Jack's body had been found that morning, but still, I went hoping to see him at the river. I sat on the bank, closed my eyes, and prayed. I prayed that somehow Jack could appear in the water, swim towards me, get out of the water, and sit next to me on the bank. Please God..., but no, I opened my eyes and saw only the moon and water. I saw things in my mind, in my prayers, but I knew those things couldn't be if I couldn't see them with my eyes. My mind's view faded and what I saw with my eyes was a moon that offered peace and a river that offered taunts.
She didn't say anything and neither did I. Nothing came to mind to say to her. I guess nothing came to her mind either. I looked at her a few times, she kept her attention focused on the river. After a short while, she rose, and without looking at me, she turned and left.
I broke the silence, "Where have you been?"
She turned her head to me, said nothing, and then turned back to the river.
"Jack?"
I decided, in my mind, what she looked like and guessed her facial expressions from how she moved her head, shoulders and torso. The way she cocked her head, held her head still, shook her head, quickly or slowly turned her head away, I could see facial expressions in all that. I saw more in how she moved the rest of her body. I could see her shrug her shoulders. I could see her shoulders slump. Truth is, it was probably too dark for me to see any of that, but still, I saw it.
She turned her head to me, and though I couldn't see her face in the dark, I knew I had insulted her from her response.
"Why do you come to the river? "her shoulders hunched.
I wasn't saying colored folks shouldn't be at the river. I was trying to ask why she came in the middle of the night with only a moon to light. It was about three o'clock when she showed, a time when any person with any sense would be asleep. The only three folks I'd seen at the river that late were Jack, her, and me. I didn't say any of that. I just left her feeling insulted.
She told me, "that night you were here, that wasn't the first night between your brother and me. I didn't know him. Probably wouldn't have known him in the light of day. But that wasn't the first night between him and me, here at the river."
I searched for words.
I got up, and without looking in her direction, I walked into the woods and ended up an hour or so later, lying awake in bed, with tears still streaming down my face.
Still, I kept going to the river, and so did she. I had to find out about her. I hoped she knew something about Jack I didn't know. I hoped she could make Jack's death understandable to me. She wouldn't talk about him to me. She never said a single word to me about Jack; she never spoke his name.
She came to greet me with a nod of her head that I took as friendly and answered, with a worried head nod of my own. She began to talk more to me. She'd say more that I could understand. When I say she was saying things I couldn't understand, I mean sometimes she'd turn her head away before speaking, sometimes she'd talk in a voice that wasn't loud enough for me to clearly hear, sometimes she just repeated the same sentence over and over.
She had this great fear that her grandmother was soon to leave her as well.
"My grandmama was always an out-and-about kind of person. She was nothing like me. She had lots of friends, she always was on the move. She used to drag me off to church, off to town to the grocer, off to visit her friends. After her sight left her, I just shut the two of us away and none of her friends remembered to come see her. 'Let's say a prayer for Sister Christina,' I could almost hear the preacher say in church, but he never came by either.
" And now my grandmama...."
She was a bit taller than me and still quite thin, her stomach excluded. She was an attractive girl; dark, warm eyes; thick lips; broad forehead. Not much like I had pictured her in the moonlight.
"I'll do the best I can," was her response when I brought her needing help up.
"It's unusually warm for October, "he said with a smile. He didn't remove his jacket. Each time I looked at him, I'd receive a smile and a nod of his head in return. If I could have gotten inside that man's head, what I might have found might have stopped me in my tracks. We left the paved road for a dirt road, left the dirt road when we reached a barbed wire fence that was more down than up. I looked to the preacher, and something in his smile told me he knew where we were and who we were there to see.