One Came Home (23 page)

Read One Came Home Online

Authors: Amy Timberlake

BOOK: One Came Home
2.83Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Living with uncertainty is like having a rock in your shoe. If you can’t remove the rock, you have to figure out how to walk despite it. There is simply no other choice.

I kept busy. Busy helped. Every morning I started early in the store—restocking, sweeping off the porch whether it needed it or not, and straightening displays. When the store opened, I took on tasks that used to be done by Agatha and Grandfather Bolte: I advised customers. I completed the sale by taking money and counting back change. At the end of the day, I gathered up the receipts and went upstairs to record them in the account books on Grandfather Bolte’s desk.

I liked it too. “She’s got a knack,” said Aunt Cleo to Ma repeatedly (and in my hearing). Another time Aunt Cleo said
that sales ran in the family, and I’d inherited the tendency. I understood what she meant. I felt almost clairvoyant. Sometimes I knew what people wanted or needed before they knew themselves. I certainly liked devising schemes to sell this or that item: I formulated plans. I tweaked wordings on signs and made sure everything looked like a picture postcard from the plate glass window. And despite the circumstances, I felt a kind of congruity with the world and my place in it when the store thrummed like a beehive with Aunt Cleo, Ma, and me each doing our part.

Still, we all wondered about Agatha. At different times, Ma, Aunt Cleo, and the sheriff all asked to see the ribbon again. Mr. Olmstead came by to make me repeat what the Dog Hollow stationmaster had said. I did not offer theories, and no one asked. For the first time, I started to understand what it must have been like for Ma as she wondered about Pa all those years.

I imagine we all came up with ways to deal with the uncertainty. I did two things. First, I wrote letters. I wrote a letter to “The Harrisons, parents of Morgy Harrison, Dog Hollow, Wisconsin.” I wrote a letter to “Mrs. Garrow on the bluff, Dog Hollow, Wisconsin” and enclosed a piece of the blue-green ribbon. Then I wrote a letter to the University of Wisconsin at Madison. The address read: “The Department That Educates Young Ladies in the Sciences.” It was an unlikely address, but I had to try. “If you see her, tell her to write us. We are longing for a word.”

Second, I arose one morning while it was still dark, saddled Long Ears, and rode to the bluffs.

Agatha had not come home, so I found a wide rock that overlooked the Wisconsin River and spoke about her loudly into the wind. I told her story. I told my story. I apologized.

Agatha had not come home, so I told the air, the sky, the horizon (and, I suppose, Long Ears) what Agatha looked like when, parasol in hand, she spun under pigeons: spring set free, a dance of heaven and earth, mankind and creation enjoying each other’s company.

Agatha had not come home, so I stood at the edge of that bluff, pulled up a dandelion gone white with seeds, and blew those seeds into the wind. I watched them sail off, tottering, turning, and gradually descending to the river below.

And I swear I saw a single blue feather in the wind.

I watched it and remembered shooting those gin bottles after Agatha’s funeral. Feathers had flown up with every shattering. I had wondered about the difference between feathers and leaves, and now my thoughts came back to me. It was too true: Agatha had been carried away, beyond my reach, like some sort of feather. Me? I’d had my flight and was back at home. I found I did not mind.

I could have gone on, but Long Ears nudged in to check my pockets for sugar, found none there, and tipped me over.

I pushed his muzzle off me, stood up, and noticed the perfection of the day—not a cloud in the sky, not a breeze. And there was that mule with the ears that stuck out like hands on a clock, eyeing me.

I love it when he waits like that. Long Ears knows it.

I smiled at him, then looked again out over the edge of the bluff.

Yes, I’d said what I needed to say.

Long Ears stamped.

I turned to him, and laughed for the first time that day. “What about an apple? Would that do?”

On July 24, 1871, Ma shuffled through the mail (like she did). She squinted at the return address on a letter. A small sound—her tongue clicking—escaped her lips. The letter slipped from her hand.

I watched it slice through the air like a feather and I
knew
.

I
knew
before it hit the ground and skidded across the pine floor.

Aunt Cleo hurried to pick it up. I watched Aunt Cleo’s face open up like the letter O.

Ma set the rest of the mail down and grabbed the letter from Aunt Cleo’s hand. Aunt Cleo shooed a customer out of the store and flipped the
OPEN
sign to
CLOSED
. Ma ripped the envelope off the letter. A newspaper clipping flapped to the
ground. I picked up the clipping, and ran behind Ma to read over her shoulder.

We read the letter together:

Dearest Ones
,

Let me tell you that I am fine, since I am sure you are worried. I am in Madison, staying at a reputable boardinghouse for lady students. I’ve got a job as a store clerk. All is well, except for the turmoil in my thoughts and heart
.

First, let me ask about the newspaper clipping. Georgie, tell me this is not about you! The sketch makes you seem quite transformed. I think you must have gone to Dog Hollow to find me. What have I done? I can barely sleep for worry
.

