THAT NIGHT, AFTER FRITA WENT HOME, MOMMA, POP, ME, AND JIMMY the spider sat outside on the front steps. Momma said it was too hot to go inside. Felt cooler outdoors where a breeze might kick up every now and then. She leaned her head on Pop’s shoulder and he kissed her neck instead of her cheek, which made her smile. Then we sat quiet while the neighbor’s lights blinked off and the stars blinked on, one by one.
All around the trailer it got dark, but the fireflies lit up the night with hundreds of little lights. When one came close, Momma reached out and cupped it in her hand so I could watch it light up. She let it go by throwing it up in the air, only it stayed stuck to her palm like it wanted to stay there for good. Then Pop reached over and pushed it off with his thick, rough finger, but he was real gentle.
We sat outside until late. I didn’t want to go to bed—ever. Felt right to sit out there with Momma and Pop, but once the moon was high, Pop nudged me indoors. I lay in my room on top of my bedsheets, listening to the crickets sing, and thought for sure I’d never fall asleep.
But I did.
I know, because I remember waking up.
* * *
It was almost three o’clock in the morning and I was having a nightmare. It was about spiders, but it wasn’t about Jimmy. These spiders were people spiders and they were hanging on their webs, looking down on me and Frita.
In the dream, I’d lost Momma and Pop, and Frita was helping me look for them. We were walking through the swamp, hollering, only no one answered, so we walked faster and faster, trying to find them. My hands were clammy and my heart was pounding, and with every step my feet sunk deeper into the swamp muck.
“Momma?” I yelled. “Pop?”
It was dark in the swamp. Me and Frita tried to run, but we could hardly see and there were so many webs, we had to push them out of the way with our hands. We were in a sea of spiderwebs and they were full of all sorts of things—car fenders and corpses of kids half eaten by alligators. It was cold and smelled like muck, and I could feel a thousand eyes watching me.
Then I looked up and there were a thousand eyes watching me.
Spider eyes.
Hanging right above my head was a spider that looked just like Duke Evans. He’d grown fangs where his missing teeth had been, and he was ready to pounce.
“Let’s get out of here,” I yelled.
I took off running, only I didn’t get very far before I realized Frita wasn’t with me. I stopped and turned around, and that’s when I saw her. She was standing right under Duke’s web, only this time it wasn’t Duke who was up there, it was his daddy.
“Frita, run!” I yelled, but it was too late. The Mr. Evans spider reached out his huge spider claws and…
I sat bolt upright in bed, sweat dripping down my forehead. It had to have been a hundred degrees in my room, but I pulled the sheet up to my chin anyway. My eyes darted around, looking for spiderwebs. All I wanted to do was crawl into bed with Momma and Pop. Plus, I had to go to the bathroom something fierce, but I was sure the minute I put my feet down I’d feel the tickle of webs wrapping around my ankles. I stayed put until the sun came out and I heard Pop waking up. Then I sprinted to the bathroom.
Peeing never felt so good.
* * *
I knew right away I had to tell Frita about my dream. According to Frita, dreams were important. Her daddy read stories from the Bible where God warned people about stuff in their dreams. Mr. Wilson said those dreams were signs and portents—they told you what was going to happen in the future. If my dream was a portent, I wanted to tell Frita about it soon as I could, but I had to wait on account of it being Sunday and we had church.
“Stop fidgeting,” Momma whispered during the service. I swung my legs and kicked at the pew in front of us.
“Sit still,” Pop said, giving me the evil eye.
I crossed my arms and scowled. I sure wished we could have gone to Frita’s church, but Frita went to church in Rockford and I went to church in Hollowell. The only difference I could figure was that Frita’s church was fun. I’d gone a couple times for special occasions, and when Mr. Wilson got going, he’d turn his sermon into a song. There was a huge choir that swayed and shouted behind the pulpit, and people yelled, “Amen” and “Preach it, brother” even though Mr. Wilson was not their brother.
This morning I’d said, “Couldn’t we all go to Frita’s church just this once?” But Momma said that church was for black people. Why we didn’t just do some integrating I do not know, but we never did.
The only good thing about my church was that it let out a full hour before Frita’s. That meant if I got on my bike the minute I’d changed out of my dress clothes, I could pedal over to Frita’s house and be there by the time her family got back to cook Sunday dinner.
