“Hi.”
“I won't be but a minute.” She checked Maggs's feeding tube and then began to tiptoe out. Just as she was about to disappear behind the doorframe, she turned around and whispered, “Professor, I won't be in class tomorrow. Doctor's appointment. I left you a voice mail at home, thinking I might miss you here. See you tomorrow afternoon, maybe.”
“Okay. Thanks for letting me know.”
Amanda left, and the silence crowded in again. Blue whimpered, as if to say,
Look, man, say something. She needs to hear your voice.
I took hold of her hand. “Maggs, I miss the sound of your voice.” That's when it hit me.
Voice mail.
I picked up the phone, dialed as fast as the rotary phone would let me, waited four rings, and then she picked up.
“Hi, this is Dylan and Maggie. Sorry we missed your call, but leave us a message and we'll call you back. Talk to you soon. Take care.”
I quickly dialed back, wedging the phone between my shoulder and ear, dialing with one hand and holding Maggie's with the other. Blue crawled across the bed, put his front paws in my lap and licked the phone, whimpering. After the eighth time, I set the phone in the receiver, rubbed my face, and stared out the window.
I
DISMISSED CLASS, GRADED QUIZZES FOR ALMOST
an hour, then packed my bag and slipped out. Crossing the yard to my truck, I got curious, so I wandered over toward the fence. The football team was practicing on the far eastern side of the field. I threw my bag in the back and walked through the gate toward the scrimmage. I didn't necessarily want to see it as much as I wanted to smell and hear it.
As I was walking, I heard a voice behind me.
“You singing, Professuh?”
I turned around to see Russell towering over me like Goliath.
“Who, me? No, I'm just, uh . . . ” Okay, I lied.
Russell smiled. “You was singing, Professuh.” His eyes widened, and a grassy, sweaty smile cracked his face.
“Not really,” I dodged. “Who do y'all play this week?”
“Professuh, that singing sounded good.” Russell raised his eyebrows and tried not to smile. “Sing some more.”
“Russell, I can't sing my way out of a wet paper bag.”
“My daddy loved to sing. He liked blues and old hymns. Sang both so much he got 'em mixed up all the time. One minute he'd be singing 'bout a girl he once knew, the next it was the coming glory.” Russell's smile came back, and he raised his eyebrows once again. “And you still ain't answered my question, Professuh. Was you singing?”
“Russell, it's
âWere
you singing.'”
“Okay, Mr. Professuh, sir.” Russell had little quit in him.
“Were
you singing?”
“Yes, I was,” I admitted, my eyes scanning the practice field.
“I thought so. Now, what was you singing?”
The last thing I wanted was a casual conversation with Russell. In class is one thing. Out of class, that's another. Students can't differentiate. Pretty soon, they start wanting to have out-of-class discussions in class. At that point, the idea of you as teacher, and them as students, hops on a ghost train and flies south. Never to return.
“Russell.” I gathered myself. “I was singing a song my wife, Maggie, used to sing to our son before he was born.”
“How's it go?”
“Russell, aren't you supposed to be out there somewhere, hurting somebody?” I pointed to the field.
“Professuh, you ain't answering my question.” He put his hand on my shoulder.
Russell has a contagious smile. About like Pastor John's. It absolutely destroys any walls you throw in its place. You could rebuild Jericho, and Russell's smile would bring it crumbling down.
“Russell, let me put it to you this way,” I said, looking at his hand on my shoulder. “There ain't no way in God's green earth I'm singing you a lullaby.” I stepped up toward the fence, crossed my arms, and kept my eyes on the scrimmage, appearing intent on the action on the field.
“Professor,” he said in his best English, “âAin't' is not a word.”
I laughed. I walked back toward him, stepping over pieces of wall as I went.
“Professuh, you don't laugh much, but when you do, it's a good laugh. You oughta try it some more.”
What is it with these kids? I'm walking around here half-naked tripping over wall rubble.
Russell continued, “So how's that lullaby go?”
“No.”
“Now, Professuh.” Russell started talking with his hands. “They's no need to start getting huffy. We jus' having a friendly conversation, and you was about to sing me a song.”
