Come next spring / Alana White.
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- ISBN: 9781504034135 (electronic bk.)
- ISBN: 1504034139 (electronic bk.)
- Physical Description: 1 online resource
- Publisher: [United States] : Open Road Distribution : 2016.
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Come Next Spring
By Alana White
OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA
All rights reserved.
On the first day of school, Salina woke early and could not go back to sleep. The September sky outside her bedroom window was sunny with pink clouds drifting across it. In the distance lay the Smoky Mountains, blanketed in blue-gray mist.
Salina's mind raced ahead into the morning. In a while, she and Mary would get up and go downstairs, and after a big breakfast, she and Paul â and this year, Mark â would walk to Pine Valley School together, three Harris kids strung across Sand Lick Road. And finally, in her classroom at last, she would once again see Mayella.
"Mary," she whispered when she couldn't stand waiting a minute longer. "Come on. Wake up!"
She nudged her sister in the ribs, then hopped from bed and hurried to the dresser. The floor was bare, and this morning the wooden planks felt cold to her naked feet. After slipping on her dress and splashing her face with water from the porcelain basin, she studied her reflection in the mirror. There she stood, a tall, skinny eighth-grader with unruly red hair.
"Yipes," she muttered, mashing her hair down around her head. It sprang back up the moment she released it. She glanced at the black and white magazine photo of Clark Gable stuck along the frame's edge and took another look at herself.
The freckles splotching her nose and cheeks looked as big and brown as always; bigger, maybe, because of the summer sun and all those afternoons swimming in Abrams Creek. Once, she had tried bleaching her freckles with lemons, like Mayella suggested. It hadn't worked.
"Yipes," she muttered again â and glancing across the room to the feather bed, saw that Mary had not moved one inch. "Mary," she said, as she worked the brush through her hair, "come on, now, it's getting late."
Mary lay still and gazed back at her, dreamy-eyed and content, before slowly unwinding herself from the tangled sheets. Mary was nineteen, a graduate of Pine Valley High School, and since Christmas she had been engaged to Hank White. Hank had joined the military service in June and was stationed in Texas. Mary would see him in December, when he came home on furlough. With the engagement had come a certain laziness, and though something about Mary's self-satisfied new look intrigued Salina, the overall change irritated her. She watched impatiently while her sister stood before the dresser and ran a comb through her hair â shiny brown hair that always fluffed and curled at the ends in a perfect way.
"Just look at you," Mary said. "I swear I've never seen anybody so antsy about the first day of school."
Salina smiled. "I'm not antsy. I'm looking forward to seeing Mayella, that's all."
"She back?"
"Yep. Mr. Crenshaw was bringing her and her mom home from Sevierville last night."
Mary eased the lid off the round cardboard box on her cosmetics tray and leisurely powdered her arms and neck. "Wish I had a rich Aunt Lucy to spend the summer with."
"Not me â I'll take Pine Valley over Sevierville any day of the week." Salina glanced toward the bedroom door.
Mary gave no notice.
"I smell ham frying. Breakfast must be about ready."
Mary said nothing.
"Everybody's waiting for us."
Mary touched her index finger to the tip of her tongue and ran her dampened finger over one light brown eyebow, and then the other. "You go on," she murmured. "I'll be down later."
"Later?" Salina's brown eyes widened. "But you never miss breakfast!" She folded her arms across her chest and gazed at her sister. "I'll just wait."
Mary concentrated on her reflection. "I got my period in the middle of the night. You go on. Tell Mama for me."
"But Mary," Salina wheedled.
Mary scowled at Salina in the mirror and said in a complaining voice, "For Pete's sake, what difference does it make? I don't feel good and I'm not hungry! Anyway, I want to lose five pounds before Christmas." She leaned over the dresser, closer to the glass to inspect one side of her nose. "And stop gawking at me."
"Well, good grief," Salina said. She watched Mary a moment longer before heading downstairs and into the kitchen.
Watery sunlight filtered through the windows, giving the room a vague blue light. As always, the oak table was set for breakfast, but Paul, Mark, her daddy â this morning their chairs were vacant.
Salina drew her brow into a light frown and regarded her mother steadily. "Just exactly where is everybody?"
Anna Harris removed a pan of crusty biscuits from the oven. "Good morning," she said pleasantly.
Salina bit her lip. "Good morning."
"They're in the barn. Supposed to be checking over the tractor." Her mother's brown eyes were teasing. "They're watching Sugar-Boy, I imagine."
Salina walked farther into the kitchen, giving herself a view of the barn. "That figures. They're always watching that horse, especially Paul."
Her brother had come by Sugar-Boy in a curious way. The foal was premature and at church his owner, Homer Joiner, said he was too old to fool with keeping the sickly thing alive. Since old Doc Sharp's passing, people tended their ailing livestock themselves. If they really needed help, they prayed for the traveling vet to come around. Finally, Paul had stepped in â he'd buy the foal, he said. And he had paid Homer Joiner ten dollars.
