Read Leota's Garden Page 9


  “Think how much more you could’ve done, Annie, if only you’d tried a little harder. If I’d had your opportunities . . .”

  Annie knew no matter what she did, it would never be enough.

  Or was she just trying to excuse herself for running out?

  Dropping her highlighter, she rested her head on her crossed arms. Lord, am I a quitter like my mother said? Am I a coward? Am I afraid I wouldn’t be able to make it at a real college?

  “You’re just like your grandma Leota!”

  She could still see the look in her mother’s eyes when she had said it.

  “Annie?” Susan said softly. “You okay?”

  “I’m okay.” She rubbed her forehead. “I’m just trying to put all the pieces together.”

  “Maybe you should just walk away. Give her time.”

  Annie looked up, stricken. She knew Susan didn’t care much for her mother. Nora Gaines had never done anything to make Susan feel welcome. Sometimes she wouldn’t even take the message when Susan called. “That girl,” she always said in that certain tone she could take on, as though Susan carried some kind of social disease. “Why don’t you cultivate a friendship with Laura Danvers. She comes from a good family.” Which, of course, meant a family with wealth and social standing . . . someone else who lived inside the gates.

  Her mother didn’t understand. Things had probably changed a lot since her days in high school. Maybe then things were the way they appeared. Not anymore. Laura Danvers was pretty and dressed nicely, but she also had a cocaine addiction.

  “Her mother says Laura goes to parties all the time and has a wonderful time. Why won’t you go when you’re invited?”

  Because Annie knew what went on at the parties. She wasn’t into that scene. She didn’t want to fit in when it meant smoking pot, drinking, or having sex. Sure, Laura was popular. When she was high, she went along with any guy who happened to be with her. Everyone in school knew she had had two abortions before she was seventeen. And just before graduation practice had started, one of the girls in the gym said Laura had tested positive for HIV.

  Annie’s mother knew none of that, and Annie didn’t feel it was her place to talk about Laura’s private life. She also didn’t want to get involved with Laura’s crowd. They all thought they were being so cool, but all they were doing was throwing away their lives with both hands.

  Besides, even if Annie told her mother everything that went on in the corridors of the high school or at the parties, it wouldn’t matter. Her mother probably wouldn’t believe her. Nora saw only what she wanted to see. She looked at Susan with her long, black-dyed hair and nose ring and saw trouble. She looked at Laura Danvers with her eighty-dollar haircut and Saks Fifth Avenue clothes and saw class. And that was that. Her mind was set.

  I’m guilty, too, Lord. I’m not what people see. I’ve worn a mask. I’ve pretended everything was fine because I haven’t wanted to witness to my mother. I’ve just obeyed her, Lord. I’ve tried so hard. And I was afraid, too. I admit it. I’ve been afraid to face my mother’s wrath. And now that I’ve left home, I’m afraid if I go one step further and see my grandmother, my mother will never forgive me.

  “Love the Lord your God . . .”

  “Annie?”

  She felt Susan’s hand on her back. She let out a shaky sigh and sat up. Raking a hand through her hair, she crossed her legs Indian fashion and looked at her dearest friend. “Suzie, I don’t know if I’m doing the right thing.”

  Susan sat down on the rug with her. “What can be wrong with seeing your grandmother?”

  “You don’t understand. My family isn’t like yours. Everything’s complicated.” So complicated she couldn’t see the beginning, middle, or end of the mess. Just a thread, that’s all she wanted—just a slender thread so she could grasp what had happened to make her mother so bitter. Maybe then she could begin the process of untangling some small part of the jumble of knots.

  Oh, Lord, I want to understand my mother. I don’t want to end up hating her the way she hates her mother. “Love one another,” You said. Help me do that. Please help me.

  “I’m so nervous.” Annie held out her hands. They were shaking.

  Susan reached out and took hold of them. “It’ll be okay.”

  “Suzie, I don’t even know where to start. What do you talk about with your grandparents?”

