Chapter Fourteen

Picture Perfect

 

THE NEXT DAY, Wendy whined quietly to her mother, “Mom, I’m so bored.”

“Why don’t you read a book?” Aunt Lori said.

“Mom, it’s summer!” Wendy seemed offended by the suggestion.

I was entertaining myself by watching Oreo trying to catch a fly. I thought reading a book was a good idea. I loved to read. 

“It’s not against the law to read over the summer, you know,” Aunt Lori encouraged. “Go look in the trunk in my bedroom. I think there are some books in there. They might be old, but sometimes the oldies are the goodies.”

“I don’t want to read,” Wendy said, pouting.

“Well, there are probably some games in there, too. Just go have a look.”

“Okay,” Wendy surrendered. “Come on, Chris.”

I scooped up Oreo and took him with us. The trunk was at the foot of the bed, and we flipped the latches and opened the top. We rummaged through paperback books and a few games that looked old and unfamiliar, and then we found some larger hardback books. I pulled one of those out. “What’s this?”

“Let me see.” Wendy took it from me. “Hey, this is my mom’s old yearbook.”

She opened it up. “Let’s look at it.” She jumped up on the bed. “Come on.” She patted the bed, motioning me to sit next to her.

“Okay. I bet my mom’s in here too,” I said as I got on the bed, Oreo close behind me. We lay on our stomachs next to each other so we could both see the pages. Oreo found some fringe on the throw pillows to entertain himself. I loved him, and I whispered my secrets nightly into his furry ear. He kept me from the shadow world for the most part. I couldn’t wait for Mom to meet him. Lisa was going to go crazy when I returned back home with a kitten.

Wendy flipped to the section where the mug shots were lined up in rows alphabetically by last name and by class. We looked through the freshman class first, and then sophomore, and then we found my mom in the junior year section.

“There she is.” Wendy pointed.

I bit my lip, trying to keep from laughing until Wendy giggled.

“Look at that hair!” It was up in a beehive.

Then we flipped through the sophomore class, looking for Aunt Lori. My eyes spotted her long blond hair first, and I pointed to her photo.

“There she is. Gosh, she’s so pretty.”

“Thank you sweetie,” Aunt Lori said from the doorway. I didn’t know she was there.

“I think you’re pretty too, Mom,” Wendy said.

Aunt Lori laughed and went back to cleaning.

“Hey, isn’t that your dad?” I pointed to the opposite page.

Wendy looked at the photo. “Yep, that’s him.”

His hair was too much to ignore, and I had to say something. After all, one small stab at him was a drop in the bucket compared to what he did to me.

“What did he use, motor oil?” I giggled.

His hair was jet black and slicked back on his head, except for the one thick curl that hung down on his forehead. You could see where the teeth of the comb had left their impression.

“That’s the way they wore it in the fifties,” Wendy said. 

I looked at the next page. “Hey, is that him too?” Uncle Butch was standing on a platform in the middle of a gym, but it didn’t look like a sporting event.

Wendy slid the book over to where she could see the page better. “Yeah. What does he have in his hand?”

“It’s a trophy. What’s it for?” I asked.

“I know what it is,” Wendy said. “It’s a dance trophy. Remember, he said he was a dance champion or something.”

I looked closer at the picture. There in the background was a banner that read: Winter Dance Competition. Then it hit me. That was the same photograph my uncle was looking at in Mount Adams! I shivered and looked away from the yearbook. I squeezed my eyes closed, trying to block the memories of that night. But it was no good. I couldn’t shake the queasy feeling that had come over me. The urgency in Uncle Butch’s eyes and his red spider webbed nose appeared so clearly on the back of my eyelids that I gasped. I kept reminding myself that every day I survived was one day closer to my mom.

“Are you okay?”

No, I wasn’t okay and I wished everyone would just stop asking me. I wanted my mom, but I knew that was unlikely. So I did what I did most days, and I pushed the thought out of my head. I tried to act normal.

“Yeah. Just peachy.”

I remembered that my mother also had high school accomplishments. “Hey, let’s find my mom in the sports section.” If I couldn’t be with her, at least I could look at her photos to feel close to her.