I pedaled extra fast and made the ride in only eight minutes, so I waited on Frita’s front lawn. When the Wilsons pulled up in their station wagon, there I was. Frita waved from the window, but Terrance glared as he climbed out of the driver’s seat. He looked like he might be headed down to the basement to punch things.
“What are you lookin’ at?” he growled when he walked by. He had on a T-shirt that said BLACK POWER. I was pretty sure Mrs. Wilson didn’t allow T-shirts at church on Sunday, and she frowned as Terrance stomped past. Terrance and Mrs. Wilson were always arguing about one thing or another. Mostly they argued about college. Mrs. Wilson said Terrance needed to think about the future—and that meant going to college. But Terrance said colleges were racist. He said they didn’t want black people, so why should he go where he wasn’t wanted? Terrance said his plan was to move to Atlanta and stay with his uncle Rory, who used to be in a group called the Black Panthers.
I watched as Terrance disappeared into the house. The front door slammed shut real hard, but Mrs. Wilson just shook her head. Then she turned to me.
“Hello, Gabe,” she said at last. “You’re here bright and early today.” She took off her floppy hat. “Do you want some Sunday dinner?”
Mrs. Wilson always asked if I wanted Sunday dinner like it was a brand-new idea and she’d just thought of it. She knew what the answer was going to be because every time she asked me, I said yes.
“Yes, ma’am,” I said, remembering my manners. Frita got out of the car and did a cartwheel on the lawn, then she somersaulted over to me. Mrs. Wilson sighed.
“You kids can play outside until dinner’s ready, but Frita, you change your clothes before…”
It was too late. Me and Frita were halfway across the yard, headed for the pecan tree out back. Frita had on a dress with a wide ribbon and a bow in the back, plus she had on her dress shoes with new white socks, but she still beat me up the tree. I sat down two branches below her and tried to crack open a pecan.
“Two bucks says you can’t guess what I dreamed about last night,” I said.
Frita thought it over. “Spiders?”
I just about choked. “How’d you know that?” I asked.
Frita shrugged.
“Yeah,” I said, “but you’ll never guess what happened.”
“What?”
“Let me tell you, it was the scariest dream I ever had in my whole life.”
“Really?”
I crossed my heart and spit on the ground.
“Yup,” I said. “I was awake all night because of it, and even after I woke up, I could still feel it.”
Frita leaned over the branch. “What happened?”
Now I had her attention, so I told her about losing my parents and walking through the spiderwebs, trying to find them.
“…when I saw the spider that looked like Duke, I ran like heck, but you stayed put. You wouldn’t go anywhere. Then I looked back over my shoulder and there was a spider waiting to get you, only it wasn’t Duke…. ” I made Frita lean in even closer. “It was his daddy!”
“No!”
“Uh-huh,” I said. “He was reaching for you with his claws. I was so scared, I almost wet the bed.”
Frita’s eyes went wide like full moons. “He got me?” she whispered. I nodded and Frita said it again, only this time I could tell she was thinking hard.
“You think it means something?” she asked. “Think it’s a sign?”
“Yup,” I said. “I’m almost completely sure.” I was growing more sure by the minute.
Frita took a deep breath. “Gabe,” she said, “this is serious business. We’re going to have to double our liberating. That must be what your dream meant—it was a warning so we wouldn’t forget to make me brave too.”
“What have you got to be scared—”
“Frita! Gabe! Come wash up for dinner.”
Mrs. Wilson hollered out the back door and I jumped a mile. Frita swung off her branch, but I nearly fell out of mine. I landed with a thud.
“Frita, wait!” I said. “What are we going to do?”
She thought it over.
“I better make a list,” she said. “Like you. Then we’ll cross my stuff off too.”
I swallowed hard. I’d never thought about Frita needing to be brave. I wondered what would be on her list.
“Come on,” Frita said. “We can do it soon as dinner’s over.”
She took off, but I stood still, watching her go. The wind kicked up and carried with it a whiff of Mrs. Wilson’s corn bread stuffing. Mrs. Wilson made the best corn bread stuffing in all of Georgia, but right then I didn’t feel like eating. I had a churning feeling in the pit of my stomach that said there was going to be trouble.
Sure hoped it wasn’t a sign or a portent.