The Crowning Glory of Calla Lily Ponder: A Novel

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The Crowning Glory of Calla Lily Ponder: A Novel Page 35

by Rebecca Wells


  I washed the dishes in silence, feeling the hot soapy water, the soft scent of the mild detergent wafting up. We worked side by side without talking. The sound of the water splashing, the light clinking of silverware, the swoosh of the rinsing, the placing of the dishes in the drainboard rack.

  Then, without looking at me, Tuck said softly, “Calla, I’m sorry.”

  At first I thought I’d imagined it. I waited a while, kept washing. “’Scuse me, did you—did you just say something?”

  Tuck stopped rinsing dishes. “I’m sorry, Calla.”

  “Could you please look me in the face and say that again?”

  Tuck closed his eyes for a moment. When he opened them, tears were gathering.

  “I’m sorry for hurting you, Calla Lily Ponder,” he said, his voice rough. “I’m sorry I left.”

  Our eyes locked on each other.

  “It was a bad decision, Calla,” he said. “I never stopped loving you. I was young, I was stupid, and I was scared.”

  We were both silent for a moment.

  “Can you forgive me?” he asked.

  I turned. It was his eyes. The words were important. But it was his eyes.

  My hands were shaking. I kept on scrubbing at some crust stuck on a pie plate. Words were running around my head: honey, peaches, white flour, sugar…Run, run, danger, danger!

  I wanted to touch his cheek and assure him that I forgave him everything. I wanted to make him crawl across the desert on his knees.

  Could I forgive him? Had I already forgiven him? I must have, on some level, or I wouldn’t be standing there next to him washing the dishes after his grandfather’s funeral.

  When I had nothing left to scrub, I passed a final clean plate to Tuck. Our fingers brushed once more. He set the plate in the drainer and covered my hand with his. Achingly, I remembered everything about his hands: their size, their color, their texture, his long elegant fingers, the strong grace. And how those same hands once knew how to please every inch of my young body.

  “Calla,” he said. “Calla Lily.”

  I stared at his hand on top of mine.

  Tears streamed down my face. Longing shot through me like a cramp. I lifted my eyes to look at Tuck. His were filled with tears again.

  I turned my hand over so our palms touched. Slowly, our fingers began a smooth dance of touching, turning over to feel the back of each other’s hand, then palms. Then his thumb pressed hard in the center of my palm, and it was all I could do to swallow. It had been so long since I had been touched. Don’t stop touching me, Tuck. Please don’t stop. Oh, God, stop now. I cannot bear for you to hurt me again.

  He stepped behind me, and slowly, he lifted my hair and kissed one spot, one particular spot, and with that, my heart and my body began to open. At that sink, on that night, I was sixteen years old again. I was being given a second chance. What I thought could only be fantasy was actually becoming real.

  “Your hair,” Tuck breathed. “Oh, that lavender-vanilla smell…”

  He turned his head and gently kissed the side of my neck, and all the vulnerable places that I touch on so many people.

  His hand came around so that his palm was cupping my cheek. I turned around to face him and gently moved Tuck’s hand from my cheek to my lips. He did the same with my palm. I could now feel his lips on my palm, feel his breath on my skin. I began to kiss the palm of his hand. I kissed his life line, his love line, then the center of his palm. He sighed, and with the exhale let out a trembling sound. Each of us closed our eyes. The world met at two points: where our lips met our palms.

  I opened my eyes and looked into his. Then my head dropped forward slightly and I gave a soft little moan. He heard my consent.

  I listened as he deeply inhaled the smell of my hair. Tuck next to me riding Sable Star. Early morning storm rolling in. Hot summer morning. Freshly cut hay. The scent of leather. I began to have trouble standing up. I reached out to hold on to the counter.

  “Calla,” Tuck softly asked, “you want something to hold on to?”

  I could not believe he was saying this. I breathed deeply for a while before I answered. Once I answer, it’s all over; I’m gone.

  “Yes,” I murmured.

  “Calla?” he whispered, his voice a soft puff.

  “Yes,” I said, “I do.”

  “You do what?” Tuck asked.

  “I do want something,” I said.

  “What do you want, Calla?”

