Ma was looking out the kitchen window, and she give Grandpa a nod. "Yes indeedy. Here he comes now."

Sure enough, we could see ol" Bixbee hotfooting up the walk.

Ma went through the parlor to the front doora"meaning to head him off, I reckona"but he fooled her and came around the back way. Pa got to the kitchen door too late, on account of Bixbee already had it and his mouth open at the same time.

"Morning, Jethro," he said, in that treacle-and-mola.s.ses voice of his.

"And a sad grievous morning it is, too! I purely hate disturbing you so early on this sorrowful occasion, but it looks like today"s another scorcher." He pulled out a tape measure. "Best if I got the measurements so"s to get on with the arrangements. Heat like this, the sooner we get everything boxed and squared away the better, if you take my meaninga""



"Sorry," said Pa, blocking the doorway so ol" Bixbee couldn"t peek inside. "Needs be you come back later."

"How much later?"

"Can"t say for sure. We ain"t rightly made up our minds as yet."

"Well, don"t dilly-dally too long," Bixbee said. "I"m liable to run short of ice."

Then Pa shut the door on him and he took off. When Ma come back from the parlor, Pa made a sign for her to keep her gap shut, but of course that didn"t stop Grandpa.

"What was that all about?" he asked.

"Purely a social call."

"Since when?" Grandpa looked suspicious. "Ol" Bixbee ain"t n.o.body"s frienda"him with his high-toned airs! Calls hisself a Southern planter. Shucks, he ain"t nothing but an undertaker."

"That"s right Grandpa," said sister Susie. "He come to fit you for your coffin."

"Coffin?" Grandpa reared up in his seat like a hog caught in a bobwire fence. "What in bo-diddley blazes do I need with a coffin?"

"Because you"re dead."

Just like that she come out with it. Ma and Pa was both ready to take after her but Grandpa laughed fit to bust.

"Holy hen tracks, childa"what on earth give you an idee like that?"

Pa moved in on Susie, taking off his belt, but Ma shook her head. Then she nodded to Grandpa.

"It"s true. You pa.s.sed on last night. Don"t you recol lect?"

"Ain"t nothing wrong with my memory," Grandpa told her.

"I had one me one of my spells, is all."

Ma fetched a sigh. "Wasn"t just no spell this time."

"A fit, mebbe?"

"More"n that. You was took so bad, Pa had to drag Doc Snodgra.s.s out of his officea"busted up the game right in the middle of a three-dollar pot. Didn"t do no good, though. By the time he got here you was gone."

"But I ain"t gone! I"m here."

Pa spoke up. "Now don"t git up on your high horse, Grandpa. We all saw you. We"re witnesses."

"Witnesses?" Grandpa hiked his galluses like he always did when he got riled. "What kind of talk is that?

You aim to hold a jury trial to decide if I"m alive or dead?"

"But Grandpaa""

"Save your sa.s.s, sonny." Grandpa stood up. "Ain"t n.o.body got a right to put me six feet under *thout my say-so."

"Where you off to?" Ma asked.

"Where I go evvy morning," Grandpa said. "Gonna set on the front porch and watch the sights."

Durned if he didn"t do just that, leaving us behind in the kitchen.

"Wouldn"t that frost you?" Ma said. She crooked a finger at the stove. "Here I went and pulled up half the greens in the garden, just planning my spread for after the funeral. I already told folks we"d be serving possum stew. What will the neighbors think?"

Don"t you go fret now," Pa said. "Mebbe he ain"t dead after all."

Ma made a face. "We know different. He"s just being persnickety." She nudged at Pa. "Only one think to do. You go fetch Doc Snodgra.s.s. Tell him he"d best sashay over here right quick and settle this matter once and for all."

"Reckon so," Pa said, and went out the back way. Ma looked at me and sister Susie.

"You kids go out on the porch and keep Grandpa company.

See that he stays put till the Doc gets here."

"Yessum," said Susie, and we traipsed out of there.

Sure enough Grandpa set in his rocker, big as life, squinting at cars over the road and watching the drivers cuss when they tried to steer around our hogs.

"Lookee here!" he said, pointing. "See that fat feller in the Hupmobile? He came barreling down the road like a bat outa h.e.l.la"must of been doing thirty mile an hour. *Fore he could stop, ol" Bessie poked out of the weeds right in front of him and run that car clean into the ditch. I swear I never seen anything so comical in all my life!"

Susie shook her head. "But you ain"t alive, Grandpa."

"Now don"t you start in on that again, here!" Grandpa looked at her, disgusted, and Susie shut up.

Right then Doc Snodgra.s.s come driving up front in his big Ess.e.x and parked alongside ol" Bessie"s pork b.u.t.t. Doc and Pa got out and moseyed up to the porch. They was jawing away something fierce and I could see Doc shaking his head like he purely disbelieved what Pa was telling him.

