it’s
because it’s the only thing I have left.”
After that, we started
reading the Bible together. It somehow seemed like the right thing
to do, but my heart was nonetheless telling me that there still might be
something more.
At night I lay awake,
wondering about it.
Reading the Bible gave us something to focus on, and all of
a sudden everything started to get better between us, maybe because I wasn’t as
worried about doing something to offend her. What could be more right than
reading the Bible? Though I didn’t know nearly as much as she did about it, I
think she appreciated the gesture, and occasionally when we read, she’d put her
hand on my knee and simply listen as my voice filled the room.
Other times I’d be sitting
beside her on the couch, looking at the Bible and watching Jamie out of the
corner of my eye at the same time, and we’d come across a passage or a psalm,
maybe even a proverb, and I’d ask her what she thought about it. She always had
an answer, and I’d nod, thinking about it. Sometimes she asked me what I
thought, and I did my best, too, though there were moments when I was bluffing
and I was sure that she could tell. “Is that what it really means to you?”
she’d ask, and I’d rub my chin and think about it before trying again.
Sometimes, though, it was her fault when I couldn’t
concentrate, what with that hand on my knee and all.
One Friday night I brought
her over for dinner at my house. My mom joined us for the main course, then
left the table and sat in the den so that we could be alone.
It was nice there, sitting
with Jamie, and I knew she felt the same way. She hadn’t been leaving her house
much, and this was a good change for her.
Since she’d told me about
her illness, Jamie had stopped wearing her hair in a bun, and it was still as
stunning as it had been the first time I’d seen her wear it down. She was
looking at the china cabinet—my mom had one of those cabinets with the lights
inside—when I reached across the table and took her hand.
“Thank you for coming over
tonight,” I said.
She turned her attention
back to me. “Thanks for inviting me.”
I paused. “How’s your father
holding up?”
Jamie sighed. “Not too well.
I worry about him a lot.”
“He loves you dearly, you
know.”
“I know.”
“So do I,” I said, and when
I did, she looked away. Hearing me say this seemed to
frighten her again.
“Will you keep coming over
to my house?” she asked. “Even later, you know, when . . . ?”
I squeezed her hand, not
hard, but enough to let her know that I meant what I said.
“As long as you want me to
come, I’ll be there.”
“We don’t have to read the
Bible anymore, if you don’t want to.”
“Yes,” I said softly, “I
think we do.”
She smiled. “You’re a good
friend, Landon. I don’t know what I’d do without you.”
She squeezed my hand,
returning the favor. Sitting across from me, she looked radiant.
“I love you, Jamie,” I said
again, but this time she wasn’t frightened. Instead our eyes met across the
table, and I watched as hers began to shine. She sighed and looked away,
running her hand through her hair, then turned to me again. I kissed her hand,
smiling in return.
“I love you, too,” she
finally whispered.
They were the words I’d been
praying to hear.
I don’t know if Jamie told Hegbert about her feelings for
me, but I somehow doubted it because his routine hadn’t
changed at all. It was his habit to leave the house whenever I came over after
school, and this continued. I would knock at the door and listen as Hegbert
explained to Jamie that he would be leaving and would be back in a couple of
hours. “Okay, Daddy,” I always heard her say, then I would wait for Hegbert to
open the door. Once he let me in, he would open the hallway closet and silently
pull out his coat and hat, buttoning the coat up all the way before he left the
house. His coat was old-fashioned, black and long, like a trench coat without
zippers, the kind that was fashionable earlier this century. He seldom spoke
directly to me, even after he learned that Jamie and I’d begun to read the
Bible together.
Though he still didn’t like
me in the house if he wasn’t there, he nonetheless allowed me to come in. I
knew that part of the reason had to do with the fact that he didn’t want Jamie
to get chilled by sitting on the porch, and the only other alternative was to
wait at the house while I was there. But I think Hegbert needed some time
alone, too, and that was the real reason for the change. He didn’t talk to me
about the rules of the house—I could see them in his eyes the first time he’d
said I could stay. I was allowed to stay in the living
room, that was all.
Jamie was still moving
around fairly well, though the winter was miserable. A cold streak blew in
during the last part of January that lasted nine days, followed by three
straight days of drenching rain. Jamie had no interest in leaving the house in
such weather, though after Hegbert had gone she and I might stand on the porch
for just a couple of minutes to breathe the fresh sea air. Whenever we did
this, I found myself worrying about her.
