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Chapter 64 of 64

Chapter 46

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[Section opener]

Meg

Chapter 46

On the morning I am to leave the red house for good, I lay my View Day dress out on the bed.

The white scratchy one I swore to Baby Jesus I would never, ever wear again. I hold my breath

so as not to smell the sad place it came from and I will not look at myself in the mirror either

when I get it on. I don’t want to see it. I am not sure why I even kept the damn thing, except for

deep down I knew it would come to this.

Next, I start taking those nice things off the hangers. She said they are mine to take.

Those fancy shopping bags are long gone so I pull out my old paper sack with the portraits of the

volunteer ladies still in there. I can’t stand to look at them either. In goes the bluebird dress, the

lamb’s wool sweaterette, the stockings, the socks, the nightgowns, I even stick a plush towel in.

Even though I know Miss Garnett will jerk them away like she does all the girls. Who knows

where in the hell they go to. Maybe she gives them to better children. They will not appreciate

them as much as me.

When I get to the pink bathing suit, I take a deep smell of it. It still smells strong of lake

from me and Tom’s last swim together. Tom’s Lake, I think of it now. I decide I will wear it up

under my dress so I will feel close to Tom on the drive. That way Miss Garnett cannot take it and

I can smell it later when I need to. I will need to do that until it loses its smell forever.

Lucille is still in there packing up a few last things. Early this morning, Mrs. Heidelberg

came over to inform me of how my life would look from now on. She let her own self in, it is her

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house. And it is a wonder to think all the things that woman can buy—homes, cars, a classic six,

a baby. She can make a woman like Lucille disappear, but her money cannot bring Tom back.

Lucille was still up in bed, so I came downstairs in my nightgown, and we stood there,

looking at the other.

Dressed all in black, she was standing a little straighter than she was a few days ago.

Losing Tom would not kill a woman like her but she looked like a part of her had died too. I was

shivering, since it had got chilly this morning but with her hands crossed in front of her, I could

tell she could not handle another hug. It would send her right back into the slump she was in a

few days ago.

She said somebody from the orphanage would be coming to pick me up at the big house

soon. Go on and pack your things, Meg. Mr. Oney will be by to get you. Take those clothes and

whatever you need.

I saw her eyes get wet and I wanted to beg her not to send me back, but how could I ask

this woman for anything more than I had already took from her? I felt like I could see into the

future, right then. The Heidelbergs gathered around the dinner table talking about a blond-headed

girl who used to stay with Tom and Lucille. What was that little girl’s name?

She never did ask me to call her Grandmama. Maybe she knew this day would come.

After she was gone, I went in Tom’s office to take that blue Fitzgerald book he loved so

much. Oh I wanted to take it with me bad, but I knew that witch would snatch it and she did not

deserve to have something so important. It belonged here in Tom’s office. So I opened it and, in

the front, under where it said Thomas Heidelberg III, I wrote,

Margot Lefleur was here.

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There is no feeling lonelier than knowing the people you love soon won’t even remember

your name.

I already know it will be Miss Garnett that picks me up. She wouldn’t miss the damn

chance. And that first look she will give me, that will be the worst. Like the first lick in the belt

closet that stings and bites until your mind starts to drift. The belt closet. Thinking about it is

enough to make a girl feel crazy as she is! Miss Garnett has some nerve to talk about that

feebleminded woman, when she is the actual crazy one. Crazy enough to think she can put a girl

in a hot, dirty room with a boarded-up window and she would forget the taste of fresh air.

Well I got some Spanish news for her. She can beat me with a belt until she is blue in the

face, call me filthy dirty, but I can always dream about a better world, one without her damn in it!

When Mr. Oney pulls up in the truck, he loads Lucille’s things into her and Tom’s car as

she stands there, saying do this or move that, like a spoiled brat. I guess she gets to keep the

damn car along with all that money. By her twitchy green eyes I can tell she is halfway down the

road in her head, but some last little bit of guilt makes her come give me a hug. It feels like

hugging a coat hanger. I can smell the liquor alcohol already on her breath.

All that money Mrs. Heidelberg gave her will go straight down a bottle.

Take care, sugar, she says with a phony smile. And she is gone.

