Sing Me a River
Pa
had worn that old gray coat until it was almost nothing but a rag that hung on
his big frame. It smelled of rancid venison, catfish and gasoline but Pa didn't
mind any. He wore it almost everywhere and year 'round. He would have worn it
at church on Sunday morning but that was where Ma put her foot down. Pa wasn't
much into giving in to what other people wanted and didn't give a whit what
people thought of him, but when it came to Ma, he deferred to her good judgment
and wishes.
I
was going on fifteen when we moved to a small piece of farmland near the banks
of the Ohio River. Even before Ma unpacked the dishes, Pa had put on his coat
and gotten his fishing pole from the back of the truck.
“You
wanna come along?” he asked me.
“Can't,
Pa,” I said. “I have a piece to learn.”
I
untied the blanket wrapped around the piano to protect it during the move and
sat down on the bench and watched him through the window as he headed off
through a field of dead brown stalks of corn going toward the river. It was
late fall and the trees had shed most of their leaves. Everything looked gray,
as if nature was dying right in front of my eyes. Pa's coat served as
camouflage and he was soon lost from view shortly after entering the woods that
separated the farm from the river.
Cold
air seeped into my bedroom through some of the small spaces between the boards
in the wall and from around the window frame. The wallpaper was old and buckled
or peeling and did nothing to keep the chill out. Ma had put some masking tape
around the window and hung wool curtains but it didn't really help. I sat in my
bed with the comforter my grandma had given me pulled around me and by
lamplight looked at sheet music and tried to memorize the notes. The wind
whistled through the walls providing notes of its own.
“You
awake in there, son?” Pa asked.
“Yeah,
Pa. Just studying my music. Come on in.”
Pa
opened the creaking door and stuck his head in before coming all the way in.
“You going to be okay here?”
“Sure,
Pa. It's a bit chilly but I'll get used to it,” I said. “You missed supper. How
was the fishing?”
“Didn't
catch a damn thing,” he said.
He
came in and moved the curtain aside and looked at the window. “Your Ma did a
good job with the tape.” He stared out the window for a moment then put the
curtain back into place. “If you go down to the river be careful. I found a
trap buried under some brush.”
“What
kind of trap?” I asked.
“For
small game. Just big enough to injure you if you don't look out,” he said.
“Okay
Pa, I'll be careful.”
Before
leaving he stopped in the doorway. “I heard you singing all the way down to the
river. You've been given a gift, son.
Don't squander it.”
“I
won't, Pa.”
During
the night, I lay in bed under the comforter and listened to the hooting of an
owl as the wind whistled through the walls. I tried to attach musical notes to
the sounds and fell asleep imaging I was listening to a song.
“That
stew smells good, Gracie,” he said.
“It's
still got about thirty minutes to go,” Ma said. “Where have you been?”
“I
went down to the river,” he said. “Watching up close all that water flowing by
is a powerful experience.”
Ma
put the lid on the pot and sat down at the table. “Aren't you going to practice
today?” she said to me.
“I
had the music room all to myself during lunch time at school,” I said. “I was
able to play and sing for about an hour.”
“You
making friends there?” Pa asked.
“Not
yet,” I said.
“It's
a new school. It'll take a little time,” Pa said. “You been down to the river
yet?”
“Not
yet.”
I
looked down the bank a ways and there was Pa.
His hands were in the pockets of his coat and he was facing the river.
He looked like a statue or that he was a frozen. There was something private
going on between him and the river. I
felt like an intruder, and so I turned and went back the same way I had come.
The
church organist nodded at me and I went up to the pulpit and lay the hymnal on
it and for the next four minutes nothing existed in the world for me but
singing.
When
I sat down Pa whispered in my ear. “That was real good son.”
“Thanks
Pa,” I whispered back.
Pa
came out of the house and stood next to me. “It's a beautiful sight, isn't it
son?”
“Yes
Pa.”
“You
still need to go down to the river,” he said.
I
said nothing.
Water
dripped from the gutter and splashed in the puddle that had formed around the
house like a moat.
“How
was school?” she asked as I took a piece of the celery and bit into it.
“It
was okay,” I said.
The
kitchen was the warmest room in the house. It was where Ma spent most of her
time even when she wasn't cooking.
“Dinner
will be ready soon. Can you go get your father?” she said.
“Where
is he?” I asked.
“I
saw him wandering across the field going toward that river,” she said. The way
she said, “that river” was the same way she talked about other things she held
in derision. That broken-down car of ours. That high-priced meat at the store.
I
went out the front door and by the time I was half way across the field my
boots were covered in mud. The storm had shaken off most of the leaves that had
been clinging on. The bare branches were locked in combat above my head. Before
reaching the river bank I found a trap with a dead squirrel caught in it. The
teeth of the trap were clasped on its hind leg.
The
river was swollen. A couple inches more and it would be flowing over the bank.
I watched as a dead tree was carried along on the swift current. Pa was nowhere
along the bank. I walked along it for a ways until I found his coat neatly
folded and lying on a bed of wet leaves at the river's edge.
I
sang at the church service for Pa. I sang about a river. I never sang again.
Tags:
Short Fiction
Love this story. The imagery, characters and emotion are spot on.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful story to read!
ReplyDeleteWonderful!
ReplyDelete