There was the neat redbrick house with white iron window gates. The electrical pole near the curb looked as though its top half had been chewed off, and it was leaning at a crazy angle over a heap of junk. Reesie caught sight of a cream-and-red stripe that she recognized. It was a section of wallpaper from their kitchen. She practically jumped back, bumping the vehicle sitting in the driveway. She turned to stare at the blue Honda. It was her uncle’s old car.
Of course, she thought. Parraine would have given his car to Daddy, because both his and Mom’s must be in a scrapyard somewhere. She stepped carefully over some cables into what had been their front yard, and felt her mother’s hand slip into hers.
“Here we go,” Mom whispered.
“How’re you doing?” Reesie asked, thinking of their conversation on the plane. Her mother only had a chance to nod before the door popped open.
“Jeannie! Reesie!” Daddy wrapped them both up in his arms there on the stoop. Reesie peeked inside over his shoulder.
“Dang…,” she muttered. Neither of her parents corrected her. They followed her inside.
They were standing in the midst of bare bones—even the walls between the rooms were gone. Reesie could see straight through this, the used-to-be living room, to the nonexistent hallway, to the weirdly unfamiliar space that should have been her bedroom.
She tasted the tears that had begun to run down her cheeks, but she didn’t bother to wipe them. Her emotions were oddly disconnected: they’d lost something they couldn’t replace, yes. But was she devastated? No. For a minute Reesie thought the old guilt might kick in again. It didn’t. Legacy, Daddy had said. Legacy, Miss Martine had said.
“Oh … Lloyd!” Mom’s words echoed, and Reesie winced at the sound. Her parents seemed small as they stood huddled together in the middle of the empty space. She couldn’t look at them.
The smell of wet wood was so strong that she reached out to one of the exposed beams. It was—still—soft and damp to her touch. How could that be, months after the flood?
“Daddy?”
Her father sighed. How hard it must have been for him! Reesie thought.
“Listen.” He was clearly speaking more to her mother than to her, so she stayed where she was, in the hallway that wasn’t.
“We can’t save the house.” His words dropped like rocks.
“But, Lloyd! The insurance—I’ve been going over the papers, and—”
“No, Jeannie. No.” Daddy shook his head and walked away toward the back of the house as if he couldn’t face them. Reesie instinctively moved closer, as did her mother.
“Pete and I had an engineer come out. The place is structurally unsound. And the money FEMA is offering us, even with the insurance payout, won’t be enough to rebuild from scratch.”
“Couldn’t you use my college money?” Reesie heard herself asking. Her father turned with his shoulders slumped, and pain was written all over his face. But he managed a smile.
“No, I cannot, Reesie Bear. Your grandmother would roll in her grave if I put this collection of brick and wood over you and your brother getting an education. It wasn’t about the house for her; it was about me and Pete being better off.”
“Your mother was right, as always,” Mom said firmly. “But this, Lloyd, is about the kids as much as it’s about us, isn’t it? We won’t give up on this. So, we’ll find a rental, and we’ll start saving.”
Reesie watched her father’s shoulders snap to attention. Superman was weakened, but he hadn’t given in.
“Jeannie. This ride isn’t going to be easy from here on. Are you sure, now?”
“I’m sure.”
Reesie had the feeling that her parents had forgotten that she was there. She quietly eased to the door and out. Blinking in the sun, she shaded her eyes. There was no sign of Parraine and Tee Charmaine, but she only thought of them for a moment before her phone buzzed. She looked at the screen: Orlando.
“Peanut Butter! How come you didn’t call me? Y’all already there?”
“Yeah. Sorry. I—”
“I’m not mad at you. It’s rough, right? You okay?”
Reesie smiled. “Yeah.”
“That’s what I’m talkin’ about! Hey, I’m in the car with Tree and Dré. They’re gonna bring me by your house, and then they want to have ya’ll come by and eat. Tell your mama.”
“I will,” Reesie said. “See you.”
“Sooner than you think!” Orlando laughed, clicking off.
Reesie slipped her phone into the backpack slung over her shoulder. She was still smiling, even as she looked across the twisted landscape in front of her. She shoved her hands into her pockets and walked up the street in the direction of Miss Martine’s, kicking dust with the toes of her sneakers.
She was alone, just like in her last dream. The layers of dried mud covered the blacktop completely, so it looked like the road had never been paved—or as if there was no road at all. There were none of the noises of living around her, no dogs barking or birds and cicadas calling from trees. It was a type of desert, she thought as she went on.
Miss Martine’s house was gone. Even the lot had been cleared down to the cinder block foundation. Only Dré’s brick shed was still standing where it had been, with its door shut tight and the little window’s panes unbroken. Something green caught Reesie’s eye.
At one edge of the house’s foundation, near what would have been the back door, were the remains of a little flower bed marked by a row of bricks embedded halfway into the ground. Green spring grass had come up. And unfurling out of that grass were the slender stems of “elephant ears”—Miss Martine called them caladiums.
Reesie whipped out her phone and stooped close to take a picture of them. That bright green against red brick would make a great painting, she thought.
And why, she wondered as she straightened up, do I have to think of this nothingness as the end of anything?
On the spot, she did a 360-degree turn to take in everything her eyes could see. It was bleak, it was ugly. She snapped a picture. Far down the street she could see a truck pull up at a lopsided house. People got out and began unloading sheets of plywood. She snapped again.
Nothing was the same, Orlando had said. This was new normal, and she was new normal Reesie. She was finished with nightmares and feeling afraid for her family and herself. She was finished with feeling afraid about losing old friends and making new ones.
Katrina could not win this fight. Teresa Arielle Boone would not let her. It was going to be hard, but she would keep on going, just like her parents and her friends were doing. Just like New Orleans was doing.
She walked back to the shed and squatted in front of the red door. The paint was peeling, and the wood was buckled. She pushed against it, but the lock held. She twisted her body into a sitting position and opened her backpack.
First she took out her phone and texted Orlando to tell him where she was. Then she dug deeper into the bag and pulled out Woman Everlasting.
It was odd, but just right, that she hadn’t taken the time before now to actually read any of it; she felt trembly inside again as she leafed through the yellowed pages.
There it was. The poem titled “Finding Someplace.”
She looked up quickly, then reminded herself that no one was there to hear her reading out loud. And to her surprise she discovered that she really wouldn’t care if anyone did. Reesie tilted the book away from the midday glare.
the mat says
welcome, but
my heart reads:
‘enter here,
and be loved.’
and yes, there’s always
another dream
to chase, or
friend to follow,
always
one
more
photo to take
before returning
before embracing
the old life
that’s fading
in the brightness of
now; but let me tell you:
find someplace
get yourself somewhere
that you can always
enter,
knowing
you will
be
loved.
Reesie closed the book and got up stiffly, brushing dust off herself. She started to put the book away but decided not to: she wanted to show her parents and Eritrea and Dré—and Orlando. She wanted to explain to them how well she understood Miss Martine’s words. She’d learned a lot about the people in her life since that day in the attic, and a lot about herself.
She’d found her someplace—by the hardest, as Miss Martine would say—and the funny thing was: it wasn’t even a place. It was the people who’d made her feel strong, even when she wasn’t. It was the people who felt like family, even when they weren’t. Reesie smiled to herself. She could carry her someplace around with her always now, because it was inside her heart.