For the next few weeks, Paul had practically moved into the barn with the foal, keeping an eye on him, dipping a damp cloth in sugar-water for him to suck. Sugar had lived and become the center of Paul's life, and lately it seemed to Salina her brother didn't take much time for anyone else ... not even her, anymore. They had always been such pals, exploring mountain trails, playing on the same team at school ... till he transferred to the high school building. Not that she didn't love Mark and Mary; she did. But Mark was young, and Mary never seemed to have fun.
"I wish Homer Joiner hadn't sold Paul that horse," Salina said now. To her mind, the only spark of interest Sugar had ever caused had occurred a couple of months ago in mid-June, when Michael Burmeister appeared at the farm in his truck, hoping to drum up some business. Burmeister was new in town, a veterinarian, and so far he had not gotten much work in Pine Valley.
Besides being a stranger to the community, the young newcomer was German. An outlander if ever there was one, since not long ago America had fought a war against the Germans.
That afternoon John Harris had treated Burmeister cordially, saying things were fine these days and mentioning Sugar's close call.
"Why don't I take a quick look at him?" said the young man, who was tall, slender, and fair.
"No need," answered Paul, moving slightly to block the man's way to the barn.
When Michael Burmeister left, Paul had shaken his hand, but his face had remained grim.
"Where's Mary?" Anna Harris said. She stirred the grits bubbling in a cast-iron pot on the stove.
"She's coming. She doesn't feel good."
"It's certainly not like her to miss breakfast."
Salina cast her mother a sly look. "She's on a diet."
"A diet? Mary? Why, she's already skinny! It didn't look to me like she was on a diet at the picnic yesterday, eating all Miss Minnie's pecan pie."
Salina ran her finger along the cabinet of the black sewing machine that had been Old Mama's. "'I want to lose five pounds before Christmas.' That is exactly what she said."
Salina's mother laughed softly. "I knew it: love."
"Then I am never going to be in love," vowed Salina. "Not ever. I'm not ever letting it get me crazy."
"Never say never, Salina. Are you looking forward to seeing Mayella at school today? The Crenshaws must have gotten home awfully late last night to have missed the Labor Day picnic."
"I sure am." Salina's face brightened.
"I know you two will have a good time."
Salina nodded, true, and glanced at the clock over the refrigerator. "We will if I ever get to school. Guess I'll just have to go after Daddy and those two brothers of mine. The darn ham will be cold as ice."
After the bright morning, the inside of the barn looked black to Salina's eyes. She stood in the doorway and squinted to make out her father and brothers. "Daddy?"
"Come on in, Salina," he called softly.
Paul shushed her and Mark held a warning finger to his lips as Salina stepped over the threshold into the stillness of the barn. "Be real quiet," Paul said. "Sugar's sound asleep."
She peered into the stall where the horse lay sleeping. He was going on eleven months, and she did not understand the fuss. He was small for his age, but doing well. Still, she kept her voice low. "Y'all come on. Mama's got breakfast ready."
"Good," Paul grinned. "I'm starving."
"You're always starving."
"I'm a growing boy."
Paul was the image of their father, dark-skinned, with eyes and hair that were almost black. His hair was slightly long. He was a good-looking boy, people around Sevier County said so, especially the women at the Hogginsville Free Will Baptist Church. Make a fine man when he got his knots worked out. Right now, as far as Salina was concerned, Paul had a stubborn streak as wide as Pine Valley.
Take two weeks ago: Paul had shirked his chores to go fishing with his pals, though John Harris had warned him not to leave till his work around the farm was done. Naturally, he got caught and wasn't allowed to go anywhere except to church for a week. "What difference does it make when I finish painting the fence as long as it gets done?" he'd said to his dad.
"Your mother and I set the schedules around here," John Harris had reminded him. "Not you."
Today, Paul was beginning his senior year at Pine Valley High School: an official member of the graduating class of 1950.
"Me, too," Mark piped. "I'm starving, too."
"Then come on. I don't want us tardy the first day."
Paul shook his head. "I'm not gonna be tardy. I'm not going, period."
Salina stared at him. "Not going?" she said, "what do you mean, you're not going?" and her voice was too loud for the barn.
Paul nodded toward Sugar-Boy. "Hush. You'll wake him. Come on. Mama'll be out here after us in a minute."
"She should be," John Harris said. "No excuse in us not being ready for breakfast." He removed his straw hat from a rusty nail in the wall and started for the barn door, limping slightly. No matter how much his leg ached, he never complained. "Least I can feel it," he always said.
Going across the back yard, Salina lengthened her stride to match Paul's. He had on his black and red flannel shirt and his faded denim jacket and brand-new Levi jeans and new boots. He was right. He was a growing boy. Suddenly, he towered over her.
"I'm going to Sevierville with Daddy to help pick out new parts for the tractor," he said boastfully.
"Sevierville? How come everybody's going to Sevierville all of a sudden?"
"After-Labor Day sale starts at noon today," Salina's daddy explained.
