Chapter Eighteen

I feel like we were just driving this road,” I said.

“We were,” Mother said. “I don’t know why they have these two big events so close together. One at the beginning and one at the end of the summer would make more sense, but then when did they ever ask my opinion?”

“Well, it does make a nice last hurrah of summer before we have to head back to school.”

“So Molly,” Mr. Pop said. “I heard the Birgers were coming up to the fair today too.”

Molly blushed.

“Oh yeah?”

“Well, I thought that might be of interest to you.” Mother swatted Mr. Pop’s leg and shot him her best “stop it” glare before revealing a smirk.

Molly had to work to keep a straight face. Her nonchalance was noted but not believed by me or anyone else in the car. I could see Mother’s profile from the backseat; she had a big grin on her face. Even Mr. Pop cracked a smile. Poor Molly couldn’t cover her true feelings for long. We decided to let it go rather than embarrass her any more than we already had.

“So do you think the Henderson kids will win more Future Farmers of America ribbons this year?” I asked Mr. Pop.

Mother responded first. “I think they’d be devastated if they didn’t. They spend the whole year grooming their cattle just for the state fair.”

“Mr. Pop, what do you think?”

“I think it’s likely, but I’ve been hearing in town that the two Brown boys are finally at the age where they will be serious competition for someone. It should be fun to watch it all unfold.”

“You know what I want to watch? The Indian Rights Council unfold in a way that lets Mick out of jail. That’s what I’ve been praying for. That everyone will see that Mick being locked up is nonsense and wrong. Please tell me you think that’s what will happen after this meeting.”

Mr. Pop sighed. Though I knew this was foremost on his mind every bit as it was on mine, Mr. Pop had urged me before we left not to let it consume my every thought and every bit of conversation. I had tried, but I could hold back no longer.

“Mercy, I wish I could say I know what the outcome will be,” Mr. Pop said. “But I can’t. And these meetings are not about Mick and his situation. At least, not explicitly. I can tell you that there will be more forward progress just because your uncle Roger will be there. He’s used to working with politicians and knows how to push a meeting forward. He knows how to ask the right questions and raise the most necessary issues, and as you know, they have a number of things to discuss.”

He smiled kindly at me then said, “Try to enjoy your day. Take in all you can, and we’ll meet up at supper time and decide exactly what time we’ll head back. Since we’re almost there, Geneva, would you lead us in a prayer for this day? I know we all sense the importance of the next few hours.”

Mother turned around, making sure we’d closed our eyes and bowed our heads before she began.

“Almighty God, ruler of all, You know the end from the beginning, and we desperately need Thy help today. We need Thy presence in the meeting this morning. Give Paul and Roger Thy wisdom as they speak up for the least of these. Oh God, may Thy ways prevail, may You sway the hearts and opinions of men who would wish harm on any Maliseet. Remove the scales from their eyes. Do whatever it takes, holy Lord. Work a miracle, God! Lead them to see the truth this very day. Amen.”

A round of amens followed.

Mr. Pop reached a hand over to grab Mother’s and smiled. “Thanks, dear,” he said. “A real courage booster.”

Mother nodded. I never doubted Mr. Pop’s courage, but I suspected that Mother knew his weaknesses and fears better than anyone.

“That was beautiful, Mrs. Millar. Thank you.” Molly had confided to me that she’d given up on praying. She felt that either God wasn’t listening or He wasn’t even there.

“Oh, Molly,” Mother said. “You are welcome. I just took the words that were pent up in my heart and spilled them out into the ear of God. You know any of us can do that. He is always waiting for us to be with Him.”

“Doesn’t always feel like it,” Molly said in a small voice.

“No, it does not,” Mr. Pop agreed, slowing as we pulled into town and traffic began to build around us. “But if we always felt like this, I don’t think we’d need faith. Certainly, our faith would not grow. Well, look at this. Here we are already.”

I didn’t know what, if anything, Molly heard of Mr. Pop or Mother’s little sermons. As soon as we pulled into town, the crowds and passing cars had pulled Molly’s attention toward the windows. I scooted toward Molly and leaned to look out her same window. People bustled past carrying ice cream cones and pastries, pushing baby carriages, and pulling wagons. As Mr. Pop pulled into a parking spot, a familiar family stopped in front of our car, pointing and smiling: the Birgers.

Molly blushed once again and straightened up to see herself in the rearview mirror.

“You look beautiful,” would be just about the last thing I said to her all day before she and Tommy wandered off into the throngs of people in their own little fog.

“Really, Mercy. Why don’t you come with us?” Tommy had urged, turning around as they walked three steps ahead of me. I assured them I was fine and slowed my steps so they could carry on without me.

“See you at the entrance at 4:30!” Molly had yelled back. That was the time Mr. Pop had said we’d all meet up.

I turned away from the crowds of the fair and wandered back toward the Presque Isle Free Library where I figured I’d sit and finally finish The Catcher in the Rye, after I found where its Beulah Akeley Boardroom was, where the Indian Affairs Council meeting would commence, just after lunch.

