The kickball teams are divided up, each side wearing cheap mesh pullovers from the middle school gym. The teams are multigenerational. Woods made sure of it. The youngest member is the mayor’s grandson, Caleb, who is seven and a real ballbuster. He’s turning cartwheels by home plate. The oldest is Ada May Adcock. No less than four sports bras attempt to contain her abundant chest. Heaven help us, and her back, if she runs the bases. No cartwheels for her. Normally, Mash and I would play, but Woods says we shouldn’t.
Mash being Tyson’s hometown grandson, me being the Corn Dolly nominee.
“Oh, dear Lord,” Mom says about Ada May, and we both laugh.
“Be kind,” Dad reminds us.
The waistband of Janie Lee’s short shorts is flipped over and she’s wearing tall multicolored socks with purple otters on them. If this were olden times—two weeks ago—I would walk up and tell her she has an ass cheek hanging out. But now, I don’t know. Can I still do that when we are what we are?
“Are you going to wish her luck?” Mom asks.
I say, “Yes,” and start her way, wondering where my dad is and if he’s watching. This was Dad and me this morning:
Him: “Tawny will be there.”
Me: “I know.”
He didn’t have to say anything else.
I don’t make it all the way to Janie Lee because Mash yells my name out the driver’s window of his truck. He beats the door, whooping with excitement. “Make way for the man in the truck,” Woods says to several families in the truck’s path. Mash drives past Fifty’s directional flag and parks between Mrs. Johnson’s electric fence and the bleachers. He’s out, using the tire as a step, and hopping into the bed before I can jog over and lend a hand. He hefts a Radio Flyer wagon into my arms.
I yawn. He yawns back and then stuffs some Big League Chew into his cheek. We toss the trash bags filled with last night’s crafting spoils into the wagon.
“How do you want to do this?” he asks.
“They go to everyone,” I tell him.
“Even the dudes?”
We made two thousand Book Dollies. I’m not taking them home.
“Even the dudes,” I say.
He likes this idea, and says, “You know Big T’s smiling right now.”
Gerry and Thom, who have driven in for the day, offer to help, but we put them in jerseys and send them to separate teams. Mash and I set about the crowd, doling out Book Dollies—folded and tucked pieces of torn classics that were headed for the dump. Small origami gifts patterned after Molly.
I know basically how they will be received because at six a.m., Mom descended the steps into the garage in search of the newspaper. Mash had fallen asleep on the floor, and I had taken the couch. Everyone else had gone home around one. We were drowning in Dollies.
If Mom were a crier, she would have cried. She’s not, so she smiled instead.
“I am not going soft,” I said wearily, and put my head back down for five more minutes of sleep.
“I didn’t say you were,” she said.
Now, as I press Book Dollies into the hands of men and women alike, I think: maybe I am going a little soft. And maybe that’s exactly the way I’m supposed to be.
With only one winner every year, the odds of earning a Dolly aren’t high. I picture all the women like me—the ones who will never win—putting their Book Dolly in a special place when they get home. The mantel. The curio cabinet. Maybe a hope chest. There is more than one way to add color to the world. More than one way to crown a queen.
I develop a little rhythm with greeting people. “In case it’s the last Harvest Festival, everyone should get something to remember it by.”
This works well and good until I get to the Spandex Junkwagons. They’ve seen me gifting hundreds of dollies at this point. I can’t conceivably skip them, and Mash is clear on the other side of the field, so there’s no delegating.
The game is raging like the Super Bowl. Tied seven-seven. Davey has just kicked a home run. His second in three innings. I’d like to celebrate him. But no. I’m offering Margaret Lesley a Book Dolly and repeating my mantra.
She brings herself to give me a proper thank-you.
I’ve heaped some sugar on her sourness. That’s satisfying in its own way.
Mash and I have only a limited number of Dollies left by the time we reach the front row. Mr. Nix sits there, Otis in his lap, and Kevin the home health aide by his side. He’s eating a Little Debbie cake as if it is the only pleasure in the world. To his right, Grandy and Tawny Jacobs are talking fencerows. “The painting rates these days are ungodly.” “I had three posts reset and it cost one hundred and fifty dollars. Can you believe it?” “I can.”
One could not call this a friendly conversation because it is not happening between friends, but one could call it congenial.
This seating placement rings of Woods. Their bony tushes are atop two UK bleacher chair backs owned by the Carringtons. I get his attention.
“Einstein rules the world,” he yells back to me, because KickFall is doing more than raising money.
Janie Lee is beside him. One of her otter socks has fallen to her ankle. She’s leaning over, tugging it back to her knee. I have a memory of the tall tube socks she wore in elementary school. No one at her house did much more than make sure she had boxed macaroni and cheese for dinner back then, so she always came to school dressed pell-mell. Tube socks as knee socks. Extra-large men’s T-shirts as dresses. Knowing someone from first grade on, watching them turn from that to this, well, it’s a piece of life art.
Hands empty, I walk to the backstop and wave her over. She laces her fingers through fencing. I lace mine on top of hers, intending to say, Sorry I was late this morning, but she jerks back as if I’ve slapped her.
“Not here,” she whispers, eyes drifting toward Tawny. “Your dad.”
I back away, embarrassed, and busy myself taking the wagon to Mash’s truck. Will it always be this way? Will we always care about what everyone thinks?
Not long ago we swore that nothing would ever change us. Was that na?ve? Can you put everything on the line and have it change nothing? Maybe. Woods and I are the same. Maybe even better. Easier. Because now every touch and look that passes between us isn’t going somewhere. I don’t hold my breath and wonder about our future. I just live. I want to be in that space with Janie Lee whether we are together or apart.
I wiggle into a seat beside Mr. Nix, praying he changes the sudden sullenness of my mood. Mr. Nix giddily cheers for Davey, who laps up the praise like gravy. Every trip to the plate, he phantom high-fives Mr. Nix. “Gloria would like our boy all grown up,” he tells Kevin. Kevin doesn’t correct Mr. Nix, and I’m glad for it.
Flowers line the kickball field. Transplanted mums trim the freshly painted playground. All from Mr. Nix. A group of kiddos are on the merry-go-round where I used to make myself dizzy; they’re using a bag of leftover potting soil to drive Matchbox cars through. In the spring, the tulip bulbs will bloom, and I will bring Mr. Nix here and show him Gloria’s garden. Her legacy of seeds and bulbs. The color she has added to the world.
“How are you liking my coat?” Mr. Nix asks. He remembers the coat but has forgotten Davey’s name. With a wink and a grin, I tell him, “That coat is worth one thousand dollars.”