While we read the Bible,
people would knock at the door at least three times every day. People were
always dropping by, some with food, others just to say hello. Even Eric and
Margaret came over, and though Jamie wasn’t allowed to let them in, she did so
anyway, and we sat in the living room and talked a little, both of them unable
to meet her gaze.
They were both nervous, and
it took them a couple of minutes to finally get to the point. Eric had come to
apologize, he said, and he said that he couldn’t imagine why all this had
happened to her of all people. He also had something for her, and he set an
envelope on the table, his hand shaking. His voice was choked up as he spoke,
the words ringing with the most heartfelt emotion I’d ever
heard him express.
“You’ve got the biggest
heart of anyone I’ve ever met,” he said to Jamie, his voice cracking, “and even
though I took it for granted and wasn’t always nice to you, I wanted to let you
know how I feel. I’ve never been more sorry about anything in my life.” He
paused and swiped at the corner of his eye. “You’re the best person I’ll
probably ever know.”
As he was fighting back his
tears and sniffling, Margaret had already given in to hers and sat weeping on
the couch, unable to speak. When Eric had finished, Jamie wiped tears from her
cheeks, stood slowly, and smiled, opening her arms in what could only be called
a gesture of forgiveness. Eric went to her willingly, finally beginning to cry
openly as she gently caressed his hair, murmuring to him. The two of them held
each other for a long time as Eric sobbed until he was too exhausted to cry
anymore.
Then it was Margaret’s turn,
and she and Jamie did exactly the same thing.
When Eric and Margaret were
ready to leave, they pulled on their jackets and looked at Jamie one more time,
as if to remember her forever. I had no doubt that they wanted to think of her as she looked right then. In my mind she was
beautiful, and I know they felt the same way.
“Hang in there,” Eric said
on his way out the door. “I’ll be praying for you, and so will everybody else.”
Then he looked toward me, reached out, and patted me on the shoulder. “You too,”
he said, his eyes red. As I watched them leave, I knew I’d never been prouder
of either of them.
Later, when we opened the
envelope, we learned what Eric had done. Without telling us, he’d collected
over $400 dollars for the orphanage.
I waited for the miracle.
It hadn’t come.
In early February the pills
Jamie was taking were increased to help offset the heightened pain she was
feeling. The higher dosages made her dizzy, and twice she fell when walking to
the bathroom, one time hitting her head against the washbasin. Afterward she
insisted that the doctors cut back her medicine, and with reluctance they did.
Though she was able to walk normally, the pain she was feeling intensified, and
sometimes even raising her arm made her grimace. Leukemia is a disease of the blood, one that runs its course throughout a person’s
body. There was literally no escape from it as long as her heart kept beating.
But the disease weakened the
rest of her body as well, preying on her muscles, making even simple things
more difficult. In the first week of February she lost six pounds, and soon
walking became difficult for her, unless it was only for a short distance. That
was, of course, if she could put up with the pain, which in time she couldn’t.
She went back to the pills again, accepting the dizziness in place of pain.
Still we read the Bible.
Whenever I visited Jamie, I
would find her on the couch with the Bible already opened, and I knew that
eventually her father would have to carry her there if we wanted to continue.
Though she never said anything to me about it, we both knew exactly what it
meant.
I was running out of time,
and my heart was still telling me that there was something more I could do.
On February 14, Valentine’s Day, Jamie picked out a passage
from Corinthians that meant a lot to her. She told me that if she’d ever had
the chance, it was the passage she’d wanted read at her
wedding. This is what it said:
Jamie was the truest essence of that very description.
Three days later, when the temperature slightly warmed, I
showed her something wonderful, something I doubted she’d ever seen before,
something I knew she would want to see.
Eastern North Carolina is a
beautiful and special part of the country, blessed with temperate weather and,
for the most part, wonderful geography. Nowhere is this more evident than Bogue
Banks, an island right off the coast, near the place we grew up. Twenty-four
miles long and nearly a mile wide, this island is a fluke of nature, running
from east to west, hugging the coastline a half mile
offshore. Those who live there can witness spectacular sunrises and sunsets
every day of the year, both taking place over the expanse of the mighty
Atlantic Ocean.
Jamie was bundled up
heavily, standing beside me on the edge of the Iron Steamer Pier as this
perfect southern evening descended. I pointed off into the distance and told
her to wait. I could see our breaths, two of hers to every one of mine. I had
to support Jamie as we stood there—she seemed lighter than the leaves of a tree
that had fallen in autumn—but I knew that it would be worth it.
