The Second Coming
finials on the greenhouse to the dog. How could she keep meat cold? She gave the dog the luncheon meat. While he chewed it, he was able to meet her eye, giving himself leave to watch her, cocking first one eyebrow then the other at her. As long as he chewed, he could look at her. When he finished, he licked his chops and settled his complex mouth but his lip stuck high and dry on a tooth. It embarrassed him. But the dogâs embarrassment did not embarrass her. Wasnât this a good sign?
All next morning from sunrise to the noon she worked in the greenhouse. What to do and where to start? Clean out the jungle. Start in the corner near the door, which as soon as the sun hit it began to smell of florist damp and root reek and rain forest. Could those be orchids gone to seed in big wire baskets hanging from the roof or some kind of air-feeding lianas trailing down like snakes?
At first she thought the laurel and rhododendron had fallen through the rotten benches and rooted in the earthen floor, but the floor under an inch of mulch was concrete. Take hold of a small tree and up it came easily with its flat fan of roots. The trouble was getting the junk out. Bush, tree, bench she dragged out and pushed into the fen. Using a piece of copper flashing from the ruins, she shoveled out root rot and potsherds, and by the time she got hungry, she had cleared a quadrant of concrete ten or twelve feet on edge. Sitting in the sun with the dog, she ate again and brushed the floor lightly with her freehand: good solid old trowel-smoothed uncracked cured concrete, iron-colored and silky as McWhorterâs driveway. Two more items for her shopping list: broom, shovel.
Tired, she curled up in her bunk and fell immediately to sleep with only time to think: God, I am going to sleep without a pill!âand woke as suddenly. What woke her? The violet vapor from the glass grapes falling straight in her eye? No, the dog had barked. Or rumbled a deep throat rumble. He was sitting up, ears erect, hackles bristling along his spine like a razorback hog.
Someone was coming down the trail.
It was a troop of Girl Scouts, all but one hefty, most fat. They had shoulder patches which she could not make out. The fattest girl and the thinnest girl carried between them a banner which rippled but she could make out: Troop 12, Lafâ? Inâ? Lafayette, Indiana? Surely Girl Scouts couldnât be older than fourteen or fifteen, yet they looked at least twenty and bigger than life. Their legs were like trees.
The fattest girl had straight blond hair that came straight down over her ears like eaves, like Kelsoâs.
Kelso grabbed her in the dayroom.
I know where youâre going.
She did. Kelso knew everything.
You got visitors. Your folks come to see you. What they doing here? They only been here twice. Maybe they come to take you out of here. How come they keep you here? Donât they know what a dump this is? Donât they know they donât buzz you any more at good hospitals? You want to know what this place is for? This is for people who are too proud to go to state and too poor or stingy to go to a good private hospital. You want to know what it costs them here to keep us? Less than half what it does at state. They making money on us, honey.
Kelso had been at Valleyhead for fifteen years. When she was not too sick, she was canny and told the truth, but one look at her and you knew she could not make it for long in the world. There was no place for her to go. She was smart and had been a bookkeeper with Sears, but that wasnât enough. Sometimes she went to Atlanta, to her parentsâ house. Though she sounded countrified and looked like a fat lady running a service station in south Georgia, her father had a big house in Druid Hills. But she always came back fatter than ever, stiff as a board and obedient, hair coming straight down all around her head like a funnel. So stiff and obedient that once McGahey told her to sit down and she sat for hours until McGahey noticed there was no chair under her.
Isnât your father a doctor, Allie?
She shook her head.
A dentist, right. He could afford it. Maybe they taking you out.
She shrugged.
You could make it, babe. Youâre a smart cookie and you know how to get along if you wanted to. How come you donât try?
She shook her head.
I saw them coming in, all dressed up. They must be passing through.
She shrugged.
Talk to me, babe.
Okay, Kelso. (She jumped.
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