eVersion 1.0 – click for scan notes SOMETHING BRIGHT Zenna Henderson Do you remember the Depression? The black shadow across time? That hurting place in the consciousness of the world? Maybe not. Maybe it's like asking do you remember the Dark Ages. Except what would I know about the price of eggs in the Dark Ages? I knew plenty about prices in the Depression. If you had a quarter—first find your quarter—and five hungry kids, you could supper them on two cans of soup and a loaf of day-old bread, or two quarts of milk and a loaf of day-old bread. It was filling and—in an after- thoughty kind of way—nourishing. But if you were one of the hungry five, you eventually began to feel erosion set in, and your teeth ached for substance. But to go back to eggs. Those were a precious commodity. You savored them slowly or gulped them eagerly—unmistakably as eggs—boiled or fried. That's one reason why I remember Mrs. Klevity. She had eggs for breakfast! And every day! That's one reason why I remember Mrs. Klevity. I didn't know about the eggs the time she came over to see Mom, who had just got home from a twelve- hour day, cleaning up after other people at thirty cents an hour. Mrs. Klevity lived in the same court as we did. Courtesy called it a court because we were all dependent on the same shower house and two toilets that occupied the shack square in the middle of the court. All of us except the Big House, of course. It had a bathroom of its own and even a radio blaring Nobody's Business and Should I Reveal and had ceiling lights that didn't dangle nakedly at the end of a cord. But then it really wasn't a part of the court. Only its back door shared our area, and even that was different. It had two back doors in the same frame—a screen one and a wooden one! Our own two-room place had a distinction too. It had an upstairs. One room the size of our two. The Man Upstairs lived up there. He was mostly only the sound of footsteps overhead and an occasional cookie for Danna. Anyway, Mrs. Klevity came over before Mom had time to put her shopping bag of work clothes down or even to unpleat the folds of fatigue that dragged her face down ten years or more of time to come. I didn't much like Mrs. Klevity. She made me uncomfortable. She was so solid and slow-moving and so nearly blind that she peered frighteningly wherever she went. She stood in the doorway as though she had been stacked there like bricks and a dress drawn hastily down over the stack and a face sketched on beneath a fuzz of hair. Us kids all gathered around to watch, except Danna who snuffled wearily into my neck. Day nursery or not, it was a long, hard day for a four- year-old. 'I wondered if one of your girls could sleep at my house this week.' Her voice was as slow as her steps. 'At your house?' Mom massaged her hand where the shopping-bag handles had crisscrossed it. 'Come in. Sit down.' We had two chairs and a bench and two apple boxes. The boxes scratched bare legs, but surely they couldn't scratch a stack of bricks. 'No, thanks.' Maybe she couldn't bend! 'My husband will be away several days and I don't like to be in the house alone at night.' 'Of course,' said Mom. 'You must feel awfully alone.' The only aloneness she knew, what with five kids and two rooms, was the taut secretness of her inward thoughts as she mopped and swept and ironed in other houses. 'Sure, one of the girls would be glad to keep you company.' There was a darting squirm and LaNell was safely hidden behind the swaying of our clothes in the diagonally curtained corner of the other room, and Kathy knelt swiftly just beyond the dresser, out of sight. 'Anna is eleven.' I had no place to hide, burdened as I was with Danna. 'She's old enough. What time do you want her to come over?' 'Oh, bedtime will do.' Mrs. Klevity peered out the door at the darkening sky. 'Nine o'clock. Only it gets dark before then—' Bricks can look anxious, I guess. 'As soon as she has supper, she can come,' said Mom, handling my hours as though they had no value to me. 'Of course she has to go to school tomorrow.' 'Only when it's dark,' said Mrs. Klevity. 'Day is all right. How much should I pay you?' 'Pay?' Mom gestured with one hand. 'She has to sleep anyway. It doesn't matter to her where, once she's asleep. A favor for a friend.' I wanted to cry out: whose favor for what friend? We hardly passed the time of day with Mrs. Klevity. I couldn't even remember Mr. Klevity except that he was straight and old and wrinkled. Uproot me and make me lie in a strange house, a strange dark, listening to a strange breathing, feeling a strange warmth making itself part of me for all night long, seeping into me … 'Mom—' I said. 'I'll give her breakfast,' said Mrs. Klevity. 'And lunch money for each night she comes.' I resigned myself without a struggle. Lunch money each day—a whole dime! Mom couldn't afford to pass up such a blessing, such a gift from God, who unerringly could be trusted to ease the pinch just before it became intolerable. 'Thank you, God,' I whispered as I went to get the can opener to open supper. For a night or two I could stand it. I felt all naked and unprotected as I stood in my flimsy crinkle cotton pajamas, one bare foot atop the other, waiting for Mrs. Klevity to turn the bed down. 'We have to check the house first,' she said thickly. 'We can't go to bed until we check the house.' 'Check the house?' I forgot my starchy stiff shyness enough to question. 'What for?' Mrs. Klevity peered at me in the dim light of the bedroom. They had three rooms for only the two of them! Even if there was no door to shut between the bedroom and the kitchen. 'I couldn't sleep,' she said, 'unless I looked first. I have to.' So we looked. Behind the closet curtain, under the table—Mrs. Klevity even looked in the portable oven that sat near the two-burner stove in the kitchen. When we came to the bed, I was moved to words again. 'But we've been in here with the doors locked ever since I got here. What could possibly—' 'A prowler?' said Mrs. Klevity nervously, after a brief pause for thought. 'A criminal?' Mrs. Klevity pointed her face at me. I doubt if she could see me from that distance. 'Doors make no difference,' she said. 'It might be when you least expect, so you have to expect all the time.' 'I'll look,' I said humbly. She was older than Mom. She was nearly blind. She was one of God's Also Unto Me's. 'No,' she said. 'I have to. I couldn't be sure, else.' So I waited until she grunted and groaned to her knees, then bent stiffly to lift the limp spread. Her fingers hesitated briefly, then flicked the spread up. Her breath came out flat and finished. Almost disappointed, it seemed to me. She turned the bed down and I crept across the gray, wrinkled sheets and, turning my back to the room, I huddled one ear on the flat tobacco-smelling pillow and lay tense and uncomfortable in the dark, as her weight shaped and re-shaped the bed around me. There was a brief silence before I heard the soundless breathy shape of her words, 'How long, O God, how long?' I wondered through my automatic Bless Papa and Mama—and the automatic back-up because Papa had abdicated from my specific prayers—bless Mama and my brother and sisters—what it was that Mrs. Klevity was finding too long to bear. After a restless waking, dozing sort of night that strange sleeping places held for me, I awoke to a thin, chilly morning and the sound of Mrs. Klevity moving around. She had set the table for breakfast, a formality we never had time for at home. I scrambled out of bed and into my clothes with only my skinny, goosefleshed back between Mrs. Klevity and me for modesty. I felt uncomfortable and unfinished because I hadn't brought our comb
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