“Russell, go away. Go hit somebody. I'll see you in class.”
“I ain't gonna do dat, Professuh. Been hitting people all day. That's how come I'm standing here. 'Cause I'm good at it, and all those boys over there ain't. Now come on, I heard it when I walked up here.”
“How's your term paper coming?” I asked.
“Professuh, don't change the subject. We ain't in school. This is football, you see.” Russell used his hands to paint along with his words. “In case you ain't never seen one, that's a field. That's a ball. This is grass. These are pads, and this is sweat. School is over there, and this is here. Let's keep 'em separate.” His smile grew bigger. “Now are you gonna sing, or am I gonna bring this up in class? I am bigger than you, and . . .”
“Yes?” I said. “And what? I can flunk you in two shakes.”
“I'm waiting.” He tapped his size-fourteen cleats on the grass.
Every time I stood in Russell's presence, I noticed how big he was. He stood maybe seven inches taller than me, weighed at least 290 pounds, and had very little fat. Maybe 8 percent. With shoulder pads, he was huge. I was glad I didn't have to tackle him.
“If you ain't in there,” the coach hollered, tobacco juice oozing out the corner of his mouth, “or standing on the sideline, I want you on a knee.”
I sat down on a nearby bench, and Russell took a knee. He faced the scrimmage, one ear trained on the coach and one on me. He knew how to look as though he were paying attention. Sweat was pouring out of every pore, and Russell was in his element. Heat, pads, pain. Paradise.
I gave in and sang.
I sang Maggie's sweet lullaby, and maybe I wanted to hear it too. At first I murmured, barely above my breath, but Russell would have none of that.
“Professuh,” he said, keeping his eyes pointed toward the field, “that don't count. I can't hear you.” He cupped his hand to his ear.
So I sang it for real, as if I were singing to Maggie's tummy. I finished my song, blinked away the glisten, and looked down at Russell, expecting chiding.
“Professuh,” Russell said, strapping on his helmet, “you awright.” He buttoned his chinstrap and didn't look at me. “You awright.”
I don't know if he looked away because he didn't want to see the water in my eyes or didn't want me to see the water in his.
“See you in class, Russell.”
“In class,” Russell said with his back toward me.
I heard the second snap of his chinstrap, and Russell jogged off. Man, he was big. Powerful too. Whatever his folks fed him, it worked. There's no telling how much it cost to feed that kid when he was coming up.
I walked off the practice field, pulled the door of my truck closed, cranked her up, and headed for the hospital. As I was driving over the old tracks, I glanced back across the field and spotted Russell. He had rejoined the scrimmage, tackled the running back, and was now holding both the ball and the running back's helmet. The running back lay on his back, dazed, shaking his head, surrounded by three trainers.
Minutes later, I caught myself humming.
I
DISMISSED CLASS AMID A PUDDLE OF AFTERNOON
sweat. It was now almost October, but the lazy summer haze was hanging around, winning the battle against the cooler breezes that made a strong charge in the evening, but beat a retreat during the day. With every class, I kept threatening to buy a window unit and blow some a/c into this place. If I did, I'd bet my truck that the introduction of that window unit would change the seating chart. All my kids would be crowding around that thingâeven Koy.
On her way out the door, Amanda glanced at my arm, looked down her nose, and shook her head. “You better let me clean that again.” She left without another word.
I rolled down my sleeve, stuffed my hand in my pocket, and began packing my bag. As I was leaving, I almost stumbled over Koy, who was still seated. She had her hands folded in front of her mouth and looked as though she wanted to say something. I decided to help her out.
“You were quiet in class today.”
“I'm quiet every day.”
“True.” I smiled and waited for her to say something else. I wasn't going to drag it out of her.
“Professuh.” She lifted her book bag into her lap. “I write a lot, and, uh, I was wondering if maybe you'd look at this for me. Tell me whether you think it's any good.”
I walked over and leaned against the desk next to hers. “Sure, I'll look at it, but don't take me as the sole measure for whether or not it's any good. I may say it's great when others think not. And I may say it stinks when it doesn't. I'm just one opinion, and unfortunately, I like what I like. Know what I mean?”
