Read Finding My Thunder Online

Authors: Diane Munier

Finding My Thunder (29 page)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Finding My Thunder 47

 

It
was overwhelming to separate the last of anything I wanted out of Lonnie's house.
I packed up Lonnie's stuff, his clothes and some of his personal stuff as well,
the paperwork from his bottom drawer. A lot of stuff we burned in the barrel
back of the house.

Some
stuff Danny helped me load to Temple and we put it in the basement for the
frequent rummage sale days we held there.

A
bunch of stuff went straight to the trash. And it wasn't easy sorting through
my parents' lives. That stuff was like…emotional, but the more we got rid of
the better I felt.

Good
thing Naomi had a basement cause I was able to store the rest of my stuff down
there. It was exhausting. Lonnie's furniture would just have to go with the house,
or the bank could figure it out.

So
that's how the last of my days with Danny went. We laid up in my room, just the
mattress on the floor now and not much else. He left Monday morning and it was Sunday
night and we had distracted ourselves with all the work, but now there was nothing
but the truth.

We'd
been talking around things, leaping to the future. The idea of a business and a
life together, it was a strong thing for us both. But the great divide…we were stepping
to it now. He didn't want me to go to the airport, his family was going, and he
wanted to be strong for them and if I was there…he didn't know. So he'd go in the
morning, at 4 a.m., and I'd go on back to Naomi's and I'd be done with it here in
this house, and with all of my sweet times with Danny in this room.

I'd
have to be strong, but there was something desperate welling up, well we had made
such sweet love and we were holding each other, but his body…I didn't think I could
bear to think of him hurt, and there would be so many wanting to hurt him, kill
him. The way that VA hospital smelled and the fragileness of it…of those men…trying
to knit back together…if he were hurt….

I
sat up and started to go over him with my hands.

"What
are you doing?" he said softly.

"I…I
just want to remember," I said.

He
relaxed his arms then, put them flat so I could do what I wanted. Well I knelt beside
him, and I started with his face.

"So
serious," he whispered.

I
just nodded. He didn't need to hear my hysteria. I touched his face like Helen Keller
might. "You know I think you're beautiful," I said.

"Yes,"
he said. "But beautiful…that's you."

I
shook my head and felt some tears get free so I pressed my lips together and moved
my attention to his neck, a strong column and he swallowed, his chest a breastplate
of skin shielding his heart, his shoulders, strong burden-bearing friendship,
his arms sinew, protecting, shielding, his hands busy and skilled generous, his
stomach strong rows of muscle, his male parts the heat blast of what he told me
he felt, his legs strong, powerful, speed, his feet strong and sure and quick
to rush to help…now so ready to take him to strange places in strange boots on
strange earth.

He
told me it was the same sun but we'd see it at different times. There was no good
way to view this. It was wrong to be apart. This war was wrong. But I made myself
be here, with him, not off in a future we didn't have. Didn't want. Well I didn't.

So
I smoothed my hand over him, and I asked him to roll over and I dragged my hand
over the back of his head and his neck and over every inch of him, laying on of
hands, the bible spoke, the transference of blessing, of power, I gave him all
I had and I asked that through me God would give him more, and I would remember
this…remember this, him warm and alive under my hands so whole, so perfect, so present
and young…so strong…so young…so willing…so young.

I
stroked over him until I felt the craziness in myself simmer, calm. Danny
didn't say, "Are you finished?" He didn't fight it, fight me, his
eyes were closed, and he lay there for me and I smoothed over and over his
flesh, so much love in me, so much give in me, so much want in me, so much
prayer.

Then
I kissed where I had touched. I kissed him and I touched him and I stroked him.
He was my warrior. He was my friend. My gift. I kissed him and I gave him. The loss
I'd known…of everything before this…before him was lesser. Even my Mama…much as
I loved her…even that was one step back from this giving of Danny Boyd to God's
good grace.

