Julia Watts - Finding H.F. Read online




  Table of Contents

  Part One: The Flood

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Part Two: The Journey

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Epilogue

  Publications from Bella Books, Inc.

  Copyright © 2001 by Julia Watts

  Bella Books, Inc.

  P.O. Box 10543

  Tallahassee, FL 32302

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, without permission in writing from the publisher.

  Originally published by Alyson Books 2001

  First Bella Books Edition 2011

  Cover Designer: Judy Fellows

  ISBN 13: 978-1-59493-285-4

  “God gave Noah the rainbow sign, don’t you see?”

  —traditional hymn

  Part One:

  The Flood

  Chapter One

  When somebody asks what my initials stand for, I always say the same thing: “You promise not to laugh if I tell you?” Whoever it is always promises, and then when I tell them, they bust out laughing anyway.

  I used to get mad when kids laughed at my name—I even got into fights about it on the playground in grade school—but now I don’t blame people for laughing. My name is funny. It fits me about as well as the blue coat Memaw bought me when I was in third grade. When I tried it on, she looked at how the sleeves hung down long and loose like the arms on an orangutan and said, “You’ll grow into it.” And four years later I did.

  I guess Memaw hopes I’ll grow into my name the same way I grew into that blue coat, but I’ll tell you right now, it ain’t gonna happen. I know what Memaw was thinking when she named me—here comes the name, promise not to laugh—Heavenly Faith. (And don’t think I didn’t hear you laughing just now.) She was thinking, If I give my grandbaby a name that puts her close to the Lord, she won’t make the same mistakes her momma did. She’ll put her faith in heaven and not let the sins of this earth drag her down.

  Well, let’s just say the name didn’t take.

  It’s not like I’m a bad girl exactly, but I’m sure not the girl Memaw was picturing when she came up with that crazy name. And I’m not the girl she thought I would grow up to be when she was filling my head with every Bible story and hymn that ever was. She dragged me to Sunday school, vacation Bible school, and services at the Morgan Freewill Baptist Tabernacle until I got so big that she couldn’t drag me anymore.

  Of course, when I was little I didn’t hate all that church stuff. Some of the Bible stories were fun in a blood-and-guts kinda way, and I used to love the picture in the Sunday school room of all the animals lined up to get on Noah’s Ark. And the cookies and Kool-Aid at Bible school always tasted good.

  But the thing is, I never believed those Bible stories were real any more than I believed The Poky Little Puppy was real when Memaw read it to me. I didn’t believe in those Bible things any more than I believed in talking dogs that ate strawberry shortcake. That’s what makes my name so funny. Heavenly Faith, my foot! If I can’t see it, hear it, smell it, touch it, or taste it, I don’t believe in it.

  That’s why I make everybody call me H.F. Well, everybody but Memaw. I let her call me Faith, without the “Heavenly” part, because I feel sorry for her. She didn’t get the granddaughter she asked for, so I let her use part of the name she gave me as a consolation prize...like on game shows when you don’t win the big money so they give you a case of Rice-A-Roni to make you feel better.

  Don’t get me wrong. I know Memaw loves me. I know it because I see it and hear it every day—the way she mends my ratty blue jeans instead of making me wear dresses, the way she lets me eat macaroni and cheese straight out of the pan. Even how she rubs the top of my head and says, “I swear, I don’t know what I’m gonna do with you” is full of love. But I know I’m not the model granddaughter she asked for. She says she’s glad of one thing, though: At least I’m not boy-crazy.

  If Memaw knew the truth—that I’m girl-crazy instead—I don’t know what she’d do. Pray and cry and try to get me “cured,” I reckon. One thing’s for sure: She’d never understand it, and neither would most people in Morgan, Kentucky, which ain’t exactly San Francisco, if you know what I mean. So to keep from making trouble for me and other people, I keep my mouth shut and try to feel good that at least I won’t break Memaw’s heart by getting pregnant before I finish high school, which is what my momma did.

  The fact that my mother got pregnant when she was 15 years old is one of the few things I know about her, and of course, the only reason I know that much is because it’s why I’m here.

  Here’s what I do know about her: Her name is Sondra Louise Simms, and she was the youngest—by 16 years—of three children. Uncle Bobby, who eats supper with Memaw and me every week or so, told me he barely knew his little sister.

  “She wasn’t nothin’ but a baby the whole time I was livin’ at home,” he told me one night as he sat at the kitchen table drinking his third cup of coffee. “And then I went off and joined the Army. By the time I got back home, I didn’t hardly recognize her.”

  I’d love to ask Mom’s other brother, Gary, about her. But he lives up in Ohio, so we don’t get a chance to talk much.

  Most of the pictures Memaw has are from when Momma was little. She was a pretty, dark-eyed baby who looks real serious in all the pictures—not all gummy, drooly smiles like a lot of babies. If the photographer was making silly faces at her or telling her to watch the funny puppet, she wasn’t having any of it. In every picture she looks as serious as a little funeral director.