In time the glowing,
cratered moon began its seeming rise from the sea, casting a prism of light
across the slowly darkening water, splitting itself into a thousand different
parts, each more beautiful than the last. At exactly the same moment, the sun
was meeting the horizon in the opposite direction, turning the sky red and
orange and yellow, as if heaven above had suddenly opened its gates and let all
its beauty escape its holy confines. The ocean turned golden silver as the
shifting colors reflected off it, waters rippling and sparkling with the
changing light, the vision glorious, almost like the beginning of time. The sun continued to lower itself, casting its glow as far as
the eye could see, before finally, slowly, vanishing beneath the waves. The
moon continued its slow drift upward, shimmering as it turned a thousand
different shades of yellow, each paler than the last, before finally becoming
the color of the stars.
Jamie watched all this in
silence, my arm tight around her, her breathing shallow and weak. As the sky
was finally turning to black and the first twinkling lights began to appear in
the distant southern sky, I took her in my arms. I gently kissed both her
cheeks and then, finally, her lips.
“That,” I said, “is exactly
how I feel about you.”
A week later Jamie’s trips to the hospital became more
regular, although she insisted that she didn’t want to stay there overnight. “I
want to die at home,” was all she said. Since the doctors couldn’t do anything
for her, they had no choice but to accept her wishes.
At least for the time being.
“I’ve been thinking about the past few months,” I said to
her.
We were sitting in the
living room, holding hands as we read the Bible. Her face
was growing thinner, her hair beginning to lose its luster. Yet her eyes, those
soft blue eyes, were as lovely as ever.
I don’t think I’d ever seen
someone as beautiful.
“I’ve been thinking about
them, too,” she said.
“You knew, from the first
day in Miss Garber’s class that I was going to do the play, didn’t you. When
you looked at me and smiled?”
She nodded. “Yes.”
“And when I asked you to the
homecoming dance, you made me promise that I wouldn’t fall in love, but you
knew that I was going to, didn’t you?”
She had a mischievous gleam
in her eye. “Yes.”
“How did you know?”
She shrugged without answering,
and we sat together for a few moments, watching the rain as it blew against the
windows.
“When I told you that I
prayed for you,” she finally said to me, “what did you think I was talking
about?”
The progression of her disease continued, speeding up as
March approached. She was taking more medicine for pain,
and she felt too sick to her stomach to keep down much food. She was growing
weak, and it looked like she’d have to go to the hospital to stay, despite her
wishes.
It was my mother and father
who changed all that.
My father had driven home
from Washington, hurriedly leaving although Congress was still in session.
Apparently my mother had called him and told him that if he didn’t come home
immediately, he might as well stay in Washington forever.
When my mother told him what
was happening, my father said that Hegbert would never accept his help, that
the wounds were too deep, that it was too late to do anything.
“This isn’t about your
family, or even about Reverend Sullivan, or anything that happened in the
past,” she said to him, refusing to accept his answer. “This is about our son,
who happens to be in love with a little girl who needs our help. And you’re
going to find a way to help her.”
I don’t know what my father
said to Hegbert or what promises he had to make or how much the whole thing
eventually cost. All I know is that Jamie was soon surrounded by expensive equipment, was supplied with all the medicine she
needed, and was watched by two full-time nurses while a doctor peeked in on her
several times a day.
Jamie would be able to stay
at home.
That night I cried on my
father’s shoulder for the first time in my life.
“Do you have any regrets?” I asked her. She was in her bed
under the covers, a tube in her arm feeding her the medication she needed. Her
face was pale, her body feather light. She could barely walk, and when she did,
she now had to be supported by someone else.
“We all have regrets,
Landon,” she said, “but I’ve led a wonderful life.”
“How can you say that?” I
cried out, unable to hide my anguish. “With all that’s happening to you?”
She squeezed my hand, her
grip weak, smiling tenderly at me.
“This,” she admitted as she
looked around her room, “could be better.”
Despite my tears I laughed,
then immediately felt guilty for doing so. I was supposed to be supporting her,
not the other way around. Jamie went on.
“But other than that, I’ve
been happy, Landon. I really have. I’ve had a special
father who taught me about God. I can look back and know that I couldn’t have
tried to help other people any more than I did.” She paused and met my eyes.
