The Grave of God's Daughter (18 page)

Read The Grave of God's Daughter Online

Authors: Brett Ellen Block

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #General, #Allegheny River Valley (Pa. And N.Y.), #Allegheny Mountains Region - History, #Allegheny Mountains Region, #Iron and Steel Workers, #Bildungsromans, #Polish American Families, #Sagas, #Mothers and daughters, #Domestic fiction

BOOK: The Grave of God's Daughter
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Martin wiped his face with the back of his hand. “I didn’t
mean to start crying when I fell. It didn’t even hurt. I didn’t mean to cry, but they saw me start and then they were laughing and I couldn’t stop.”

I pulled Martin to me, into my arms.

“Do you believe me? That I didn’t mean to cry?”

“I know you didn’t mean to.”

“I don’t think that Nowczyk boy would believe it. He thought it was funny.”

“Well, he’s stupid.”

“You think so?”

“I know so. He’s stupid and ugly and nobody likes him.”

“Really? Nobody likes him?”

“Sure. Plenty of people hate him.”

Martin was eager to believe that his hatred was confirmed by others. I wasn’t sure that what I was saying was true, nor did I care. All I knew was that I now hated the nameless Nowczyk boy.

“I want to go home,” Martin said.

“Okay.”

“You have to promise not to tell anybody I cried.”

“I promise,” I replied, thinking of the promise I’d already made to Mr. Goceljak. All of those promises, I wondered if I was the person to be making them.

“We’d better get home before anyone sees you looking like this.”

“Why? What do I look like?”

Martin slid past me out of the stall and gawked at himself in the mirror. Dirt clung to his sweater and darkened the bottom half of his pants. His hair was matted on one side and his eyes were puffy and bloodshot from crying.

“I look terrible,” he said in genuine amazement.

“You’ll be fine once you take a bath and get out of those dirty clothes.”

Martin prodded his swollen cheeks and rubbed his eyelids, studying his reflection. “I don’t even look like me. I didn’t know I could look so different.” He admired his face as though it were a surprise gift and his anger and distress faded. “Will it go away?” he asked.

“Eventually you’ll go back to normal.”

“Oh,” he said, regretfully. “I guess that’s okay. I don’t know if I’d want to look like this all the time.”

For all we had suffered through, it was a wonder my brother could be charmed by the change his own tears created. We should have looked like that every day, teary, red eyed, beaten. Perhaps those were our true faces, we just didn’t know it.

 

I
RAN A BATH FOR
M
ARTIN
and helped him change out of his soiled clothes. “She’s going to notice,” he said, wriggling out of his sweater. “She’ll ask why I got so dirty.”

“I’ll shake the clothes out while you take your bath.”

“So you’re going to leave? While I’m in the tub?”

“I’m only going to go out the door.”

“But what if I sink?”

“You’ve never sunk before.”

“But you never know. I was never in a fight before either.”

“Do you want me to clean your clothes or not?”

“Yes, but couldn’t you do it now, while the tub is filling, and then, I thought, maybe, you could stay in here. Just in case.”

“All right. I’ll shake the clothes out now. But first I have to put the water on to heat.”

We had no hot water. We always had to boil some on the stove and add it to the tub to keep the temperature right. Each bath was a trial to see how long we could stand the changes in temperature. Initially, the water was scalding hot, then it cooled rapidly, dipping down below tepid. In total, the bathwater was bearable for about ten minutes.

I stoked the coal stove, put the big stew pot on to warm and went to shake Martin’s clothes out on the front stoop. Before I opened the door, I thought I felt something, an undercurrent of noise roiling up and coursing down Third. I stuck my head out the door tentatively.

Two or three children flew past the apartment, racing for the end of the alley. Then the sound hit me. It was the angry cawing of women’s and children’s voices, all shouting out of time.

A cart stood at the end of the alley. Though it was mostly obscured by the crowd, I could tell that it was the rag cart, Ragsoline’s cart. The women were screaming at him in Polish and he was shaking his head, confused, unable to understand them or what he had done. Slurs burst out over the din and jammed against one another.

Get out of here. You killed her. The nigger killed Swatka Pani. Leave, nigger. Leave.

With the front door open, Martin heard the shouting. He came out of the washroom dressed only in his long underwear.

“What’s happening?”

