So I say it back, but I got to ask,. I don’t understand why I—
Because I said so, alright? she snaps. And like she doesn’t like it a bit herself, she says,
And because if you don’t say it, we’ll have to take you back to that shithole you came from.
That is all she has to say. I tell her, I will say I’m from Memphis. You can count on me.
Good. Thank you, and she takes a long drink, sets it down. And whatever you do, don’t
tell anybody we’ve got liquor in this house. Even if they ask.
Tom walks back in, nodding his head. He sits in his chair. They should be home any day
now. They’re saying the reception will be a couple of days after that, so they can rest. Tom looks
at me like he is sorry. Meg, there’s something we need to talk to you about.
It’s already been taken care of, Lucille says. We girls understand each other well. Isn’t
that right, Meg?
Yes, ma’am. We sure do.
Chapter 22
On the day of the party, I wake up and scoot down to the kitchen. Willy May isn’t here, but a
newspaper is open on the kitchen table. It is a fat one, called The Memphis Commercial Appeal,
and above a alert that Mrs. Jones’s bridge club is postponed, I read:
“MR. AND MRS. THOMAS HEIDELBERG AND FAMILY RETURN FROM SIX-
WEEK TOUR OF EUROPE ON RMS AQUITANIA AND SS DIXIE. The family will be
receiving guests at Cottonwood Plantation Saturday at 11:00 a.m.”
The people must be something, to put it in the newspaper like that. I fix me a leftover
biscuit with some butter we keep soft on the counter. I am reading the funny papers when Lucille
comes in. She says, It’s showtime, Meg.
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Yesterday, she made me rehearse until the words stopped making sense: Mrs. Georgia
Tann, the Tennessee Children’s Home Society, Memphis, Tennessee. I said it and said it until I
was damn blue in the face. And then last night after some liquor drinks, she pulled me aside and
said if I don’t say it, she will snatch me bald-headed and drive me right straight back to the
orphanage without telling Tom.
Well that one took me by such surprise, I had to go lie down a minute. Tom is the best
part of my day. I am learning a thing or two about Lucille after she has had a few of those liquor
drinks.
Upstairs, I see the pink Shirley Temple dress laying out on my bed. With all I have ate
this week, I am apt to split the thing in two. She helps me pull it over my head and step into a
three-layer petticoat that goes underneath. That petticoat makes it a even tighter squeeze. Also it
is itching all up my legs and it is too short and I can’t breathe good—
What is this material even called? Because it does not stretch a bit.
Taffeta. She says it flat like that. Then she brushes my hair and puts a prissy pink bow in
back I also hate. She says, If it’s any consolation, the dress I’m wearing makes me look like a
suffragette from 1910.
I don’t know what that is, but I hope it is itchy.
I give it one last try. Are you sure, Lucille? The bluebird dress fits me really good.
I’m sure it does, she says. But we need you to look young.
How young? Lord knows, I am already small for eleven.
Try for infantile.
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After I pull on stockings and buckle the white shoes, I find Tom standing around in the
front sitting room. He has got on a dark suit and a tie. He tells me, You look very nice, Meg.
Don’t be nervous. Way he is gripping the back of the chair, I think he is the one with nerves.
I do my best not to sulk.
Sure enough, Lucille’s dress looks like something Miss Garnett would’ve wore. It is a
paste-colored number with zero sparkle to it. Pearls are clipped onto her ears instead of the usual
razzle-dazzle, and she has just a dab of red lipstick on. She looks flat-out disgusted by herself.
Tom, though, practically melts all over. His shoulders, his hands, even his eyeballs relax.
You look perfect, darling, he tells her.
Lucille sighs and says, I know.
We load up in the car and Tom drives us down the lane with the trees bowing over like
we are royal somethings. He turns the wooden wheel and we pass a field and a old falling-down
shack. Then he turns again and soon I see a big white house ahead. This one is a lot larger and
wider in size than ours and is more rectangular, with porches hanging off the top and the bottom.