Danny
wasn't mine. I didn't own him. I couldn't. Shouldn't. But I could know him. And
God had shared him with me. And I wanted more. And I asked for more. Like Oliver
Twist I held him up in my mind and to God I said…and I was sorry about the analogy…but
I said to God in his high collar and his kinky cravat and his bad hair I said…
"More please."

I
did. And angels gasped and devils grinned and the other humans who listened in from
eternity's halls and eternity's pits put their hands over their mouths and
waited to see what would happen next.

When
I laid next to him finally, I thought he might be asleep, but he was not. He was,
however, in a deep state of relaxation. His eyes opened, just slits, but
intense like always. "What was that?" he said, one side of his face
scrunched on the pillow.

I
smiled a little. "A surrender," I said.

He
studied me for a moment, but his eyes were heavy and he let them close and I pulled
as close as I could to him, gently slid my leg over him, put my arm around him,
and that was how I spent the night, awake and suspended in that place, more please,
please, please, for Danny…until it was time.

I
shook him awake, and he awoke with a start and he scrambled then, already leaving
me, already pulling away, on the clock, sense of duty. Fumbled dressing, time
breathing fire. Kisses and clutches then, at the top of the stairs, then down
the stairs, then at the door, on the porch, in front of the house.

I
love you, I'll write you, I'll think of you every minute, I'll be home before
you know it, don't cry, I'm not crying, I love you, go now, I'm going now, go
inside, don't watch or I can't go, go on I want to watch, good-bye, good-bye.

In
the house that was no longer any part of me, in the room where I said good-bye to
the memories two ghosts made just minutes before, out the door, clutching the bag,
the remnants of my Arabian nights of wild love. With my love.

The
Canna
garden still and decayed. The ghost of my dog
greeting me in the yard. Naomi asleep, the bag of sheets still warm from our
bodies and the candle still mellow and my pillow the shroud of Danny's face
upon it, accordion pleat from his drool, now placed in the space I called home
with my grandmother. My spinster's life. I was a nun. I was in the army too, of
school and work and duty to God. We were all going to march now, we were all
going to fall in line.

Tapping
on my window. It was him and I made a noise like a wounded bird and I ran down
the hall and into the living room and on the porch and he was there and I jumped
in his arms and my lips, my hands, on him and he held me so close and my ankles
were crossed behind me, but I wouldn't know that until I thought about it later.
He kissed me wild, and he said… "You didn't know you'd see me again so soon,"
and he was laughing.

And
I laughed too, and cried, and I said, "Why? Why?"

He
said, "I wanted to show you…there's good. There's surprises. You don't
know it all," and he was squeezing me. Then he set me on my feet and one
hand on my arm, with the other he fished in his pocket and pulled out a jewelry
box and gave it to me.

"This
is for you. I know you didn't want it. Put it on quick I got to go."

I
opened it and with my hands shaking, put the little silver ring on quick. It
was easy on the eyes, nothing showy, just sweet, just perfect.

"Smile,"
he said, his hands on my shoulders.

"I
am," I said.

He
gave me a sweet, soft kiss. Then he let me go. As he walked quick to that car he
said, "Keep smiling." Then before he got in he looked across the hood
at me and said it again, "Keep smiling."

And
holding that empty box against me I stood grinning at him, laughing a little, and
he waved and pulled off in Sukey's car.

I
gasped when I turned around to go in. I was still smiling. Naomi was in the doorway
her eyes swollen with sleep and her hair in pins. Her mouth was open but she
took me in, shaking her head. "Well…if the Lord has not returned I am
going back to bed," she said.

I
went to her and hugged her because I'd been the most rebellious awful granddaughter,
full of secrets. She hugged me back right away.

"Is
he off then?"

"Yes,"
I said.

She
pulled back and patted me. We parted, her to her room, me to mine. I laid down,
still holding the box, and held my splayed hand up to check that little ring. I
had to laugh some. It was never all bad, it never was. His lesson had been
simple and true. I had so much, I already had so much with him, and I'd given
him all that I could, and I'd keep on giving and building, and I was
so…blessed…and nothing took that away… nothing could.

I
kissed that ring, put my lips on it and held them there.

