Read Broken Ground Online

Authors: Karen Halvorsen Schreck

Broken Ground (4 page)

“Already?” Mother draws back in surprise. “Well, good.” Sounds like she's saying the opposite.

“I'll be back soon.” If only I were saying the opposite.

Out I go.

On the front porch, I stop. Beyond out suddenly seems impossible. Then the door bangs shut behind me, shaking the brittle Christmas bough that still hangs there, scattering a shower of dead needles at my feet, propelling me toward the porch steps and down them. Across the patchy lawn I go. One foot in front of the other, headed toward what's most familiar I go, leaving footprints in the red dust that coats everything all around. By the time I've walked the four blocks to Central Street, the dust coats me, too. A block down Central, the one-room brick building that is Kickingbird School has, from the dust, turned the color of dried blood. Across from the school, the Alba Public Library, a small fortress constructed of rough-hewn stones, has turned from yellow to orange.

The wind rises. I lean into it. I lean toward the library, toward Miss Berger. I keep going. With each step, my footprints disperse, swept from this earth as Charlie was, his life no more substantial than a grain of dust. But here is the library, a small fortress. Here, its door—red, like those of certain churches. Pull, pull hard, and the door opens against the wind. I am inside. The wind may buffet the windows and hiss at the door closing behind me, but inside, all is still and calm. Miss Berger sits at the front desk, a red bandana covering her short, gray hair. She leaps up at the sight of me—her lean, rangy body taut with barely contained energy—knocking her chair to the floor. Disregarding this, she's upon me in a moment, pulling me close. My head rests on her bony chest, and I hear her heartbeat, vigorous and vital.

“I'm sorry, Ruth. I'm so sorry.” Her words are close to comfort—the closest any have come. She pats my back. “You're shivering, and it's hot as blazes out there. Are you ill?”

“Just cold.” As I say this, I realize it's true. “Always cold.” That's true, too.

Miss Berger guides me to her desk, rights the chair, sits me down, then retrieves her green wool shawl from the bottom drawer and starts to drape it over my shoulders. I lean away. “The wind and dust. I'm filthy.”

She gives an impatient huff and wraps the shawl around me, firmly securing the ends in a thick knot that hangs, a warm weight, against my ribs. Now she darts off to her little office, just behind the desk. I hear her lift the kettle from the two-burner unit, then pour out what's inside. Next moment, she presses a full steaming mug into my hands. “Just brewed this. I was going to pour it over ice when it cooled, but it's put to better use this way.” She resolutely tugs her bandana down on her forehead. As usual when the weather warms, she wears a white cotton T-shirt neatly tucked into a long khaki skirt. When Charlie was a boy, he once told Miss Berger that she looked like she should be going on safari in this attire. To which she said that the library was adventure enough. Her work here—she loves it. It was all she's ever needed out of life and all she'll ever need.

I thank her for the tea. As I take a scalding sip, she nervously clasps and unclasps her hands. “I was one day away from coming to your parents' house, Ruth, never mind your daddy.”

Daddy doesn't like Miss Berger, in spite of the fact that, as my previous employer, she paid me twice a month without fail for my work, and my wages helped us get by.

Miss Berger's fingers are trembling. With a hiss of exasperation, she gives them a shake. “Now's as good a time as any, I guess.”

She opens the top drawer of her desk and takes out two envelopes, then holds them right before my eyes. The tea's steam momentarily clouds the formal handwriting, but after a moment the words come clear. One envelope is addressed to Mr. Charles Warren, c/o The Alba Public Library. The other is addressed to Mrs. Charles Warren, c/o The Alba Public Library. The return addresses on both envelopes read:

Admissions Office

Union University

Pasadena, California

Wet heat sears my thighs. Miss Berger drops the envelopes on the desk and swiftly extracts the dripping mug from my hands and sets it on the floor.

“Look what I've done!” My voice breaks with emotion far greater than what's called for. “I've gone and spilled all over everything!”

