It took some time for her to make up her mind about me. She was one of
these that is never going to be wrong, period. As regards to me: (1) No flesh and blood of hers was getting turned back over to the do-nothings at DSS.
(2) Sheโd sooner shoot herself in the head than raise a boy, so. Getting her way was going to be a problem.
Her opinion on her brother Dick: most people thought he was brainless, but really he was the smartest person they knew. She wanted me to hang out with him, which I was a little scared to do, honestly, due to not knowing
how. I asked what happened to him to get in the wheelchair. She said he
was born with a spinal type of thing, but that life hadnโt helped his case any either. Whenever they were little, the boys at school bullied him to the extent almost of death. Stuffing him in a feed bag, hiding him in a culvert, stunts like that, just for being so small he couldnโt fight back. Also for liking to read and knowing the answers in school, which everybody knows
is asking for it. She was the big sister and got handy at warding off the boys with whatever weapon fell to hand, but their father had other ideas and put him in a home in Knoxville. He didnโt get a lick of schooling over there, so she took him books if they went to visit. The father wanted him out of sight, with people at church saying a cripple was punishment from God. Poor
little Dick was there for years, until the rest of the family passed away and she could go get him out.
Damn. I was still nervous to go talk to him, but less so after she told me all that. One no-toucher kid knows another, you have to think.
His room was downstairs for the wheelchair, and usually the door stood open. The first time I went in, he didnโt notice me because of reading a
book. Not regular reading, I meanย gone. He and that big book were not in this house, nor maybe this world. His room was basically a living room
with a bed in it. Chairs, lamps, desk, plus some medical and bathroom stuff I tried not to look at. The desk had a lot going on there, including a kite.
Every wall had shelves of more books than Iโd seen anywhere, school library included. Some few had the skinny spines and the colors I knew
were kidsโ books. Iโd not seen a lot of those. Somebody one time gave me the one where the boy is hateful and sent to bed with no supper, and in his head heโs a monster and goes to this island where itโs all wild monsters like him, seriously ticked off, making their wild rumpus. I loved that. But preferred comics, which I didnโt see any of at all in Mr. Dickโs room.
Finally I said, โHey, Mr. Dick,โ and he looked up and smiled, not that surprised. He motioned me to come in. His throat or voice box was messed up, but you could get used to it and mostly tell what he was saying. It took me a minute though to get to that point. That first day I checked out his books, asking what this or that one was about, and pretended I understood the answer. I didnโt find the wild boy one. His kidsโ books had the old- timey pictures that kids now would get bored of. He must have kept every book he ever read. I asked if those were the ones his sister brought him in
the cripple home, and he said yes. Which kind of wrecked me, how tragic that was. Jesus. But here these two were now, living happier-ever-after than most.
Mr. Dick didnโt take offense at much of anything, so in time I asked some nosy shit, like how did my grandmother get such a nice house (by outliving everybody else in the family), and what did the others die of (being meaner than snakes). Did he remember my dad? Yes! At the time of my grandmother fetching Mr. Dick back from the cripple home, after her husband died, my dad was a teenager. That tripped me out, to think of him walking around in this exact house, alive and a kid. I was used to thinking of my dad as another category of being, like Ant-Man or Jesus. But a real person. That looked like me. I wanted to know a million things, like what
was his first car, what sports did he play. Mr. Dick was vague on that, saying just that he fought a lot with the religious father, and then without any dad in the house to lay down the law, fought with my grandmother.
Then turned sixteen and moved out. What he did between leaving this
house and taking up with Mom in Lee County, which was a lot of years, Mr.
Dick had no idea. Possibly nobody did. I wished I could find the book of my whole dad in that house and read every page.
So, taking crap from a teenager that looked like me: Was this the start of my grandmother taking her dim view of boys? I had to ask. Mr. Dick smiled and shook his head no, motioning over his crooked shoulder like, way, way back. Of course. The big, stinking guys that shoved his little wishbone arms and legs in a feed sack, laughing their nuts off. Sheโd made up her mind long before she had her redheaded baby boy. He probably never had a chance.
