All around us, people watched with held breaths as Aunt Sister’s lips kept moving.
Reverend Freeman burst through the ring, Cyl just behind him. “Baby—?”
He knelt beside us and put his arm around his daughter and she leaned against his chest with a little moan, but didn’t pull her injured hand away. “She’s making it better, Daddy.”
At last Aunt Sister raised her head and pushed back a strand of white hair that had escaped from her bun. Old and faded blue eyes looked deeply into young brown ones.
“All the fire is gone,” she said. It wasn’t a question.
Lashanda looked at her hand and flexed her small fingers. “Yes, ma’am.”
Her palm and fingertips were smooth and unmarked. No blisters, faint redness.
A collective sigh erupted from the crowd and so many people started talking then that I was probably the only one who heard when Lashanda smiled up at her father and said, “Mommy’s wrong, Daddy. There white people are nice.”
I stood up, feeling suddenly drained and weary. A whole lifetime of knowing, yet I’m surprised every time I get reminded that racism isn’t a whites-only monopoly.
Someone handed me a welcome cup of iced lemonade. One of the newcomers, Allison Lazarus.
“Remarkable said,” Dr. Gevirtz in a clipped New York accent. “I’ve heard of fire-talkers, but this is the first time I’ve ever seen it done.”
“The colorful natives performing their ritual ceremonies?” I snapped. “Too bad you didn’t have a camera.”
“Was I sounding like a tourist?” he asked mildly. “Sorry.”
Abashed, I apologized for my bad manners. “I’d be curious and skeptical, too, if I hadn’t seen Aunt Sister do it enough times.”
“But surely it was putting her hand in cold liquid so quickly?” protested Ms. Lazarus.
“No, no,” he said. “It’s a true type of sympathetic healing. The practitioner believes so strongly that those around her—especially the patient—also believe and that in turn causes—”
I excused myself and left them to it. I know all the intellectual arguments: the burn wasn’t that bad, the prompt application of ice kept the tissue from blistering, the power of positive thinking, psychosomatic syndromes, et cetera, et cetera. As with old Mr. Randall, who dosed my well, or Miss Kitty Perkins, who talked seven warts off my hands when I was fourteen, I no longer questioned how such things worked. It was enough to know that they did work, that there were people like Aunt Sister who had the gift and used it freely when called upon.
I was walking away from the tent when Ralph Freeman called to me, “Judge Knott? Deborah?”
“Yes?”
“I hope you didn’t misunderstand back there.”
“I don’t think I did,” I said evenly.
His eyes met mine and he nodded. “No, I reckon you didn’t. I’m sorry.”
“Don’t apologize. We can’t be responsible for everybody else’s gut feelings. Your wife probably has better reasons than some of my relatives.”
He gave a wry smile and we fell in step together.
“Must make it awkward for you,” I probed.
“Not really,” He walked along beside me with his hands clasped behind his back. “If you don’t work outside the home, if you confine your social interactions to the African-American community, it’s amazing how long you can go without having to speak to an ofay.”
His voice parodied the offensive word and took the sting from it.
“School?” I asked. “PTA?”
The excitement over, the kids had resumed their volleyball game. We watched as Ralph’s son took the setup and spiked the ball for another point.
“Sports?”
“Well, yes, there are those times,” he conceded.
Despite a certain sadness in his voice, I sensed that he felt disloyal to say even this much about his wife and I quit pushing.
“Lashanda’s okay?”
He seized gratefully on the change of subject. “Oh, yes. Ms. DeGraffenried—Cylvia? The prosecutor?—she took Lashanda up to your house to change out of her bathing suit and then there was some mention of a lemon meringue pie. I can’t thank you enough for what you did.”
“Not me. My aunt.”
“She might have prayed the fire out, but you were the one got her to your aunt so quickly.”
I shrugged.
Ralph Freeman stopped and smiled down at me, a smile as warm and uncomplicated as July sunshine. “You don’t like to be thanked, do you?”
“Sure I do, but not when it’s for something as elemental as helping a hurt child.”
He brushed aside my demurral as if I hadn’t spoken. “All you have to do is say ‘you’re welcome.’”
“Excuse me?”
“I say ‘thank you,’ you say ‘you’re welcome.’ What’s so hard about that?” There was such genuine goodness in his smile.
Goodness, and yet a touch of mischief, too, in the tilt of his head.
“Thank you for helping my baby girl,” he said.
I smiled back at him.
“You’re welcome,” I said.
17
A trying time is no time to quit trying.
—Jehovah Pentecostal
Cyl soon returned with Lashanda, who had a flick of meringue on the tip of her little nose. For the child, getting changed had been a simple matter of sliding a pair of yellow shorts on over her bathing suit and stepping into a pair of yellow jelly sandals. She trailed an oversized yellow T-shirt across the grass and seemed too tired to walk.
Ralph Freeman swung her up on his broad shoulders so that a leg dangled down on each side of his chest and motioned to his son, who had just stripped off his rugby shirt and was ready to follow the other kids into the pond. The boy immediately put on a typical teenage face.
“Aw, Dad” do we hafta leave now? I didn’t even get to swim yet.
I was amused to see that a preacher could be as torn as any father between the needs and desires of his children. Seven-year-old Lashanda was clearly exhausted and in bad need of a nap after such an emotional experience, while thirteen-year-old Stan was enjoying the swing of things.
“I don’t mean to interfere,” Cyl said hesitantly, “but if your son wants to stay a little longer, I could drop him off on my way home.”
Stan’s face lit up. “Can I, Dad? Please?”
“Are you sure it won’t be too much trouble?” Ralph asked her.
“Positive. Just so Stan can tell me where you live. Cotton Grove, right?”
“Right,” said Stan. “It’s only two blocks off Main Street on this side of town.”
“No problem then,” Cyl said.
With a paternal injunction to behave himself and to come as soon as Ms. DeGraffenried called, Ralph thanked Cyl for her kindness and me for my family’s hospitality. Then he headed out to the parking area with his daughter clinging drowsily to his head.
“Nice man,” I said, watching them go.
“For a black man?” Cyl asked sweetly.
Stan had gone racing down the pier and we were alone for the moment beneath the hot July sun.
I felt as if I’d been spat on. “Excuse me?”
“Sorry,” she said. “I spoke out of turn.”
“But that’s what you think?”
“I said I was sorry, Your Honor.” She turned to walk away.
“Oh, no, no, no,” I said hotly and grabbed her arm. “You’re not getting out of it like that. Forget I’m a judge. When did I ever give you a reason to lay something like that on me?”
“Woman to woman?” She looked me in the eye. “All right then. You show your prejudices almost every court session.”
“Prejudices?” I was stung by the injustice of her accusation. “I bend over backwards to be fair.”
An eyebrow lifted scornfully. “Right. You bend so far backwards when it’s a black defendant that you go looking for mitigating circumstances even where there aren’t any. You never hold black youths to the same high standard you hold whites. Oh, you’re not as blatant about it as Harrison Hobart or Perry Byrd used to be, remember? Remember how they’d give suspended sentences if one black man killed another? Black-on-black crimes never got their attention. For them, it had to be black-on-white to put the law in play and then they came down like an avalanche.”