“Did you get the food?”
“You won’t believe it, Ma. You know that—”
“Sugar, did you bring back the food?”
I shook my head. “You know that girl I told you about last year, the one I got to know in North Carolina?”
Ma stepped into the bedroom and her face looked like it froze on her. I wondered if it was over me not bringing back the steak dinner, but it was even a more serious look than she’d given me the couple of times that I’d gambled away her supper money.
I backed up from her look and the excitement fell out of my voice, but just a little. “Remember, the girl who lived on that—”
“I remember.”
“She’s here. She checked into the Alton House and I’m going down there.”
Ma walked across the squeaking pine floor for a moment and both her hands started grabbing at the robe where it draped her legs. She now just looked spooked.
“You mad I didn’t bring up the steak dinner yet?” I asked.
Ma rolled up her hair to the top of her head. She pulled a pin from somewhere in her robe and stuck it into the ball.
“I put the order in. I paid for it already, Ma. I’ll bring it back from Merle’s in a—”
She shut the bedroom door and stood between it and me. “Have you seen her?”
“Not yet. But Herbert saw her and said she was looking for me. It’s her. It’s Amanda Lynn. She told Herbert her name.”
“So she knows you’re here?”
“Yeah, Ma. He told her I lived here.”
“You can’t go see her.”
A long ugly quiet passed between us. Ma’s eyes were watery but never blinked.
“What?”
She started pacing again and wiped under one eye. “Find your brothers, right now. They should still be down at the falls…you tell them to stay until I come for them. Tell them not to come back here. Don’t you come back here neither until I find you. Do not come back. For any reason. Now go. Right now, Benjamin. And do not go to see this girl.” Ma tried to turn me toward the door with one hand on my shoulder, but I didn’t move.
“What’s going on?”
She started pushing harder. “I’ll tell you when I meet you at the river.”
“I wanna know now.”
Ma let go of me and starting pacing again, but this time a lot faster. She went to take a seat on the double mattresses that me and my brothers slept on, then she looked at me all of a sudden like she’d forgotten I was standing there. She shot back up.
“Go! And if you see any men you don’t know, don’t get near them. Run. Don’t speak to anybody, not even your friends. Now find your brothers. I’ll be there soon. And go through the woods to get there, don’t take the river trail. I have to go talk to the—”
“I’m gonna see Amanda Lynn.”
Ma took one long step and slapped me hard across the face. I mean real hard. “I said no,” she said.
I turned back to her. I was a lot bigger than Ma and had been for a couple of years. I’d never gotten so mad at her as I got the second after she laid a hand across my face for no reason. Before, she’d always had a decent reason for something I’d done. Not this time. I hadn’t seen Ma with the moonlight in her eyes in ages, and wondered if she was off in the head and that man she was with had given her something bad to drink or sniff or smoke like had happened before one time.
I stepped up full in front of her and she backed up from me. I tasted the blood in my mouth and wanted to hit back and hit back hard, but I didn’t. It was the first time I’d ever wanted to hit my own ma like I’d hit a man, being riled up as I was, and it shook me up even more feeling like that because I’d never felt such a dark thing before.
“Don’t ever hit me again,” I finally said.
When I went to leave my bedroom, Ma tried to grab hold of me. She pulled my shirt out from where I’d just tucked it, but I was walking fast toward the front door.
“Don’t let him leave!” she screamed at Uncle Ray.
I looked back at Ma knowing she was acting crazy now. I think Uncle Ray thought the same thing by the way he watched her. But he rose from the sofa, looking back and forth at us with his quick eyes. Ma was still screaming right behind me, trying to slow me down.
“Stop him!”
Uncle Ray went to grab me same as Ma did, and at first I tried to get his hand off me easy-like, but he wasn’t letting go. He was taller than me, but so thin and with his feet busted up, I just turned fast and shoved him back down onto the sofa as hard as I could.
He rolled onto the floor and I felt bad about what I’d done the moment I did it, because I knew Uncle Ray wasn’t expecting what I’d just done to him. He’d always been good to me and I knew from then on we’d always be different toward each other. Besides that, I was always a little leery of Uncle Ray the way he was so book smart and good with a gun and a razor. But I had to see Amanda and he was in my way of doing it. And now I just felt like I had to get away from Ma, too.
I yanked open the door and ran out with Ma still trying to hold on to me and yelling. When I looked back, an old man with hair sticking up everywhere was peeking out her bedroom. I stopped at the bottom of the back steps when she said all out of breath and shaky, “You can’t go.” She was holding on to the top railing with both hands when I turned to leave. “She may’ve brought trouble here!”
I walked back up one step and leaned forward, staring at Ma as hard as I could. “You don’t even know her. She’s the best thing that—”
“Danger may have followed her.”
“What danger?”
“We have to leave until I can find out if—”
“You’re talking crazy, Momma. I’m going to see her.”
“I forbid it!”
Ma drew a line in the dirt right there with those words and with her hands now all fisted at her sides. A line I’d never crossed that she’d ever found out about. She looked plain shook-up, standing up above me and staring down. I felt sorry for her all of a sudden for whatever was wrong with her with the shape she was in, but I had to go. I figured we’d work it out somehow when I got home. We’d probably worked out worse before.
“Come here,” she said, finally lowering her voice and trying to cover up more with the chill in the air.
I didn’t say anything else and took off around the side of the saloon to head up to the Alton House. Ma didn’t say or scream anything else, but I could hear her running through our apartment, yelling at Uncle Ray.
Just before I was out of earshot of her kitchen window, opened a crack, it sounded like she said, “They’re gonna kill my baby.”
I slowed, wondering if I’d heard her right. I did hear “kill” and “baby” clear enough. Ma tended to call all of her boys “baby”sometimes, even though none of us were babies anymore. But it wasn’t just what she said, it was the way she said it that sent a sharp chill through me. My legs were still trembling. It was the first time I’d stood up to her in such a way and flat disobeyed her like I just did. Something big had changed between us.
I stood on the boardwalk outside the open door of the Last Rebel Yell and tried to get my breathing