Read Come a Stranger Online

Authors: Cynthia Voigt

Come a Stranger (12 page)

“Yes and no,” Mina said. They had a little table set out between them on the front porch with the Scrabble board on it. “I learned a lot.” She arranged her seven squares on the rack.

“Yes, your daddy does keep you all wound around in your cocoon here. But it doesn't seem to have done the older two any harm, so maybe it won't hurt you either, Missy.”

“Actually,” Mina said, “I meant learned like—learned things I never knew anything about. Books and music and stuff.”

“I heard some of that music, last year, coming from your room. I haven't heard any since you've been back.”

Mina hadn't played any records, she hadn't wanted to. In the same way she hadn't wanted to dance, or anything.

“I hope you like learning,” Miz Hunter said. “I did myself. I still do. Education learning, that is.” Her little hand, brown as a sparrow's back, made the word
lease.
Mina could use that S, if she could find a good enough word to attach to it. She shuffled her letters around, trying to find a word with an H and a Y both, that could end in S. Her mind kept skittering around, coming up with words she didn't have the right letters for, like
hyphen
or
hyena. History
had the S in the middle, and it was long too, but she didn't have a T or an I or an R.

*   *   *

On Sunday morning, she rejoined the choir. It was kind of fun watching the expression on peoples' faces when they saw her up there. From where she sat, she could look over the whole congregation. Mina saw the fine summer dresses and caught her first
glimpse of Alice sitting up front, with Momma and Miz Hunter. Miz Hunter had her red straw hat bright on her gray head, but Alice didn't wear a hat. Instead, she braided her hair into many little braids, each one woven through with colored ribbons. The colors danced whenever Alice moved her head. She was as pretty as her pictures, as pretty as a picture, and Mina stared at her for a long time. She had big, big, dark eyes under curved eyebrows, a nose that turned up just a little at the end, and a red mouth that looked kissable. That was all Mina could think of, looking at Alice's mouth with its red lipstick, that it looked like what they called a kissable mouth, and she didn't think she ought to be thinking like that during church. A little girl, about eight or nine Mina guessed, sat beside Alice, her hair in three thicker braids, one down the back of her head and two at the sides. Mina thought they must have spent hours getting their hair ready. Beside the girl sat a thin little boy in a suit that was too big for him, with glasses. The littlest child sat on Zandor's lap, pulling at his nose while Zandor talked over the heads of the children to Alice, as if he couldn't take his eyes off her. Mina didn't blame her brother.

When the service started, Mina looked over and around the congregation, at the different colors of the faces. Mr. Shipp was right, she thought, colored was the best name for them. The service went on around her, Bible readings, hymns, collection, and Mina looked around her. There was as much variety of color as you would see in a furniture store, Mina thought. The faces were all the colors of wood, seasoned and stained, oak and pecan, maple, pine. Mr. Shipp, she thought, her eyes resting on the back of his neck, was darker, like black locust that had been around for years and years, stained by smoke, maybe.

Outside the windows it was a low, gray morning, and it would rain before the day was out, she was sure. The air had
that close, squeezing weight to it, of moisture building up. She settled back to hear what Mr. Shipp's sermon would be like. Her eyes settled over the congregation, contented to be among the warm, woody colors of her own people, in her poppa's church. Mr. Shipp was about the most interesting person she'd ever met in her whole life; she thought, with a rush of gratitude, that he was one of her people.

Mr. Shipp talked about Judas, who betrayed Jesus for thirty pieces of silver. But he didn't talk about Jesus's sacrifice, how he had allowed himself to be crucified so that everybody's sins could be forgiven; Mr. Shipp ignored that part of it altogether. Instead, he talked about what Judas did after he had betrayed his Master, how he had tried to return the silver pieces, how he had gone out and killed himself. He talked about why Judas might have done that, until Mina felt so sorry for Judas; she almost felt sorrier for him than for Jesus. Then Mr. Shipp changed the subject, sort of, to talk about an old Italian named Dante. Dante wrote a long poem about Hell and Heaven. This Dante said that in Hell the people who committed suicide got a worse punishment than the pitch and the flames and the tormenting devils, they were trapped inside trees. When you broke off a twig of one of these trees, the tree bled.