Then Doc noticed Grandpa setting there, and he stopped cold in his tracks. His eyes bugged out.

"Jumping Jehosephat!" he said to Grandpa. "What you doing here?"

"What"s it look like?" Grandpa told him. "Can"t a man set on his own front porch and rock in peace?"

"Rest in peace, that"s what you should be doing," said Doc. "When I examined you last night you were deader"n a dor nail!"

"And you were drunker"n a coot, I reckon," Grandpa said.

Pa give Doc a nod. "What"d I tell you?"

Doc paid him no heed. He come up to Grandpa. Mebbe I was a wee bit mistaken," he said. "Mind if I examine you now?"

"Fire away," Grandpa grinned. "I got all the time in the world."

So Doc opened up his little black bag and set about his business. First off he plugged a stethoscope in his ears and tapped Grandpa"s chest. He listened, and then his hands begun to shake.

"I don"t hear nothing." he said.

"What do you expect to heara"the Grand Ol" Opry?"

"This here"s no time for funning," Doc told him. "Suppose I tell you your heart"s stopped beating?"

"Suppose I tell you your stethoscope"s busted?"

Doc begun to break out in a sweat. He fetched out a mirror and held it up to Grandpa"s mouth. Then his hands got to shaking worse than ever.

"See this?" he said. "The mirror"s clear. Means you got no breath left in your body."

Grandpa shook his head. "Try it on yourself. You got a breath on you would knock a mule over at twenty paces."

"Mebbe this"ll change your tune." Doc reached in his pocket and pulled out a piece of paper. "See for yourself."

"What is it?"

"Your death certificate." Doc jabbed his finger down.

"Just you read what it says on this line. *Cause of death- card-y-ak arrest." That"s medical for heart attack. And this here"s a legal paper. It"ll stand up in court."

"So will I, if you want to drag the law into this,"

Grandpa told him. "Be a pretty sight, tooa"you standing on one side with your damfool piece of paper and me standing on the other! Now, which do you think the judge is going to believe?"

Doc"s eyes bugged out again. He tried to stuff the paper into his pocket but his hands shook so bad he almost didn"t make it.

"What"s wrong with you?" Pa asked.

"I feel poorly," Doc said. "Got to get back to my office and lie down for a spell."

He picked up his bag and headed for his car, not looking back.

"Don"t lie down too long," Grandpa called. "Somebody"s liable to write out a paper saying you died of a hangover."

When lunchtime come around n.o.body was hungry. n.o.body but Grandpa, that is.

He set down at the table and put away black-eyes peas, hominy grits, a double helping of chitlins, and two big slabs of rhubarb pie with gravy.

Ma was the king who liked seeing folks enjoy her vittles, but she didn"t look kindly on Grandpa"s appet.i.te. After he finished and went back on the porch she stacked the plates on the drainboard and told us kids to clean up. Then she went into the bedroom and come out with her shawl and pocketbook.

"What you all dressed up about?" Pa said.

"I"m going to church."

"But his here"s only Thursday."

"Can"t wait no longer," Ma told him. "It"s been hot all forenoon and looking to get hotter. I seen you wrinkle up your nose whilst Grandpa was in here for lunch."

Pa sort of shrugged. "Figgered the chitlins was mebbe a little bit spoiled, is all."

"Weren"t nothing of the sort," Ma said. "If you take my meaning."

"What you fixing to do?"

"Only thing a body can do. I"m putting evvything in the hands of the Lord."

And off she skedaddled, leaving sister Susie and me to scour the dished whilst Pa went out back, looking powerful troubled. I spied him through the window, slopping the hogs, but you could tell his heart wasn"t in it.

Susie and me, we went out to keep tabs on Grandpa.

Ma was right about the weather heating up. That porch was like a bake-over in the devil"s own kitchen.

Grandpa didn"t seem to pay it any heed, but I did. Couldn"t help but notice Grandpa was getting ripe.

"Look at them flies buzzing *round him," Susie said.

"Hush up, Sister. Mind your manners."

But sure enough, them old blueflies buzzed so loud we could hardly hear Grandpa speak. "Hi, young *uns," he said.

"Come visit a spell."

"Sun"s too hot for setting," Susie told him.

"Not so"s I can notice." He weren"t even working up a sweat.

"What about all them blueflies?"

"Don"t bother me none." Big ol" fly landed right on Grandpa"s nose and he didn"t even twitch.

Susie begun to look scared. "He"s dead for sure," she said.

"Speak up, child," Grandpa said. "Ain"t polite to go mumbling your elders."

Just then he spotted Ma marching up the road. Hot as it was, she come along lickety-split, with the Reverend Peabody in tow. He was huffing and puffing, but she never slowed until they fetched up alongside the front porch.

"howdy, Reverend," Grandpa sung out.

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