Living on a peach farm in South Carolina
with her harsh, unyielding father, Lily Owens has shaped her entire life
around one devastating, blurred memory - the afternoon her mother was
killed, when Lily was four. Since then, her only real companion has been
the fierce-hearted, and sometimes just fierce, black woman Rosaleen, who
acts as her "stand-in mother."
When Rosaleen insults three of the deepest racists in town, Lily knows
it's time to spring them both free. They take off in the only direction
Lily can think of, toward a town called Tiburon, South Carolina--a name
she found on the back of a picture amid the few possessions left by her
mother.
There they are taken in by an eccentric trio of black beekeeping sisters
named May, June, and August. Lily thinks of them as the calendar sisters
and enters their mesmerizing secret world of bees and honey, and of the
Black Madonna who presides over this household of strong, wise women.
Maternal loss and betrayal, guilt and forgiveness entwine in a story
that leads Lily to the single thing her heart longs for most.
The Secret Life of Bees has a rare wisdom about life - about mothers and
daughters and the women in our lives who become our true mothers. A
remarkable story about the divine power of women and the transforming
power of love, this is a stunning debut whose rich, assured,
irresistible voice gathers us up and doesn't let go, not for a moment.
It is the kind of novel that women share with each other and that
mothers will hand down to their daughters for years to come.
Chapter One
At night I would lie in
bed and watch the show, how bees squeezed through the cracks of my
bedroom wall and flew circles around the room, making that propeller
sound, a high-pitched zzzzzz that hummed along my skin. I watched their
wings shining like bits of chrome in the dark and felt the longing build
in my chest. The way those bees flew, not even looking for a flower,
just flying for the feel of the wind, split my heart down its seam.
During the day I heard
them tunneling through the walls of my bedroom, sounding like a radio
tuned to static in the next room, and I imagined them in there turning
the walls into honeycombs, with honey seeping out for me to taste.
The bees came the summer
of 1964, the summer I turned fourteen and my life went spinning off into
a whole new orbit, and I mean whole new orbit. Looking back on it now, I
want to say the bees were sent to me. I want to say they showed up like
the angle Gabriel appearing to the Virgin Mary, setting events in motion
I could never have guessed. I know it is presumptuous to compare my
small life to hers, but I have reason to believe she wouldn't mind; I
will get to that. Right now it's enough to say that despite everything
that happened that summer, I remain tender toward the bees.
*
July 1, 1964, I lay in
bed, waiting for the bees to show up, thinking of what Rosaleen had said
when I told her about their nightly visitations.
"Bees swarm before
death," she'd said.
Rosaleen had worked for
us since my mother died. My daddy - who I called T. Ray because
"Daddy" never fit him - had pulled her out of the peach
orchard, where she'd worked as one of his pickers. She had a big round
face and a body that sloped out from her neck like a pup tent, and she
was so black that night seemed to seep from her skin. She lived alone in
a little house tucked back in the woods, not far from us, and came every
day to cook, clean, and be my stand-in mother. Rosaleen had never had a
child herself, so for the last ten years I'd been her pet guinea pig.
Bees swarm before death.
She was full of crazy ideas that I ignored, but I lay there thinking
about his one, wondering if the bees had come with my death in mind.
Honestly, I wasn't that disturbed by the idea. Every one of those bees
could have descended on me like a flock of angels and stung me till I
died, and it wouldn't have been the worst thing to happen. People who
think dying is the worst thing don't know a thing about life.
My mother died when I was
four years old. It was a fact of life, but if I brought it up, people
would suddenly get interested in their hangnails and cuticles, or else
distant places in the sky, and seem not to hear me. Once in a while,
though, some caring soul would say, "Just put it out of your head,
Lily. It was an accident. You didn't mean to do it."
That night I lay in bed
and thought about dying and going to be with my mother in paradise. I
would meet her saying, "Mother, forgive. Please forgive," and
she would kiss my skin till it grew chapped and tell me I was not to
blame. She would tell me this for the first ten thousand years.
The next ten thousand
years she would fix my hair. She would brush it into such a tower of
beauty, people all over heaven would drop their harps just to admire it.
You can tell which girls lack mothers by the look of their hair. My hair
was constantly going off in eleven wrong directions, and T. Ray,
naturally, refused to buy me bristle rollers, so all year I'd have to
roll it on Welch's grape juice cans, which had nearly turned me into an
insomniac. I was always having to choose between decent hair and a good
night's sleep.
I decided I would take
four or five centuries to tell her about the special misery of living
with T. Ray. He had an orneryness year-round, but especially in the
summer, when he worked his peach orchards daylight to dusk. Mostly I
stayed out of his way. His only kindness was for Snout, his bird dog,
who slept in his bed and got her stomach scratched anytime she rolled
onto her wiry back. I've seen Snout pee on T. Ray's boot and it not get
a rise out of him.
I had asked God
repeatedly to do something about T. Ray. He'd gone to church for forty
years and was only getting worse. It seemed like this should tell God
something.
I kicked back the sheets.
The room sat in perfect stillness, not one bee anywhere. Every minute I
looked at the clock on my dresser and wondered what was keeping them.
Finally, sometime close
to midnight, when my eyelids had nearly given up the strain of staying
open, a purring noise started over in the corner, low and vibrating, a
sound you could almost mistake for a cat. Moments later shadows moved
like spatter paint along the walls, catching the light when they passed
the window so I could see the outline of wings. The sound swelled in the
dark till the entire room was pulsating, till the air itself became
alive and matted with bees. They lapsed around my body, making me the
perfect center of a whirlwind cloud. I could not hear myself think for
all the bee hum.
I dug my nails into my
palms till my skin had nearly turned to herringbone. A person could get
stung half to death in a roomful of bees.
Still. The sight was a
true spectacle. Suddenly I couldn't stand not showing it off to
somebody, even if the only person around was T. Ray. And if he happened
to get stung by a couple of hundred bees, well, I was sorry.
I slid from the covers
and dashed through the bees for the door. I woke him by touching his arm
with one finger, softly at first, then harder and harder till I was
jabbing into his flesh, marveling at how hard it was.
T. Ray bolted from bed,
wearing nothing but his underwear. I dragged him toward my room, him
shouting how this better be good, how the house damn well better be on
fire, and Snout barking like we were on a dove shoot.