Ragsoline was backing away from the growing crowd and wrenching his mare’s reins in an attempt to flee. A few children were tugging at the rags hanging from his cart. Then others started throwing pebbles at him.

“No!” Martin shouted. He burst past me and set off running toward the crowd.

“Martin. Wait.”

I ran after him. Martin’s tiny, shoeless feet hit the ground and came up black. Mud spattered onto his white long underwear. He dove between the legs of the women, pushing them to stop and flailing at them with his small fists. His shouts melted into the churning crowd. I tried to reach him, but he was enmeshed in the tangle of limbs.

Soon the women were picking up stones too, bigger than the pebbles the children had been throwing. They hurled them at Ragsoline and his cart. One hit the horse and sent it bucking. Another caught Ragsoline on the cheek. The impact sent his head snapping back.

Martin’s cry rang out over the tumult. “No!”

Ragsoline stumbled and covered his head with his arms, still furiously yanking at his horse’s reins. Spooked, the old mare began to trot and Ragsoline took off running. Blood streamed from the cut on his cheek.

“Stop!” Martin shouted, swatting at the women and older boys. I saw his hands and head bobbing between people’s waists. Then someone pushed Martin backward, sending him to the ground.

“Martin!”

He was pinned down under the crowd, trapped in the mud. All my anger at the Nowczyk boy boiled over and I slammed my body
forward, knocking into anyone in my path. I jammed my elbow into the ribs of a young girl who stood in my way. One woman squawked as I pushed her aside.

“Little bitch,” the woman hissed.

I grabbed Martin’s arm, which was slick with mud, and wrenched him to his feet, my grip sliding up his forearm. The crowd was turning on us. One boy my age pushed me in the back. While still holding Martin, I whipped around and smacked the boy with a muddy hand, connecting with his nose. Stunned, the boy reeled and stumbled onto one knee.

“Run,” I told Martin.

We took off for our house, the shouts of the women at our backs, some of the children on our heels. I shoved Martin inside and slammed the door behind us, quickly bolting it with muddy fingers. The angry jeers of the kids rumbled outside as they pounded on the door and beat on the window.

“What do we do?” Martin’s whole body was streaked with mud, his chest and face spattered. His long underwear was hanging off him, sopping with muck. He was shivering so hard his body quaked.

“Nothing,” I said, pressing all my weight against the door. “The door’s locked. We stay here.” Through the door, I could feel the pummeling of the hands and fists against my back.

“Are we safe here?” Martin asked.

Were we? Were we ever?

For once in our lives, this was the one place where we were safe.

“Yes,” I said, unsure if this was another lie to add to the list. “We’re safe here.”

After a few minutes, the yelling died down and the pounding ceased. I eased back from the door. The onslaught was over.

Martin’s teeth were chattering loudly, the clatter falling in with the gurgle of the water boiling on the stove.

“Go. I’ll get the water.”

Martin scurried into the washroom while I went for the stew pot. Without thinking, I grabbed each of the metal handles. I heard the hiss of my palms being scalded before I felt anything, then came agony. I jerked my hands away, but it was too late. A pink line rose in the center of each hand.

“Hurry,” Martin pleaded from the washroom.

I took two dish towels to grasp the handles with and tried to ignore the pain. Filled high with water, the stew pot was nearly too heavy for me to carry. I hauled the sloshing pot off the stove, holding it out in front of me so I wouldn’t get burned again.

Martin shivered in his mud-caked underwear as I dumped the boiling water into the bath. Steam rose, sizzling as the hot water hit the cold water that was already in the tub.

“I can’t feel my feet,” Martin said through chattering teeth.

“Get in. The bath will warm you up.”

He was about to strip off his pants, then he said, “Don’t look.”

“Sorry.” I faced the door and heard him dip his foot in the water.

“It’s too hot.”

Careful not to turn my head, I leaned over to run more water and winced as pain shot up from my palms when I touched the faucet, but Martin couldn’t see my face. “Try it now,” I told him.

Martin tested the water with his finger and swirled it around to mix the cold in with the hot. “Better.”

He climbed in, and seconds later, the water darkened to a pale brown. “Uh-oh,” Martin intoned.

“It’ll have to do. She’ll be home soon.”

“What about my hair?”

“You’ll have to wash that too.”

“By myself?”