“Not
everything
.” Miss Berger yanks off her bandana and hands it to me. Her short hair stands on end; she clearly couldn't care less. “Go ahead, use it.” She gestures at the bandana. “No, don't worry about the chair. Take care of yourself first.”

Dutifully, I try to dry my dress. Then Miss Berger uses the bandana to wipe down the mug. She whisks off to the back room, returns to freshen my tea, and picks up the envelopes again. They might as well be glass, the way she holds them.

“Came about a month ago, before I got the news about Charlie,” she says. “I've been keeping them safe, as I promised I would. But now I can't wait any longer. Please, Ruth. Open them.”

Any moment, it seems, the envelopes might
do
something. Leap from her hands. Levitate. Speak. Bite. But of course, they simply wait to be acted upon. Outside, seeping in, the wind hisses and buffets. It stirs the encroaching black fog. “I only did this for Charlie and me. That's why we both did it. For
us
. College doesn't matter anymore.”

“It most definitely matters! Despair is a coward's choice, Ruth, and you're no coward.” Miss Berger gives me a glare as scalding as the tea. I look away; the cooling stain on my dress becomes something to study. Last time my clothes got wet like this, I was doing wash. The time I want to remember—not the smoky night, but the clear day—there was Edna Faye, bravely working away at her math, tackling problems others might dodge. Not so long ago, I prided myself on being as brave as Edna Faye. Not so long ago at all.

I set the mug of tea on the desk. I take the envelopes from Miss Berger. While she watches, I carefully open one envelope, then the next. Side by side, I scan them. The words are nearly the same.

Dear Mr. Warren,
one letter opens.
Dear Mrs. Warren,
opens the other. Then they both read:
After much deliberation, we are pleased to offer you a full scholarship to Union University.

The letters continue from there.
Intelligence,
potential,
and
congratulations.
Those are the words I can take in.

“We're accepted.” My voice sounds flat.

“Indeed, and not only that, your way is paid!” Miss Berger gives me a fierce hug, then releases me. “Do you know how rare this is? What a gift—a gift for which you longed, Ruth. Now it's yours, and you must receive it. You have to say yes.”

For a long moment, we are quiet, so quiet that, along with the wind, I hear something scurry across the floor. The library is often overridden with mice. When it is, they wreck havoc on the books, nibbling covers and pages. We got good at catching mice, Miss Berger and I, wielding brooms and boxes. I was the one who usually carried our captives outside. It was satisfying to see them shake off their trembling and bolt, their sleek brown and gray bodies darting into bushes, disappearing among twigs and leaves. By some kind of grace they could not possibly understand, they were free.

“A gift.” I try on the word for size, wondering whether it will ever fit.

HOME AGAIN, I
walk past the front door and around the side of the house, past the cackling chickens, past strutting, glittering-eyed Captain. I go to where the bellflowers bloom. At least Mother said they were blooming some vague, immeasurable time ago—the time that constitutes the days before today. I expect flowers glowing on long stalks in the noonday light, such as the light is, for the sky is opaquely gray behind a scrim of dirty air. Still, I
expect
flowers. I expect them to remind me of Charlie's eyes. But there are no blooms, not anymore. The wind and dust have stripped them away and beaten the stalks to the ground. Nothing remains of the bellflowers but a messy pulp.

I sink to the ground. Lost as I've been in black fog, I missed the chance to see that blue again.

Go
.

Not a still, small voice but one that reverberates to my marrow. Beneath the opaque sky and low-hanging haze, upon a bed of broken bellflowers I listen and hear it again:
Go
.

Go,
Charlie said once upon a time.
Go,
Miss Berger said only today.
Go,
God seems to be saying now.
Go,
says a woman I don't know, the woman I am becoming, the woman I must become.
“Go.”

THREE

I
write the letter I must to Union University, declining Charlie's scholarship. I am able to do this only with Miss Berger's help. She stays by my side, encourages me when I falter. Words are insufficient to describe all that has happened, but even in their insufficiency, they work a terrible magic on me. Writing things down makes them true. Charlie's death becomes a fact fixed on a page.