“Yeah, me too.” Koy reached into her bag and pulled out a well-worn journal. This book had seen some time. She handed me the journal reluctantly and walked out of the room.
The pages were worn, tattered, and on them she had written thousands of words. I slid it into my backpack and turned to leave. When I did, I noticed Koy standing back in the doorway.
She turned slowly, pointing at the journal, and said, “Professuh, that's . . . that's me in there.” She looked away, then turned and faced me. Her right hand came slowly up to her face and removed her glasses. Beautiful green eyes stared out at me. An emerald surprise.
Why would someone try so hard to hide something so beautiful?
She stepped forward, took a deep breath, and said, “Can we keep me between you and me?”
“Koy.” I reached into my backpack and pulled out the journal. “If you're asking me whether or not I will keep what I read in this journal inside me and between us, the answer is yes. Absolutely. But trust? Trust is another matter. It's a choice. It's earned. It's something I don't do with everybody. Am I trustworthy? You have to decide that. Not me. It's your call. And if you ask me to read this journal, you're trusting me.”
She stood motionless a minute, looked at the floor, glanced down the hall, put her glasses back on, tugged at her handbag, then walked over to me, grabbed the journal out of my hand, and left without a word.
Maybe I was too hard. Maybe not. Who knows? I do know this: most people, myself included, are at their most vulnerable in a journal. They pour it all out. Sometimes a journal is the only ear that will listen, or at least the only one that you want to talk to. So we talk until our hand can write no more and then, spent, we fall off to sleep or go to class or get back to work or whatever it was that we were escaping from in the first place.
I
WENT HOME, PIDDLED AROUND THE HOUSE, AND THEN
decided I'd drive to the hospital after the late shift had settled down. I was surprised when I found myself instead curled up on my front-porch swing, watching the sunrise light the corn tassels. Last thing I remembered was watching the wind make waves out of the corn rows.
Squinting in the morning sun, I saw that on the floor below me lay Koy's journal with a note on top of it.
Professor, I didn't want to wake you. Sorry about yesterday. Please read. Koy.
I percolated some Maxwell House, returned to the swing with a steaming cup, resisted a tug to get to the hospital, and started on page one.
By noon I had read the whole thing. Mostly poetry and short vignettes. Scenes of her life. No beginning. No ending. Snapshots absent a context.
When I finished, I had one question: why in the world was this girl in my class? Koy was good. I'm not talking about “she has good style” or even “control of the English language.” Koy had a gift. The real deal.
Sitting there on my porch, holding that girl's mind and heart in my hand, I could only think of two real possibilities. Either she was a gifted genius unchallenged by school, sort of a Bill Gates with a pen, or something had happened to her. Something violent and sudden had taken away the tenderness and replaced it with the ice-queen demeanor and sunglasses.
What I held in my hand reminded me of a feeling that I had had several times in grammar school and rarely since. It was that awe mixed with incredulity that I got in Ms. Edward's music class while studying Mozart. Now I had it with Koy. How could someone so young produce something so fine and grown-up?
I put the journal down and sipped my coffee, which had long since grown cold. It was horrible. Maggie loved cold coffee. She used to pour a cup in the morning, let it sit a few hours, and then pick it up just before lunch. Sort of a midday caffeine hit. I never did figure that out. Why would anyone purposefully drink cold coffee when she could have it hot? I sniffed the top again, realized it had sat dormant for more than three hours, brought it to my lips, and sipped again curiously. The cold dregs swirled around my tongue and fell down my throat. I noticed a different taste and once again felt the cold hammer of loneliness slam me against the porch.
T
HE THERMOMETER OUTSIDE READ NINETY-EIGHT DEGREES,
and not a single cloud dotted the clear blue sky. I walked through the hospital doors wearing a long-sleeved black T-shirt, Blue at my heels. All was quiet. Maggie lay in her room, a solemn sleeping beauty. Someone had recently brushed her hair and painted her fingernails. I checked her feet to see if they were cold and noticed that the same person had painted her toenails as well.