  I knew he was both teasing me and checking with me every baby step of the way.

  “I want something to hold on to, Tuck.”

  “So do I,” he said.

  “Then hold on to me,” I said, facing the sink and looking at my reflection in the kitchen window. I moved my thick braid to the front and pulled off the little elastic band at the bottom. As my fingers began to loosen the strands of hair from each other, I turned and looked up at Tuck in invitation. He took my braid from my hands, wrapped his arms around me, and gently finished loosening my braid. Then slowly he pulled his fingers through my hair.

  In front of me was the wooden carpenter’s table that my grandpa had built, with its warm, gleaming surface. Most of it was covered with open Tupperware containers of leftovers: spinach casserole, shrimp succotash, and crawfish étouffée. Tuck lifted me and set me down on the table’s edge. His hands went to my hips. They were trembling as he bent to kiss me.

  My legs wrapped around his waist and pulled him slightly forward. I lifted my lips so they were right next to his. For a while our lips almost, but not quite, touched. He moved a tiny bit closer. I moved a little closer, and then our lips definitely touched. Full smooth lips. No tongues just yet. He was waiting for my subtle signal. I gave it, and then our kisses began.

  I touched the very tip of my tongue to his. Tuck’s tongue came a little ways into my mouth. I let my tongue trace the inside of his lips slowly. There was a whole world inside Tuck’s mouth. Then, just when my tongue was coming back to the front, his lips closed on it and began to suck on it softly.

  Find me, kiss every little place. Worlds slowly fell away. World of loss, world of anger, world of buying, world of selling, world of loudness, world of cars and asphalt, world of clocks, world of scarcity, world of thinking, all fell away. Only lips and tongues, all energy focused on small intersections .

  My legs closed tighter around Tuck. Our kisses took us further and further down the road we were walking. He did nothing without my permission. Finally, he pulled away and looked at me, tilting his head to the side in question. I laughed, and tilted my head back as if to say, You may, oh yes, you may. Tuck gave me a big smile. He reached his hand down and began to touch me. With each touch he gave a little groan of arousal, a little groan of recognition. He leaned in and put his face close to mine and breathed in my scent.

  “Oh God,” he said. “Oh sweet Jesus Lord.”

  Then the scent of old floors polished with lemon oil, and I am lying on the old four-poster bed, the soft chenille bedspread underneath my back, Tuck’s body on top of me. Then my body on top of his. Then side by side. I loved him in ways he’d never been loved, because I myself had been well-loved in a good marriage. I did things I’d dreamed about doing but never had, not even in all those years of marriage. I also let myself do things I had never thought of before. All those teenage years of yearning were the best aphrodisiac possible. He gave me more than any of my fantasies had.

  Our stamina was fueled by the memory of our teenage arousal. Slow dancing to “When a Man Loves a Woman” on the gym floor, our bodies touching, Tuck’s head bent, his lips grazing my shoulder, our hips swaying. Oh, God. How can it be that I am sixteen again? Again and again we entered and explored and pleased, and there was so much moaning that at one point we both started laughing at the same time, and it was soon after that we finally stopped to rest.

  Later we climbed into the big old tub, and Tuck said, “Lean back.”

  He reached out for my bottle of baby shampoo.

&
nbsp; For a moment, I froze. Strangely, after all the intimacies we’d just shared, it just felt too intimate to have Tuck wash my hair. I wasn’t ready to have him hold the weight of my head in his hands.

  “Come on, this won’t even sting your eyes,” Tuck assured me.

  “Okay,” I said, and leaned back to wet my hair. When Tuck began to rub the shampoo into it, I felt so unprotected. But the time for that fear had gone. As Tuck massaged around my temples, the day and night began to catch up with me. I began to drift off.

  I floated deeper into the doze, and pictured myself in the river on whose banks La Luna rested. I pictured myself being held in M’Dear’s hands.

  To wake me, Tuck gently rocked my head. He climbed out of the tub, filled an old pitcher, and began to rinse my hair.

  “You’re pretty good for an amateur,” I told him.

  “That was kind of intense, wasn’t it?” Tuck asked. “I mean, when I was holding your head in my hands, I could have done anything to you. At the salon, when you wash people’s hair, do you feel that?”