This
was more.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Finding My Thunder 48

 

Monday
morning, as Danny was
enroute
to Vietnam, I was
sitting in Principal Brown's office with my forged letter concerning truancy
and poor grades. "Your parent needs to be here," the principal was
saying.

"Yes
sir," I said. "But my father has had a stroke. It's put some extra
pressure on me…the trips to the hospital. I haven't meant to mess up with my
schoolwork. I just…it's hard what with…I will get better now."

"And
who is watching over you? I know your mother passed," he fumbled through my
records, the one I filled out hastily when I'd registered the day school
started, "Oh my, just months ago. Do you need to see the school
counselor?"

"Um…no
sir. And I live with my Grandmother."

"Then
she needs to come in," he said.

"She
works," I said hastily. "But I'll do better. I promise. My
father…he's in rehabilitation now. Things have…they settled down some. Well a
lot. They're better. Really better." First rule of lying effectively, talk
as little as possible. Let others draw the conclusions they need to make
themselves feel better about what you're trying to get by with. I'd read that
in a really horrible book. I think a serial killer said it. But he'd evaded
capture for years so…

The
principal sighed. Yes, I could hear his thoughts. He was so sick of kids. He could
barely stand us. So he created a happier idea of us, and I was just what he needed
to make himself feel better, like he could really do some good in his position and
it wasn't all board meetings and parent meetings and paperwork and this ugly office
with tiny windows where kids lied to him. I was almost saving myself with my hopeful
attitude, so all he had to do was extend mercy and I would be the best dinner
party story he could ever tell his friends if he needed some strokes…and didn't
we all.

"We'll
give it the rest of the week. If you do better…make school every day on time, get
your work done, then by the end of the week, we'll see. But take this letter
home and have your grandmother sign it under your father's name. I need to know
that
your
responsible parent or guardian is aware of
this dilemma."

I
had a new name to forge now, a new sin. "Yes sir," I said. And I
considered I might quit school altogether. It was really robbing me of the time
needed to do something real and if it wasn't for Naomi I wouldn't be here
today. That was the truth.

I
lost Lonnie's truck on Wednesday and bought it back from the bank on Friday. There
went two thousand of my dollars. I cut French class in the afternoon to meet with
Mr.
Stevers
, a real creeper that talked more to my
chest than to my face. I met him at the bank and bought the truck, missing the
test on feminine and masculine pronouns so I could keep transportation so I
could get around and drive to see Allie, and Lonnie, and set up a business on
which hinged my and Danny's entire future.

If
I got caught, meaning if my French teacher figured out that after embarrassing him
by mumbling how I'd started my period and needed to be excused from class, was
complete bull, then I might be in trouble again. But seeing as he was not married,
and seemed very strange and solitary and was always flushing red around the
female students who teased him once they figured out he was easily degraded, it
wasn't likely he'd pursue the truth concerning my monthly visitor, a visitor
which was highly irregular anyway and hadn't made an appearance for six months
truth be told. Not unusual for me as I'd never been regular in that way.

So
I was managing things as well as I could.

The
other thing was the call I intercepted from the hospital. They were suggesting we
allow Lonnie to be transferred to a state run nursing home. He refused to cooperate
with physical therapy and there wasn't anything else they could do for him. He
was severely depressed, unable to speak clearly, mostly bed ridden, refusing to
do his exercises which left him bed bound and wheelchair bound.

Lonnie
was deteriorating and giving up. He wanted to come home but there was no home
to come back to. There were no people. And the amount of care he needed was
daunting and impossible.

There
was a for sale sign in front of his house, formerly my old house, my Mama's house,
my great-Grandmother's house. It was being sold to pay Lonnie's debts. His shop
was cleaned out, its contents on a truck bound for auction, a For Rent sign in the
building's window. Papers attesting to a medical discharge from the army and his
marriage to Mama were in a box in Naomi's basement. His wife was in a grave, his
daughter saved from homelessness by the Negro woman who had filled his boots too
many times, his girlfriend back to the life she'd never left and good thing.
And Robert his faithful employee had fleeced him until the sheep had no wool
and no skin either. We had all survived him and it hadn't been easy. He never
made it easy.

