Chapter
7
Faint
Memories
The
next morning, Clisty returned to the hospital and settled into the chair in the
corner of Faith’s room. “I’m glad it’s Saturday. I won’t have to be at the
studio this afternoon.” The aroma of freshly baked sugar cookies filled the
room. Roma had artfully arranged them on a small platter and placed them on the
over-the-bed table.
“Your
parents will be home from Florida this afternoon, won’t they, Clisty?” Roma asked
as she fluffed Faith’s bed pillow.
“Yes,
and I’m glad.” Then she smiled sheepishly. “I’m an adult with serious adult
responsibilities, but with everything that happened yesterday, it feels good
that they will be home.”
“When
life becomes complicated, it’s nice for us to pull our family and friends
closer around us, isn‘t it?”
Clisty
smiled the smile of sweet memories. Outside, the April day was magnificent.
There was no evidence of snow remaining in black, left-over piles along curbs.
Pale green tree leaves had pushed out and demanded consistent spring
temperatures.
“Yes,
it’s always nice to have family around,” Clisty said, “but especially when the
world seems to have tipped a little and things are listing to starboard. I’m
glad it’s such a beautiful day. Everything about it is glorious, from the blue
sky to the fact that Faith is home.”
Roma
started to respond, and then her eyes grew large in pleasant anticipation.
“Well, Pooky, I wondered when you would wake up.” She walked over to the bed, reached
out and gave her granddaughter a long hug. “It’s nice that the hospital allowed
you to curl up and nap with your mama this morning.” She smiled as she watched
her new granddaughter yawn and stretch. When Pooky spied the platter of
cookies, Roma added, “I don’t usually serve children cookies for breakfast, but
this is a special occasion.”
“Hi,
Miss Sinclair,” Pooky collected the biggest cookie on the plate, bounced down
off the bed, went over and planted her feet in front of Clisty. She was so
close, the toes of her shoes touched Clisty’s brown, lace up Saturday shoes.
“Grandma said you’re a friend of Mama’s.” She bit into the sweet smelling, iced
cookie as crumbs fell into Clisty’s lap.
“That’s
right. I hadn’t seen her in a long time and I really missed her.” She brushed
the cookie specks from her jeans and smiled.
Pooky
pressed herself against the side of Clisty’s leg and silently slipped up onto
her lap. “Mama talks funny, but I can understand her, a little. She said I
could trust you.” The girl snuggled back on Clisty’s arm and rested her head on
her shoulder.
“Disinhibited
Reactive Detachment Disorder,” Roma whispered without looking at Pooky. “This
whole thing must have set her back. She seems to let anyone get close to her,
except Al.”
“Maybe
she always did. Who knows what her life was like?” Clisty suggested.
“Who,
Grandma?”
“Someone
Miss Sinclair and I know, Honey.” Roma brushed off the question as she perked
up and listened. “It sounds like your mama may be finished with her shower. I
heard the water turn off.”
“She’s
taking a shower?” Pooky asked as she picked up the locket Clisty wore around
her neck.
“Yep.
Do you want to shower when she’s finished? I’m sure it will be okay with the nurse.
She’s kinda kept her eye on you too this morning.”
“Maybe.”
Pooky turned the locket over to see the engraved flowers on the back. “I want
to stay with Mama.”
“Do
you want to see the picture?” Clisty watched Pooky’s eyes and curious fingers
inspect the necklace.
Pooky
nodded and tried to force her chewed fingernails down into the place where the
front clasped to the back. “I ain’t got no fingernails.” She hung her head in
resignation, her bottom lip protruded like a perch outside a bird house.
“So
I see,” Clisty tried to ignore the pads at the ends of Pooky’s fingers that
stood proud of her nails, gnarled down to nothing. Clisty looked up at Roma.
“Maybe Grandma has some pretty pink fingernail polish. Would you like that?”
Pooky nodded vigorously. “You might have to stop biting your nails if you want
to keep them pretty.”
“Can
we Grandma?” Pooky jump down, ran to her grandmother and grabbed her hand.
“Can
you what?” Faith shuffled a little as she came into the room in a clean shirt
and jeans. She had gained enough energy to wrap her arms around her daughter as
she eased onto the side of the bed. “What are you planning to do?”
“We
were talking about painting Pooky’s fingernails a pretty, Petal Pink. Is that
okay?” Roma asked as she placed a cup of coffee on the bedtable. She had
brought it in a thermos from her own coffee pot at home. “I assume you drink
coffee. I can find some tea if you prefer.”
“No,
coffee is wonderful. Steven and I drank coffee each morning.”
“Steven?”
Clisty asked as Roma handed her a cup from the basket she had brought in.
“Who?”
Faith asked as Pooky hopped over and tried to help her mama lean back on the elevated
hospital bed.
“Steven.
You said you and Steven drank coffee each morning. Was that before he went to
work?”
“Work?”
“Steven,
where did he work, Faith?” Clisty tried again.
“He
…,” Pooky began.
“No,
Pooky,” Faith whispered in frightening gasps. “Nothing.” She sipped silently
from her cup and glimpsed out the window with darting eyes.
“Can
you tell us about the man who brought you to Fort Wayne?” Clisty asked.
“I
don’t remember,” Faith stated flatly. Suddenly, the coffee began to slosh a
little in the cup she held in trembling hands.
“I
was asleep,” Pooky said, as Faith pulled her onto the bed beside her.
“Let’s
rest a little, Honey,” Faith gently patted her daughter’s forehead. She leaned
back on the bed and closed her eyes.
