another world.
The job of caring for the cannas was left to me, Dad, and Grand because even though the cannas were just a few feet from the house, Mom never risked the rain. She gardened from the back porch, using us as her hands. We were her reach in the outside world. She told us when the cannas were dry and needed more water. Weâd get the hose and give them a drink while she followed through the motions with us, feigning to pull the hose across the yard and then to stand still with her hand up and moving side to side like she was spraying something more than air.
She examined their growth through binoculars, looking out for insects or other damage. I remember the year the leaf rollers came, a great pest that rolls the leaves of the cannas in order to pupate inside them. Mom instructed me from the back porch to cut off the infected leaves. She held a pair of scissors and cut with me. Then she handed me flour to sprinkle on the remaining leaves as prevention, keeping some flour for herself, which she sprinkled all over the back porch.
Every day she asked for a canna. I suppose to feel the petals, the leaves, the roots, allowing her to feel somewhat responsible for them.
âWhat variety today, my love?â Dad pulled her back to him without much difficulty.
âOh, Iâd say Alaska.â She tilted her face to his and softly wiped the sweat from his cheeks. âAlaska will do for today. Perhaps itâll cool me down.â
âIn that caseââ Dad kissed her wet forehead. ââI shall get enough Alaska for all of us.â
The Alaska variety has a yellow middle surrounded by white petals. Pee in Alaskan snow, thatâs what I said as I took the flower from Dad.
âNot pee.â Sal frowned at me. âItâs your mother in her yellow dress and sheâs twirling in the Alaskan snow. In the white rain.â
âIâm off now. You boys be good.â Dad carried his own flower tucked under his arm as he walked out the door.
Mom watched him go as if he were a feather falling off her wing. âWellââshe turned to usââwhat say you boys run down to Juniperâs for me. Get some lentils.â
âYou donât have any, Mom? I thought that was what you were makinâ for dinner?â
âWell, my loveââ She licked her palm and tried to lay down my cowlick, the same as hers. ââI canât make âem if I donât have âem, now, can I?â
âMom, stop.â I swatted her hand away. âGive me some money so I can go.â
âAnd may we have enough to buy ice cream?â
âMr. Elohim flamed all the ice cream yesterday,â I reminded Sal.
âHmm, I wonder why he did that.â Mom reached into her change purse. âIâll give ya some extra so you can getcha some chocolate bars.â
âCâmon.â I grabbed Salâs arm once I had the money. âMaybe Mr. Elohim didnât burn all of it. Maybe they had some hidden in a back freezer.â
When we came upon the Delmar house, Sal stopped and stared at Dresden, who was once again standing against the oak in her yard, this time with To Kill a Mockingbird. Sal waved and softly called her name. She held the pen in her hand tighter and the book higher, though her freckled forehead and her light eyes peered above the page at him.
âTell me something about her, Fielding.â
âHer dad split a few years back, so itâs just her and her mom, Alvernine. Alvernineâs one of them fancy-pancy ladies and sexy as hell. Sheâs consumed by beinâ Miss Perfection. She wouldnât like you.â I smacked a sweat bee away. âThough, maybe if ya gave her a rose. She started a club on âem.â
âIs Dresden in the club?â
âNaw. Itâs just society ladies, like Alvernine. Why you care so much about this girl anyways?â
âEven a devilâs heart isnât just for
Brian Keene, J.F. Gonzalez