  “Yes, sometimes. Most of the time. But I feel all sorts of other things, too.”

  After rinsing my hair, Tuck smoothed it down my back. “Calla, I can’t believe that you still have such long hair. It’s been years since I’ve even met a woman whose hair wasn’t gelled or sprayed to death.”

  “Hey, let’s don’t knock styling,” I said, joking.

  “I just mean, in the world I lived in, a woman over twenty-eight with a long, full mane of hair pulled back into a braid was pretty rare.”

  Then we went back into the bedroom and climbed under the covers, breathing in the scent of old line-dried cotton sheets and clean bodies.

  Before we drifted off, I whispered, “In high school, I dreamed of having you inside me.”

  “I dreamed of it in high school and ever since.” Tuck hugged me tightly to him.

  “Have you been loved enough?” I asked.

  “Tonight? You’ve got to be kidding.”

  “No, I mean, have you been loved enough, period?”

  He frowned, and turned away from me. I waited, remembering the young boy with his beat-up suitcase, getting off the bus in La Luna.

  “No, Calla,” Tuck said, turning back to me. “I don’t think I have.”

  I closed my eyes and breathed. I knew there was more to say, but now was not the time.

  Our breathing filled the room, joining with the sound of the river.

  “Calla,” he said, “you awake?”

  “Yes,” I said. “Are you?”

  “Barely. I want to talk to you, though. I want to tell you about my grandfather. What I said in his eulogy today: that he wanted what was good for me, no matter what the cost? Well,” he said, his voice shaky, “you were the biggest cost. I don’t blame him. But he was blind. And I was blind.”

  “What do you mean?” I said, propping up on one elbow.

  “I’ll tell you. Do you remember how we promised we’d write each other every day?”

  I was silent for a long moment.

  “Did you ever write any letters?” I asked.

  “I did. They’re in a box that I found late last night in Papa Tucker’s study with a letter to me,” he said. I stared at Tuck as he continued. “I read late into the night until I couldn’t take it anymore. I brought the box over here this morning, to give to you, if you wanted it. If you cared about the letters.”

  “Where is it?”

  “I asked Sonny Boy to put it in his old room for me.”

  “Well?”

  “Do you want to see it?”

  “I’m not sure. Maybe I’ve had enough surprises tonight.” I sat up, pulling my hair into a loose bun. “All right. Go get it.”

  He slipped his jeans back on, and I could hear the floorboards creak in Sonny Boy’s old room as my mind raced.

  When he returned, he was carrying an old leather-bound box. We sat on the floor and opened it. Inside were a stack of letters. As I picked them up, the image of the girl I once was felt so strong it was like she was in the room with us.

  Tuck held one of the letters up. “I read them yesterday after reading the letter from my grandfather. He explained what he had done. Actionable. It makes me sick. And it could only have happened in a small town where a man like Papa Tucker could actually intercept mail. Can you imagine it? He threatened Jean Randolph, the postmistress—said if she didn’t hand over every one of our letters, he would fire her husband, who worked at the cotton gin.” He paused. “He said he wanted me to have a fresh start, to leave La Luna behind. He loved you, Calla, but he said he loved me more.

  “He wasn’t a demon, Calla, although part of me still feels that way. Remember that day our senior year, when I went off with my mother and drunken father in his truck?”

  “I remember it clearly.”

  “Well, my father pulled out a pistol and threatened to kill me if I ever tried to get my mother out of that horrible drunken marriage.

  “Papa Tucker was there. And his reasoning afterwards—or as he put it to me—was that there was no way that he could keep me safe as long as I was in the state of Louisiana—that he could keep me away from them, but he could never keep them away from me.”

  “God,” I said. “I feel physically ill.” I reached over and took a drink of water.

  “You wrote me,” I said, looking through the letters.

  “I wrote to you almost every day, Calla. I let myself wait until 1972, the new year. No letters came—”

  “But why didn’t you take my calls at the dorm?”

  “I never got your messages. Believe me, Calla.”

  “Tuck, this is almost too much to grasp.”

  He squeezed my hand.