“I’ve even fallen in love and had someone love me back.”
I kissed her hand when she
said it, then held it against my cheek.
“It’s not fair,” I said.
She didn’t answer.
“Are you still afraid?” I asked.
“Yes.”
“I’m afraid, too,” I said.
“I know. And I’m sorry.”
“What can I do?” I asked
desperately. “I don’t know what I’m supposed to do anymore.”
“Will you read to me?”
I nodded, though I didn’t know
whether I’d be able to make it through the next page without breaking down.
Please, Lord, tell me
what to do!
“Mom?” I said later that night.
“Yes?”
We were sitting on the sofa
in the den, the fire blazing before us. Earlier in the day Jamie had fallen
asleep while I read to her, and knowing she needed her
rest, I slipped out of her room. But before I did, I kissed her gently on the
cheek. It was harmless, but Hegbert had walked in as I’d done so, and I had
seen the conflicting emotions in his eyes. He looked at me, knowing that I
loved his daughter but also knowing that I’d broken one of the rules of his
house, even an unspoken one. Had she been well, I know he would never have
allowed me back inside. As it was, I showed myself to the door.
I couldn’t blame him, not
really. I found that spending time with Jamie sapped me of the energy to feel
hurt by his demeanor. If Jamie had taught me anything over these last few
months, she’d shown me that actions—not thoughts or intentions—were the way to
judge others, and I knew that Hegbert would allow me in the following day. I
was thinking about all this as I sat next to my mother on the sofa.
“Do you think we have a
purpose in life?” I asked.
It was the first time I’d
asked her such a question, but these were unusual times.
“I’m not sure I understand
what you’re asking,” she said, frowning.
“I mean—how do you know what
you’re supposed to do?”
“Are you
asking me about spending time with Jamie?”
I nodded, though I was still
confused. “Sort of. I know I’m doing the right thing, but . . .
something’s missing. I spend time with her and we talk and read the Bible, but
. . .”
I paused, and my mother
finished my thought for me.
“You think you should be
doing more?”
I nodded.
“I don’t know that there’s
anything more you can do, sweetheart,” she said gently.
“Then why do I feel the way
I do?”
She moved a little closer on
the sofa, and we watched the flames together.
“I think it’s because you’re
frightened and you feel helpless, and even though you’re trying, things
continue to get harder and harder—for the both of you. And the more you try,
the more hopeless things seem.”
“Is there any way to stop
feeling this way?”
She put her arm around me
and pulled me closer. “No,” she said softly, “there isn’t.”
The next day Jamie couldn’t get out of bed. Because she was
too weak now to walk even with support, we read the Bible in her room.
She fell asleep within
minutes.
Another week went by and Jamie grew steadily worse, her
body weakening. Bedridden, she looked smaller, almost like a little girl again.
“Jamie,” I pleaded, “what
can I do for you?”
Jamie, my sweet Jamie, was
sleeping for hours at a time now, even as I talked to her. She didn’t move at
the sound of my voice; her breaths were rapid and weak.
I sat beside the bed and watched
her for a long time, thinking how much I loved her. I held her hand close to my
heart, feeling the boniness of her fingers. Part of me wanted to cry right
then, but instead I laid her hand back down and turned to face the window.
Why, I wondered, had my
world suddenly unraveled as it had? Why had all this happened to someone like
her? I wondered if there was a greater lesson in what was happening. Was it
all, as Jamie would say, simply part of the Lord’s plan? Did the Lord want me
to fall in love with her? Or was that something of my own volition? The longer
Jamie slept, the more I felt her presence beside me, yet the answers to these
questions were no clearer than they had been before.
Outside, the last of the
morning rain had passed. It had been a gloomy day, but now
the late afternoon sunlight was breaking through the clouds. In the cool spring
air I saw the first signs of nature coming back to life. The trees outside were
budding, the leaves waiting for just the right moment to uncoil and open themselves
to yet another summer season.
On the nightstand by her bed
I saw the collection of items that Jamie held close to her heart. There were
photographs of her father, holding Jamie as a young child and standing outside
of school on her first day of kindergarten; there was a collection of cards
that children of the orphanage had sent. Sighing, I reached for them and opened
the card on top of the stack.
Written in crayon, it said
simply:
Please get better soon. I miss you.