She touched Paul's elbow. "But you're a senior, and this is the first day of school. You can't just lay out â"
"Slow down!" Mark cried. He grabbed Salina's hand and stumbled along with her, his short legs struggling to match her pace. "I'm going to school today. I'm still here."
Paul turned his dark eyes on Salina and shook back his hair. "I'm not laying out. Daddy talked to Mr. Green about it and got special permission." Sam Green was the principal of Pine Valley School. "Daddy told Mr. Green he needs my help."
"But â"
"But what?"
She trailed after him, onto the screened-in back porch and into the kitchen. "I thought we'd be walking to school together today, like always. Like we always used to do."
"You're nuts," Paul said.
They sat at the kitchen table and ate scrambled eggs and ham, biscuits and grits and homemade pear preserves, everybody talking but Salina. Mary's chair was vacant. "Tell you one thing I'm gonna do in Sevierville," Paul declared at one point. "I'm gonna check around and see if people have heard anything about the surveyors Homer mentioned."
One Saturday morning in July, Homer Joiner had been complaining about a team of surveyors he claimed he had seen nosing around Sand Lick Road.
"Fine," John Harris answered. "If we have time." He took a look at Salina and added, "Wow, how about that new dress you've got on. Did you make that, or your mama?"
"Mama," Salina said, though she did not much want to talk. "She copied it out of the Monkey Ward catalogue."
"Well, it's a peach! I sure do like those little yellow flowers on it. Want some more milk?"
"No, Sir."
"Better have some, you've got to keep good and strong if you're going to be smartest in the class again this year."
Salina wondered what in the world being strong had to do with being smart, but she kept her mouth shut and poured herself a half glass of milk from the china pitcher.
"I sewed on the buttons," Mark whispered, and Paul snickered.
Salina kept still. She felt sour, although she couldn't say why. Who cared if Mary stayed upstairs? Let her stay in the bedroom and rot if she wanted. And who cared if Paul Harris wasn't going to school today? Certainly not her. It would be crazy to care one iota about that. Skipping school together â that was something else they used to do.
"All the way down the front," Mark said.
Paul rested his elbow on the top of Mark's head and gazed at Salina innocently. "How come a six-year-old can sew on buttons better than you?"
Mark watched and listened quietly.
"Because she's suddenly developed a severe case of butterfingers," John Harris said with a smile.
Salina put down her fork. It was true. These days anything she touched broke into a thousand pieces. "I don't know why," she answered.
"Am I smart now?" Mark asked.
Salina narrowed her eyes critically. "What was that?"
"Today I'm in first grade. So am I smart now?"
Salina stared at Mark, at the bright red hair, the chubby arms, the brownish-orange freckles on his cheeks. They looked just like hers.
"You're as stupid as ever," she informed him.
"Salina!" her daddy said sharply.
She studied her plate, her face flaming. "Yes, Sir," she said, and for good measure, she added, "I'm sorry, Mark," though she felt mean and stubborn and was not sorry at all.
After breakfast, she and Mark left the house together and walked down Sand Lick Road. Spotting some goldenrod, Salina plucked a blossom and stuck the stem in her mouth.
Mark said softly, "I'm getting a punkin."
"Pumpkin?" Salina answered, and with one flick of her finger sent the stem sailing through the air. "What're you talking about, ding-bat?"
"On Halloween night, I'm going to get a big orange punkin and carve a funny face in it and wear it over my head. Nobody will know me. And later, I'll make some punkin pies."
Salina groaned. "I have heard some crazy, ignorant ideas, Mark Harris, but that one is the craziest! That one takes the fruitcake. In the first place, where would you get a pumpkin big enough to wear over your head?"
"Punkin Junction," he said. "Or maybe Miss Minnie's."
Salina closed her ears to him. In the distance lay the mountains. To Salina, fall was the prettiest season in the Smokies. Unfortunately, that was when tourists crossed the mountain road by the thousands.
"Honestly," Mark said, pulling her sleeve, "don't you think I should have gone to Sevierville with Daddy and Paul today?"
"No," she answered. "You can't miss school." To her surprise, they had already passed Mayella's rich house and Miss Minnie's dilapidated store with the rusty gas pump out front.
"Paul's missing school. First day."
"Doesn't matter," she continued. "He's older."
The school buildings came into view, and both the high school and elementary school bells rang.
They walked down the hallway, their footsteps echoing around them, Salina yanking Mark's wrist. "Look here. Everybody else is in class. You better get settled quick, Mark Harris, because darn if I like being late because of you! I was planning to talk to Mayella Crenshaw before the bell rang, but huh-uh."
When they reached the doorway to Ida Carson's first grade, Mark pulled away from Salina. "You just go on then. I'm not scared." Without another word, he took a desk, slid his lunch pail in the space beneath his seat and turned to Mandy Phelps, his best friend.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from Come Next Spring by Alana White. Copyright © 2002 Alana White. Excerpted by permission of OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA.
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