26

Faith is a way of walking, not talking.

—Pisgah Church

Isaac Mitchiner was buried beside his sister, Cyl’s mother, in the cemetery at Mount Olive, a hundred feet away from where he had lain for twenty-one years. The graveside service, simple and direct, was conducted by Reverend Ligon with the assistance of Reverend Freeman.

The hot morning sun poured down on us. The choir sang “Safe in the Arms of Jesus” and “There Is a Rock That Is Higher.”

I went.

Wallace Adderly didn’t.

Cyl sat amongst her light-skinned family and I remembered her saying that when her cousins jeered, Isaac had comforted her—“We’re the only true Africans.”

As I passed through the line afterwards, she clasped my hand with a wry smile. “I still owe you dinner.”

“Yes, you do.”

“Thank you for coming,” she said.

“You’re welcome,” I said.


Daddy called me near the end of July. He doesn’t like to talk on the telephone, so his conversations are always short and to the point.

“You gonna be out this way tomorrow evening?”

“Didn’t plan to, but I can if you want me to. Why?”

“Thought you might like to see that there angel go back up.”

“What time?”

“ ’Bout six?”

“No problem.”

“Fine. See you then, shug.”


He was waiting for me beside his old beat-up Chevy truck and I stood on tiptoe to kiss his leathery cheek. It was as hot and dusty as the first evening we’d driven out to the Crocker family cemetery.

The cotton was waist-high now and full of big white blooms and tiny little green bolls.

Once again, Rudy Peacock’s big two-ton truck was there beside the low stone wall that enclosed the small graveyard, only this time, a bulky form stood in the bed of the truck. It was wrapped in burlap sacks and secured with strong, light cables.

A.K.’s black pickup was there, too. He and Raymond Bagwell had spent the last two hours raking and tidying away all the final bits and pieces of broken granite. The graveyard was as neat as Aunt Zell’s living room.

No sign of Charles Starling. Probably too Little House on the Prairie for him.

Somehow, I wasn’t surprised to see Smudge come running through the cotton rows.

Raymond shrugged. “Mrs. Avery’s daughter’s going to take him back to Washington with her after school starts. I told her I’d take care of him till then.”

Gambling that her age and previously unblemished record would get her a quick parole, Mrs. Avery had accepted the plea bargain she’d been offered and was already serving time down in Atlanta. She might could have mounted a defense of insanity. Certainly her obsession with restoring the King family homeplace held a touch of madness. Instead, rather than defend her person, she’d opted to spend her money defending the land and, to her daughter’s dismay, had retained Zack Young to fight Sister Williams’s lawsuit to reclaim that newly landscaped acre.

Rudy Peacock was even bigger and more muscular than I’d remembered. Shyer, too.

“Did the wing take drilling?” I asked. “Or did you have to carve a whole new set?”

“Your nephew here got lucky,” he said, not quite meeting my gaze. “Everything worked perfect. Would you believe I found a piece of granite the same exact shade in my scrap pile? It’d been out there so long, it even weathered good. ’Course, y’all will have to tell me if you think I’m as good a carver as my dad was.”

As he spoke, he troweled fresh mortar onto the angel’s pedestal.

“Now when I lower her down,” he told A.K. and Raymond, “y’all got to make sure she’s on here straight and hold her down, okay?”

“Okay,” they chorused.

Peacock pulled himself up into the bed of the truck and attached the hook on his hydraulic winch to the cable wrapped around the angel. Then he pushed some buttons and the arm of the winch slowly rose in the air. When the angel was clear of the bed, he pushed another button and the arm ponderously swung the angel out over the wall.

“Little more this way,” A.K. called. “Little more... little more... stop!”

He and Raymond grabbed the statue and steadied it straight over the pedestal. “Down a little... more... perfect!”

The angel settled gently onto her former perch and while the boys continued to hold her steady, Rudy Peacock removed the cable and burlap.

He used a small edging trowel to clean up the excess mortar, then stepped back proudly. “What do you think?”

“Beautiful!” we told him.

She was as naively sculpted as when I first saw her and her features still showed the effects of weathering, but the new wing tip was almost indiscernible and he had buffed her all over so that she gleamed in the late afternoon sunlight. No one would ever mistake this angel for a Renaissance creation, but here in this cotton field, open to all the elements, she would serve the Crockers another generation or two.

Daddy brought out his checkbook. “How much I owe you, Rudy?”

“Your money’s no good with me, Mr. Kezzie,” he said. “These two here already give me something on it and they’re going to work off the rest. My youngest boy’s going off to college next month and he don’t want to do this anymore. Says it’s too near like work, so I been needing more help.”

“Well, I sure do appreciate it,” Daddy said. “Looks real good.”

A.K. and Raymond swarmed up over the truck, secured the winch hook and the cables, and folded up the burlap sacking.

With a wave of his hand, Rudy Peacock headed back down the lane, kicking up a cloud of white dust as he went.

The boys put their rakes and baskets in the back of A.K.’s pickup. Raymond whistled for the dog, who came running and jumped up on the tailgate, then A.K. slammed it shut and the two boys climbed in front.

Daddy continued to lean against the fender of his truck with a cigarette in his hand and I was sitting cross-legged atop the stone wall.

“Ain’t—aren’t y’all coming?” A.K. asked.

“We’ll be along directly,” said Daddy, who has never handed out praise too freely. “Boy?”

“Yessir?”

“I’m right pleased with you.”

Blue eyes met blue eyes. A.K. nodded, settled his ball cap more firmly on his head and turned the key in his ignition.

Soon, even the sound of his truck faded in the distance and Daddy and I were alone together.

A new moon hung in the western sky, so new it was no more than the thinnest sliver of silver against the deepening blue. A bright planet—Jupiter? Venus?—gleamed nearby and I sent a mental kiss to Kidd, who would be coming this weekend to help me move into my new house.

Daddy finished his cigarette and came to join me on the wall.

We sat in easy silence for a long while, then, almost as if he was talking to himself, Daddy said, “Uncle Yancy over yonder, he died ’fore I come along but they say he could outfiddle the devil. I was always sorry I never heared him. And or Ham here, he surely did like peach brandy. He’d bring me enough pitted peaches ever’ summer to run him off a gallon or two.”

“Who was Mallie Crocker?” I asked, pointing to a nearby stone.

“Mallie? She was a Wiggins ’fore she married Ham’s brother. All them Wiggins girls had the prettiest yellow hair. Real thick and curly…”

His voice trailed off and I knew his mind was running back through the years to when the people beneath these stones had lived and loved and quarrelled and laughed.

I scooted closer and leaned my head on his shoulder.

“When I was a boy growing up, a lot of my friends was nervous around graveyards, didn’t like to be in ’em after dark. Myself, I always thought they was real peaceful places. Still do.”

“But not for a long time,” I said. “Okay?”

“Not till you’re a old, old woman,” he promised—as he’d been promising from the first day I realized parents could actually die—and his calloused hand squeezed mine with as much comfort as we’re allowed in this uncertain world.

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