It was signed by Lydia, the girl who’d fallen asleep in
Jamie’s lap on Christmas Eve. The second card expressed the same sentiments,
but what really caught my eye was the picture that the child, Roger, had drawn.
He’d drawn a bird, soaring above a rainbow.
Choking up, I closed the
card. I couldn’t bear to look any further, and as I put the stack back where it had been before, I noticed a newspaper clipping,
next to her water glass. I reached for the article and saw that it was about
the play, published in the Sunday paper the day after we’d finished. In the
photograph above the text, I saw the only picture that had ever been taken of
the two of us.
It seemed so long ago. I
brought the article nearer to my face. As I stared, I remembered the way I felt
when I had seen her that night. Peering closely at her image, I searched for
any sign that she suspected what would come to pass. I knew she did, but her
expression that night betrayed none of it. Instead, I saw only a radiant
happiness. In time I sighed and set aside the clipping.
The Bible still lay open
where I’d left off, and although Jamie was sleeping, I felt the need to read
some more. Eventually I came across another passage. This is what it said:
The words made me choke up again, and just
as I was about to cry, the meaning of it suddenly became clear.
God had finally answered me,
and I suddenly knew what I had to do.
I couldn’t have made it to the church any faster, even if
I’d had a car. I took every shortcut I could, racing through people’s
backyards, jumping fences, and in one case cutting through someone’s garage and
out the side door. Everything I’d learned about the town growing up came into
play, and although I was never a particularly good athlete, on this day I was
unstoppable, propelled by what I had to do.
I didn’t care how I looked
when I arrived because I suspected Hegbert wouldn’t care, either. When I
finally entered the church, I slowed to a walk, trying to catch my breath as I
made my way to the back, toward his office.
Hegbert looked up when he
saw me, and I knew why he was here. He didn’t invite me in, he simply looked
away, back toward the window again. At home he’d been dealing with her illness
by cleaning the house almost obsessively. Here, though, papers were scattered
across the desk, and books were strewn about the room as if
no one had straightened up for weeks. I knew that this was the place he thought
about Jamie; this was the place where Hegbert came to cry.
“Reverend?” I said softly.
He didn’t answer, but I went
in anyway.
“I’d like to be alone,” he
croaked.
He looked old and beaten, as
weary as the Israelites described in David’s Psalms. His face was drawn, and
his hair had grown thinner since December. Even more than I, perhaps, he had to
keep up his spirits around Jamie, and the stress of doing so was wearing him
down.
I marched right up to his
desk, and he glanced at me before turning back to the window.
“Please,” he said to me. His
tone was defeated, as though he didn’t have the strength to confront even me.
“I’d like to talk to you,” I
said firmly. “I wouldn’t ask unless it was very important.”
Hegbert sighed, and I sat in
the chair I had sat in before, when I’d asked him if he would let me take Jamie
out for New Year’s Eve.
He listened as I told him
what was on my mind.
When I was finished, Hegbert
turned to me. I don’t know what he was thinking, but
thankfully, he didn’t say no. Instead he wiped his eyes with his fingers and
turned toward the window.
Even he, I think, was too
shocked to speak.
Again I ran, again I didn’t tire, my purpose giving me the
strength I needed to go on. When I reached Jamie’s house, I rushed in the door
without knocking, and the nurse who’d been in her bedroom came out to see what
had caused the racket. Before she could speak, I did.
“Is she awake?” I asked,
euphoric and terrified at the same time.
“Yes,” the nurse said
cautiously. “When she woke up, she wondered where you were.”
I apologized for my
disheveled appearance and thanked her, then asked if she wouldn’t mind leaving
us alone. I walked into Jamie’s room, partially closing the door behind me. She
was pale, so very pale, but her smile let me know she was still fighting.
“Hello, Landon,” she said,
her voice faint, “thank you for coming back.”
I pulled up a chair and sat
next to her, taking her hand in mine. Seeing her lying there made
something tighten deep in my stomach, making me almost want to cry.
“I was here earlier, but you
were asleep,” I said.
“I know . . . I’m
sorry. I just can’t seem to help it anymore.”
“It’s okay, really.”
She lifted her hand slightly
off the bed, and I kissed it, then leaned forward and kissed her cheek as well.
“Do you love me?” I asked
her.
She smiled. “Yes.”
“Do you want me to be
happy?” As I asked her this, I felt my heart beginning to race.
“Of course I do.”
“Will you do something for
me, then?”
