Mom graduated from rehab and got to go home. Now instead of McDonaldโs I could go sit in our kitchen, or in my room that was the exact mess Iโd left it the night it all happened, visiting Mom with my chest hurting for how much I missed being a normal kid. Any minute Miss Barks was going to tap on the door and say, โSorry, timeโs up.โ Thenย bam, back to foster life. Some years down the road it would be like this with the girls saying,ย Pull out now, quick!ย Honestly, give me all or nothing at all. Give me the damn visits at McDonaldโs.
But Mom said she lived for these times. Regardless the unfairness of her being allowed home while I wasnโt. Me beingย notย the one of us that screwed up. She still had drug tests to pass and a hard row to hoe, so Miss Barks said it was a realistic goal for us to get me home for Christmas. She didnโt babysit us at the house, even though if Mom had wanted to do me
damage there were a lot more options there than at McDonaldโs. Miss Barks said Mom was earning trust. Sheโd drop me off and sit outside in her car for the hour, doing her homework or her case files. Homework, yes. Miss Barks was seriously young. She was taking night classes to get certified for a teacher, which she said was her dream, because she loved kids. And I thought, What am I?
My first visit back home, I went after school while Stoner was at work. Mom said Stoner was still anti me moving back in, due to the stress of the three of us as a family making Mom relapse. Youโre going to say, What kind of shit is that for a mother to be telling her kid? Even I thought that, at the time. But Mom had milk and cookies out on the table for me, so probably she was trying to learn the drill from TV. She was nervous. I cut
her some slack. She showed me the presents Stoner got her for coming home, including a new microwave that told the time in lit-up numbers. She asked if my foster was still being an asshole, and I told her a person could get used to anything except hanging by the neck. Something Iโd heard from Mr. Peg.
After our time was up, Miss Barks came in and said I should get together anything I wanted to take with me. My first thought was to load up on stuff I missed like Snickers bars and my best comics. But anything valuable I would have to turn over to Fast Forward, so I ended up not taking much.
Just two of my small-size action heroes that I could sneak in. I would hide them in Swap-Out and Tommyโs beds, and theyโd never know who put them there. God, maybe. The surprise toy in the shitburger happy meal of their lives.
On the drive back we rolled down the windows. โJust smell that,โ she said. โFall time.โ Plowed-under silage fields, smoke from peopleโs leaf burning, and something a little bit sweet, maybe apples that had rotted on
the ground. She was a country girl. She showed me where her parentsโ farm was because we went past that road. The happiest I remember being that fall was in the car with Miss Barks. She was chatty and would ask questions like who were my caseworkers before, which I couldnโt remember, honestly. Iโd see one a couple of times, sheโd be all like,ย Hey, Iโve got your
back. Next visit, hereโs a new one reading my name off the files.
Given her looks, I figured Miss Barks would have a boyfriend wanting to get her knocked up and married, but she made no mention of that. Sheโd moved out last year and got her apartment with the roommate in Norton, which her parents thought was a waste of money, but she wanted that bad to be on her own. I asked why did she want to be a teacher, and she said you
have to follow your dreams, plus it pays better than DSS. She wanted an apartment by herself because her roommate left dirty dishes and her crap all over. She said her two best high school friends had gotten their scholarships and gone away to college, but she didnโt get one and it about killed her.
Everybody knows there arenโt that many to go around, but she was still ashamed. Sheโd thought she was as smart as her two friends were. But hereโs the thing, she told me, you donโt give up, sometimes you just have to take second choice. In her case the job at DSS, slob-roommate apartment, and night classes at Mountain Empire Community College.
She asked me what I wanted to be whenever I grew up. I had to think about that. We went past some barns and tobacco fields with their big yellow-green leaves waving in the sad evening light. She looked over at me and said, Hey, why so glum, chum?
I told her nobody ever asked me that question before, about growing up and what I wanted to be, so I didnโt know. Mainly, still alive.
Eventually I got to spend a whole Saturday with Mom, which was the day she told me her surprise: Mom was pregnant. Holy Jesus. I was as ignorant as the next kid, but knew enough to ask, How did you get pregnant in
rehab?
She laughed, and said it was going on longer than that but she didnโt know until they ran blood tests on her for other reasons. Now she knew.
Next April I was going to have a brother or sister. Which blew my mind actually, to put it that way. Me, Demon, that never had even a cousin to my name, soon to be a big brother. Maggot would be jealous. Heโd never had any brothers or sisters so far, with future hopes slim to none. Goochland being women only.