When Mr. Oney opens the door to the old truck for me, I soak up one last look. The red

and white trim, the fairytale turret going up the side. It makes me think how this house is sort of

like those color crayons I found. It does not matter how many exotic assorted colors you got to

choose from, if you take the best ones away, the ones that made sense, all you got is a big fancy

box of crazy crayons you can hardly use. Tom was the best color around here. It sounds corny,

but it is true.

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Soon, Mr. Oney slows down to make the last turn. I hold the door handle and consider

making a run for it. See can I make my way to that town Byhalia, start knocking on doors. Pray

for a nice family to take one look at me and say, Why, what a nice addition you’ll make to our

already hungry family in these difficult times.

I might be crazy but I am not that stupid. In the real life story, I either get ate alive by

slave dogs or else that nice family drives me right straight on back to the Orphan or whichever

one is closest. Probably saying they are just taking me to the damn store.

But as Mr. Oney rolls to a stop in front of the big house I do think about taking that

chance.

Lord, crazy is when getting ate by dogs sounds better than the alternative.

I am so tired of the wrong damn people winning all the time.

Willy May helps me down out of the truck. I get my paper sack and hold her hand to go

sit on the front porch steps. Miz Isabelle upstairs, but she say fo you to wait out here, baby. Dr.

Pittman done arrange somebody to come by in a little while.

I do as I am told. I do not blame Mrs. Heidelberg for staying away. If I were her, I would

do the same.

Willy May hands me a glass of milk and says she has made me a sack lunch for the drive.

I drink down the milk and wipe my lips on my sleeve. This will be the last good, cold thing I

taste for a long time. While we wait, Willy May pets my hair with her palm in long, worried

strokes.

For a while, we don’t see anybody coming up the drive. It is awful waiting, with my heart

pounding. Birds are singing—how could they know better? Since it is Saturday, Marybeth and

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Gloria are probably at one of their houses doing something fun. Though surely they will not be

swimming in Tom’s Lake anytime soon.

Miz Isabelle say Dr. Pittman sending somebody this mawning, Willy May says, shaking

her head at the driveway.

Well I hope she had her a damn car accident. I hope that witch is dead and bloody on the

side of the road. I could still live here, out there in the carport even.

And then we see it.

A motorcar is coming up the drive. Well, well, looks like Miss Garnett has bought herself

a fancy new automobile. It has a long black nose and a white tire on the side. Willy May pulls

me up by the hand and says, You be a good girl, Meg. I be praying for you.

Don’t waste your damn breath, I almost say to her, but I tell her, Thank you, Willy May,

though it comes out quiet. I pick up my clothes sack and the lunch and walk down the front steps

toward the big car. Let’s just get this thing damn over with.

The car door opens, and a woman gets out. She is not Miss Garnett, but she sure looks to

be in a hurry to ruin my life. She comes toward me but then stops. She is holding her hands down

to her side, but they are twitching like she wants to grab me. I take a few steps backward and turn

to look at Willy May on the steps and then back at the lady in a blue dress.

My brain is mixed up. Am I seeing things I shouldn’t? The lady’s brown eyes are red like

she’s been crying and they’re more crinkled around the edges than I remember. Is this a dream?

A fairy tale that belongs with that other one I used to believe in called “I’ll Be Right Back”? She

squats down some and stretches both her hands out to me and waits for me to come the few steps

to her.

What’s a girl to do in a situation like this?

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Mama? I say.

Shhhh, she says soft and shakes her head, glancing up at Willy May. But then like she

can’t help it anymore, she comes closer and wraps her arms around me and I am in her arms. I

try to fight it for my own sake, but my body gives up. I hug her back and press my face down

into her shoulder. She smells the same as she did in my dreams.

I didn’t leave you on purpose, Meg, she whispers. I’m so sorry. I promise I did not leave

you on purpose, oh my God, Meg.

What’s a girl supposed to say? After all this time?

Where the hell have you been, Mama?

She shushes me again, choking on a sob, and says, Nowhere good, Margot, but I am here

now. Then she stands up and says, We’ve got to hurry, we’ve got to get to Memphis. She waves

to Willy May on the porch, calling, Thank you, I’ve got her, in a strong voice. It is her voice. She

opens the door on the driver’s side and scoots me in to sit in the front seat, next to her, with my

sacks beside me. She starts the car, and we drive down the lane with the trees bowing down over

us, and I don’t look back at any of it, I just look straight on ahead.

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[Acknowledgments]

TK

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[About the author]

TK

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