Parked all over the grass are black motorcars, along with some mule wagons and a couple horse-
and-carriages with colored men leaning on them. It reminds me of a old postcard I saw of one of
those big houses from before the Civil War.
I am getting a good case of nerves. This looks like more people than even the last View
Day.
Tom parks the car under a shade tree. Beside him Lucille opens a compact but frowns
and closes it quick. We get out, and the three of us begin our trudge toward the house. They both
walk slow like we are headed to a funeral. I have never been to one myself, but I have heard. If
one of us was singing “Oh Peter Go Ring Dem Bells,” it would not feel odd. Up the big front
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steps we go, and I see there on the side of the house is a sign that says Cottonwood Plantation,
1845. Tom takes a deep breath and pushes the heavy front door open.
It is like a slap in the face! Noisy noise and people’s bodies, a man’s striped fat belly
straight in my nose. For a second none of us can hardly move. I myself have not been to a lot of
parties before or ever. I crane on tiptoes to see around the people. Best I can tell is we are in a
wide, long hall. Rooms off to the left and right hold more people than furniture to sit on. All the
lights are burning bright, even with it sunny outside. Another lady bumps me and I got to hop out
the way so I can stay behind Tom. I would hold his hand if I knew the man a little better.
Since I have to look up to see everybody, mostly all I see is a good amount of chins.
Folks clap Tom on the shoulder and tell him, Mighty good to have you back, Tom, and I know
your mama’s happy to have you back at Cottonwood. Tom just nods and moves us to a part of
the wide hall where we can breathe. Over my head, I hear, PARIS! Paris costs a fortune!
Lucille has let Tom hold her hand without swatting it off. They both look like they might
be sick. I just want to get this hot, squeezing pink thing off my body. I spot Willy May, not in her
regular white uniform but a fancy gray one, holding a silver tray of something. Lord, that frilly
thing on her head looks itchy too. Fact, I see four or five colored people milling around with
trays. Tom does not like coloreds holding things for him, but these other white people don’t seem
to mind it a bit. Then I spot some kids! In a room off to the left, and sure enough they are girls
and several look my age, in fancy dresses with ribbons down their backs. I want to go look at
them closer, but a big man is coming right at us.
He is even taller than Tom, and older and gray-headed and a lot thicker all over. He
moves slow like everything hurts. He beats on Tom’s back harder than could feel good. Theah
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you ah, we been looking fo you, Tom. He calls up to the air, Mama, come ovah heah and see oah
son!
Like he is dreading the answer, Tom says, How was your trip, Daddy?
Ahduous. Angina stahted up somewheah in the Atlantic and I thought we’d nevah get
back to Mahshall County. His voice is gravelly. He talks without any R’s. I move behind Tom’s
leg to practice my words, but I am nervous all over in this tight baby dress.
Lucille moves up to the man and yells, Welcome home, Big Tom. It’s so good to see y’all
made it back safely.
This Big Tom waves his hand in her face, like he is cleaning a dirty window. Wiping her
words off like they might set a stain. Theah comes Mama. Come hug yoah son’s neck, Mama, he
calls.
It is like the Red Sea parting. Here a woman comes with her arms held out stiff like the
figures in the Nativity scene reaching for Baby Jesus. She is heavy bottomed and shorter than
anybody but me with wrinkles all over her face, but her hair is black as Willy May’s. Black to
where you wonder if they were dyed to match.
Tom says, Hello, Mama—
But she says, Where is she, is the baby here? She smiles and waggles her fingers at Tom.
Before he can talk, Lucille juts forward again. Welcome home, Isabelle, we’re so happy
you arrived safe—
The lady ignores her. Willy May said you brought in some help for the baby. Is she here
now?
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Well I do not like this baby talk at all. Isabelle, we have a big surprise for you and Big
Tom today, Lucille says. We’d like you to meet Margot. And she nudges me in the back, so I step
forward. We call her Little Meg for short.
The short old woman looks at me and says, Hello, Meg, we’re happy to have your help.
Now, Tom, where’s the baby? I’m confused, Willy May said—
No, I’m telling you we adopted Meg instead of a baby, Lucille says.