"Bees!" I
shouted. "There's a swarm of bees in my room!"
But when we got there,
they'd vanished back into the wall like they knew he was coming, like
they didn't want to waste their flying stunts on him.
"Goddamn it, Lily,
this ain't funny."
I looked up and down the
walls. I got down under the bed and begged the very dust and coils of my
bedsprings to produce a bee.
"They were
here," I said. "Flying everywhere."
"Yeah, and there was
a goddamn herd of buffalo in here, too."
"Listen," I
said. "You can hear them buzzing."
He cocked his ear toward
the wall with pretend seriousness. "I don't hear any buzzing,"
he said, and twirled his finger beside his temple. "I guess they
must have flown out of that cuckoo clock you call a brain. You wake me
up again, Lily, and I'll get out the Martha Whites, you hear me?"
Martha Whites were a form
of punishment only T. Ray could have dreamed up. I shut my mouth
instantly.
Still, I couldn't let the
matter go entirely-- - T. Ray thinking I was so desperate I would invent
an invasion of bees to get attention. Which is how I got the bright idea
of catching a jar of these bees, presenting them to T. Ray, and saying,
"Now who's making things up?"
*
My first and only memory
of my mother was the day she died. I tried for a long time to conjure up
an image of her before that, just a sliver of something, like her
tucking me into bed, reading the adventures of Uncle Wiggly, or hanging
my underclothes near the space heater on ice-cold mornings. Even her
picking a switch off the forsythia bush and stinging my legs would have
been welcome.
The day she died was
December 3, 1954. The furnace had cooked the air so hot my mother had
peeled off her sweater and stood in short sleeves, jerking at the window
in her bedroom, wrestling with the stuck paint.
Finally she gave up and
said, "Well, fine, we'll just burn the hell up in here, I
guess."
Her hair was black and
generous, with thick curls circling her face, a face I could never quite
coax into view, despite the sharpness of everything else.
I raised my arms to her,
and she picked me up, saying I was way too big a girl to hold like this,
but holding me anyway. The moment she lifted me, I was wrapped in her
smell.
The scent got laid down
in me in a permanent way and had all the precision of cinnamon. I used
to go regularly into the Sylvan Mercantile and smell every perfume
bottle they had, trying to identify it. Every time I showed up, the
perfume lady acted surprised, saying, "My goodness, look who's
here." Like I hadn't just been in there the week before and gone
down the entire row of bottles. Shalimar, Chanel No. 5, White Shoulders.
I'd say, "You got
anything new?"
She never did.
So it was a shock when I
came upon the scent on my fifth-grade teacher, who said it was nothing
but plain ordinary Ponds Cold Cream.
The afternoon my mother
died, there was a suitcase open on the floor, sitting near the stuck
window. She moved in and out of the closet, dropping this and that into
the suitcase, not bothering to fold them.
I followed her into the
closet and scooted beneath dress hems and pant legs, into darkness and
wisps of dust and little dead moths, back where orchard mud and the
moldy smell of peaches clung to T. Ray's boots. I stuck my hands inside
a pair of white high heels and clapped them together.
The closet floor vibrated
whenever someone climbed the stairs below it, which is how I knew T. Ray
was coming. Over my head I heard my mother pulling things from the
hangers, the swish of clothes, wire clinking together.
When his shoes clomped
into the room, she sighed, the breath leaving her as if her lungs had
suddenly clenched. This is the last thing I remember with perfect
crispness - her breath floating down to me like a tiny parachute,
collapsing without a trace among the piles of shoes.
I don't remember what
they said, only the fury of their words, how the air turned raw and full
of welts. Later it would remind me of birds trapped inside a closed
room, flinging themselves against the windows and the walls, against
each other. I inched backward, deeper into the closet, feeling my
fingers in my mouth, the taste of shoes, of feet.
Dragged out, I didn't
know at first whose hands pulled me, then found myself in my mother's
arms, breathing her smell. She smoothed my hair, said, "Don't
worry," but even as she said it, I was peeled away by T. Ray. He
carried me to the door and set me down in the hallway. "Go to your
room," he said.
"I don't want
to," I cried, trying to push past him, back into the room, back
where she was.
"Get in your
goddamned room!" he shouted, and shoved me. I landed against the
wall, then fell forward onto my hands and knees. Lifted my head, looking
past him, I saw her running across the room. Running at him, yelling.
"Leave. Her. Alone."
I huddled on the floor
beside the door and watched through air that seemed all scratched up. I
saw him take her by the shoulders and shake her, her head bouncing back
and forth. I saw the whiteness of his lip.
And then -- - though
everything starts to blur now in my mind -- - she lunged away from him
into the closet, away from his grabbing hands, scrambling for something
high on a shelf.
When I saw the gun in her
hand, I ran toward her, clumsy and falling, wanting to save her, to save
us all.
Time folded in on itself
then. What is left lies in clear yet disjointed pieces in my head. The
gun shining like a toy in her hand, how he snatched it away and waved it
around. The gun on the floor. Bending to pick it up. The noise that
exploded around us.
This is what I know about
myself. She was all I wanted. And I took her away
*
T. Ray and I lived just
outside Sylvan, South Carolina, population 3,100. Peach stands and
Baptist churches, that sums it up.
At the entrance to the
farm we had a big wooden sign with
Owens Peach Enterprise painted across it in the worst orange color
you've ever seen. I hated that sign. But the sign was nothing compared
with the giant peach perched atop a sixty-foot pole beside the gate.
Everyone at school referred to it as the Great Fanny, and I'm cleaning
up the language. Its fleshy color, not to mention the crease down the
middle, gave it the unmistakable appearance of a rear end. Rosaleen said
it was T. Ray's way of mooning the entire world. That was T. Ray.
He didn't believe in
slumber parties or sock hops, which wasn't a big concern as I never got
invited to them anyway, but he refused to drive me to town for football
games, pep rallies, or Beta Club car washes, which were held on
Saturdays. He did not care that I wore clothes I made for myself in
home3 economics class, cotton print shirtwaists with crooked zippers and
skirts hanging below my knees, outfits only the Pentecostal girls wore.