Almost as an afterthought or a postscript, I accept my scholarship. “Could you qualify your acceptance a bit?” Miss Berger asks. “Could you
gladly
accept it, or
gratefully
?” At this, I draw the line. I seal the envelope, affix the stamp, and send the letter off in the mail. The next day, I return to my old job at the library. I tell Mother and Daddy about this last—it's what they wanted, after all, for me to get on with it. But I don't tell them about my college plans. Tell them about college now and I'll get such grief that, come mid-August, I'll be too weighed down to leave the house, let alone take the train to California. Tell them come mid-August, when I'm due to depart, and I might actually do just that. Depart, mouse from captivity, Rapunzel from tower. Not glad or grateful, but going.

My hours at the library are every day but Sunday, as long as I care to work. I arrive before the library opens and stay after the library closes. There's no place I'd rather be, cataloging and shelving books, leading patrons through the stacks to find what they're looking for, sending them on their way. Over my lunch break, I read voraciously. I read far more than I eat. I stay busy at all costs, for when I am not busy, I am consumed by distraction, worry, and sadness—not necessarily in this order. The black fog hovers, waiting for an unguarded, opportune moment to descend. Hope tastes tainted, at best bittersweet, without Charlie sharing the cup.

The library isn't the busy place it used to be. The people of Alba, including the children, are increasingly busy scrabbling for necessities. When that's the case, a leisurely trip to the library becomes yet another unaffordable luxury. So Miss Berger and I spend our days poring over publishers' catalogs, trying to make the best book selections for the few remaining patrons, parsing out the meager dollars left in the budget. We do other things too, of course. We fix the building's plumbing when we're able and hunt down volunteers when we aren't. We clean the toilet and sink, wipe away the red dust that seeps through crevices and cracks in the walls, and settles on every surface—on book covers, bindings, the edges of every page. We wash the windows. We mow the grass and tend the few flowers that have managed to survive. We maintain the library inside and out, and in doing so, we become better friends. Widowed, I'm able to be a better friend. The girl I was—consumed by the
we
of
us
—died with Charlie. I have to make room for others at the table or I'll eat alone for the rest of my life. It's right that I should first try doing so with Miss Berger, and she's kind enough to help me know how.

Working side by side from day to day with her, I confirm what I already assumed: Miss Berger is quite the freethinker. Years back, when Charlie wanted to talk more deeply about Darwin, she was the person to whom he turned. I knew about their exchange; Charlie relayed their conversation to me. But now I witness other examples of the confidence Miss Berger inspires. When women are in trouble—say their husbands are drinkers, or gamblers, or violent; or maybe their husbands are fine upstanding men, but the women are having health problems that lead to medical tests, and their husbands and doctors won't let them see the results, or let the women give their opinions on the results—for
whatever
the reason (and there are so many), women come to Miss Berger for advice they can't get elsewhere. At least a few times each week, Miss Berger pulls
Grey's Anatomy
or an
Encyclopaedia Britannica
from the shelf, or one of the few scholarly journals the library owns, and reads and interprets information that might prove helpful to the person in need. “It's the least I can do,” she says when anyone tries to thank her. “You'd do the same for me if our situations were reversed.”

One night in early August, my thoughts on my imminent departure—the packing I have yet to do, the conversation with Mother and Daddy I have yet to endure—I'm about to flip the library's sign from
Open
to
Closed
when a faint knock sounds. I open the door, but no one is there. Only when I hear the knock again do I realize it's coming from the other entrance—a narrow side door. People never enter there. I doubt most know the door
is
there, hidden as it is by dusty shelves inside and by tall, dense holly bushes outside. The library shelves that conceal the side entrance hold our oldest bound newspapers, dating from the early 1880s until just after the first Oklahoma Land Run in 1889. The few people who peruse these volumes are typically engaged in land disputes, heatedly challenging who staked what claim, settled where, and when. They're much too worked up to notice a door off to the side, more an afterthought than a door, no doubt a last-minute addition to the architect's plan. Miss Berger and I use the side entrance when we take out the garbage. Otherwise, it stays shut.

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