She looked away, sadness
crossing her features. “I don’t know if I can anymore,” she said.
“But if you could, would
you?”
I cannot adequately describe
the intensity of what I was feeling at that moment. Love, anger, sadness, hope,
and fear, whirling together, sharpened by the nervousness I was feeling. Jamie
looked at me curiously, and my breaths became shallower. Suddenly I knew that
I’d never felt as strongly for another person as I did at that moment. As I
returned her gaze, this simple realization made me wish for
the millionth time that I could make all this go away. Had it been possible, I
would have traded my life for hers. I wanted to tell her my thoughts, but the
sound of her voice suddenly silenced the emotions inside me.
“Yes,” she finally said, her
voice weak yet somehow still full of promise. “I would.”
Finally getting control of
myself, I kissed her again, then brought my hand to her face, gently running my
fingers over her cheek. I marveled at the softness of her skin, the gentleness
I saw in her eyes. Even now she was perfect.
My throat began to tighten
again, but as I said, I knew what I had to do. Since I had to accept that it
was not within my power to cure her, what I wanted to do was give her something
that she’d always wanted.
It was what my heart had
been telling me to do all along.
Jamie, I understood then,
had already given me the answer I’d been searching for, the one my heart had
needed to find. She’d told me the answer as we’d sat outside Mr. Jenkins’s
office, the night we’d asked him about doing the play.
I smiled softly, and she
returned my affection with a slight squeeze of my hand, as
if trusting me in what I was about to do. Encouraged, I leaned closer and took
a deep breath. When I exhaled, these were the words that flowed with my breath.
“Will you marry me?”
When
I was seventeen, my life changed forever.
As I walk the streets of
Beaufort forty years later, thinking back on that year of my life, I remember
everything as clearly as if it were all still unfolding before my very eyes.
I remember Jamie saying yes
to my breathless question and how we both began to cry together. I remember
talking to both Hegbert and my parents, explaining to them what I needed to do.
They thought I was doing it only for Jamie, and all three of them tried to talk
me out of it, especially when they realized that Jamie had said yes. What they
didn’t understand, and I had to make clear to them, was
that I needed to do it for me.
I was in love with her, so
deeply in love that I didn’t care if she was sick. I didn’t care that we
wouldn’t have long together. None of those things mattered to me. All I cared
about was doing something that my heart had told me was the right thing to do.
In my mind it was the first time God had ever spoken directly to me, and I knew
with certainty that I wasn’t going to disobey.
I know that some of you may
wonder if I was doing it out of pity. Some of the more cynical may even wonder
if I did it because she’d be gone soon anyway and I wasn’t committing much. The
answer to both questions is no. I would have married Jamie Sullivan no matter
what happened in the future. I would have married Jamie Sullivan if the miracle
I was praying for had suddenly come true. I knew it at the moment I asked her,
and I still know it today.
Jamie was more than just the
woman I loved. In that year Jamie helped me become the man I am today. With her
steady hand she showed me how important it was to help others; with her patience
and kindness she showed me what life is really all about. Her cheerfulness
and optimism, even in times of sickness, was the most amazing thing I have ever
witnessed.
We were married by Hegbert
in the Baptist church, my father standing beside me as the best man. That was
another thing she did. In the South it’s a tradition to have your father beside
you, but for me it’s a tradition that wouldn’t have had much meaning before
Jamie came into my life. Jamie had brought my father and me together again; somehow
she’d also managed to heal some of the wounds between our two families. After
what he’d done for me and for Jamie, I knew in the end that my father was
someone I could always count on, and as the years passed our relationship grew
steadily stronger until his death.
Jamie also taught me the
value of forgiveness and the transforming power that it offers. I realized this
the day that Eric and Margaret had come to her house. Jamie held no grudges.
Jamie led her life the way the Bible taught.
Jamie was not only the angel
who saved Tom Thornton, she was the angel who saved us all.
Just as she’d wanted, the church was bursting with people.
Over two hundred guests were inside, and more than that
waited outside the doors as we were married on March 12, 1959. Because we were
married on such short notice, there wasn’t time to make many arrangements, and
people came out of the woodwork to make the day as special as they could,
simply by showing up to support us. I saw everyone I knew—Miss Garber, Eric,
Margaret, Eddie, Sally, Carey, Angela, and even Lew and his grandmother—and
there wasn’t a dry eye in the house when the entrance music began. Although
Jamie was weak and hadn’t moved from her bed in two weeks, she insisted on
walking down the aisle so that her father could give her away. “It’s very
important to me, Landon,” she’d said. “It’s part of my dream, remember?” Though
I assumed it would be impossible, I simply nodded. I couldn’t help but wonder
at her faith.