The lady finally looks Lucille in the face and says, You what.
Tom and I adopted Little Meg from the agency you sent us to up in Memphis. Lucille’s
voice is pitched higher than regular. What happened was, when we went up there to pick out a
baby like you said, we saw the poor selection they had—Lucille wrinkles her nose. You wouldn’t
believe how sickly those little things were. So we told Mrs. Georgia Tann we’d prefer to wait
until she has some healthier ones in and we were just about to leave when—she sets her hand on
my shoulder—we saw Meg. And that was it.
What was it? the lady says. Why, we just fell in love with her at first sight, and to prove it,
Lucille reaches down and takes holt of my hand. Hers is soft and shaking a little. Because she’s
just so special, isn’t that right, Little Meg?
Way Lucille is staring down at me with such adoring eyes, I feel dizzy. But I manage to
get it out of me. Mrs. Georgia Tann, Tennessee Children’s Home Society, I blurt out.
The old man cups his ear and says, Whut? Whuts she saying?
The old lady looks up at Tom. What in the name of heaven is going on here, Son?
Tom is sweating on his neck, but his face has gone white. When the lady sees she is not
going to get anything out of him, she turns back to Lucille. I gave you three thousand—you had
clear instructions to adopt a baby—
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I know—I realize this all sounds highly unusual, Isabelle but—
—not bring home a full-grown child!
—these were very, very special circumstances. Lucille squats down so she is looking
straight at me. She tucks some hair behind my ear the way a real mama would, staring at me with
those green eyes. If I was not smarter, this would be damn confusing.
The old lady Isabelle’s mouth is a wrinkled red knot. I am starting to get scared. Around
us, folks keep touching her arm to come visit, tell how much Paris costs.
I knew it, the old lady says. I knew I should have gone up there and done it myself. That
money was for a baby, so you’d start acting like a grown woman, Lucille, not a wild Indian
living up in New York City—
Lucille gives Tom a look like will you please say something? —
—and learn some matuhity, for God’s sake, by taking on the responsibility of a baby!
Tom clears his throat, and finally speaks up. Mama, please listen. I realize she’s . . . not
what you had in mind. But when we met Meg . . . she just stole both our hearts away.
The way he says that, it sounds realer than what actually happened. Like the minute we
met, we simply fell to tears over each other. Hugging at the Orphan, oh yes, let’s be a normal,
regular family. And though I am starting to understand the lie they are telling this old dyed-
haired woman, I do feel a little like crying. Especially when Tom lays his hand on my shoulder.
Lucille keeps saying how these are special circumstances because I am so special.
Please, Tom says. Just give Meg a chance, Mama. For me.
My heart is pounding while I wait to see what this lady decides.
After a spell, she looks at me. Her eyes are black but they are not mean looking. She
takes a deep breath in and out like she is letting go of something heavy.
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You should’ve talked to me first, Son, she says. She cups her hand under my chin and
clucks her tongue. Skinny as a rail, outgrown your dress. Look at those clear blue eyes.
I tell her, I sure am glad to be out of that Tennessee Children’s Home Society.
You’ll see, Mama. She really is something, Tom says.
She clasps her son’s hand between her own. Holds it like she does not love anybody more
in the world. She says, We’ll discuss this later, Son. Meg, you go on over yonder across the hall
and play with the cousins. Tom, there some folks here who want to tell you hello.
Tom nods at me to go on, so I walk slow across the hall. I feel like I have just run a race
for my life and now I got to go meet strangers. I stand in the doorway and see eight girls are
sitting in a circle on a plush rug. They all know each other good . . . I change my mind, I’d rather
stay with Tom and talk about our special circumstances and how special I am. But when I look
back, the crowd has swallowed him up.
I go in the room and I ease down on the rug behind the circle. All the girls look over at
me at once. The one I am nearest to looks my age. She is on the pudgy side with a big blue bow
in her dark hair. She has on a long white dress and white stockings like mine. All I can think to
say is, You look very clean.