I might as well have worn a sign on my back:
I am not popular and never will be.
I needed all the help
that fashion could give me, since no one, not a single person had ever
said, "Lily, you are such a pretty child," except for Miss
Jennings at church, and she was legally blind.
I watched my reflection
not only in the mirror, but in store windows and across the television
when it wasn't on, trying to get a fix on my looks. My hair was black
like my mother's but basically a nest of cowlicks, and it worried me
that I didn't have much of a chin. I kept thinking I'd grow one the same
time my breasts came in, but it didn't work out that way. I had nice
eyes, though, what you would call Sophia Loren eyes, but still, even the
boys who wore their hair in ducktails dripping with Vitalis and carried
combs in their shirt pockets didn't seem attracted to me, and they were
considered hard up.
Matters below my neck had
shaped up, not that I could show off that part. It was fashionable to
wear cashmere twinsets and plaid kilts midthigh, but T. Ray said hell
would be an ice rink before I went out like that - did I want to end up
pregnant like Bitsy Johnson whose skirt barely covered her ass? How he
knew about Bitsy is a mystery of life, but it was true about her skirts
and true about the baby. An unfortunate coincidence is all it was.
Rosaleen knew less about
fashion than T. Ray did, and when it was cold, God-help-me-Jesus, she
made me go to school wearing long britches under my Penecostal dresses.
There was nothing I hated
worse than clumps of whispering girls who got quiet when I passed. I
started picking scabs off my body and, when I didn't have any, gnawing
the flesh around my fingernails till I was a bleeding wreck. I worried
so much about how I looked and whether I was doing things right, I felt
half the time I was impersonating a girl instead of really being one.
I had thought my real
chance would come from going to charm school at the Woman's Club last
spring, Friday afternoons for six weeks, but I got barred because I
didn't have a mother, a grandmother, or even a measly aunt to present me
with a white rose at the closing ceremony. Rosaleen doing it was against
the rules. I'd cried till I threw up in the sink.
"You're charming
enough," Rosaleen had said, washing the vomit out of the sink
basin. "You don't need to go to some highfalutin school to get
charm."
"I do so," I
said. "They teach everything. How to walk and pivot, what to do
with your ankles when you sit in a chair, how to get into a car, pour
tea, take off your gloves."
Rosaleen blew air from
her lips. "Good Lord," she said.
"Arrange flowers in
a vase, talk to boys, tweeze your eyebrows, shave your legs, apply
lipstick."
"What about vomit in
a sink? They teach a charming way to do that?" she asked.
Sometimes I purely hated
her.
*
The morning after I woke
T. Ray, Rosaleen stood in the doorway of my room, watching me chase a
bee with a mason jar. Her lip was rolled out so far I could see the
little sunrise of pink inside her mouth.
"What are you doing
with that jar?" she said.
"I'm catching bees
to show T Ray. He thinks I'm making them up."
"Lord, give me
strength." She'd been shelling butter beans on the porch, and sweat
glistened on the pearls of hair around her forehead. She pulled at the
front of her dress, opening an airway along her bosom, big and soft as
couch pillows.
The bee landed on the
state map I kept tacked on the wall, I watched it walk along the coast
of South Carolina on scenic Highway 17. I clamped the mouth of the jar
against the wall, trapping it between Charleston and Georgetown. When I
slid on the lid, it went into a tailspin, throwing itself against the
glass over and over with pops and clicks, reminding me of the hail that
landed sometimes on the windows.
I'd made the jar as nice
as I could with felty petals, fat with pollen, and more than enough nail
holes in the lid to keep the bees from perishing, since for all I knew,
people might come back one day as the very thing they killed.
I brought the jar level
with my nose. "Come look at this thing fight," I said to
Rosaleen.
When she stepped in the
room, her scent floated out to me, dark and spicy like the snuff she
packed inside her cheek. She held her small jug with its coin-sized
mouth and a handle for her to loop her finger through. I watched her
press it along her chin, her lips fluted out like a flower, then spit a
curl of black juice inside it.
She stared at the bee and
shook her head. "If you get stung, don't come whining to me,"
she said, "'cause I ain't gonna care."
That was a lie.
I was the only one who
knew that despite her sharp ways, her heart was more tender than a
flower skin and she loved me beyond reason.
I hadn't known this until
I was eight and she bought me an Easter-dyed biddy from the mercantile.
I found it trembling in a corner of its pen, the color of purple grapes,
with sad little eyes that cast around for its mother. Rosaleen let me
bring it home, right into the living room, where I strewed a box of
Quaker Oats on the floor for it to eat and she didn't raise a word of
protest.
The chick left dollops of
violet-streaked droppings all over the place, due, I suppose, to the dye
soaking into its fragile system. We had just started to clean them up
when T. Ray burst in, threatening to boil the chick for dinner and fire
Rosaleen for being an imbecile. He started to swoop at the biddy with
his tractor-grease hands, but Rosaleen planted herself in front of him.
"There is worse things in the house than chicken shit," she
said and looked him up one side and down the other, "You ain't
touching that chick."
His boots whispered uncle
all the way down the hall. I thought, She loves me, and it was the first
time such a far-fetched idea had occurred to me.
Her age was a mystery,
since she didn't possess a birth certificate. She would tell me she was
born in 1909 or 1919, depending on how old she felt at the moment. She
was sure about the place: McClellanville, South Carolina, where her mama
had woven sweet-grass baskets and sold them on the roadside.
"Like me selling
peaches," I'd said to her.
"Not one thing like
you selling peaches," she'd said back, "You ain't got seven
children you gotta feed from it."
"You've got six
brothers and sisters?" I'd thought of her as alone in the world
except for me.
"I did have, but I
don't know where a one of them is."
She'd thrown her husband
out three years after they married, for carousing. "You put his
brain in a bird, the bird would fly backward," she liked to say. I
often wondered what that bird would do with Rosaleen's brain. I decided
half the time it would drop shit on your head and the other half of it
would sit on abandoned nests with its wings spread wide.
I used to have daydreams
in which she was white and married T. Ray, and became my real mother.
Other times I was a Negro orphan she found in a cornfield and adopted.
Once in a while I had us living in a foreign country like New York,
where she could adopt me and we could both stay our natural color.
