Miss Lily McCabe rises at six each morning and brews herself a cup of
tea. She takes it to her recliner in the living room and sips it as she
watches the sun come up.
After draining her cup, she heads back to the kitchen and pours
one cup of water into a pan. She places it on a burner and drops two
slices of whole wheat bread in the toaster. By the time the toaster pops
up, the water is boiling, so she adds one-half cup of oatmeal and boils
it one minute.
When she first retired, Miss Lily listened to her favorite
country classic station as she ate her oatmeal, singing along with
George Jones, Loretta Lynn and other old-timers. But nowadays she
breakfasts in silence, wondering where the time has gone, imagining what
her life would be like if she had gotten married, had a family. She
would have grandchildren now, like her friends Mary and Hazel, and
joining them in talking about the latest family gathering, what this one
or that one is doing. She might have a granddaughter named after her,
and imagines the two Lilys having tea together, discussing one student
or another, lesson plans. Young Lily would be a school teacher, of
course.
After breakfast, she watches the Today Show, although she does
not like Ann Curry. Why, she does not know. Ann Curry is always nice
and kind to people she interviews. But there is just something about her
that rubs Miss Lily the wrong way. She likes Matt Lauer, though; he is
very handsome. Even if he is losing his hair.
One morning, she finds nothing exciting when she turns the
television on; no plane crashes, no people killed or held hostage; not
even a politician apologizing for stealing money or cheating on his
wife.
She stands and places her hands on her hips, gazing around the
living room. What is life all about, anyway? Why is she here and what
has she learned? Although she taught hundreds of kids during her forty
years as a teacher, she hasn't learned much of anything herself.
She is snapped to attention by the ringing of the phone.
"Hello?"
"Lily?"
"Yes."
"Bet you don't know who this is."
"No, I don't. How would I know?"
The man chuckles. "This is Robert Grubbs."
"Robert Grubbs? I don't know a Robert Grubbs."
"Remember Bardwell High School, class of '51?"
"Of course I do. That's the year I graduated."
The man chuckles again. "Well, remember Fuzzy?"
Miss Lily frowns, searching her memory. And then, somewhere in
the far recesses of her mind, a big round face appears, topped by black
curly hair. The boys called him Fuzzy because he had hair on his chest.
Lots of it. Miss Lily had never seen as much hair on a boy's chest. It
peeped above the collar of his shirt, front and back, and everyone made
fun of him. The poor boy never had a girlfriend. During their freshman
year, a group of them ran Fuzzy for class president as a joke and Albert
Lee Ramage hopped in a chair and made a speech on his behalf. "Vote for
Fuzzy!" he yelled, "He's the only boy in our class who's got hair on
his chest!" She jumps as Fuzzy clears his throat.
"I lived in Lexington for years, and after I retired I decided to
come back to the old home place here. I've been farming the land again.
Which brings me to the reason I called. I was wondering, Lily, if you
might need some corn."
"I thought all the corn was gone now. Besides, I don't eat much corn."
"I have late corn, Lily. It'll just go to waste. I'll be glad to bring some over."
"I don't want any corn, late or otherwise, Mr. Grubbs. Now if you'll excuse me, I have things to do."
She hangs up the phone and drops to her chair. He isn't fooling her. She knows what he's after. Who does he think he is?
For the next few days, Fuzzy's face keeps popping into her mind.
He certainly had his nerve. She is a charter member of New Hope
Baptist, a school teacher, Sunday School teacher. Her ancestors were
some of the first settlers in Carlisle County. The McCabe name has
always meant something in these parts.
That Grubbs bunch was nothing but poor white trash.
That night, Miss Lily tosses and turns and then she is dreaming.
She and her girlfriends are walking down the street, talking and
laughing, when Fuzzy Grubbs jumps out from behind a bush.
"Gotcha!" he yells. Miss Lily starts to run, and Fuzzy chases her. She runs faster and faster. But Fuzzy keeps up.
She wakes up slick with sweat, heart thumping. "White trash," she
mutters, sitting up in bed and fanning her face with the covers, "Just
poor white trash!"
Days pass, then weeks. Each time the phone rings Miss Lily checks
her caller ID before answering. She hates to be ugly, but she has
nothing to say to Fuzzy Grubbs.
But Fuzzy does not call.
Each time Miss Lily goes into town, she gazes up and down Front
Street, looking for a man in his seventies who might be Fuzzy. At Sunday
School and church, she looks for him. She has friends who go to the
other two churches in town, and they have not mentioned Fuzzy. If he
showed up there, she knew Hazel and Mary would tell her. It's a big
occasion when someone new shows up at any of the three churches in town.
That means Fuzzy is not worshiping at all.
"He is a heathen," Miss Lilly murmurs, "A low-down heathen."
After mulling it over and over in her mind for several days, Miss
Lily gets directions to Fuzzy's farm and drives by to check it out. She
is surprised to see a nice, well-kept farmhouse.
Blooming flowers and bushes surround the house and grounds and a
big Golden Retriever sits at the front door. When the dog gets up and
heads toward the car, Miss Lily floors the accelerator and speeds away,
watching through the rear view mirror as he fades in the rolling dust.
That night, Miss Lily dreams she is in a big field of corn, unable to find her way out. "Help!" she screams, "Help!"
Suddenly, she hears a roaring noise and corn is flying every which way, knocking her down, covering her whole body.
When she pulls herself awake, she is clawing at the covers.
She spends the next day staring at the phone and pacing up and
down the living room. By late afternoon, her face is flushed, blouse wet
with sweat. She takes a cool shower and dons her robe, and then she
sits staring at the phone the rest of the afternoon.
"Poor white trash," she mutters, "And a heathen to boot!"
The next morning, Miss Lily gets up early and brews herself a pot
of strong coffee. She drinks it black. After ward, she makes a western
omelet, complete with ham, green peppers, onions, gobs of cheese, and
anything else she can find in the fridge.
"To hell with cholesterol!" she says, digging into her omelet, "To hell with it all!"
After she takes her last sip of coffee, she rises and paces up
and down the living room, a memory flashing through her mind She is a
child, running in circles, turning flips on the lawn. "Calm down, girl,"
her father laughs, "You've got ants in your pants!"
She stops and looks out the window, wringing her hands, eyes
darting here and there, and then she rushes to her bedroom and hurriedly
dresses. Minutes later she is in her Buick and skidding out of the
driveway.
She turns the radio on as she whizzes down the country road,
moving the dial to the classic country station, singing along with Randy
Travis "I'm diggin' up bones; I'm diggin' up bones, exhuming things
that better left alone..."
As she nears Fuzzy's house she stops singing, and by the time she
pulls into the driveway and cuts off the motor she is shaking like a
leaf and weak as a feather. The Golden Retriever appears and begins
barking, circling the car, but she gets out and heads toward the house.
The front door opens and a man appears. He is shirtless; no hair on his chest; no hair on his head.
He starts to say something, but she rushes forward.
"There you are, you heathen!" she yells, her body quivering,
heart thumping. She throws herself into his arms, his man-scent
enveloping her. "Give me my late corn! Now!
- THE END -
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