  “Everything! They love talking about the past. Granny Addie talks about her father all the time. I never met my great-grandfather, but I feel as though I know him because she’s told me so much about him. He jumped ship in San Francisco in 1905 and was there during the 1906 earthquake. And he was still alive when Neil Armstrong walked on the moon. Isn’t that cool? Grandma and Grandpa both grew up during the Great Depression and lived through World War II. You just ask a couple of questions and they’re off and running with a dozen stories. Some I’ve heard a hundred times, but it’s still fun. Especially when they’re telling us tidbits about the folks when they were little and into things. It’s a kick.”

  “My mother says all my grandmother cared about was her job.”

  Susan frowned. “What did she do?”

  Annie shrugged. “I don’t know. My mother’s never said.”

  “Well, that’s a start right there, Annie. Ask your grandmother about her work.”

  “There are so many things I want to ask her.” She looked down at the map and the yellow line tracing the route to the neighborhood in Oakland. Leota Reinhardt lived a couple of blocks off the MacArthur Freeway. The house should be easy enough to find.

  “Do you want me to go with you? I could call and see if Hank could switch me with one of the other girls.”

  “Thanks, Suzie, but I’ll go by myself this time.”

  “Call 911,” Barnaby squawked.

  Annie and Susan laughed.

  Chapter 5

  Annie took the Fruitvale exit off MacArthur Freeway. She turned right at the bottom of the hill, drove another block, and turned left. An old brick church stood majestically on the corner at the base of a hilly, tree-lined avenue. The street was narrow and lined with charming little wood-and-stucco cottages. Each one had a front porch, and though some of the homes looked run down, with yard work and a fresh coat of paint they would be enchanting. Great-Grandma and Great-Grandpa Reinhardt had probably lived here during a time when people sat outside in the fading evening light, visiting with their neighbors and watching their children play together.

  Annie made a U-turn at the end of the block, in front of an old brick elementary school. She drove back slowly and pulled up in front of the house that bore the numbers of her grandmother’s address. Two little black girls were playing hopscotch on the sidewalk next door. They were dressed alike in blue jeans and bright-pink sweaters, their hair in beaded cornrows. As Annie got out of her car, the girls paused in their game to watch her warily.

  She smiled. “Hello!”

  They smiled back, though they didn’t say anything. Their parents had probably told them never to talk to strangers.

  Leaning back inside her car, Annie reached for her purse and the present she had brought for her grandmother. She looped her purse strap onto her shoulder and pushed the door shut. Studying the small house before her, she thought it must at one time have been one of the prettiest on the street. Rhododendrons and azaleas grew along the front of the house. There were no blooms now, but in a few months, the bushes would be covered. The lawn was in poor shape, but proper mowing, a weed treatment, and some fertilizing would bring it back in no time. The barren tree in front looked like it could be a winter-dormant flowering plum, beautiful in blossom. There were several such trees in her mother and stepfather’s backyard, all carefully tended by Marvin Tikado’s gardening service.

  The border alongside her grandmother’s house was entangled with climbing rosebushes. Pink roses, Annie remembered. The white picket fence would be glorious when the vines leafed up and covered it with blossoms. She saw the wisteria overhanging the carpo
rt at the end of the drive. Soon, its lavender blooms would hang like overripe bunches of grapes, mingling with the scent of roses.

  This home must be simply glorious in spring.

  Brightly painted front steps greeted her, and there was an old rocking chair pushed back in the corner of the front porch, its seat so worn, Annie thought, her grandmother must have spent countless hours sitting outside. It was dusty and cobwebbed now, but perhaps when the colder weather passed, Grandma Leota would sit outside again. The rhododendrons were too high in front to see over them to the street, but that could quickly be remedied. Annie also noticed the hanging pots and thought how pretty they would be filled with fuchsias dripping hot-pink and purple comet-shaped blossoms.

  Her heart thumping, Annie rang the bell. She thought she could hear the television playing inside. Grandma Leota must be home. The question was, would she open the door to someone she hadn’t seen in years . . . someone she probably wouldn’t even recognize?