  There’s just one picture of Momma from when she was older. Memaw says Momma was 15 when Uncle Bobby snapped that picture, so I don’t know if I was already growing inside her. If she was pregnant, she wasn’t too far gone, because her belly don’t bulge at all under her tight jeans. She’s standing in front of Memaw’s little white frame house, wearing a black Van Halen T-shirt and holding a cigarette. Her hair is thick and dark and wavy, not like mine, which is stick-straight and dishwater blond.

  I always try to see some resemblance between her and me, but I can’t. Whoever my daddy was, he must have been a plain-looking, blue-eyed skinny boy, since that’s what I look like, right down to the “boy” part.

  In the picture, though, my mother doesn’t look like a boy at all. She has curves everywhere she’s supposed to have them and these long, fringy eyelashes. She looks pretty but mad, like the last thing she wants to be doing is having her picture took, and the last place she wants to be is hanging around this old house in Morgan, with all of Memaw’s concrete frogs and geese in the tiny front yard.

  And I guess this was the last place she wanted to be. Momma left Memaw and me when she was 16, the same age I am now.

  Every time I ask Memaw about the day Momma left, she says the same thing: “That day like to killed me.”

  When my mother told Memaw she was pregnant, Memaw planned everything out so she could stay in school. I wasn’t due until July, so she could have me during summer vacation and then be back at school to start her sophomore year. Momma lived up to part of the bargain: She finished her freshman year and had me in the summer. She even went back to
start her sophomore year. But the day after my mother’s 16th birthday, Memaw knocked on her bedroom door and found her and all of her belongings gone—everything but the little white Bible Memaw gave her for her 12th birthday. All of Memaw’s plans were shot to hell in that instant, and I was still snoozing away in my crib.

  Memaw could’ve called the police, but she didn’t. She says she figured Momma would show in a few days, out of money and ready for a hot meal. When she didn’t, Memaw asked Uncle Bobby to call a guy he knew from the Army, a private investigator up in Richmond. He tracked Momma down to a town in South Carolina once, but she disappeared before he could talk to her.

  Memaw’s money started disappearing too, into the pockets of the private investigator, and pretty soon she had to choose between paying out money on the chance she would find my mother or paying to feed and clothe me. “So,” Memaw always says, “I chose you. But I never stopped praying for your mother.”

  I only know this much because I kept driving Memaw crazy with questions until she had to answer them. Maybe I ought to be a private investigator myself.

  Most of the time, though, we don’t talk about Momma, because, like Memaw says, there’s no point in talking about her. She hasn’t showed up in 16 years, which means she’s not that interested in us, right?

  But I’m a curious person. I can’t help thinking about her, and sometimes I wonder if she’s even a tiny bit curious about me. I’ve made Memaw promise that if she ever hears anything from her—a letter, postcard, anything—she has to show it to me. But there’s been nothing.

  It’s not like I spend all my time pining for my mother. Most days I don’t even think about her. Or I just think about her once or twice. I do have a life.

  Unlike Momma, I fully intend to graduate from high school. I’m finishing up my sophomore year at Morgan High, and except for math, I like the book-learning part of school just fine. It’s the people I can’t stand—not all the people, but the cheerleaders and jocks and the people who walk around and every step they take says, My daddy has money, and you don’t even know who your daddy is.

  But it’s not the money thing or even the illegitimate thing that makes me such an outcast—it’s that the cheerleaders and jocks and popular kids know I’m different. Different on the inside. Like lions on nature shows that sniff out which gazelle is ripest for the picking, those people can sniff out difference—and it’s a smell they hate.

  I guess I’m lucky, though, because I’m not the only one in school who’s different. I don’t have to be a lonely gazelle limping along while the lions stalk me. I’ve got Bo for a friend, and bless his heart, he’s got it a lot rougher than I do. The sissy boys always have it harder than the tomboys. If you’re a boyish girl, other girls just snub you, but if you’re a girlish boy, other boys beat the living hell out of you. Believe me, I’ve picked Bo up off the pavement more times than I can count.

  Sometimes a nice teacher comes along and stops the fight—not that you could really call it a fight, because it’s always four or more guys against Bo. But most teachers pretend not to notice, because they’re just older versions of the boys who are kicking the crap out of the “faggot.” They also smell that Bo’s different, and they think he deserves a good butt whipping because of it.

  But I gotta hand it to Bo. He gets his licks in—not with his fists but with his brains. Like the hot pepper incident, for example.

  Bo’s daddy is one of those macho men who likes to prove how tough he is by eating peppers so hot they make blisters on your gums. Back in the fall, after the football boys had beat him up pretty bad, Bo snuck into his daddy’s hot pepper supply and stole a few of the ones his daddy grows special—some Mexican kind that’s supposed to be the hottest pepper on earth.

  Me and Bo put the peppers in a blender and chopped them up till they turned into this scary-looking nuclear-green juice. Bo sneaked into the football locker room one Friday afternoon before a game and dabbed a little bit of the pepper juice onto every jock strap he could find.

  Since Bo is in the marching band, he got to see it all. That night, the Morgan High School Rebels came running out on the field for the big game against the Taylorsville Blue Devils, only to fall to the ground, screaming and digging at their crotches like crazed animals. The game was canceled, and the team ran over each other and mowed down a few cheerleaders in their rush to get to the showers.

