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“A Christmas Memory” (1956) by Truman Capote
Imagine a morning in late November. A coming of winter morning more than
twenty years ago. Consider the kitchen of a spreading old house in a
country town. A great black stove is its main feature; but there is also a
big round table and a fireplace with two rocking chairs placed in front of
it. Just today the fireplace commenced its seasonal roar.
A woman with shorn white hair is standing at the kitchen window. She is
wearing tennis shoes and a shapeless gray sweater over a summery calico
dress. She is small and sprightly, like a bantam hen; but, due to a long
youthful illness, her shoulders are pitifully hunched. Her face is
remarkable—not unlike Lincoln's, craggy like that, and tinted by sun and
wind; but it is delicate too, finely boned, and her eyes are sherry-colored
and timid. "Oh my," she exclaims, her breath smoking the
windowpane, "it's fruitcake weather!"
The person to whom she is speaking is myself. I am seven; she is sixty-something, We are
cousins, very distant ones, and we have lived together—well, as long as I
can remember. Other people inhabit the house, relatives; and though they
have power over us, and frequently make us cry, we are not, on the whole,
too much aware of them. We are each other's best friend. She calls me
Buddy, in memory of a boy who was formerly her best friend. The other Buddy
died in the 1880's, when she was still a child. She is still a child.
"I knew it before I got out of bed," she says, turning away
from the window with a purposeful excitement in her eyes. "The
courthouse bell sounded so cold and clear. And there were no birds singing;
they've gone to warmer country, yes indeed. Oh, Buddy, stop stuffing
biscuit and fetch our buggy. Help me find my hat. We've thirty cakes to
bake."
It's always the same: a morning arrives in November, and my friend, as
though officially inaugurating the Christmas time of year that exhilarates
her imagination and fuels the blaze of her heart, announces: "It's
fruitcake weather! Fetch our buggy. Help me find my hat."
The hat is found, a straw cartwheel corsaged
with velvet roses out-of-doors has faded: it once belonged to a more
fashionable relative. Together, we guide our buggy, a dilapidated baby
carriage, out to the garden and into a grove of pecan trees. The buggy is
mine; that is, it was bought for me when I was born. It is made of wicker,
rather unraveled, and the wheels wobble like a drunkard's legs. But it is a
faithful object; springtimes, we take it to the woods
and fill it with flowers, herbs, wild fern for our porch pots; in the
summer, we pile it with picnic paraphernalia and sugar-cane fishing poles
and roll it down to the edge of a creek; it has its winter uses, too: as a
truck for hauling firewood from the yard to the kitchen, as a warm bed for
Queenie, our tough little orange and white rat terrier who has survived
distemper and two rattlesnake bites. Queenie is trotting beside it now.
Three hours later we are back in the kitchen hulling a heaping buggyload of windfall pecans. Our backs hurt from
gathering them: how hard they were to find (the main crop having been
shaken off the trees and sold by the orchard's owners, who are not us)
among the concealing leaves, the frosted, deceiving grass. Caarackle! A cheery crunch, scraps of miniature thunder
sound as the shells collapse and the golden mound of sweet oily ivory meat
mounts in the milk-glass bowl. Queenie begs to taste, and now and again my
friend sneaks her a mite, though insisting we deprive
ourselves. "We mustn't, Buddy. If we start, we won't stop. And there's
scarcely enough as there is. For thirty cakes." The kitchen is growing
dark. Dusk turns the window into a mirror: our reflections mingle with the
rising moon as we work by the fireside in the firelight. At last, when the
moon is quite high, we toss the final hull into the fire and, with joined
sighs, watch it catch flame. The buggy is empty, the bowl is brimful.
We eat our supper (cold biscuits, bacon, blackberry
jam) and discuss tomorrow. Tomorrow the kind of work I like best begins:
buying. Cherries and citron, ginger and vanilla and canned Hawaiian
pine-apple, rinds and raisins and walnuts and whiskey and oh, so much
flour, butter, so many eggs, spices, flavorings: why, we'll need a pony to
pull the buggy home.
But before these Purchases can be made, there is the question of money.
Neither of us has any. Except for skin-flint sums persons in the house
occasionally provide (a dime is considered very big money); or what we earn
ourselves from various activities: holding rummage sales, selling buckets
of hand-picked blackberries, jars of home-made jam and apple jelly and
peach preserves, rounding up flowers for funerals and weddings. Once we won
seventy-ninth prize, five dollars, in a national
football contest. Not that we know a fool thing about football. It's just
that we enter any contest we hear about: at the moment our hopes are
centered on the fifty-thousand-dollar Grand Prize being offered to name a
new brand of coffee (we suggested "A.M."; and, after some
hesitation, for my friend thought it perhaps sacrilegious, the slogan
"A.M.! Amen!"). To tell the truth, our only really
profitable enterprise was the Fun and Freak Museum we conducted in a
back-yard woodshed two summers ago. The Fun was a stereopticon with slide
views of Washington and New York lent us by a relative who had been to
those places (she was furious when she discovered why we'd borrowed it);
the Freak was a three-legged biddy chicken hatched by one of our own hens. Every body hereabouts wanted to see that biddy: we
charged grown ups a nickel, kids two cents. And
took in a good twenty dollars before the museum shut down due to the
decease of the main attraction.