“I’d
better leave and let you sleep.” Clisty started to place her cup on the
windowsill. “I can come back after you have napped.”
“No,
please,” Faith reached out her hand. “I ... I think I know you.” Her eyes, rimmed
in red, shed fresh tears that flowed down her cheeks. “I’m sorry.” From her
pocket she pulled a tissue and blotted the corners of her eyes. The plastic
covered clover fell out with it. She picked up the “lucky piece” and then
looked at Clisty. “No, no ... I do know you, Clisty. But ... I was told that
you were killed the day I was taken.” With her hand held flat on her chest, she
began patting herself as a mother would calm a child. “I ... don’t know what’s
true anymore.”
With
eyes still closed, Pooky reached up and stroked her mother’s cheek. “It’s okay,
Mama.”
Faith
patted her daughter’s hand. “I know only what they told me. I lived in one
room.”
“Not
all the time, I’ll bet,” Clisty cautiously coaxed. “You said Pooky went to
school for a few weeks.”
“But,
I never went out of the house,” Faith sighed. “Just Pooky.”
“That
was when Grandpa was gone,” Pooky’s eyes snapped open. “I don’t know where he
was.”
“Jail
... I think,” her mother said softly, with little expression or concern, as if
she were talking about a stranger.
“Did
Mama teach you to read and write and work numbers?” Roma asked. “You know I was
a teacher for a long time.”
“Yes,”
Pooky’s eyes flew open in amazement. “How did you know?”
“Because
I taught her when she was little.”
Clisty’s
heart jumped as she thought of a question that demanded an answer, but she didn’t
know how to ask it. “You know I have to ask you, Faith,” she began with a smile
and compassionate tone. “Where did you go to school?”
“School?”
her eyes blinked and stared into apparent nothingness. “I don’t remember,” she
stammered.
Clisty’s
heart hurt for her friend and she choked on the next question. “You don’t
remember school?”
“I
don’t remember leaving the house, ever,” Faith sighed deeply. “I saw children from
my upstairs window. They played in some yards down the block, but I could see
them down there. I could hear them, too. I saw some of them play tennis in the
street once. Our house was on a road that made a circle a few streets down.”
“A
cul-de-sac?” Clisty asked.
“I
don’t know what that is,” Faith’s voice drifted off. “He caught me standing
near the window one time and beat me.”
“Who
did, Faith? Was it that man who kidnapped you?” Clisty thought of the smelly
man with rotting teeth.
“Kidnapped?
What do you mean ... kidnapped?”
Clisty
searched for words that clearly were not in Faith’s vocabulary, to explain what
had happened. “Do you remember, a long time ago, when we were watching
television at my house? A man burst in the door and tried to take both of us,
to steal us. I got away.”
Great
moans of grief heaved up from deep inside Faith as her face twisted and
distorted. “Why didn’t you come with me, Pooky?” A flood of tears angrily raced
down her cheeks. “Why did you abandon me?”
“What?”
Clisty gasped.
“You
ran away and let him take me,” Faith sobbed.
“We
were nine years old, Faith,” Clisty cried.
“Honey,”
Roma quickly interrupted, “a child can’t fight off a full grown man.”
“I
know ... I know,” Faith sobbed. “But ... I was so lonely,” she whispered as she
closed her eyes. “He told me that Momma and Daddy sold me to them.”
“Oh,
Sweetheart, you didn’t believe them did you?” her mother threw her hand to her
mouth in shock.
“No
... they told me every day ... but I didn’t believe it one time.” A faint smile
crossed her lips. “I was the winner every day that I didn’t believe their
lies.”
Clisty
cleared her throat and tried to not sound hurt by what her friend had said.
“Then, I bet it became hard to know how to tell the lies from the truth.”
“It
was hard, I guess,” Faith swallowed and cleared her throat. “Clisty, I never
really blamed you. I just couldn’t stand not having any friends. I did my
studies in my room, read, everything in the one space. I could come to the
table in the kitchen for dinner sometimes. My mother,” she stopped and looked
up at Roma, “my other mother came to my room to teach me. Once in a while, we’d
play games.”
“It
sounds like she cared for you,” Roma offered softly.
“I
guess.”
Clisty
knew she had to gather more information if they were ever going to find those
who took her friend. “What was her name?”
“Name?”
Again, Faith stared with a blank expression. “I ... don’t know.”
Clisty
tried another approach. “Did you have a TV or radio in your room?” The
questions continued but Faith’s response was always an empty gaze.
“Television,”
Faith remembered with a smile. “I could watch Mr. Rogers when I was little. It
was an old TV set. I couldn’t watch very often. They would come in and take a
tube out of the back when they didn’t want me to watch anymore.”
Clisty
fished for words when all the ones she had used were all the ones she could
think of. “What did you do the rest of the time?”
“I
slept a lot ... I guess. I don’t know,” she closed her eyes again. “Oh,” she
opened her eyes and, for a moment, they sparkled. “I wrote letters to you,
almost every day, for about a year. I couldn’t mail them, so I found a hole in
the wall of my closet and put them in there. I pretended it was my mailbox.”
With Pooky in her arms, she snuggled and kissed the top of her head.
“I
wish I had gotten them,” Clisty whispered.
“You
did ... in my dreams,” Faith said as her voice danced in the space between
awake and asleep. “We would play and laugh and ...” she drifted off and her
breathing seemed to become normal again.
“You
were in my dreams too,” Clisty added. But, what she didn’t say was, her dreams
were actually nightmares.
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