That was a different kind of tree from the dryad tree Mina had imagined, even though it was the same. Mina felt her mind stretching to understand the differences and samenesses as her eyes rested on Mr. Shipp.

At the Last Judgement, alone of everybody, these suicides were going to get their bodies back, Dante said. God would throw their poor dead bodies down, and the bodies would hang there from the trees. Because, Mr. Shipp said, they despised the body. They despised their own bodies.

“Judas betrayed twice, once his Master and Our Lord and
once himself. This burden of double sin—how far could a man carry such a burden? Judas did not go far before he tried to rid himself of the unbearable weight. The first sin is easy to recognize, so we can choose not to have to carry it. But that second sin, let us guard against it. My body, your body, these are God's work; to despise them is to despise God's work. Instead, look around to see the handiwork of the Lord. The eyes that can see, the ears to hear with, the strength of bone and muscle over organs that function with extraordinary efficiency, so perfectly that even scientists stand breathless before it. And the skin, fitted so close and tight over all, to contain and protect it. This must be God's work, upon us, and for us. To despise it is to despise God. To despair of it is to despair of God. I will not burden my soul with that second sin,” Mr. Shipp concluded.

Mina rose to sing the final hymn with her mind churning.

“Does he always talk like that?” she asked her mother when they were back home, setting the table for lunch. They would eat inside, because of the threat of rain. Miz Hunter was well enough to come and join them.

“Pretty much. Could you follow him? Sometimes I do and sometimes—like today—Well, my mind wandered. A lot of people don't care for his way of making sermons. But nobody dislikes his ministry, as far as I've heard. And I guess, being Poppa's wife, I'd be the first to hear. Did you enjoy it?”

“I don't know. It—got me thinking,” Mina said. “Yes, I did. He's different from Poppa.”

Her mother laid out knives and forks and spoons. Mina folded the paper napkins.

“Poppa keeps his feet in the plain everyday things. Tamer—he's walking out there among the ideas, like along the mountaintops.” Momma stood looking at the table. The smell of stew filled the house. “Set out the glasses, will you, Mina?”

“Can we have him and his family for dinner sometime? He's never had good crab cakes.”

Momma looked at her, as if Mina had said something that didn't make sense. “How'd you know a thing like that?”

“When we had lunch, I was telling him about yours.”

“What would you say he was sermonizing about today?” Momma asked.

“About being black,” Mina answered, setting an empty glass at each place. “Except, I can't figure out what Judas had to do with it.”

“I didn't tell you,” Momma said. She stood still, not setting anything out, not going back to the kitchen, “but your Miss LaValle, she tried to kill herself.”

“Because of me?” Mina was shocked.

“The world does not revolve around you, young lady.” Momma's voice was angry. “Believe it or not, there are people who think some things are more important than you being sent home from that camp.” Then she came over and hugged Mina. “I'm sorry, child. I shouldn't have said that—I know how much it mattered to you.”

But Mina couldn't think of why else Miss LaValle . . . “But why?” she asked. “What's wrong?”

“Her man left her,” Momma said.

“What man?”

“The man who's been paying her bills. I was sure you knew. You didn't think she supported herself just from ballet lessons, did you? We've got to get the biscuits made.”

“But, Momma—” Mina followed her mother into the kitchen. Her mother dropped mounds of soft dough onto the pan. Mina dipped her fingers into cold water and shaped the dough into smooth-topped rounds. “Did she love him that much?”

“Who ever knows, about love. Maybe she did, or maybe—at
her age—she was afraid of starting out again, afraid of being on her own.”

“She's not so old.”

“She's my age. If Poppa were to leave me—”

“He wouldn't do that.”

“Men die, you know. There are always accidents to happen. If that did happen, then I'm so tangled up in my life, children and grandchildren, my job, all the friends we have, the church—I wouldn't go under. But she didn't have anything. Not a single child. I always felt so sorry for her.”