Then
there was that other thing. Danny's brother Sukey. He was at school now. But
that wasn't new. Sukey had been at school my whole life. He was a senior and we
did not share classes, not even lunch, but I saw him every day, taller,
thinner, muscular, silent, stony-faced with a blond ponytail. I caught him
staring at me more than once and when we had assembly, I felt his eyes on me
and when I looked to see, he was there, in the back, looking at me, and I
looked away. But there was no threat in the look, no kindness, just a looking,
unapologetic looking. He was different. He didn't hurry around, mouthy and loud
and vying for attention and social position. He was like a shadow of that boy.
He was this boy, ticking quiet.

I
remembered him and Danny had fought. I didn't know how it was between them. I
didn't know if he'd gone to the airport to see Danny off, but I suspected that
was why Danny didn't want me to come. He was protecting me. That's what I assumed.

To
think that both of us were so connected to Danny and yet unable to share, to comfort
one another, to speak, to even be friends. It was so strange. We were so strange.
The human race. The strange human race, the pinnacle of God's creation, at war
with one another. Strange.

The
weekend was busy. A visit to Lonnie. The reality of the VA hospital yet again. My
father's despair. I hoped for apathy, I don't know why, the hope he was going numb
inside and barely aware.

But
it wasn't that way, that terrible way, it was worse. He suffered.

I
talked to him and I heard my own youth, my own distance from his Raggedy Andy
life and how he had to feel laying crumpled and dependent on others for everything,
for every act.

"They
said you wouldn't work at getting better," I said, and it was so strange
and foreign to be like this, to pretend we were normal enough to care about one
another's lives, to act like we knew each other.

"Lonnie…they're
sending you to another place…where they can care for you. You need so much
help…." Here came the hand, plucking at me, spastic, the long sound of no.
The long o sound.

"I
can't…," tears choking me, but not reaching my eyes. I knew life was
brutal. He had taught me that. I wasn't bitter. I wasn't angry. It was so,
that's all, and the truth… it's all I had to give. "It's state run,
government paid…and they'll care for you there, and I'll come sometimes…if you
want. I…I don't know what else I can do." I thought I heard him say God,
then say it again, short o this time. Long o. Short o.

No.
God. No. God.

I
gripped the iron footboard on his bed. There was no way but through. He had refused
to go forward…and now they sat him on the pot. There was no way but through.
You had to keep fighting. And when you quit, they dragged you forward and did
the things you did for yourself. And then…you lived and breathed in captivity.
He was a proverb and a by-word, and I didn't say it meanly.

"Lonnie…I
can't take you home."

He
was grimacing and moving his head and sputtering and gasping. His hands were
spastic and curled uselessly, and his bony legs were laying there, his feet
just anemic pale yellow and soft and not going anywhere.

"You'll
have care, that's the thing," I said. I knew it wasn't the thing.

"
Diiiiiiiiii
," he got out, long
i
.

"I…can't
help you with that," I said. Now that was an odd response. From me. It came
out really quick, before I thought too much about it. So I lowered to the chair
beside his bed. "I mean…I understand you might feel really
discouraged."

This
made him mad. He had no trouble showing anger. Not ever.

"Calm
down," I hissed, putting my hand on his arm.

He
did work on it some and he lay there pretty spent, tears leaking.

"I'm
trying to talk to you but they're going to come in here and then it'll be
over," I was whispering loudly.

He
kept saying the pathetic word,
diii
…trying to turn
himself toward me.

"I
can't help you die," I said. "I can't…take you home to die. I can't
kill you…I can't help you," I said, my hands going from my temples to be
open in front of me. I was so angry he would ask this, too.

He
stared at me, much as he could before his head would spasm then he would work
to get me in his sites again.

"You're
not…trying," I wiped at my eyes, so angry.

I
wished I'd brought Naomi. She would know what to say, how to speak to him.