  I was scared to death that somebody would figure out Bo did it and kill him, but he said I was giving the jocks too much credit. I remember him grinning extra wide, even though his lip was still split from his last beating. “I reckon I showed them sumbitches that there’s some things worse than a busted lip,” he laughed. “Even if they did find out and kill me, it just might be worth it.”

  Right now I’m sitting in the institutional-green hall here at dear old Morgan High, waiting for Bo to get out of band practice. Me and Bo spend most afternoons together, doing a whole lot of nothing.

  Bo’s got a car—or what passes for one—a beat-up old brown Ford Escort he bought with money he saved from playing music in different churches. So most afternoons we just ride around. Sometimes we stop at the Dixie Diner for a chili dog or the G&J Drive-In for a root beer, but mostly we just drive the back roads and talk, staying out as long as we can without getting in trouble for being late for supper.

  For Bo, the trouble he’d get in would be deep. Like I said, Bo’s dad is a tough guy, and I’m sure he wasn’t thinking he had a sissy on his hands when he named his firstborn son Pierre Beauregard, after his favorite Confederate general. Bo’s younger brother, Nathan, is just like Bo’s daddy. He’s just in the eighth grade, but he already wears a “Confederate States of America” belt buckle. Bo says he wonders if the hospital made a mistake when he was born and gave him to the wrong family.

  The band room door swings open, and all the little band nerds come trooping out, Bo along with them. His blond hair is carefully arranged in short, neat waves around his heart-shaped, acne-free face. In a testosterone-soaked town like Morgan, Bo is almost too pretty for his own good. When he spots me, he gives me a little wave with his flute case. He’s the only boy flute player in the band, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he was the only boy flute player in all of Kentucky.

  Bo is wearing this shiny green vest over a collarless shirt, looking all snazzy. He buys all his clothes from catalogs with the money he gets from his church gigs. He says he wouldn’t go to a dog’s funeral wearing the clothes you can buy in Morgan.

  “Hey, sugar!” He waves his little flute case at me. “You ready to go ridin’ around?”

  “Sure.” I reach down and pick up my schoolbag off the floor, but when I stand up and see the person in front of me, I freeze like a possum in headlights.

  Wendy Cook is the most beautiful girl I’ve seen in my life, and that includes TV and movie actresses. She has long, curly, red hair that stands out from her pretty face like a burning bush. She’s always wearing these long, flowered dresses with boots or clogs, and she’s always carrying a book with her—not a schoolbook, but a book she’s reading for fun.

  Wendy and her parents moved here last year when her dad got a job teaching at Randall College, Morgan’s only institution of higher learning, which is run by people who are about as Jesus-crazy as Memaw is. The Cooks lived in Pennsylvania before, and I don’t think Wendy’s very happy in Morgan. How could she be? One of the biggest strikes a person can have against somebody in this town is them not being from around here.

  It’s totally ridiculous for me to have a crush on Wendy. Like that poem we read in English the other day said, “Let me count the ways.” It’s totally ridiculous because (1) she’s a girl and so am I; (2) her dad’s a college professor, and I’m going to be the only member of my family who even graduated from high school; (3) she’s been to New York City and overseas, and I’ve never been farther away from home than Lexington, (4) she...

  “Me and H.F. was about to go ridin’ around,” Bo is saying to Wendy, who I�
�ve been staring at like a crazy person for I don’t know how long. “Wanna come with us?”

  I can’t believe he’s doing this. If I so much as lay eyes on the girl, my tongue turns to rubber in my mouth. How does he expect me to talk to her?

  “A tempting offer, but I’ve got to head over to Randall for my piano lesson.”

  I’m relieved and disappointed at the same time.

  “Well, you have fun tinkling them ivories, sugar,” Bo says.

  Wendy crinkles up her freckled nose. “I’ll try. Well...see you, Bo...H.F.”

  “See ya,” Bo says. I manage to say “See ya” too, but not until Wendy is already out the door.

  Chapter Two

  “You sure got it bad for Pippi Longstocking,” Bo says as we’re pulling out of the parking lot of the G&J Drive-In.

  “She does not look like Pippi Longstocking.” I’m trying to sound annoyed, but I’m laughing.

  “Who’re you tryin’ to kid? All them freckles and that red hair? Put her in pigtails and stick her finger in a light socket, and she’d be Pippi Longstocking.”

  “It’s bad enough I’ve got a useless crush on this girl,” I say. “Now you’ve gotta make fun of me for it.”

  “I’m not making fun of you... I’m making fun of her.” I watch him spot a sign marked DEER CREEK ROAD. “Hey, let’s see where this road goes,” he says, making a sudden turn.

  “I bet it goes past trailers and churches and cow fields like every other dang road in this county. I’d be real surprised if we landed in front of the Taj Mahal.” I look out the window as we pass a trailer with children in their underwear playing in the front yard. “Anyway, why are you making fun of Wendy? I thought you liked her fine.”

  “Shoot, H.F., I don’t have nothin’ against her. It’s just like you said: It’s a useless crush. And if it’s useless, I don’t feel like I ought to be encouragin’ it.”