My mother usually helped Martin with his hair because he didn’t like dunking his head underwater. She would hold his hand while he held his nose.

“Well, if you don’t want me to turn around, how am I supposed to help wash your hair?”

Martin weighed his options. “Okay, I guess you can turn around. But don’t look.”

I swiveled around slowly, and the sight before me was almost amusing. Martin was hunkered down in the dirty water with his chin above the waterline. I tried to contain a giggle.

“What?”

“I’m not sure how we’re going to get your hair clean if the water’s already turned back to mud.”

“That’s not funny. And you can’t dunk me,” he added. “Not in this stuff.”

“I won’t. I’ve got an idea. Hand me the soap.” We’d used up all of the hot water, so I refilled the stew pot in the sink, gripping it with my fingers instead of the palms of my hands.

“This is going to be cold,” I warned.

“I’m already cold.”

“Then you shouldn’t feel the difference.”

“All right,” he said, squeezing his eyes shut in preparation. “I’m ready.”

Though it hurt to grasp the pot, I poured it over Martin’s head, drenching him. Clumps of dirt sluiced out of his hair and down into the murky bathwater.

“Is it over?” he groaned, eyes still clenched.

“Halfway done.”

“Do you think Ragsoline’s okay?” Martin asked as I worked the soap into his hair with the tips of my fingers.

I hoped so, though I knew better than to say as much to Martin.

“He got away. I’m sure he’s all right.”

The soap built into a thick lather as I scrubbed Martin’s head and neck and ears. My palms were pulsing with pain as I ran the water to refill the stew pot but I didn’t want to tell Martin what I’d done to myself. In my mind, it was another punishment for my lies.

“It’s going to be cold again,” I explained.

“Okay.”

“Don’t open your eyes.”

Martin trembled as I spilled the icy water over his head. The water gushed down over his shoulders, washing away all of the dirt and the soap at once. He was finally clean.

With a shiver, he asked, “Now is it over?”

“It’s over.”

I opened a towel wide, held it up, and closed my eyes. Martin hopped out of the tub and into my arms, wrapping himself in the towel. I got him fresh pajamas while he dried off, then left him alone to change.

He came out of the washroom holding up the towel. “Look,” he said. The pale, worn towel was a grimy mess.

“Well, there’s nothing we can do about that, not now.”

“Come look at the tub.”

The brown, brackish water sat in the bathtub like a murky soup.

“She can’t see this,” I said. “I have to clean it.”

“I can help,” Martin offered.

“No, you’re already clean. You can’t get dirty all over again.”

He gave me no argument, just lent his support by keeping me company while I drained the tub and sopped up the muck with the towel he’d dirtied. In spite of the pain in my hands, I refilled the stew pot over and over, rinsing the tub with fresh water to force the mud down the drain.

“You’re good at this,” Martin said. “You’re like her. You’re both good at cleaning.”

He meant to be helpful, to rally me along, yet the compliment stung worse than my hands. It was difficult for me to believe that my mother and I had anything in common. To think that, of all things, cleaning was all that we shared.

The tub was finished, back to its normal state of spotlessness. The towel, however, was an oozy brown. Martin grimaced. “What are you going to do with it?”

“I guess I could wash it too.”

“Where? In the bathtub?”

“I guess not. What do you think I should do with it?”

“Throw it away.”

“No, she’ll know it’s missing.”

“If she asks us, we’ll say we don’t know anything about it.”

“Martin!”

Before, my brother would never have tempted fate by uttering such an idea. I reminded myself that I had changed us.

“Well,” I relented. “Where are we going to put it?”

Martin thought for a second. “Throw it out back. By the laundry lines. Then she’ll think it got blown down and got dirty that way. I can do it.”

“No,” I insisted. I had dragged him too far along with me already. “You’ll get dirty out there. Stay here. I’ll do it.”

 

I
BUNDLED MY COAT
over my clothes only to discover that they were also splattered with mud. My boots were caked to the ankles. My tights were streaked as well. My mother would undoubtedly notice.

“Maybe you should bury it a little,” Martin suggested. “You know, push it down in the mud back there.”

“All right,” I answered, too busy checking to see if the coast was clear outside our door.

“Are they still out there?” he asked.

“I don’t think so. But lock the door behind me. I’ll take the key. And don’t open the door if anyone knocks. And don’t go near the window.”

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