*
My mother's name was
Deborah. I thought that was the prettiest name I'd ever heard, even
though T. Ray refused to speak it. If I said it, he acted like he might
go straight to the kitchen and stab something. Once when I asked him
when her birthday was and what cake icing she preferred, he told me to
shut up, and when I asked him a second time, he picked up a jar of
blackberry jelly and threw it against the kitchen cabinet. We have blue
stains to this day.
I did manage to get a few
scraps of information from him, though, such as my mother was buried in
Virginia where he people came from. I got worked up at that, thinking
I'd found a grandmother. No, he tells me, my mother was an only child
whose mother died ages ago. Naturally. Once when he stepped on a roach
in the kitchen, he told me my mother had spent hours luring roaches out
of the house with bits of marshmallow and trails of graham-cracker
crumbs, that she was a lunatic when it came to saving bugs.
The oddest things caused
me to miss her. Like training bras. Who was I going to ask about that?
And who but my mother could've understood the magnitude of driving me to
junior cheerleader tryouts? I can tell you for certain T. Ray didn't
grasp it. But you know when I missed her the most? The day I was twelve
and woke up with the rose-petal stain on my panties. I was so proud of
that flower and didn't have a soul to show it to except Rosaleen.
Not too long after that I
found a paper bag in the attic stapled at the top. Inside it I found the
last traces of my mother.
There was a photograph of
a woman smirking in front of an old car, wearing a light-colored dress
with padded shoulders. Her expression said, "Don't you dare take
this picture," but she wanted it taken, you could see that. You
could not believe the stories I saw in that picture, how she was waiting
at the car fender for love to come to her, and not too patiently.
I laid the photograph
beside my eighth-grade picture and examined every possible similarity.
She was more or less missing a chin, too, but even so, she was
above-average pretty, which offered me genuine hope for my future.
The bag contained a pair
of white cotton gloves stained the color of age. When I pulled them out,
I thought, Her very hands were inside here. I feel foolish about it now,
but one time I stuffed the gloves with cotton balls and held them
through the night.
The end-all mystery
inside the bag was a small wooden picture of Mary, the mother of Jesus.
I recognized her even though her skin was black, only a shade light than
Rosaleen's. It looked to me like somebody had cut the black Mary's
picture from a book, glued it into a sanded piece of wood about two
inches across, and varnished it. On the back an unknown hand had written
"Tiburon, S.C."
For two years now I'd
kept these things of hers inside a tin box, buried in the orchard. There
was a special place out there in the long tunnel of trees no one knew
about, not even Rosaleen. I'd started going there before I could tie my
shoelaces. At first it was just a spot to hide from T Ray and his
meanness or from the memory of that afternoon when the gun went off, but
later I would slip out there, sometimes after T. Ray had gone to bed,
just to lie under the trees and be peaceful. It was my plot of earth, my
cubbyhole.
I'd placed her things
inside the tin box and buried it out there late one night by flashlight,
too scared to leave them hanging around in my room, even in the back of
a draw. I was afraid T. Ray might go up to the attic and discover her
things were missing, and turn my room upside down searching for them. I
hated to think what he'd do to me if he found them hidden among my
stuff.
Now and then I'd go out
there and dig up the box. I would lie on the ground with the trees
folded over me, wearing her gloves, smiling at the photograph. I would
study "Tiburon, S.C." on the back of the black Mary picture,
the funny slant of the lettering, and wonder what sort of place it was.
I'd look it up on the map once, and it wasn't more than two hours away.
Had my mother been there and bought this picture? I always promised
myself on day, when I was grown-up enough, I would take the bus over
there. I wanted to go every place she had ever been.
*
After my morning of
capturing bees, I spent the afternoon in the peach stand out on the
highway, selling T. Ray's peaches. It was the loneliest summer job a
girl could have, stuck in a roadside hut with three walls and a flat tin
roof.
I sat on a Coke crate and
watched pickups zoom by till I was nearly poisoned with exhaust fumes
and boredom. Thursday afternoons were usually a big peach day, with
women getting ready for Sunday cobblers, but not a soul stopped.
T. Ray refused to let me
bring books out here and read, and if I smuggled one out, say, Lost
Horizon, stuck under my shirt, somebody, like Mrs. Watson from the next
farm, would see him at church and say, "Saw your girl in the peach
stand reading up a storm. You must be proud." And he would half
kill me.
What kind of person is
against reading? I think he believed it would stir up ideas of college,
which he thought a waste of money for girls, even if they did, like me,
score the highest number a human being can get on their verbal aptitude
test. Math aptitude is another thing, but people aren't meant to be
overly bright in everything.
I was the only student
who didn't groan and carry on when Mrs. Henry assigned us another
Shakespeare play. Well actually, I did pretend to groan, but inside I
was as thrilled as if I'd been crowned Sylvan's Peach Queen.
Up until Mrs. Henry came
along, I'd believed beauty college would be the upper limit of my
career. Once, studying her face, I told her if she was my customer, I
would give her a French twist that would do wonders for her, and she
said - and I quote - "Please, Lily, you are insulting your fine
intelligence. Do you have any idea how smart you are? You could be a
professor or a writer with actual books to your credit. Beauty school.
Please."
" It took me a month
to get over the shock of having life possibilities. You know how adults
love to ask, "So what are you going be when you grow up? I can't
tell you how much I'd hated that question, but suddenly I was going
around volunteering to people, people who didn't even want to know, that
I planned to be a professor and a writer of actual books.
I kept a collection of my
writings. For a while everything I wrote had a horse in it. After we
read Ralph Waldo Emerson in class, I wrote "My Philosophy of
Life," which I intended for the start of a book but could only get
three pages out of it. Mrs. Henry said I needed to live past fourteen
years old before I would have a philosophy.
She said a scholarship
was my only hope for a future and lent me her private books for the
summer. Whenever I opened one, T. Ray said, "Who do you think you
are, Julius Shakespeare?" The man sincerely thought that was
Shakespeare's first name, and if you think I should have corrected him,
you are ignorant about the art of survival. He also referred to me as
Miss Brown-Nose-in-a-Book and occasionally as Miss
Emily-Big-Head-Diction. He meant Dickinson, but again, there are things
you let go by.