  “Oh, no,” I said. “My letters. That I rushed to the post office each day to make the afternoon pickup.”

  A few minutes of silence went by as I tried to take it in. Then I picked up a letter I had written him and we read it together.

  Dear Tuck,

  Why have you stopped loving me? What have I done wrong? Please tell me. You can tell me anything, you know you can. So tell me please, why have you stopped loving me?

  We were both crying.

  “I remember the day I wrote that letter. I was in the café after bussing all my tables at Melonçons’. I sat down with a Coke and put my feet up. My feet hurt bad because I had forgotten where I’d left my innersoles.” I couldn’t continue speaking, so I picked up a letter from Tuck from the stack.

  Nov. 2, 1971

  Palo Alto, California

  Dear Calla,

  When will I hear from you? Papa Tucker tells me you’re dating a fellow from Claiborne. Someone you met at the café. You might have told me yourself, Calla. Our vows on the pier, don’t they mean anything?

  I love you, Calla. Please give me one sign that you love me.

  I will wait until the holiday. Then if I don’t hear from you, I won’t come home. It would hurt too much. Maybe it’s like Papa Tucker says—“It’s just a teenage romance.”

  Please, Calla, tell me he’s wrong.

  I love you,

  Tuck

  “Tuck, this is too big to take in all at once.”

  She must have known, too. There is no way Miz Lizbeth could not have known. All the time—my God—my family’s oldest, dearest friend—“Uncle Tucker”—and Sonny Boy’s godfather. All the time!

  As if reading my mind, he said then, “Miz Lizbeth—she wasn’t a part of this.” Then he tenderly put his hand on my shoulder. After a moment he helped me up off the floor, and we got into bed.

  We held hands under the covers and rested.

  “Calla, do you think we could have a second chance?” Tuck asked.

  I lay there, surprised at how calm I felt in the face of all this.

  “Let’s see what tomorrow brings,” I said.

  “Thank you, Calla. If there’s a chance, I’ll wait.”

  “Let’s rest,” I said, fluffing my pillow and turning off
the bedside lamp. We were quiet for a long time, just breathing.

  “He’s at rest up there at last, I imagine,” I said.

  Tuck sighed. “Miz Lenora is resting too. And your Sweet. Now all three of them are up there.”

  “Hmmm,” I murmured softly.

  We grew silent again.

  Then I said, “Maybe they’re not resting at all. Maybe they’re all up there playing Bourrée.”

  Tuck laughed softly.

  It was as if we were saying little prayers through these simple sentences.

  “May I roll over and hold you?” Tuck asked.

  “That would be a very good thing to do,” I said, turning to my side, feeling his body spoon against mine, his face near my neck, his knees in the crook of my knees. I liked the way he asked my permission, the way he took no gesture for granted.

  We slept this way until a few hours later, when we woke, each of us having grown used to sleeping alone.

  Tuck turned to me.

  “God, you are so lovely,” he said softly.

  “Umm,” I said, in the most languorous tone I’d heard come out of my body in years.

  Then he pulled me to him and hugged me tightly. Our bodies, no longer young, were relaxed and open. I could feel little endorphin-angels flying rapturously around the bedroom at the sight of us, our armor dropped. We had both lost enough in our lives to know that such perfect bliss does not last. But we also knew enough to surrender to this one glorious moment.

  Once Tuck was asleep again, I got up. I was tired, but my body needed its daily morning swim. Quietly I put on my vintage kimono and left the house. Walking down to the pier felt good, my muscles stretching. My arms swinging at my side. I felt happy at the prospect of a swim . I walked through the backyard toward the river, thanking everything. Everything needed thanking, deserved to be thanked, and I felt I hadn’t done it in far too long.

  Just as I reached the pier, the sun was rising. I stood there, not moving for a moment. Then my long-legged body that weathered every storm began a slow easy dance. With my mother. A private dance, just the two of us. Then I opened out to the sun, to embrace the fiery star that brings us life. In the year since I moved back to La Luna, I’d frequently felt tiny sparks inside my body. Today I danced, welcoming a new little white spark inside me that was glowing. Welcome, little spark, to this body. Sun, moon, male, female, old, young, death, birth. I opened my arms to everything.

 

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