We had an amazing day, me and Mom. We went outside and raked up
leaves and Maggot came over and we jumped in them. I wanted to run over and see Mrs. Peggot but Mom needed me all to herself, so I stayed. At one point she looked at me and said, Oh my god, Demon, I think you went and got taller than me! Which was impossible, so we measured ourselves with marks on the wall, the official way with a cereal box on your head. Of our two pencil lines, mine came out on top, by a hair. Mom always said she was five-feet-sweet in her two bare feet, but it turns out all this time she was only fifty-nine inches. Which rhymes with nothing, but now that was me too, plus a hair. Unbelievable. I was used to being taller than most kids, except the ones that had been held back a lot of grades. But taller than your own parent is a trip. We put on music and danced crazy, which was a thing we did, and sat on the floor and played dumb board games, which we hadnโt done forever. I kept thinking about the baby. I asked her what we should
name it, because I had ideas. Tommy was a good one. Also Sterling, which Mom didnโt know was even a name.
I asked where its room would be, and she was vague on that. Actually it kind of killed the mood. It turns out she and Stoner had been having
arguments on moving to a bigger house. They hadnโt been married that long
yet and he still liked the good times, so he was not keen on her having this baby. Which was ridiculous. If he wanted to run around with the no-kids version of Mom, he already missed that boat by ten years. Plus, the baby was on the way. You canโt take it to customer service and get your money back, I told her, but she didnโt laugh. Without really going into it, she told me that was more or less what Stoner had in mind.
I changed the subject by turning over the whole checkerboard and getting in a tickle fight, just basically acting like an idiot. We about peed ourselves laughing.
Stoner was supposed to get home around four, and it was required for me to wait and at least say hello. Our so-called work to do on learning to be a family. Miss Barks said sheโd come in and get me at four thirty. Iโd not seen Stoner since the night of Momโs OD, so I kind of froze up. He looked the same: denim vest, leather bracelet, gauges. Iโd spent a lot of time making him die in my drawing notebook. Even if he never saw those drawings, Iโd made them, and looking at him now, I felt like he knew. Not sensible, just an in-my-mind thing.
He gave Mom a kiss and asked what we two had been up to. She said nothing much. She got a beer out of the fridge and cracked it open for him, and asked why didnโt he sit down and talk to me a little, to start things off on a new foot. Fine, he said. He turned one of the kitchen chairs around and sat in it backward, straddling it with his arms folded on the back, looking at me. Mom pushed her hair out of her eyes, edgy. Sheโd been happy and fun all day and now without even looking at her straight on, I could feel her change.
Stoner asked what I was learning in foster care. I said so far mostly putting up hay, working cattle, stretching fences, and riding the bus two
hours each way to school. I told him basically everything else was the same as home, in terms of always having to watch my back. His eyes changed.
He said he meant, how was I doing with theย attitude.
I told him fine, thanks.
โGuess what!โ Mom said. โI told him about the baby, and heโs as excited as he can be.โ She was looking at me, mouth-smiling but not the eyes.
Those please-save-me eyes. โJust think if this oneโs a boy, and Demon gets a little brother. Theyโll be two peas in a pod.โ
Stoner stared at her. โIt wouldnโt be a fucking mulatto.โ
โMy dad was Melungeon,โ I told him. โNot a, whatever you said.โ
Mom tried to change the subject, asking where all Stoner made deliveries today, and why didnโt we go in the living room because the chairs were
more comfortable and her back hurt.
Stoner was still staring her down. โYou wanted us to talk. We are fucking talking.โ
He had much to say. How I would have to be more considerate now, due to Momโs fragile situation. Stoner had learned a lot, he said, from him and Mom going to their counseling. New words to help us all get along.
Opposition disorder being one of them. Supposedly that was a disease, and I had it. If I wanted to move in here, Iโd need to go on the medication to knock some of the wind out of my sails. Evidently I had too much of that in my sails. Wind.
Mom acted somewhat like she didnโt hear any of this and brought up the different subject of Christmas. How I would be coming home then, and that we would do something special. I remembered to tell her the Peggots were going to Knoxville again over vacation. Probably they would invite me to go too.
Not so fast, buddy, was Stonerโs advice. He said I was still not to hang out with Maggot, which I could tell was a surprise to me and Mom both. I told him Miss Barks had checked out the Peggots and given the thumbs-up. It turned out Miss Barks had dated one of Maggotโs cousins in high school. And Mom was like, Ha-ha, Lee County, wouldnโt you know it.
Stoner slowly turned his head and fixed on her, like a big guard dog. โSince when does this Barks bitch make the rules about what we do as a family?โ
Iโd been thinking it was ever since the night Mom almost offed herself and Stoner gave me a black eye, but maybe thatโs just me. According to Stoner, the Peggots and me were a no-go. He said he was getting an injunction, so if I went over there the cops would arrest me.
I looked over at Mom like, Is this true? And she made just the tiniest, tiniest shake of her head. He didnโt see it.
The microwave heโd bought her with the blue lit-up clock said 4:21. Nine minutes to go. I didnโt want to be in that kitchen, and didnโt want to go back to the farm. I sat still, trying to be nothing and nowhere, watching my
minutes tick out.