Without books in the
peach stand, I often passed the time making up poems, but that slow
afternoon I didn't have the patience for rhyming words. I just sat out
there and thought about how much I hated the peach stand, how completely
and absolutely I hated it.
*
The day before I'd gone
to first grade, T. Ray had found me in the peach stand sticking a nail
into one of his peaches.
He walked toward me with
his thumbs jammed into his pockets and his eyes squinted half shut from
the glare. I watched his shadow slide over the dirt and weeds and
thought he had come to punish me for stabbing a peach. I didn't even
know why I was doing it.
Instead he said,
"Lily, you're starting school tomorrow, so there are things you
need to know. About your mother."
For a moment everything
got still and quiet, as if the wind had died and the birds had stopped
flying. When he squatted down in front of me, I felt caught in a hot
dark I could not break free of.
"It's time you knew
what happened to her, and I want you to hear it from me. Not from people
out there talking."
We had never spoken of
this, and I felt a shiver pass over me. The memory of that day would
come back to me at odd moments. The stuck window. The smell of her. The
clink of hangers. The suitcase. The way they'd fought and shouted. Most
of all the gun on the floor, the heaviness when I'd lifted it.
I knew the explosion I'd
heard that day had killed her. The sound still sneaked into my head
occasionally and surprised me. Sometimes it seemed that when I'd held
the gun there hadn't been any noise at all, that it had come later, but
other times, sitting alone on the back steps, bored and wishing for
something to do, or pent up in my room on a rainy day, I felt I had
caused it, that when I'd lifted the gun, the sound had torn through the
room and gouged out our hearts.
It was a secret knowledge
that would slip up and overwhelm me, and I would take off running -- -
even if it was raining out, I ran -- - straight down the hill to my
special place in the peach orchard. I'd lie right down on the ground and
it would calm me. Now T. Ray scooped up a handful of dirt and let if
fall out of his hands. "The day she died, she was cleaning out the
closet," he said. I could not account for the strange tone of his
voice, an unnatural sound, how it was almost, but not quite, kind.
Cleaning the closet. I
had never considered what she was doing those last minutes of her life,
why she was in the closet, what they had fought about.
"I remember," I
said. My voice sounded small and faraway to me, like it was coming from
an ant hole in the ground.
His eyebrows lifted, and
he brought his face closer to me. Only his eyes showed confusion.
"You what?"
"I remember," I
said again. "You were yelling at each other."
A tightening came into
his face. "Is that right?" he said. His lips had started to
turn pale, which was the thing I always watched for. I took a step
backward.
"Goddamn it, you
were four years old!" he shouted. "You don't know what you
remember."
In the silence that
followed, I considered lying to him, saying, I take it back. I don't
remember anything. Tell me what happened, but there was such a powerful
need in me, pent up for so long, to speak about it, to say the words.
I looked down at my
shoes, at the nail I'd dropped when I'd seen him coming. "There was
a gun."
"Christ," he
said.
He looked at me a long
time, then walked over to the bushel baskets stacked at the back of the
stand. He stood there a minute with his hands balled up before he turned
around and came back.
"What else?" he
said. "You tell me right now what you know."
"The gun was on the
floor -- - "
"And you picked it
up," he said. "I guess you remember that."
The exploding sound had
started to echo around in my head. I looked off in the direction of the
orchard, wanting to break and run.
"I remember picking
it up," I said. "But that's all."
He leaned down and held
me by the shoulders, gave me a little shake. "You don't remember
anything else? You're sure? Now, think."
I paused so long he
cocked his head, looking at me, suspicious.
"No, sir, that's
all."
"Listen to me,"
he said, his fingers squeezing into my arms. "We were arguing like
you said. We didn't see you at first. Then we turned around and you were
standing there holding the gun. You'd picked it up off the floor. Then
it just went off."
He let me go and rammed
his hands into his pockets. I could hear his hands jingling keys and
nickels and pennies. I wanted so much to grab on to his leg, to feel him
reach down and lift me to his chest, but I couldn't move, and neither
did he. He stared at a place over my head. A place he was being very
careful to study.
"The police asked
lots of questions, but if was just one of those horrible things. You
didn't mean to do it," he said softly. "But if anybody wants
to know, that's what happened."
Then he left, walking
back toward the house. He'd gone only a little way when he looked back.
"And don't stick that nail into my peaches again."
*
It was after 6:00
p.m. when I wandered back to the house from the peach stand, having sold
nothing, not one peach, and found Rosaleen in the living room. Usually
she'd have gone home by now, but she was wrestling with the rabbit ears
on top of the TV, trying to fix the snow on the screen. President
Johnson faded in and out, lost in the blizzard. I'd never seen Rosaleen
so interested in a TV show that she would exert physical energy over it.
"What
happened?" I asked. "Did they drop the atom bomb?" Ever
since we'd started bomb drills at school, I couldn't help thinking my
days were numbered. Everybody was putting fallout shelters in their
backyards, canning tap water, getting ready for the end of time.
Thirteen students in my class made fallout-shelter models for their
science project, which shows it was not just me worried about it. We
were obsessed with Mr. Khrushchev and his missiles.
"No, the bomb hasn't
gone off," she said. "Just come here and see if you can fix
the TV." Her fists were burrowed so deep into her hips they seemed
to disappear.
I twisted tin foil around
the antennae. Things cleared up enough to make out President Johnson
taking his seat at a desk, people all around. I didn't care much for the
president because of the way he held his beagles by the ears. I did
admire his wife, Lady Bird, though, who always looked like she wanted
nothing more than to sprout wings and fly away.
Rosaleen dragged the
footstool in front of the set and sat down, so the whole thing vanished
under her. She leaned toward the set, holding a piece of her skirt and
winding it around in her hands.
"What is going
on?" I said, but she was so caught up in whatever was happening she
didn't even answer me. On the screen the president signed his name on a
piece of paper, using about ten ink pens to get it done.
"Rosaleen -- -
"
"Shhh," she
said, waving her hand.
I had to get the news
from the TV man. "Today, July second, 1964," he said,
"The president of the United States signed the Civil Rights Act
into law in the East Room of the White House."
I looked over at Rosaleen,
who sat there shaking her head, mumbling, "Lord have mercy,"
just looking so disbelieving and happy, like people on television when
they answer the $64,000 Question.
