State of Grace

Free State of Grace by Joy Williams

Book: State of Grace by Joy Williams Read Free Book Online
Authors: Joy Williams
we plant it? Who will come to watch it grow? I imagine already friendly beasts following us down the street, birds and bees and grazing things. But I become weary. My feet lag. What a responsibility, this grass! What a burden! I have poisoned it. The man said so. I am so destructive. My hands are hatchets. Daddy had told me this. He’d said, AND WHERE THE SLAIN ARE THERE IS SHE . Job. He’d said, It’s happened and it’s ahead of you, forever and ever.
    We enter the college grounds.
    I sit down beneath a banyan tree though I only want to be back in the trailer or sitting in the Jaguar, at rest, resting. Grady kisses me good-by and enters the chemistry building. He turns before he opens the door, his hair all smacked askew with water, heartbreaking as a grebe, and waves at me. I wave back, grateful for his familiarity. He drops from sight into forestry and mathematics.
    He has a theory for the animals, with which by equation the earth can be saved.
    I have a malapropism or two.
    The leaves on this tree are long as baseball bats. Many of the roots haven’t rooted yet but stick out stiff as wires, ateye-level, from the trunk. Everything’s so colorful and fecund. A bellowing order and thoughtful rhyme. Noah’s Ark. A path for every foot to trod. A trot for any taste. Students move heartily by with the faces of winning contestants. Everyone’s a winner here! The South is Cracker-Jax!
    “Hello!” they cry. I blink.
    “Hiyew,” a girl says cutely as a comic book. “Why we haven’t seen you for quite some time. My boyfriend’s sleeping in your bed.”
    “O.K.!” I cry cheerfully. I am speaking too loudly. I know this girl. Debbie Dow. Before I’d gone off with Father five months ago and then immediately with Grady, five months ago, I had known this girl. A sister. With a pin and a barrette of hammered silver weighing down her head.
    “Those your sheets?” the girl asks. “Or are they from the service? Better get yourself some new sheets when you come back. Are you coming back? Jean’s wearing your clothes. Half of them are in her closet now.”
    Her teeth do not grow out of the gums but are perched there as though in afterthought. Other than this, the girl’s face is wealthy.
    So many questions, so much news. “OK.!” I cry joyously.
    “Those sheets certainly have had their lives,” the girl says. “Those pussycat sheets.”
    I know this girl. I’ve seen her squatting for the soap. Rump bumpy as an ugly lemon. I know the boy as well. A baseball player on a scholarship. A pitcher with big ears. What’s all this talk about boys and beds? A whore is a deep ditch and a strange woman is a narrow pit. A youth’s a rictus and an aging man is ruinous. There’s no turnpike to love. Just snares and snaffles. I want to go back, back. But to what?
    I will tell this girl instead. I will whisper in her ear’s veranda. The girl’s head tips expensively, from the barrette. She speaks first.
    “There’s been some mail for you. One or two letters. I saw them just the other day but they were gone this morning. I suppose you picked them up?”
    The girl seems to be shouting at me. From a distance. I look down at the ground, expecting to see a cheeping creek separating us, an unfordable crinkle in the earth. It’s almost there. There’s a plastic straw on the ground. I pick it up and put it in the new picnic basket. A straw’s as good as a cup. One never knows what the day will bring.
    “Was that your daddy I saw you with? Down for Homecoming? Down for the water show?”
    “Oh, but that was a long time ago,” I shout.
    “Yes, but that was the last time I saw you,” the girl says confidently. “Why wasn’t that the Homecoming though? With our float winning and all? What a time Cloyd and I had! We fell asleep and the tide just about took us out.”
    I think of replies. I discard them all.
    “We had champagne in the House after the parade,” Debbie persists. “Why weren’t you there?”
    “That certainly

Similar Books

Jumping In

Cardeno C.

Cornerstone

Misty Provencher

Bundle of Joy

Barbara Bretton

Bossy

Kim Linwood

Achilles

Elizabeth Cook