Better
than me.

"Ever
think…maybe you're supposed to live and learn some things over? Ever…ever see
it like that? Like a second chance?" I was crying in earnest now…

"It's
hard…I know it…but…if you could be a better man…for the time left…if you could
make some peace…show some kindness…I don't know. I don't know. You had it
hard…and Mama and you…all the bad times between you…bad feelings…but now…the
way things are with us…we're trying…aren't we? I mean…I'm here. I don't know
what it means to you. I'm…willing to…I forgive you. Okay? I held some stuff against
you…but I forgive you." I cried harder now, but I sniffed and sucked it
back in, "All that bitterness…and hate. Maybe you need to own up to it
all. Admit it. Make your peace. Then…maybe it's time. Maybe a better place, a
door will open up and you'll walk again and you'll be perfect…and it will be
perfect," I was crying and part of me thought I'd surely lost my mind, but
it came to this and I knew it had to, it should, and he was listening, whether
in despair or neutral or even hopeful, I couldn't have said. He was just so
still. I touched his shoulder. It was so foreign to touch him, reaching through
the fence and touching the growling dog, but still now, and if he hadn't moved
inside, I had.

He
was turned away and he closed his eyes.

"I'm
gonna go," I said. I figured I'd said too much. "But…I'll be praying
for you. And Lonnie? I ain't sorry you're my father. I get it now. I see why. I
hope you can think some and get there about me. Goodnight."

I
stood then and took a last look at him, still with his face turned away. I went
to the doorway then and stopped one more time. He hadn't moved.

And
here's what I knew. God took me way, way out there with Lonnie…and having gone
through it…his wrath, his crazy raging life…there was nothing anyone could throw
at me I couldn't survive. Cause I had survived Lonnie Grunier.

 

One
week later my first letter came from Danny. I went in my room and fell on my
knees and removed it like it was the Magna
Carta
.

“Dear
Hilly,

“Smile.
I hope you're missing me and not already taking up with some high school asshole
who's beating my time. Well, I know you wouldn't but that's what they drill into
us…she's fucking someone else.

“Okay,
I'm some pissed off so don't listen to me. This letter is pretty fucked.

“Vietnam
is fucked. Also, let me know if I can tell you the truth or if you need me to hold
it back.

“I
am on a firebase called White Stallion. It's not cowboys and Indians though.
Not anything I've ever known. The food, I hate it already.

“Hey,
Hawaii is beautiful, not that I saw it for long. I had a great sandwich there.

“When
we got over the country here they fired at us, at the plane. Called it a welcome
committee. Yeah, just letting us know how welcomed we were. I was like, what in
fuck? But they were like, no big deal. So welcome to Vietnam.

“Once
we got off the plane they put us on school buses with wire over the windows.

“Hot?
You wouldn't believe. Stink here? Think of sticking your head in a hot hamper full
of rotten socks and black slimy cabbage. That's about it.

“They
took us to this station and gave us a speech and some supplies. Me and the guys
meant for White Stallion, there were only three of us. We were the last to get picked
up. Two guys came for us in a jeep. One was my sergeant. What an asshole.

“That
doesn't cover it.

“I
ended up liking the army by the time I went home from basic. I don't know if I told
you. I started in hate, I ended in thinking it wasn't bad at all. I did well.
It was football, you know? Now I'm here and it's hate again. I'll get used to
it.

“The
guys you're with? You don't feel like them either. You're just too new, still
who you used to be, but you don't fit, just into this green outfit of
misplants
and some of them are crazy but they're who you
got and you're eager. Much as you hate them, you'll kill for them. It's fucked.
But there's a couple you admire right off. You can tell they know.

“On
the way to base we went through this shallow water. An old man was crossing there.
I can't even tell you, but they wanted to bust our cherries. Don't let Naomi
see this. Don't leave it where she'll see. That old man wasn't anything to
them. And once they busted our cherries, we drove on to the base and how you
doin
'? You see how it is, and that old papa ain't
seein
' nothing no more.

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