I didn't know whether to
be excited for her or worried. All people were talked about after church
were the Negroes and whether they'd get their civil rights. Who was
winning - the white people's team or the colored people's team? Like it
was a do-or-die contest. When that minister from Alabama, Reverend
Martin Luther King, got arrested last month in Florida for wanting to
eat in a restaurant, the men at church acted like the white people's
team had won the pennant race. I knew they would not take this news
lying down, not in one million years.
"Hallelujah,
Jesus," Rosaleen was saying over there on her stool. Oblivious.
*
Rosaleen had left dinner
on the stove top, her famous smothered chicken. As I fixed T. Ray's
plate, I considered how to bring up the delicate matter of my birthday,
something T. Ray had never paid attention to in all the years of my
life, but every year, like a dope, I got my hopes up thinking this year
would be the one.
I had the same birthday
as the country, which made it even harder to get noticed. When I was
little, I thought people were sending up rockets and cherry bombs
because of me - hurray, Lily was born! Then reality set in, like it
always did.
I wanted to tell T. Ray
that any girl would love a silver charm bracelet, that in fact last year
I'd been the only girl at Sylvan Junior High without one, that the whole
point of lunchtime was to stand in the cafeteria line jangling your
wrist, giving people a guided tour of your charm collection.
"So," I said,
sliding his plate in front of him, "my birthday is this
Saturday."
I watched him pull the
chicken meat from around the bone with his fork. "I was just
thinking I would love to have one of those silver charm bracelets they
have down at the mercantile."
The house creaked like it
did once in a while. Outside the door Snout gave a low bark, and then
the air grew so quiet I could hear the food being ground up in T. Ray's
mouth.
He ate his chicken breast
and started on the thigh, looking at me now and then in his hard way.
I started to say, So
then, what about the bracelet? but I could see he'd already given his
answer, and it caused a kind of sorrow to rise in me that felt fresh and
tender and had nothing, really, to do with the bracelet. I think now it
was sorrow for the sound of his fork scraping the plate, the way it
swelled in the distance between us, how I was not even in the room.
*
That night I lay in bed
listening to the flicks and twitters and thrums inside the bee jar,
waiting till it was late enough so I could slip out to the orchard and
dig up the tin box that held my mother's things. I wanted to lie down in
the orchard and let it hold me.
When the darkness had
pulled the moon to the top of the sky, I got out of bed, put on my
shorts and sleeveless blouse, and glided past T. Ray's room in silence,
sliding my arms and legs like a skater on ice. I didn't see his boots,
how he'd parked them in the middle of the hall. When I fell, the clatter
startled the air so badly T. Ray's snore changed rhythm. At first it
ceased altogether, but then the snore started back with three piglet
snorts.
I crept down the stairs,
through the kitchen. When the night hit my face, I felt like laughing.
The moon was a perfect circle, so full of light that all the edges of
things had an amber cast. The cicadas rose up, and I ran with bare feet
across the grass.
To reach my spot I had to
go to the eighth row left of the tractor shed, then walk along it,
counting trees till I got to thirty-two. The tin box was buried in the
soft dirt beneath the tree, shallow enough that I could dig it up with
my hands.
When I brushed the dirt
from the lid and opened it, I saw first the whiteness of her gloves,
then the photograph wrapped in waxed paper, just as I'd left it. And
finally the funny wooden picture of Mary with the dark face. I took
everything out, and, stretching out among the fallen peaches, I rested
them across my abdomen.
When I looked up through
the web of trees, the night feel over me, and for a moment I lost my
boundaries, feeling like the sky was my own skin and the moon was my
heart beating up there in the dark. Lightning came, not jagged, but in
soft, golden licks across the sky. I undid the buttons on my shirt and
opened it wide, just wanting the night to settle on my skin, and that's
how I fell asleep, lying there with my mother's things, with the air
making moisture on my chest and the sky puckering with light.
I woke to the sound of
someone thrashing through the trees. T. Ray! I sat up, panicked,
buttoning my shirt. I heard his footsteps, the fast, heavy pant of his
breathing. Looking down, I saw my mother's gloves and the two pictures.
I stopped buttoning and grabbed them up, fumbling with them, unable to
think what to do, how to hide them. I had dropped the tin box back in
its hole, too far away to reach.
"Lileeee!" he
shouted, and I saw his shadow plunge toward me across the ground.
I jammed the gloves and
pictures under the waistband of my shorts, then reached for the rest of
the buttons with shaking fingers.
Before I could fasten
them, light poured down on me and there he was without a shirt, holding
a flashlight. The beam swept and zagged, blinding me when it swung
across my eyes.
"Who were you out
here with?" he shouted, aiming the light on my half-buttoned top.
"No-no one," I
said, gathering my knees in my arms, startled by what he was thinking. I
couldn't look long at his face, how large and blazing it was, like the
face of God.
He flung the beam of
light into the darkness. "Who's out there?" he yelled.
"Please, T. Ray, no
one was here but me."
"Get up from
there," he yelled.
I followed him back to
the house. His feet struck the ground so hard I felt sorry for the black
earth. He didn't speak till we reached the kitchen and he pulled the
Martha White grits from the pantry. "I expect this out of boys,
Lily - you can't blame them - but I expect more out of you. You act no
better than a slut."
He poured a mound of
grits the size of an anthill onto the pine floor. "Get over here
and kneel down."
I'd been kneeling on
grits since I was six, but still I never got used to that powdered-glass
feeling beneath my skin. I walked toward them with those tiny feather
steps you expect of a girl in Japan, and lowered myself to the floor,
determined not to cry, but the sting was already gathering in my eyes.
T. Ray sat in a chair and
cleaned his nails with a pocketknife. I swayed from knee to knee, hoping
for a second or two of relief, but the pain cut deep into my skin. I bit
down on my lip, and it was then I felt the wooden picture of black Mary
underneath my waistband. I felt the waxed paper with my mother's picture
inside and her gloves stuck to my belly, and it seemed all of a sudden
like my mother was there, up against my body, like she was bits and
pieces of insulation molded against my skin, helping me absorb all his
meanness.