  Lord, please let my grandmother invite me in. Help me not to say anything that will upset her and close any lines of communication between us. Help me see things clearly from all sides. Lord, help.

  She waited, hoping, excited, her stomach trembling with niggling fears and uncertainties. Why should she expect any kind of welcome? Had she even bothered to write? She thought of a dozen ways she had slighted her grandmother without even thinking about it. She didn’t even know when Leota’s birthday was.

  The door opened a crack. “If you’re selling something, I’m not interested.”

  “Grandma Leota? I’m Annie. Annie Gardner.”

  The old woman looked at her oddly. “Annie?”

  She must not remember. Why should she? “Annie Gardner,” she said again, hoping to jog her grandmother’s memory. It had been such a long time. Her mother and father had divorced when Anne was five, and she could count on one hand the number of times she had been brought over here. “Nora’s daughter.”

  She looked into her grandmother’s brown eyes but couldn’t read her expression. Did her grandmother remember anything? Maybe she had even forgotten she had grandchildren.

  Annie’s heart sank.

  Leota remembered. Oh, indeed, she remembered. She just couldn’t speak past the lump in her throat as she looked at the beautiful young girl standing on her porch. How many years had it been since she last saw her granddaughter? Anne-Lynn Gardner wasn’t a little girl anymore. She was tall and slender, with that lovely fall of strawberry-blonde hair. She was holding an African violet with lovely purple blooms. How did Annie know violets were her favorite flowers? The plant was in a little pink ceramic pot.

  “Nora’s daughter, Grandma Leota,” the girl said again, clearly distressed.

  “I know who you are.” Leota was dismayed that she sounded so gruff and impatient. She opened the door a little wider to show the girl she was welcome. After all these years, little Annie was a young woman. Oh, God, all those lost years. Leota’s throat closed tight.

  Annie stepped inside and glanced to where the television was still on. “I hope I’m not interrupting.”

  Leota stepped over and punched the Power button. “Geraldo can live without me.”

  The room fell into silence. She turned and looked at her granddaughter again, studying her. She could see Eleanor in the girl. She had her mouth and nose, with some of her father in her as well. Those beautiful blue eyes. Leota drank in the sight of her, wondering what to say, wondering why she had come. She must have some reason. She looked nervous and embarrassed. “Are those violets for me?” Leota smiled at her, hoping to put her at ease.

  “Oh! Yes. Of course.” She held them out in both hands, as though they were an offering.

  “My favorite flowers,” Leota said as she took them and admired the soft, velvety, purple petals. “How did you know?”

  “I didn’t,” Annie said softly. “I thought they were pretty and that you might like them.”

  “I do. Very much. Thank you.” She thought of the violets she had planted in her yard and how lovely they had looked peeping up from the feather moss. She looked at Annie, wondering again why she had come, yet too afraid to ask. Why spoil the moment? “Would you like something to drink? Tea? Coffee?”

  “Anything would be fine.”

  “Come into the kitchen then. I’ll fix us some tea.”

  Tea. With her granddaughter.

  I wonder when I’ll wake up from this lovely, lovely dream?

  Annie followed her grandmother. She hadn’t expected Leota to be so small. She was only about five feet tall and thin. Her hair was white and pinned up in a French roll with wisps here and there. She was wearing an old-fashioned, white cardigan, a blue flower-print dress, and pink slippers. Annie thought she looked adorable. Her grandmother held the pot of violets as though it were her most cherished possession. She looked at it for a long moment and then set it carefully on a small table by the windows. A newspaper was spread out, and Annie noticed the half-worked crossword puzzle. Then she noticed the backyard. Oh, how sad . . .

  “I remember your garden. I thought it was Wonderland.”

  Leota glanced up. “Wonderland?” That description seemed to please her; then a sadness filled her expression as she followed her granddaughter’s gaze. “Well, it’s not a wonderland anymore. It’s a jungle. I haven’t done any gardening in a long time.”

  “Are the elves still there?”

  “Elves?” Leota thought for a moment, but she couldn’t remember.