I knew she planned on
wearing the dress she’d worn in the Playhouse the night of the play. It was the
only white dress that was available on such short notice, though I knew it
would hang more loosely than it had before. While I was wondering how Jamie
would look in the dress, my father laid his hand on my shoulder as we stood
before the congregation.
“I’m proud of you, son.”
I
nodded. “I’m proud of you, too, Dad.”
It was the first time I’d
ever said those words to him.
My mom was in the front row,
dabbing her eyes with her handkerchief when the “Wedding March” began. The
doors opened and I saw Jamie, seated in her wheelchair, a nurse by her side.
With all the strength she had left, Jamie stood shakily as her father supported
her. Then Jamie and Hegbert slowly made their way down the aisle, while
everyone in the church sat silently in wonder. Halfway down the aisle, Jamie
suddenly seemed to tire, and they stopped while she caught her breath. Her eyes
closed, and for a moment I didn’t think she could go on. I know that no more
than ten or twelve seconds elapsed, but it seemed much longer, and finally she
nodded slightly. With that, Jamie and Hegbert started moving again, and I felt
my heart surge with pride.
It was, I remembered
thinking, the most difficult walk anyone ever had to make.
In every way, a walk to remember.
The nurse had rolled the
wheelchair up front as Jamie and her father made their way toward me. When she
finally reached my side, there were gasps of joy and everyone spontaneously
began to clap. The nurse rolled the wheelchair into
position, and Jamie sat down again, spent. With a smile I lowered myself to my
knees so that I would be level with her. My father then did the same.
Hegbert, after kissing Jamie
on the cheek, retrieved his Bible in order to begin the ceremony. All business now,
he seemed to have abandoned his role as Jamie’s father to something more
distant, where he could keep his emotions in check. Yet I could see him
struggling as he stood before us. He perched his glasses on his nose and opened
the Bible, then looked at Jamie and me. Hegbert towered over us, and I could
tell that he hadn’t anticipated our being so much lower. For a moment he stood
before us, almost confused, then surprisingly decided to kneel as well. Jamie
smiled and reached for his free hand, then reached for mine, linking us
together.
Hegbert began the ceremony
in the traditional way, then read the passage in the Bible that Jamie had once
pointed out to me. Knowing how weak she was, I thought he would have us recite
the vows right away, but once more Hegbert surprised me. He looked at Jamie and
me, then out to the congregation, then back to us again, as if searching for
the right words.
He
cleared his throat, and his voice rose so that everyone could hear it. This is
what he said:
“As a father, I’m supposed
to give away my daughter, but I’m not sure that I’m able to do this.”
The congregation went
silent, and Hegbert nodded at me, willing me to be patient. Jamie squeezed my
hand in support.
“I can no more give Jamie
away than I can give away my heart. But what I can do is to let another share
in the joy that she has always given me. May God’s blessings be with you both.”
It was then that he set
aside the Bible. He reached out, offering his hand to mine, and I took it,
completing the circle.
With that he led us through
our vows. My father handed me the ring my mother had helped me pick out, and
Jamie gave me one as well. We slipped them on our fingers. Hegbert watched us
as we did so, and when we were finally ready, he pronounced us husband and
wife. I kissed Jamie softly as my mother began to cry, then held Jamie’s hand
in mine. In front of God and everyone else, I’d promised my love and devotion,
in sickness and in health, and I’d never felt so good about
anything.
It was, I remember, the most
wonderful moment of my life.
It is now forty years later, and I can still remember
everything from that day. I may be older and wiser, I may have lived another
life since then, but I know that when my time eventually comes, the memories of
that day will be the final images that float through my mind. I still love her,
you see, and I’ve never removed my ring. In all these years I’ve never felt the
desire to do so.
I breathe deeply, taking in
the fresh spring air. Though Beaufort has changed and I have changed, the air
itself has not. It’s still the air of my childhood, the air of my seventeenth
year, and when I finally exhale, I’m fifty-seven once more. But this is okay. I
smile slightly, looking toward the sky, knowing there’s one thing I still
haven’t told you: I now believe, by the way, that miracles can happen.
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