I unfolded the newspaper clipping and saw the headline: “Girl Sharpshooter Brings Down Counterfeiters.” The sketch beneath it was also familiar, but it never ceased to cool my blood. Below perfectly fine pigtails wasn’t a head but a chunk of meat gone bad in the sun. I touched my cheek reflexively.

Aunt Cleo snatched the clipping out of my hands. “You
never
looked like
that
.”

We continued to read the letter:

I was upset when Benjamin broke off our engagement, and stubbornly determined to leave at once in order to study at a university. I decided to slip off and to avoid contacting
you until I’d started my studies. I thought if my education was well under way that
even you
, Grandfather, might let me stay
.

I made a hasty decision to leave with pigeoners traveling to Prairie du Chien. At the time, I had a vague idea about attending a university in Iowa or Minnesota–too true that my thoughts were scattered. Mostly, I wanted to leave Placid as quickly as possible
.

Soon after leaving, however, I began to suspect that the pigeoners I traveled with were untrustworthy. So in order to avoid any trouble, I separated myself from them at my first opportunity
.

That opportunity came at Dog Hollow, when the pigeoners met up with a Mr. Garrow. (The same Garrow as in the clipping?) He wanted to conduct his business in private, so I walked into town with his daughter Darlene. As the two of us talked, Darlene revealed she was engaged but had no wedding dress
.

Ma, I sold her the ball gown. I am sorry not to have it, but Darlene was thrilled. What better use for such a beautiful dress than as a wedding dress? The color looked
so
well on her (her hair is the same color as mine). Though I ache over the loss of your handiwork, I am to be a student, and will spend my spare time studying. My heart is broken. I cannot imagine attending balls and assemblies
.

Anyway, Darlene promised not to tell the pigeoners where I’d gone. I spent that night in the woods, and the next morning I boarded the first train leaving Dog Hollow. Because I had not traveled as far as I thought I would, it
made perfect sense to turn around and go to Madison. I also thought doubling back might throw you off my trail. So here I am in Madison
.

Grandfather, you are correct in saying that the University of Wisconsin doesn’t educate women in the way that they should. But I’ve found people here who have promised to help me learn all that I can
.

Ma, please show this letter to Mr. Olmstead. Please tell him how sorry I am for my behavior
.

All of you—please write. Write that you are alive and well. Tell me what happened. Those newspaper articles scared me nearly
to death
. You can write to the address below
.

All my love (such as it is)
,
Agatha

“Heedless girl,” said Aunt Cleo.

“She doesn’t know the half of it,” said Ma.

I stood slack-jawed. Then I rammed my knee hard into the counter. “I hate her. She deceived us,” I said.

The store went quiet as a hairpin. I looked up and saw their wide eyes staring at me. I read concern—for
me
.

Even after all I’d done—leaving and making my family sick with worry.

After
all that, Ma, Aunt Cleo, the sheriff, Mr. Olmstead, our neighbors, all of Placid had taken me back in a most unreserved way.

Wouldn’t I do the same for Agatha?

I saw the letter held between Ma’s index finger and thumb. I reached for it. I spread it flat on the counter. Agatha’s handwriting. Those loopy letter e’s. I put my finger on the inked letters and pressed against the lines, feeling every indent as if it were braille.

I
wanted
my sister. I
loved
my sister.

I did it then—I forgave her …

… and burst out laughing (confusing Ma and Aunt Cleo to no end). I laughed at the irony: Agatha and I had both started in Placid and ended in Dog Hollow. Yet who would say we’d had the same journey? It was as if I had walked, tilling the earth for troubles, and Agatha had bypassed it all by flying overhead.

Agatha was alive.

Ma reached out for Aunt Cleo and me. With our arms around each other, we smiled until it hurt.

Pause a moment. Feel the air surround that moment. Push against it, and find that it truly exists. Blow on it, and see how the tiny barbs snag the wind and lift. Watch it fly.

Feather by feather, she
had
made her way.

You’d think 1871 would have finished with me. This was not the case. There are still a few wonders I need to relay before I end my story. The year 1871 seemed determined to remake me, and it did. In the end, 1871 remade
all
of us.

As letters went back and forth, 1871 established itself firmly as a year we’d never be able to forget. Already we’d experienced the largest pigeon nesting within recorded memory, and now in August talk was all about lack of rain. People complained of low water levels in their wells, and of slogging pails of water to their gardens. When had it last rained? I remembered big drops the day I’d negotiated with Billy McCabe for a horse. But after that, everything went bone-dry.

Of course, everyone in my family (including myself) was happily preoccupied with Agatha. We scribbled out missives and eagerly awaited replies. Ma and the sheriff made plans for a November honeymoon to Madison. At Agatha’s request, they invited Mr. Olmstead to join them.

Other books

Ruins of War by John A. Connell
Kissing My Killer by Newbury, Helena
The Flower Bowl Spell by Olivia Boler
Life with My Sister Madonna by Christopher Ciccone
Episodios de una guerra by Patrick O'Brian
Up All Night-nook by Lyric James
Adoring Addie by Leslie Gould
BloodImmoral by Astrid Cooper