1952
One morning, Pa, shaved fresh and dressed in a wrinkled button-down shirt, came into the kitchen and said he was
leaving on the Trailways bus for Asheville to discuss some issues with the army. He figured he had more disability due him and was off to see about it and wouldnโt be back for three or four days.
Heโd never told Kya his business, where he was going, or when he was coming back, so, standing there in her too-short bib overalls, she stared up at him, mute.
โAh bโleeve ya deaf and dumb as all git-out,โ he said, the porch door slapping behind him.
Kya watched him gimp along the path, left leg swinging to the side, then forward. Her fingers knotted. Maybe they were all going to leave her, one by one down this lane. When he reached the road and unexpectedly looked back, she threw her hand up and waved hard. A shot to keep him tethered. Pa lifted an arm in a quick, dismissive salutation. But it was something. It was more than Ma had done.
From there, she wandered to the lagoon, where early light caught the glimmer of hundreds of dragonfly wings. Oaks and thick brush encircled the water, darkening it cavelike, and she stopped as she eyed Paโs boat drifting there on the line. If she took it into the marsh and he found out, heโd take his belt to her. Or the paddle he kept by the porch door; the โwelcome bat,โ Jodie had called it.
Perhaps a yearning to reach out yonder pulled her toward the boatโa bent-up, flat-bottomed metal skiff Pa used for fishing.
Sheโd been out in it all her life, usually with Jodie. Sometimes heโd let her steer. She even knew the way through some of the intricate channels and estuaries that wandered through a patchwork of water and land, land and water, finally to the sea. Because even though the ocean was just beyond the trees surrounding the shack, the only way to get there by boat was to go in the opposite direction, inland, and wind through miles of the maze of waterways that eventually hooked back to the sea.
But, being only seven and a girl, sheโd never taken the boat out by herself. It floated there, tied by a single cotton line to a log.
Gray grunge, frayed fishing tackle, and half-crushed beer cans covered the boat floor. Stepping in, she said out loud, โGotta check the gas like Jodie said, so Pa wonโt figure I took it.โ She poked a broken reed into the rusted tank. โโNough for a short ride, I reckon.โ
Like any good robber, she looked around, then flicked the cotton line free of the log and poled forward with the lone paddle. The silent cloud of dragonflies parted before her.
Not able to resist, she pulled the starter rope and jerked back when the motor caught the first time, sputtering and burping white smoke. Grabbing the tiller, she turned the throttle too far, and the boat turned sharply, the engine screaming. She released the throttle, threw her hands up, and the boat eased to a drift, purring.
When in trouble, just let go. Go back to idle.
Accelerating now more gently, she steered around the old fallen cypress, putt, putt, putt beyond the piled sticks of the beaver lodge. Then, holding her breath, she steered toward the lagoon entrance, almost hidden by brambles. Ducking beneath the low-hanging limbs of giant trees, she churned slowly through thicket for more than a hundred yards, as easy turtles slid from water-logs. A floating mat of duckweed colored the water as green as the leafy ceiling, creating an emerald tunnel. Finally, the trees parted, and she glided into a place of wide sky and reaching grasses, and the sounds of cawing birds. The view a chick gets, she reckoned, when it finally breaks its shell.
Kya tooled along, a tiny speck of a girl in a boat, turning this way and that as endless estuaries branched and braided before
her. Keep left at all the turns going out, Jodie had said. She barely touched the throttle, easing the boat through the current, keeping the noise low. As she broke around a stand of reeds, a whitetail doe with last springโs fawn stood lapping water. Their heads jerked up, slinging droplets through the air. Kya didnโt stop or they would bolt, a lesson sheโd learned from watching wild turkeys: if you act like a predator, they act like prey. Just ignore them, keep going slow. She drifted by, and the deer stood as still as a pine until Kya disappeared beyond the salt grass.
She entered a place with dark lagoons in a throat of oaks and remembered a channel on the far side that flowed to an enormous estuary. Several times she came upon dead ends, had to backtrack to take another turn. Keeping all these landmarks straight in her mind so she could get back. Finally the estuary lay ahead, water stretching so far it captured the whole sky and all the clouds within it.
The tide was going out, she knew by water lines along the creek shores. When it receded enough, any time from now, some channels would shallow up and sheโd run aground, get stranded. Sheโd have to head back before then.
As she rounded a stand of tall grass, suddenly the oceanโs faceโ gray, stern, and pulsingโfrowned at her. Waves slammed one another, awash in their own white saliva, breaking apart on the shore with loud boomsโenergy searching for a beachhead. Then they flattened into quiet tongues of foam, waiting for the next surge.
The surf taunted her, daring her to breach the waves and enter the sea, but without Jodie, her courage failed. Time to turn around anyway. Thunderheads grew in the western sky, forming huge gray mushrooms pressing at the seams.
Thereโd been no other people, not even distant boats, so it was a surprise when she entered the large estuary again, and there, close against the marsh grass, was a boy fishing from another battered rig. Her course would take her only twenty feet from him. By now, she looked every bit the swamp childโhair blown into tangles, dusty cheeks streaked with wind-tears.