It was after her son ran off that sheโd started taking in girls for their so- called educations. I asked Mr. Dick what she taught them that they wouldnโt learn in regular school. Iโd already seen how Jane Ellen hit the books every single evening, homework spread out all over the kitchen table. My grandmother would quiz her or give pointers on history or even math, trig and such, which surprised me that an old person would know about. Iโd thought it was a newer invention. Mr. Dick said she taught her girls to be
the best in their class and not let anybody talk down to them. Same old song in other words: steer clear of the hateful boys. Mr. Dick said yes, that was it. I asked him how the girls graduated from their educations and moved out.
He said generally by getting married.
It was a long couple of weeks I waited around. Some days sheโd put me outside on garden chores. Jane Ellen also, if she wasnโt at school or work. We spent a morning turning over dirt where she wanted to put in her fall collards. I could get Jane Ellen tickled over the smallest thing, talking
worms etc. But that only takes you so far. There wasnโt any TV. It was usually Mr. Dick or nothing. We guys had our laughs. Sometimes we made fun of my grandmother a tiny bit. He loved her of course, but to a certain extent, she was batshit. Our little secret.
One morning I found him wheeled up to his desk working on something, and he meant business. Not reading, he was writing. On the kite. Iโd had dollar store kites as a kid, but his was not normal like that. It was homemade, out of tobacco lath and the plain paper in rolls. He said to pull up a chair, so I sat and watched him write on his kite. He had the neatest, littlest writing ever to come out of a human person. To be so crooked in his body, his lines of writing were straighter than straight. Also, slow as Christmas. It took forever for him to finish one sentence:ย So wise so young,
they say, do never live long.ย Words that made no exact sense, but probably true. Heโd written other sentences all over that kite. Like, a hundred of them. My eye picked out:ย Dispute not with her: she is a lunatic.ย Uh-oh, I thought, trouble with sister dear. But another one said:ย I am determined to prove a villain, and hate the idle pleasures of these days.ย I couldnโt make heads or tails.ย No beast so fierce but knows some touch of pity.ย And in the center, in bigger print:
And if I die no soul will pity me. And why should they since I myself find in myself no pity to myself.
Iย asked what it was about, and he patted his book on the desk that heโd just finished. Did he aim to write out the entire book on the kite? No. Just certain parts he liked the best.
โAnd then what happens?โ
He pointed out the window. His hand motioned up, up. โYou fly the kite?โ
He nodded yes. He said after he read a book he oftentimes wanted to thank whoever wrote it, but usually they were dead. His book had a name on it Iโd heard of, Shakespeare. Dead, evidently.
โSo itโs like returning the blessing?โ I asked.
He nodded yes. Like that. Which my grandmother said they didnโt do in
this house. Not to God, anyway. Returning the blessings to Shakespeare and them, evidently okay. You had to reckon she was on board with it because thereโs no way he was going to go behind her back. Flying a kite from a wheelchair is bound to be a production.
What finally lit a flame under my grandmotherโs ass was school. That I wasnโt going. Jane Ellen was already studying for tests, and Iโd not even set a foot intoโwhat grade was I supposed to be in? All the sudden sheโs acting like itโs an emergency, and Iโm wondering, Whereโs the fire, lady?
Iโd laid out of school plenty, mostly due to grown-ups wanting to get some better use out of me. Not this one. Sheโd have no part in me growing up an ignorant bastard. She called me into her parlor and sat me down. Asked if I had any particulars on where I wanted to go. She was sitting at her big desk that I didnโt know was a desk until she heaved open the top thing that rolled open. It took me a minute to work out what she meant byย particulars.
What grade? No. School, county, state. I couldnโt stay with her, but she wasnโt sending me back to Lee County, if thatโs not where I wanted to be.
I wasnโt used to choices. I only had a list of people I hoped not to see again this side of the grave, with Stoner on top. Next, Creaky and his farm. Old Baggy, but I already knew my grandmotherโs opinions on the DSS. What she had in mind was a different setup.
โIโve been looking after children longer than youโve been alive,โ she said, looking at me through the top of her glasses. The glass part was divided, like an F-150 two-tone.
โYes maโam,โ I said.