This was an entirely different person from the Miss LaValle Mina had known for years, the woman who had taught her how to dance. It was like a horror movie on TV, a Friday late-night horror movie, where the monster peels back the mask-face to reveal his true, horrible face. “I should go see her,” Mina said.

“She's gone.”

“You mean she died?”

“No, although she tried. No, she moved out, moved away, clean away. She's gone to the West Coast, where she has friends, people she met when she worked as a professional dancer up north.”

“She was a ballerina?” Miss Maddinton could be wrong, there could be black ballerinas.

“No. She said once she wanted to, but she couldn't.”

“She wasn't good enough?”

“I wouldn't know about that. They don't let blacks in—or at least they didn't when I was a girl. Irene danced in chorus lines. She was actually on Broadway twice, or so she told us. It was years ago.” Momma put the two trays of biscuits into the oven and then just stood there with her back to Mina, her shoulders sagged. When she turned around, she had to wipe her eyes.

“Momma? What's the matter?”

“Oh, I don't know. Sometimes, it just seems like so much uphill work—she must have been awfully good, to get as far as she did, being black, and a woman, and then she ends up in the emergency room having her stomach pumped and wanting to die. If Tamer hadn't been there . . .”

“But she didn't go to our church,” Mina asked.

“She didn't go to any church. But you know how it is, Mina; we all know all about one another, and we take care of each other. No matter what church anybody goes to.” Then Momma seemed to relax and feel better. “I thought
that
was what Tamer was sermonizing about, about Miss LaValle. He's not the young man to let things go unspoken when people want to avoid them. Everybody's been gossiping and I guess he just thought we needed a little bringing up short.”

Mina didn't want to think about it anymore. “Will you ask them to supper?”

“If you'll help out. Don't even bother answering; I know you. You go ahead and ask them, honey. I'm only working nights for a few more days, then I go back to days, so it'll be fine next week. Do you want to slice the tomatoes or drain the beans?”

They got back to work. One thing about a big family, Mina thought, hefting the pot of green beans over to drain through the colander, the jobs got split up. Mina helped her mother with the cooking, because it was what she liked. Belle and Zandor wanted to hang around after church and see people, so they would do the washing up. When Zandor went off to college in the fall, Louis would take over most of the jobs he did, because he was about old enough. They
did
take care of one another, Mina thought. Her mother was right about that. Then Mina thought—alone in the kitchen, moving the baked biscuits from the trays onto the serving platter, piling the layers up—how lucky she was that this was where she was. She liked being where people knew
how to keep close to one another; she liked having these people her people.

Mina heard her family gathering in the dining room and she heard the slow summer rain start plopping down outside. She looked at the plates of food standing ready on the Formica table close up to the wall. The kitchen wasn't any too large, and it wasn't any too fancied up, but the air was warm and filled with food smells, the meaty smell of beef stew and the bready smell of biscuits and, lighter in the air, the smells of vegetables. Mina felt so snug in there, among shelves of glasses and dishes and food in cans and bags and boxes, she almost didn't want to go out to the table. In a fit of contentment, sharper for thinking of Miss LaValle, Mina brought down the honey jar. Louis loved honey and butter mixed together to spread on his biscuits. She'd sit next to him and show him how to mix them, so Momma wouldn't have to worry about him making sticky messes.

CHAPTER 11

M
ina got back in touch with Kat that week. Kat didn't ask her for any apologies, but she made a brief one anyway, and that was that. Through Kat, she got back in touch with Rachelle and Sabrina and all the rest. They were a little standoffish with her, but she figured that wouldn't last long. They didn't ask her about what had happened, except for Kat, privately. To Kat she said quite honestly that it turned out she had the wrong build to study ballet, and the wrong color. Kat didn't say anything, but she kept her eyes on the ground and her lips pursed up just a little, so Mina could guess what she was thinking, that it might have been better, after all, not to have been the one chosen. Mina didn't say so out loud, but she sort of agreed. Anyway, she told Kat, absolutely honestly, she was glad to be back home.

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