I found the room without much trouble, that is, without having to ask the librarian. I was glad this librarian did not know me, so she wouldn’t be inclined to wonder why I was asking the location of a conference room.

But now that I knew where their room was, knew the place where Mr. Pop and Uncle Roger would gather with politicians from across the state—I needed to find a perch, a place comfortable enough that it would make sense for me to be sitting and reading there; a place where I could hear when the meeting started and, more important, when it ended but not be seen by anyone coming from or going to the room.

I selected a musty old wing back set in front of a window two stacks over from the boardroom. But no sooner had I settled in and started reading than did my stomach growl. Though a “No Eating. No Drinking” sign hung in a gilded frame not far from where I sat, the chair I’d selected and my deep bag that concealed my tightly wrapped sandwich and polished apple, offered protection from those who might want to catch me eating. So with one hand on my book and another dipping back and forth into the bag nestled up against me as I ate my lunch, I waited for the Indian Affairs Council men to assemble and start their meeting.

I read all of three pages in the next hour. My ears had been trained to the coming and going of folks behind me. I became accustomed enough to the regular library folks passing through the stacks, that it was easy enough to pick up a change when the politicians began arriving. They didn’t seem to care about staying hushed or walking gently through the library. Their steps hit hard on the wooden floors, creaking and clacking as they went. Their voices rang out above the whispers and the otherwise stillness of the library. I froze in my chair as they began filing in behind me. I kept my head bowed toward the pages as I tried to count the number of times the door opened and closed, letting new people in. I slunk a little farther down in my chair when I heard Uncle Roger’s quiet tone.

“Could be interesting, brother,” he said. “Lord have mercy, indeed.”

And with that, Uncle Roger and Mr. Pop walked into the Indian Rights Council and the door clicked closed for the last time.

For the next half hour I was able to roam the streets of New York with Holden Caufield, but I became quickly as restless as Holden was and I could sit no longer. Unwilling to leave the library or risk being seen, I roamed through the stacks beyond the door, where I could still hear any loud rumblings or when the meeting ended, but wouldn’t be seen should Uncle Roger or Mr. Pop leave for any other reason.

My eyes wandered over the spines of the burgundy and black and brown leather-bound volumes of poetry that lined the shelves, seeing nothing really. But I stopped when DICKINSON appeared on a yellow-bound volume. We’d talked about Emily Dickinson in English class. “The best poet this country has ever known!” our teacher had declared. I pulled the volume from the shelf and opened it to “Grief.”

I measure every grief I meet

With analytic eyes;

I wonder if it weighs like mine,

Or has an easier size.

I wonder if they bore it long,

Or did it just begin?

I could not tell the date of mine,

It feels so old a pain.

I wonder if it hurts to live,

And if they have to try,

And whether, could they choose between,

They would not rather die.

I wonder if when years have piled

Some thousands on the cause

Of early hurt, if such a lapse

Could give them any pause;

Or would they go on aching still

Through centuries above,

Enlightened to a larger pain

By contrast with the love.

The grieved are many, I am told

The reason deeper lies—

Death is but one and comes but once,

And only nails the eyes.

There’s grief of want, and grief of cold—

A sort they call “despair”;

There’s banishment from native eyes,

In sight of native air.

And though I may not guess the kind

Correctly, yet to me

A piercing comfort it affords

In passing Calvary,

To note the fashions of the cross

Of those that stand alone,

Still fascinated to presume

That some are like my own.

I hadn’t yet read enough American poets to form an opinion on who was the best. As I fought back tears reading this poem, I realized my teacher must be right. Because somehow, this woman who grew up in a broad white house in the best part of town, educated and well-fed and not without love interests, recognized grief in all its forms, and spoke words that even desperate boys from the worst parts of town in the worst sorts of shelter would recognize.

Trying to shake getting lost in my own grief and my despair over the conversation that I imagined taking place in the room not twenty feet behind me, I flipped through the pages, closer to the front and stumbled upon Miss Dickinson’s “Hope.”

I’d just begun to read,

Hope is the thing with feathers

That perches in the soul

when I heard a sharp shuffling of feet and the librarian’s voice. “Sir, please just allow me to knock first. You’ll disturb the patrons.”

I turned to see two deputies flanking who I’d later learn was Sheriff Dolling. He ignored the librarian’s request and flung the door open without so much as knocking.

With my volume still in hand, I slid along the shelves until just outside the door. I no longer cared who could see me.

“Gentlemen,” Sheriff Dolling said, “sorry to disturb you. But Mr. Millar—”

I heard two chairs push back and two men, both Mr. Pop and Uncle Roger, answer, “Yes?”

My heart pounded in my chest.

“Mr. Roger Millar. Judge Dodd is requesting your presence in his courtroom immediately.”

Now more chairs backed up, and the hubbub overwhelmed the room. It took two seconds for both Uncle Roger and Mr. Pop to exit the room. Both looked at me immediately but said nothing. Mr. Pop pulled the door closed behind him as Uncle Roger spoke to the sheriff.

“What’s this about?”

“It seems,” Sheriff Dolling said, checking his notebook, “one Arthur Stringer has woken up.”