She turned a roller-wheel thing with cards in it that was her list of people.
Names, phone numbers, but weโre talking maybe a hundred cards in that thing. Imagine knowing that many people. She was an old person of course, fifties or sixties. Time enough to round up a posse.
โMy girls donโt usually end up staying in Unicoi,โ she said. โThey have bigger fish to fry.โ I thought of what Mr. Dick said about them marrying, so maybe it was their husbands that had the bigger fish. But I was not about to pick any fights with the spider lady that had me in her web, deciding my fate. Because thatโs what this was about. One of her girls was going to take me in. We went over the different ones, what they did, if they had kids now. They lived all over. Two in Knoxville, one in Johnson City. Most had gone to college, she was proud of that. So naturally theyโd end up in the city. I said Iโd be real glad and amazed if anybody wanted to take me in, but
please not the city. And my grandmother said okay, she understood.
Whatever we came up with, she said she would have to square it with Social Services on the legal stuff. I knew they wouldnโt argue with her. Theyโd been beating the weeds for anybody to take me. Probably if she called and said, Hey, Demon is moving in with this nice ex-con child porn dealer I know, Old Baggy would say, Okay, tell me where to send the man his check.
She asked about social security, being wise to the business of me getting money for Mom being dead. I told her about the account they set up, which got me wondering about my dad as far as cash possibilities. She frowned at the wall, tapping her chin with the eraser of her pencil. She had a little bit of a mustache, if I didnโt mention it. Maybe thinking the same. I liked the idea of her son owing me. It made me not so pathetic. We were all of us in this spiderweb.
But all she said finally was that I needed to stay in the state of Virginia.
Legalwise.
I told her if I was going that far, Iโd take Lee County or thereabouts. I didnโt know I thought that, it just came out. Because of Maggot and a million other things Iโd known all my life. The Corn Dog, where I swallowed a tooth. Five Star Stadium, the Generals. The mountain everybody says looks like a face, which it doesnโt. Not seeing any of that again just made no sense. As far as Tazewell or other Virginia counties, all I knew about them was I wanted to see their asses kicked at the football games. Living there would make me a traitor.
My grandmother said Okay, sheโd see what she could do. She had girls living over that direction, one in Big Stone Gap, one in Norton. Another one in Jonesville but sadly she was dead of the breast cancer. My grandmother got kind of woeful talking about her, tough old bat that she
was. This girl Patsy was taken young, a little baby left behind. Patsy being one of the first girls my grandmother raised, so that was a while ago. She still kept in touch with the husband. She could call him up to see how heโd feel about a boy around the house. Mind you, she said, even if he says yes, this deal comes with rules. A trial run, for starters. She always paid the family something to help out, but I would be expected to be a decent young man and do my part.
Oh crap, I thought, here I go paying the rent. I did not like the sound of this house with the dead wife. Whoโs taking care of the baby? A husband ruling the roost on his own? Thereโd be nobody to remind him kids need shoes and haircuts and the shit they donโt really want but you still have to have to qualify as a person, like toothpaste. New ring binders for school. Not to say Iโd caught my grandmotherโs disease, but letโs face it, guys can be dicks.
โHeโs a schoolteacher, so thatโs good,โ she said. โI think heโs civics, or health. Land, itโs been an age.โ She was flipping through her wheel of people, looking for his card. โAnd something with the sports. I donโt know about that, but heโd not let it get in the way of your lessons. Heโs a pretty good one. Here he is, Winfield.โ
Dear Lord in Heaven. Sorry about the million times I took your name in vain because I didnโt think you were actually there. Holy God. My grandmother was picking up the phone to call the coach of the Lee High Generals.
Iย was leaving them. Mr. Dick, my grandmother, and whatever was left of my dad in the graveyard she took me to see. There wasnโt but a flat, shiny marker on the ground with his real name and how long he lived, start to finish. It spooked me to see my first name on a grave. It could have been all me, first and last, if Mom had forgiven him. The graveyard was behind a church that looked abandoned, down the road past her house. The weeds
were a sight. She put on her gloves, got down on her knees, and put it all straight. Sheโd brought a jar of flowers from her yard to set down on him, and collected up jars that were left there before. Iโd say she cared about my father more than she let on.