Who’s your mamandaddy? she says, like it is all one person. Mamandaddy.
Lucille and Tom, I say. I am Meg, they adopted me from Mrs. Georgia Tann’s orphanage
in Memphis. I figure I might as well use it for all I practiced. I believe they paid good money too.
You mean you’re a real live orphan? A little one across the circle knees her way over to
me and plants her sticky hands on either of my cheeks. Did your mama send you there for acting
up at the dinner table?
There is no point in getting into it. Yes. So you better be a good girl from now on.
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Well I have got their attention now. Another little one looks at me wide-eyed like can that
really happen? Before I know it, they are crawling all over me and touching my hair, asking was
it awful, did they beat me with a broom handle, was it like Orphan Annie in the funny papers?
Lord, who knew this would get you the star treatment.
After a while, the pudgy one, Marybeth, puts a hand up and says, Y’all, that’s enough, let
the poor girl breathe. Meg, don’t mind them, they’re just curious.
And like that, they forget all about the orphan business because Marybeth said so. We
start to play a card game called go fishing, and then Willy May lays a red-checked cloth on the
rug like it is a indoor picnic. She pats my head and says, How you doin’, Meg? and I am proud
that she acts like she knows me. She serves us little plates of ham sandwiches and fruit floating
in a red jelly mold with whipped cream on top.
While we eat, Marybeth covers her mouth chewing and says, Here’s how you and me are
related. My daddy is your daddy’s big brother, which makes you and me first cousins. She has
long curled eyelashes she bats when she talks. That’s real important in a family, understand?
I nod.
Now our daddies get along just fine long as nobody’s talking about Democrats or going
to church or slaves in the war. But your mama and my mama are like oil. And. Water. She flaps
her pudgy hand at me. And don’t even get me started on Grandmama. She can hardly stand the
looks of Lucille. I’ll tell you about that later. Now how old are you?
I tell her, I am eleven and a half.
I am eleven and three-quarters! she says with a big smile. That makes us twin first
cousins, so we’ll be doing the same lessons and grades at school!
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I ask her where is it and when does it start, school can’t start soon enough for me.
Marybeth says it’s not but a twenty-minute drive and Mr. Oney will stick us all in the one big
car, but for heaven’s sake don’t talk about school yet when we’ve got a whole nother month of
summer to enjoy.
Then she leans in and says, Now look, I am only telling you this as a friend, but that dress
you got on is too small and too baby for your age. Now come on. She grabs my hand in her fat
one and runs us out the back door. Gets us behind a tree and we both yank our heavy petticoats
off under our dresses, and then off go our shoes and the hot stockings and she says don’t tell on
her but she was apt to pop in those church clothes, and here it’s not even Sunday. It is just good
to breathe again without that petticoat!
In the backyard, we push the littler cousins on a swing set. They get twenty pushes each,
and no throwing a fit when your turn is over, Marybeth tells them. They do exactly as she orders
them to. Not one calls me crazy or Nutmeg, no sir, around here I am known as Cousin Meg. I
think it has a nice ring to it.
When the little ones get swept off for naps by the colored ladies, me and Marybeth get
the swings to ourselves. We stand on the seats and swing high as we can. Oh I forgot what it was
like to swing high! Pumping and laughing, swinging and laughing. It is so fun! I whisper that old
poem, it feels good and right to say it again—
Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the
words and never stops at all!
While we swing high, two older girls over by a tree whisper about us. They think they’re
too old now to enjoy a swing anymore. They are both dark-headed like Marybeth and wear
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matching red dresses. Whispering and eyeing us, they are missing a good time for growing up
like that.
After a while, Marybeth says it is time to go. So we get behind the tree and put it all back
on, which is not easy when you are hot. Stockings stick. Marybeth says she has got to go find
that mama of hers, that she will talk at a party until the cows come home if you let her. I follow
her inside and look through the remaining people. Then I rush over to Tom and Lucille. Soon as
she sees me, Lucille says, Thank God, and that it is time to go. And the three of us walk to the
car and ride home like we are a regular ole family.
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