“Okay.” Wendy flipped to the section.

There she was, beautiful and young, and the depths of the photo captured my mother’s smile, which was unmistakable and unique. The smile she had before my dad left. It made me homesick immediately.

“Hey.” Wendy pointed to another picture of her on the opposite page. “Isn’t that her, too?” She had found what I had hoped to find.

“Sure is. She was a runner,” I said with great pride. The photo was glorious. My mother was breaking the finish ribbon; her head thrown back with chest pushed forward to claim first place. She was wearing her track and field uniform.

“That’s so cool!” Wendy said.

“Yeah,” I added, but turned the page because I didn’t want to start feeling the pain of being away from her.

We flipped through the yearbook until we got to the last page. It turned out to be a dedication page. We spent a longer time looking at this page because it was a mystery. There were two photographs on it, but one was scratched out.

“Who’s that?” Wendy asked, fingering the photo that had become a scribble of black ink. Whoever owned the pen that did the scratching was full of rage.

“I don’t know, but someone sure didn’t like her,” I said.

Wendy read aloud This yearbook is dedicated to the memory of Charles Weaver, and to his generous wife Mary, without whom the publication of this yearbook would not have been possible.

I remembered the name “Weaver” painted on Mrs. Weaver’s weathered mailbox. “Is that Crazy Mary?”

“I can’t tell, it’s all scratched out.” Wendy looked closer, trying to distinguish a face.

“I know who would know.” I jumped up with the book in my hand, scaring Oreo. “Your mom can tell us.” We raced each other to the kitchen where Aunt Lori was sitting at the table playing solitaire. Wendy grabbed the book from me and threw it down on the table, open to the last page.

“Mom, is that Crazy Mary?”

Aunt Lori took the book and looked closer at the photo. “Well, I suppose it is. You’re father scratched out her photo.”

“I knew it,” I said under my breath.

“Oh my gosh, this brings back memories.” Aunt Lori flipped through the yearbook and found one of the pages that we had been looking at, the one with Uncle Butch receiving the dance trophy. “Well, there he is in all his glory. I believe this might have been your father’s finest moment. He was the dance champion that year. No one in the school could come close to his ability.” 

“Mom, why did Dad scratch out her photo?”

“I’m getting to it, honey. You see, at the end of every school year we had a big, and I mean, big dance contest in the spring. Your father was a sure win since he won the winter contest. Every girl in school wanted to go with him to the dance. But not just for the glory. There was a two hundred dollar prize to be won—a contribution from the Weavers. Anyhow, your father was disqualified.”

“Why?” Wendy asked

“Skipping school. He was caught skipping school by Mrs. Weaver, or Crazy Mary, as you guys like to call her. I remember it like yesterday. It was quite a scene. She marched him into the principal’s office, mad as a hornet. She was banging her fist on the desk, demanding that the principal call the police.”

“Did he rob her or destroy something on her property?” Wendy asked.

“Not to my knowledge. I still don’t know what she was so infuriated about. Your father never told anyone. He just said, ‘That old bat is crazy.’ I guess that’s how she got her nickname. 

“Anyhow, plenty of girls were mad that your father wouldn’t be dancing. I wasn’t too happy either. We had started going out that year, and I was expecting to be his date. I would’ve won half of the prize money. Anyway, the principal said that he preferred to handle the matter within the school, and he suspended your dad. As the rules go, if you are suspended, you can’t participate in any school-related activities. Oh, you should have heard your father throw a fit. I believe by that time the whole school was trying to get a peek at what was happening in that office. Mrs. Weaver was not too pleased. But I guess she accepted it, because she turned tail and stomped out of the building.”

“So that’s why dad hates her,” Wendy said. 

“I guess it is,” Aunt Lori said and proceeded to flip through the pages.

“Lori, what are you girls doing in there? Send someone out with another beer would you?” Uncle Butch called from outside where he was talking to Bob. They were sitting at the picnic table.

“You take this and put it back where you found it.” Aunt Lori handed Wendy the yearbook and resumed with her cards.

She came back with a game I had never played before, Mystery Date. We spent half the night trying to figure out the rules, but they were just as confusing as the ones in real life.