Neither low gas nor storm threat gave her the same edgy feeling as seeing another person, especially a boy. Ma had told her older
sisters to watch out for them; if you look tempting, men turn into predators. Squishing her lips tight, she thought, What am I gonna do? I gotta go right by him.
From the corner of her eye, she saw he was thin, his golden curls stuffed under a red baseball cap. Much older than she, eleven, maybe twelve. Her face was grim as she approached, but he smiled at her, warm and open, and touched the brim of his hat like a gentleman greeting a fine lady in a gown and bonnet. She nodded slightly, then looked ahead, increasing the throttle and passing him by.
All she could think of now was getting back to familiar footing, but somewhere she must have turned wrong, for when she reached the second string of lagoons, she couldnโt find the channel that led home. Round and round, near oak knees and myrtle thickets, she searched. A slow panic eased in. Now, the grass banks, sandbars, and bends all looked the same. She cut the engine and stood smack-dab in the middle of the boat, balancing with feet spread wide, trying to see over the reeds, but couldnโt.
She sat. Lost. Low on gas. Storm coming.
Stealing Paโs words, she cussed her brother for leaving. โDamn ya, Jodie! Shit fire anโ fall in. You just shit fire anโ fall in it.โ
She whimpered once as the boat drifted in soft current. Clouds, gaining ground against the sun, moved weighted but silent overhead, pushing the sky and dragging shadows across the clear water. Could be a gale any minute. Worse, though: if she wandered too long, Pa would know she took the boat. She eased ahead; maybe she could find that boy.
Another few minutes of creek brought a bend and the large estuary ahead, and on the other side, the boy in his boat. Egrets took flight, a line of white flags against the mounting gray clouds. She anchored him hard with her eyes. Afraid to go near him, afraid not to. Finally, she turned across the estuary.
He looked up when she neared. โHey,โ he said.
โHey.โ She looked beyond his shoulder into the reeds.
โWhich way you headed, anyhow?โ he asked. โNot out, I hope.
That stormโs cominโ.โ
โNo,โ she said, looking down at the water.
โYou okay?โ
Her throat tightened against a sob. She nodded but couldnโt speak.
โYou lost?โ
She bobbed her head again. Wasnโt going to cry like a girl. โWell, then. I git lost all the time,โ he said, and smiled. โHey, I
know you. Youโre Jodie Clarkโs sister.โ โI used ta be. Heโs gone.โ
โWell, youโre still his . . .โ But he let it drop.
โHowโd you know me?โ She threw a quick, direct look at his eyes.
โOh, Iโve been fishinโ with Jodie some. I saw you a couple aโ times. You were just a little kid. Youโre Kya, right?โ
Someone knew her name. She was taken aback. Felt anchored to something; released from something else.
โYeah. You know my place? From here?โ
โReckon I do. Itโs โbout time anyhow.โ He nodded at the clouds. โFollow me.โ He pulled his line, put tackle in the box, and started his outboard. As he headed across the estuary, he waved, and she followed. Cruising slowly, he went directly to the right channel, looked back to make sure sheโd made the turn, and kept going. He did that at every bend to the oak lagoons. As he turned into the dark waterway toward home, she could see where sheโd gone wrong, and would never make the mistake again.
He guided herโeven after she waved that she knew her wayโ across her lagoon, up to the shore where the shack squatted in the woods. She motored up to the old waterlogged pine and tied up.
He drifted back from her boat, bobbing in their contrary wakes. โYou okay now?โ
โYeah.โ
โWell, stormโs cominโ, I better git.โ
She nodded, then remembered how Ma taught her. โThank ya.โ โAll right, then. My nameโs Tate โcase ya see me again.โ
She didnโt respond, so he said, โBye now.โ
As he headed out, slow raindrops splattered the lagoon beach, and she said, โItโs gonna rain bullfrogs; that boyโll get soaked through.โ
She stooped to the gas tank and stuck in her reed dipstick, cupping her hands around the rim, so rain wouldnโt drop in. Maybe she couldnโt count coins, but she knew for sure, you canโt let water get in gas.
Itโs way low. Paโs gonna know. I gotta tote a can to the Sing Oil โfore Pa gits back.
She knew the owner, Mr. Johnny Lane, always referred to her family as swamp trash, but dealing with him, the storms, and tides would be worth it, because all she could think of now was getting back into that space of grass and sky and water. Alone, sheโd been scared, but that was already humming as excitement. There was something else, too. The calmness of the boy. Sheโd never known anybody to speak or move so steady. So sure and easy. Just being near him, and not even that close, had eased her tightness. For the first time since Ma and Jodie left, she breathed without pain; felt something other than the hurt. She needed this boat and that boy.