*
The next morning I woke
up late. The moment my feet touched the floor, I checked under my
mattress where I'd tucked my mother's things - a temporary hiding place
till I could bury them back in the orchard.
Satisfied they were safe,
I strolled into the kitchen, where I found Rosaleen sweeping up grits.
I buttered a piece of
Sunbeam bread.
She jerked the broom as
she swept, raising a wind. "What happened?" She said.
"I went out to the
orchard last night. T. Ray thinks I met some boy."
"Did you?"
I rolled my eyes at her.
"No."
"How long did he
keep you on these grits?"
I shrugged. "Maybe
an hour."
She looked down at my
knees and stopped sweeping. They were swollen with hundreds of red
welts, pinprick bruises that would grow into a blue stubble across my
skin.
"Look at you, child.
Look what he'd done to you," she cried.
My knees had been
tortured like this enough times in my life that I'd stopped thinking of
it as out of the ordinary; it was just something you had to put up with
from time to time, like the common cold. But suddenly the look on
Rosaleen's face cut through all that. Look what he's done to you.
That's what I was doing
-- - taking a good long look at my knees -- - when T. Ray stomped
through the back door.
"Well, look who
decided to get up." He yanked the bread out of my hands and threw
it into Snout's food bowl. "Would it be too much to ask you to get
out to the peach stand and do some work? You're not Queen for a Day, you
know."
This will sound crazy,
but up until then I thought T. Ray probably loved me some. I could never
forget the time he smiled at me in church when I was singing with the
hymn book upside down.
Now I looked at his face.
It was full of anger and despising.
"As long as you live
under my roof, you'll do what I say!" he shouted.
Then I'll find another
roof, I thought.
"You understand
me?" he said.
"Yes, sir, I
understand," I said, and I did, too. I understood that a new
rooftop would do wonder for me.
*
Late that afternoon I
caught two more bees. Lying on my stomach across the bed, I watched how
they orbited the space in the jar, around and around like they'd missed
the exit.
Rosaleen poked her head
in the door. "You all right?"
"Yeah, I'm
fine."
"I'm leaving now.
You tell your daddy I'm going into town tomorrow instead of coming
here."
"You're going to
town? Take me," I said.
"Why do you wanna
go?"
"Please, Rosaleen."
"You're gonna have
to walk the whole way."
"I don't care."
"Ain't nothing much
gonna be open but firecracker stands and the grocery store."
"I don't care. I
just wanna get out of the house some on my birthday."
Rosaleen stared at me,
sagged low on her big ankles. "All right, but you ask your daddy.
I'll be by here first thing in the morning."
She was out the door. I
called after her. "How come you're going to town?"
She stayed with her back
to me a moment, unmoving. When she turned, her face looked soft and
changed, like a different Rosaleen. Her hand dipped into her pocket,
where her fingers crawled around for something. She drew out a folded
piece of notebook paper and came to sit beside me on the bed. I rubbed
my knees while she smoothed out the paper across her lap.
Her name, Rosaleen Daise,
was written twenty-five times at least down the page in large, careful
cursive, like the first paper you turn in when school starts. "This
is my practice sheet," she said. "For the Fourth of July
they're having a voters' rally at the colored church. I'm registering
myself to vote."
An uneasy feeling settled
in my stomach. Last night the television had said a man in Mississippi
was killed for registering to vote, and I myself had overheard Mr.
Bussey, one of the deacons, say to T. Ray, "Don't you worry,
they're gonna make 'em write their names in perfect cursive and refuse
them a card if they forget so much as to dot an i or make a loop in
their y."
I studied the curves of
Rosaleen's R. "Does T. Ray know what you're doing?"
"T. Ray," she
said. "T. Ray don't know nothing."
*
At sunset he shuffled up,
sweaty from work. I met him at the kitchen door, my arms folded across
the front of my blouse. "I thought I'd walk to town with Rosaleen
tomorrow. I need to buy some sanitary supplies."
He accepted this without
comment. T. Ray hated female puberty worse than anything.
That night I looked at
the jar of bees on my dresser. The poor creatures perched on the bottom
barely moving, obviously pining away for flight. I remembered then the
way they'd slipped from the cracks in my walls and flown for the sheer
joy of it. I thought about the way my mother had built trails of
graham-cracker crumbs and marshmallow to lure roaches from the house
rather than step on them. I doubted she would've approved of keeping
bees in a jar. I unscrewed the lid and set it aside.
"You can go," I
said.
But the bees remained
there like planes on a runway not knowing they'd been cleared for
takeoff. They crawled on their stalk legs around the curved perimeters
of the glass as if the world had shrunk to that jar. I tapped the glass,
even laid the jar on its side, but those crazy bees stayed put.
*
The bees were still in
there the next morning when Rosaleen showed up. She was bearing an angel
food cake with fourteen candles.
"Here you go. Happy
birthday," she said. We sat down and ate two slices each with
glasses of milk. The milk left a moon crescent on the darkness of her
upper lip, which she didn't bother to wipe away. Later I would remember
that, how she set out, a marked woman from the beginning.
Sylvan was miles away. We
walked along the ledge of the highway, Rosaleen moving at the pace of a
bank-vault door, her spit jug fastened on her finger. Haze hung under
the trees and every inch of air smelled overripe with peaches.
"You limping?"
Rosaleen said.
My knees were aching to
the point that I was struggling to keep up with her. "A
little."
"Well, why don't we
sit down on the side of the road a while?" she said.
"That's okay,"
I told her. "I'll be fine."
A car swept by, slinging
scalded air and a layer of dust. Rosaleen was slick with heat. She
mopped her face and breathed hard.
We were coming to
Ebenezer Baptist Church, where T. Ray and I attended. The steeple jutted
through a cluster of shade trees; below, the red bricks looked shadowy
and cool.
"Come on," I
said, turning in the drive.
"Where're you
going?"
"We can rest in the
church."
The air inside was dim
and still, slanted with light from the side windows, not those pretty
stained-glass windows but milky panes you can't really see through.
I led us down front and
sat in the second pew, having room for Rosaleen. She plucked a paper fan
from the hymnbook holder and studied the picture on it - a white church
with a smiling white lady coming out the door.