  “In the rose lattice back by the vegetable garden. There were green, porcelain elves sitting on the slats. Three of them, I think. Just big enough to fit in the palm of your hand.”

  “Oh, my, I’d forgotten all about them.” She had put those little figurines out years ago when Michael was just a child, hoping he would take delight in them and they might spark some sense of surprise in him. When he never mentioned them, she forgot all about them.

  “There was a big green frog, too,” Annie said, smiling as she looked out the window. “Over there in the far corner where those calla lilies are growing.”

  Leota warmed at the way Annie remembered details about the garden. “I imagine he’s still there. I haven’t moved him.” She had put those silly things in the garden to bring joy to her grandchildren, but they had never been around long enough for her to know if they’d even noticed them. She’d dreamed once, long ago, of having Easter egg hunts and . . .

  She turned her thoughts from going down that rocky path again. What good was it, going over past hurts and disappointments? Thinking about what might have been never made things better.

  Annie looked around the kitchen, and Leota wondered what her granddaughter thought about it. It was small and cozy. At one time, it had been very cheerful, with its canary-yellow walls and white cabinets. The window over the kitchen sink looked straight across into the neighbor’s kitchen. Annie wouldn’t know it could be pushed up so ladies could talk back and forth while they did their dishes and their children played in the backyard.

  “What would you like?” Leota watched Annie’s face as she looked around the room. She had such a sweet expression. What a contrast to that young man who had come to “volunteer.”

  “Whatever you’re having, Grandma Leota. Could we sit in here?”

  “You sit anywhere you want, dear,” Leota said and watched her granddaughter sit in the chair opposite her own. Annie gazed again out the window at the backyard, and she didn’t look the least bit put off by the lack of care. Might the girl be seeing what had been, not what was? Leota wished she hadn’t let things go, but her arthritis made it difficult to get around. Of course, that wasn’t the full reason. She might as well admit it. She had let things go because she had given up. Why spend all those hours in the garden when there was no one but her to enjoy it? She was sorry now. She shouldn’t have done that. She should’ve kept it up. Now it was too late. She couldn’t undo the destruction of the last few years. She was too old.

  This was no ti
me to count her regrets. Her granddaughter had come to visit. Praise God.

  Leota felt like having something special, something to celebrate this occasion. Opening a drawer, she poked around and found a few packets of Constant Comment tea she had tucked away after Mama Reinhardt had died. Mama had loved Constant Comment tea, and the two of them would sit together in the afternoons and sip it together. Did she have any cookies stashed away? If so, they would be as old as the tea and stale and hard enough to set with mortar. Crackers? None. Oh, how she wished she had known Annie was coming. She could have bought the fixings and made some Toll House or peanut butter cookies. Maybe next time.

  Would there be a next time?

  Oh, God . . . please.

  Her hand trembled as she filled the teakettle. She carried it to the stove and turned on the gas burner. “It won’t take long.”

  Would Annie get tired of waiting and leave? Young people these days seemed to be in such a rush about everything. Places to go. Things to do. She had heard about all that from Cosma. “Maybe it’s those video games they play all the time. Everything moves so fast. Like gnats on a screen door, battering away and driving you crazy.”

  “I’m not in any hurry,” Annie said, returning her attention to her grandmother.

  “Are you hungry? I don’t have any cookies, but I could fix you a . . .” A what? She didn’t have any lunch meat. She hadn’t fixed any tuna. She didn’t even have peanut butter on hand. “. . . an egg sandwich? Would you like that?”

  “I’m not hungry. I just wanted to see you and talk with you.”

  Leota came and eased herself into the chair opposite Annie. “How’s your mother?” The girl’s eyes flickered slightly, and she lowered her head. The tension was back. Leota watched as Annie clasped her hands on the table. Something was wrong. “Is Eleanor ill?”

  “No, Grandma Leota. Mother’s fine. It’s just that . . .” She looked out at the yard again, and Leota saw the sheen of tears in her eyes. Oh, dear. Something’s wrong again. Isn’t that always the way of it? Leota waited, wondering why Annie had come to her. She had never been included in the family circle before. Why now?