โข โข โข
THAT SAME AFTERNOON, holding his bike by the handlebars, Tate Walker strolled through town, nodding at Miss Pansy in the Five and Dime, and past the Western Auto to the tip of the town wharf. He scanned the sea for his dadโs shrimp boat, The Cherry Pie, and spotted its bright red paint far out, the wide net-wings rocking with the swells. As it neared, escorted by its own cloud of gulls, he waved, and his father, a large man with mountain shoulders and thick red hair and a beard, threw his hand in the air. Scupper, as everyone in the village called him, tossed the line to Tate, who tied up, then jumped on board to help the crew unload the catch.
Scupper tousled Tateโs hair. โHowโs it, son? Thanks for coming by.โ
Tate smiled, nodded. โSure.โ They and the crew busied about, loading shrimp into crates, toting them to the wharf, calling out to one another about grabbing beers at the Dog-Gone, asking Tate about school. Taller by a hand than the other men, Scupper scooped up three wire crates at a time, carrying them across the plank, going back for more. His fists were bear-sized, knuckles
chapped and split. In less than forty minutes the deck was hosed, nets tied, lines secured.
He told the crew heโd join them another day for beer; he had to do some tuning up before going home. In the wheelhouse, Scupper put a 78 record of Miliza Korjus on the player strapped to the counter and turned the volume up. He and Tate went below and squeezed into the engine hold, where Tate handed tools to his dad as he greased parts and tightened bolts by a dim lightbulb. All the while the soaring, sweet opera lifted higher into the sky.
Scupperโs great-great-grandfather, emigrating from Scotland, had shipwrecked off the coast of North Carolina in the 1760s and was the only survivor. He swam to shore, landing on the Outer Banks, found a wife, and fathered thirteen children. Many could trace their roots back to that one Mr. Walker, but Scupper and Tate stayed mostly to themselves. Didnโt join the Sunday picnic spreads of chicken salad and deviled eggs with their relatives often, not like they had when his mother and sister were still there.
Finally, in the graying dusk, Scupper slapped Tate on the shoulders. โAll done. Letโs get home, get supper on.โ
They walked up the wharf, down Main, and out a winding road to their house, a two-story with weathered cedar-shake siding, built in the 1800s. The white window trim had been painted fresh, and the lawn running almost to the sea was cut neat. But the azaleas and rosebushes next to the house sulked in weeds.
Pulling off yellow boots in the mudroom, Scupper asked, โYou tired of burgers?โ
โNever tired of burgers.โ
Tate stood at the kitchen counter, picking up globs of hamburger meat, forming patties, and placing them on a plate. His mother and sister, Carianne, both wearing baseball caps, grinned at him from a picture hanging next to the window.
Carianne loved that Atlanta Crackers cap, had worn it everywhere.
He looked away from them, started slicing tomatoes, stirring baked beans. If not for him, theyโd be here. His mother basting a chicken, Carianne cutting biscuits.
As usual Scupper got the burgers a bit black, but they were juicy inside and thick as a small city phone book. Both hungry, they ate
in silence for a while, and then Scupper asked Tate about school. โBiologyโs good; I like it, but weโre doing poetry in English
class. Canโt say I like it much. We each gotta read one out loud. You used to recite some, but I donโt remember them.โ
โI got the poem for you, son,โ Scupper said. โMy favoriteโโThe Cremation of Sam McGeeโ by Robert Service. Used to read it out to yโall. Was your mamaโs favorite. She laughed every time I read it, never got tired of it.โ
Tate looked down at the mention of his mother, pushed his beans around.
Scupper went on. โDonโt go thinking poetryโs just for sissies. Thereโs mushy love poems, for sure, but thereโs also funny ones, lots about nature, war even. Whole point of itโthey make ya feel something.โ His dad had told him many times that the definition of a real man is one who cries without shame, reads poetry with his heart, feels opera in his soul, and does whatโs necessary to defend a woman. Scupper walked to the sitting room, calling back, โI used to know most of it by heart, but not anymore. But here it is, Iโll read it to ya.โ He sat back down at the table and began reading. When he got to this segment:
โAnd there sat Sam, looking cool and calm, in the heart of the furnace roar;
And he wore a smile you could see a mile, and he said, โPlease close that door.
Itโs fine in here, but I greatly fear youโll let in the cold and stormโ
Since I left Plumtree down in Tennessee, itโs the first time Iโve been warm.โโ
Scupper and Tate chuckled.
โYour mom always laughed at that.โ
They smiled, remembering. Just sat there a minute. Then Scupper said heโd wash up while Tate did his homework. In his room, scanning through the poetry book for one to read in class, Tate found a poem by Thomas Moore:
. . . sheโs gone to the Lake of the Dismal Swamp, Where, all night long, by a fire-fly lamp,
She paddles her white canoe.
And her fire-fly lamp I soon shall see, And her paddle I soon shall hear; Long and loving our life shall be,
And Iโll hide the maid in a cypress tree, When the footstep of death is near.
The words made him think of Kya, Jodieโs little sister. Sheโd seemed so small and alone in the marshโs big sweep. He imagined his own sister lost out there. His dad was rightโpoems made you feel something.