Rosaleen fanned and I
listened to little jets of air come off her hands. She never went to
church herself, but on those few times T. Ray had let me walk to her
house back in the woods, I'd seen her special shelf with a stub of
candle, creek rocks, a reddish feather, and a piece of John the
Conqueror root, and right in the center a picture of a woman, propped up
without a frame.
The first time I saw it,
I'd asked Rosaleen, "Is that you?" since I swear the woman
looked exactly like her, with woolly braids, blue-black skin, narrow
eyes, and most of her concentrated in her lower portion, like an
eggplant.
"This is my
mama," she said.
The finish was rubbed off
the sides of the picture where her thumbs had held it. Her shelf had to
do with a religion she'd made up for herself, a mixture of nature and
ancestor worships. She'd stopped going to the House of Prayer Full
Gospel Holiness Church years ago because it started at ten in the
morning and didn't end till three in the afternoon, which is enough
religion to kill a full-grown person she'd said.
T. Ray said Rosaleen's
religion was plain wacko, and for me to stay out of it. But it drew me
to her to think she loved water rocks and woodpecker feathers, that she
had a single picture of her mother just like I did.
One of the church doors
opened and Brother Gerald, our minister, stepped into the sanctuary.
"Well, for goodness'
sake, Lily, what are you doing here?"
Then he saw Rosaleen and
started to rub the bald space on his head with such agitation I thought
he might rub down to the skull bone.
"We were walking to
town and stopped in to cool off."
His mouth formed the word
"oh," but he didn't actually say it; he was too busy looking
at Rosaleen in his church, Rosaleen who chose this moment to spit into
her snuff jug.
It's funny how you forget
the rules. She was not supposed to be inside here. Every time a rumor
got going about a group of Negroes coming to worship with us on Sunday
morning, the deacons stood locked-arms across the church steps to turn
them away. We loved them in the Lord, Brother Gerald said, but they had
their own places.
"Today's my
birthday," I said, hoping to send his thoughts in a new direction.
"Is it? Well, happy
birthday, Lily. So how old are you now?"
"Fourteen."
"Ask him if we can
we have a couple of these fans for your birthday present," said
Rosaleen.
He made a thin sound,
intended for a laugh. "Now, if we let everybody borrow a fan that
wanted one, the church wouldn't have a fan left."
"She was just
kidding," I said, and stood up. He smiled, satisfied, and walked
beside me all the way to the door, with Rosaleen tagging behind.
Outside, the sky had
whited over with clouds, and shine spilled across the surfaces, sending
motes before my eyes. When we'd cut through the parsonage yard and were
back on the highway, Rosaleen produced two church fans from the bosom of
her dress, and, doing an impersonation of me gazing up sweet-faced, she
said, "Oh, Brother Gerald, she was just kidding."
*
We came into Sylvan on
the worst side of town. Old houses set up on cinder blocks. Fans wedged
in the windows. Dirt yards. Women in pink curlers. Collarless dogs.
After a few blocks we
approached the Esso station on the corner of West Market and Church
Street, generally recognized as a catchall place for men with too much
time on their hands.
I noticed that not a
single car was getting gas. Three men sat in dinette chairs beside the
garage with a piece of plywood balanced on their knees. They were
playing cards.
"Hit me," one
of them said, and the dealer, who wore a Seed and Feed cap, slapped a
card down in front of him. He looked up and saw us, Rosaleen fanning and
shuffling, swaying side to side. "Well, Look what we got coming
here," he called out. "Where'e you going, nigger?"
Firecrackers made a
spattering sound in the distance. "Keep walking," I whispered.
"Don't pay any attention."
But Rosaleen, who had
less sense than I'd dreamed, said in this tone like she was explaining
something real hard to a kindergarten student, "I'm going to
register my name so I can vote, that's what."
"We should hurry
on," I said, but she kept walking at her own slow pass.
The man next to the
dealer, with hair combed straight back, put down his cards and said,
"Did you hear that? We got ourselves a model citizen."
I heard a slow song of
wind drift ever so slightly in the street behind us and move along the
gutter. We walked, and the men pushed back their makeshift table and
came right down to the curb to wait for us, like they were spectators at
a parade and we were the prize float.
"Did you ever see
one that black?" said the dealer.
And the men with his
combed-back hair said, "No, and I ain't seen one that big
either."
Naturally the third man
felt obliged to say something, so he looked at Rosaleen sashaying along
unperturbed, holding her white-lady fan, and he said, "Where'd you
get that fan, nigger?"
"Stole it from a
church," she said. Just like that.
I had gone once in a raft
down the Chattooga River with my church group, and the same feeling came
to me now - of being lifted by currents, by a swirl of events I couldn't
reverse.
Coming alongside the men,
Rosaleen lifted her snuff jug, which was filled with black spit, and
calmly poured it across the tops of the men's shoes, moving her hand in
little loops like she was writing her name - Rosaleen Daise - just the
way she'd practiced.
For a second they stared
down at the juice, dribbled like car oil across their shoes. They
blinked, trying to make it register. When they looked up, I watched
their faces go from surprise to anger, then outright fury. They lunged
at her, and everything started to spin. There was Rosaleen, grabbed and
thrashing side to side, swinging the men like pocketbooks on her arms,
and the men yelling for her to apologize and clean their shoes.
"Clean it off!"
That's all I could hear, over and over. And then the cry of birds
overhead, sharp as needles, sweeping from low-bough trees, stirring up
the scent of pine, and even then I knew I would recoil all my life from
the smell of it.
"Call the
police," yelled the dealer to a man inside.
By then Rosaleen lay
sprawled on the ground, pinned, twisting her fingers around clumps of
grass. Blood ran from a cut beneath her eye. It curved under her chin
the way tears do.
When the policeman got
there, he said we had to get into the back of his car.
"You're under
arrest," he told Rosaleen. "Assault, theft, and disturbing the
peace." Then he said to me, "When we get down to the station,
I'll call your daddy and let him deal with you."
Rosaleen climbed in,
sliding over on the seat. I moved after her, sliding as she slid,
sitting as she sat.
The door closed. So quiet
it amounted to nothing but a snap of air, and that was the strangeness
of it, how a small sound like that could fall across the whole world.
from The Secret Life
of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd, Copyright © January 2002, Viking Press, a
division of Penguin Putnam, Inc., used by permission.
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