It was that fall type of day where the world feels like itโs about to change its mind on everything. Cicadas goingย why-why-why, the air lying still, all
the fight gone out of summer. My head kept telling meย Run! Go now!ย But I didnโt know from where, to what. She got up from her weeding, settled her hat on her head, and we walked back to the house on the gravel shoulder.
She took big steps like a person crossing plowed ground, and I followed behind. It felt like she was mad at me. I still didnโt know what to call her. After all my years wishing for a mammaw, I finally had one and the shoe didnโt fit. I called her yes-maโam. The sun was behind us. I shifted so my shadow touched her, falling across her skirt and fast, lumpy legs. No good reason.
Back at the house I put the clothes, toothbrush, and other things my grandmother gave me in the suitcase she gave me, wondering if this stuff was Demon now, and if so, was I erased. Itโs not that I didnโt like the
clothes or the suitcase. They were fine. The next day Jane Ellen was driving me to Kingsport, where Mr. Winfield would meet us at noon in the Walmart parking lot. After all those days and nights that about had killed me getting here, the trip home wouldnโt take but an hour and a half. Crazy. Thatโs Lee County for you. It pulls you back hard.
I went downstairs to Mr. Dickโs room. He didnโt like to start a new book till he finished his kite on the last one, but he wasnโt doing that. Just looking out the window. I said Iโd miss hanging out with him, and he said the same. I wondered if I would ever see him again. The Coach Winfield deal could fall through, of course, but one way or another it looked like I was Virginia bound. Would they come see me? Given her whole cars-equal-death thing, not likely. I told him Iโd call on the phone or write, even though I had no
idea how to buy a stamp or any of that. We sat quiet a minute. I wasnโt one for hugging, or else I would have.
The clouds had bellied up since morning and a stout wind was kicking up outside, turning the leaves upside down and silvery. Mr. Peg always said that meant rain on the way. I asked Mr. Dick if his kite was ready to fly, and he said it was. Then letโs do it, I said. I got a shiver in my spine. Maybe thatโs what my brain had been telling me all day:ย Run. Go fly a kite.
He looked pretty shocked, but he said okay, he just had one more thing to write on it. I tried to be patient, with him being the slowest writer. He said
this one was from a different book, some words he wanted to put up there for me. He wrote them at the very top:
Never be mean in anything. Never be false. Never be cruel. I can always be hopeful of you.
If that was from him to me, it was more man-to-man talk than Iโd ever had in life so far. It beat the two-cents-equals-happiness thing, all to hell. I said, Okay, letโs do this thing.
I didnโt ask how he usually did it, who helped him or what, because I had my own plan. He wheeled outside, down the porch ramp and onto the
flagstones of the front sidewalk, this being all the farther his wheelchair could go. But still in the yard. No running room. He motioned me to take the kite and go on with it, but I said, My man! We can do better. I wheeled him off the sidewalk onto the grass, which wasnโt hard with him weighing probably not much more than a bale of hay. Out over the bumpy grass we
went, Mr. Dick working his mouth until what came out was โHeee, heeee!โ Which I took to meanย Hell yes!
I unlatched the back gate and wheeled him plumb out into the stubble of the hayfield behind the house. Then the going got pretty rough, wheelchairwise, so we didnโt go far, just to where I could get the runny-go I needed to send that sucker to the moon. The clouds were scooting by, throwing shadows like a herd of wild monsters rumpusing over the field, and I was right there with them. I hefted the kite and let out the string, more and more till it was not but a speck in the sky. I could feel rain starting to spit on us, and who cared. Let it thunder.
The string was pulling hard in the wind, but I towed it back to Mr. Dick and put it in his hand. โHang on tight,โ I said, and flopped on the ground beside him, panting like a dog. He was quiet, holding that string and kite
with everything he had. The way he looked. Eyes raised up, body tethered by one long thread to the big stormy sky, the whole of him up there with his words, talking to whoever was listening. Iโve not seen a sight to match it.
No bones of his had ever been shoved in a feed bag. The man was a giant.