But one way and another we do each year accumulate Christmas savings, a
Fruitcake Fund. These moneys we keep hidden in an ancient bead purse under
a loose board under the floor under a chamber pot under my friend's bed.
The purse is seldom removed from this safe location except to make a
deposit or, as happens every Saturday, a withdrawal; for on Saturdays I am
allowed ten cents to go to the picture show. My friend has never been to a
picture show, nor does she intend to: "I'd rather hear you tell the
story, Buddy. That way I can imagine it more. Besides, a person my age
shouldn't squander their eyes. When the Lord comes, let me see him
clear." In addition to never having seen a movie, she has never: eaten
in a restaurant, traveled more than five miles from home, received or sent
a telegram, read anything except funny papers and the Bible, worn
cosmetics, cursed, wished someone harm, told a lie on purpose, let a hungry
dog go hungry. Here are a few things she has done, does do: killed with a
hoe the biggest rattlesnake ever seen in this county (sixteen rattles), dip
snuff (secretly), tame hummingbirds (just try it) till they balance on her
finger, tell ghost stories (we both believe in ghosts) so tingling they
chill you in July, talk to herself, take walks in the rain, grow the
prettiest japonicas in town, know the recipe for every sort of oldtime Indian cure, including a magical wart remover.
Now, with supper finished, we retire to the room in a faraway part of
the house where my friend sleeps in a scrap-quilt-covered iron bed painted rose pink, her favorite color. Silently, wallowing in
the pleasures of conspiracy, we take the bead purse from its secret place
and spill its contents on the scrap quilt. Dollar bills, tightly rolled and
green as May buds. Somber fifty-cent pieces, heavy enough to weight a dead
man's eyes. Lovely dimes, the liveliest coin, the one that really jingles.
Nickels and quarters, worn smooth as creek pebbles. But mostly a hateful
heap of bitter-odored pennies. Last summer others
in the house contracted to pay us a penny for every twenty-five flies we
killed. Oh, the carnage of August: the flies that flew to heaven! Yet it
was not work in which we took pride. And, as we sit counting pennies, it is
as though we were back tabulating dead flies. Neither of us has a head for
figures; we count slowly, lose track, start again. According to her
calculations, we have $12.73. According to mine, exactly $13. "I do
hope you're wrong, Buddy. We can't mess around with thirteen. The cakes
will fall. Or put somebody in the cemetery. Why, I wouldn't dream of getting
out of bed on the thirteenth." This is true: she always spends
thirteenths in bed. So, to be on the safe side, we subtract a penny and
toss it out the window.
Of the ingredients that go into our fruitcakes, whiskey is the most
expensive, as well as the hardest to obtain: State laws forbid its sale.
But everybody knows you can buy a bottle from Mr. Haha
Jones. And the next day, having completed our more prosaic shopping, we set
out for Mr. Haha's business address, a
"sinful" (to quote public opinion) fish-fry and dancing cafe down
by the river. We've been there before, and on the same errand; but in
previous years our dealings have been with Haha's
wife, an iodine-dark Indian woman with brassy peroxided hair and a
dead-tired disposition. Actually, we've never laid eyes on her husband,
though we've heard that he's an Indian too. A giant with razor scars across
his cheeks. They call him Haha because he's so
gloomy, a man who never laughs. As we approach his cafe (a large log cabin
festooned inside and out with chains of garish-gay naked light bulbs and
standing by the river's muddy edge under the shade of river trees where
moss drifts through the branches like gray mist) our steps slow down. Even
Queenie stops prancing and sticks close by. People have been murdered in Haha's cafe. Cut to pieces. Hit on the head. There's a
case coming up in court next month. Naturally these goings-on happen at
night when the colored lights cast crazy patterns and the Victrolah wails. In the daytime Haha's
is shabby and deserted. I knock at the door, Queenie barks, my friend calls: "Mrs. Haha,
ma'am? Anyone to home?"
Footsteps. The door opens. Our hearts overturn. It's Mr. Haha Jones himself! And he is a giant; he does
have scars; he doesn't smile. No, he glowers at us through Satan-tilted
eyes and demands to know: "What you want with Haha?"
For a moment we are too paralyzed to tell. Presently my friend
half-finds her voice, a whispery voice at best: "If you please, Mr. Haha, we'd like a quart of your finest whiskey."
His eyes tilt more. Would you believe it? Haha
is smiling! Laughing, too. "Which one of you is a drinkin'
man?"
"It's for making fruitcakes, Mr. Haha.
Cooking. "
This sobers him. He frowns. "That's no way to waste good
whiskey." Nevertheless, he retreats into the shadowed cafe and seconds
later appears carrying a bottle of daisy-yellow unlabeled liquor. He
demonstrates its sparkle in the sunlight and says: "Two dollars."
We pay him with nickels and dimes and pennies. Suddenly, as he jangles
the coins in his hand like a fistful of dice, his face softens. "Tell
you what," he proposes, pouring the money back into our bead purse,
"just send me one of them fruitcakes instead."
"Well," my friend remarks on our way home, "there's a
lovely man. We'll put an extra cup of raisins in his cake."
The black stove, stoked with coal and firewood, glows like a lighted
pumpkin. Eggbeaters whirl, spoons spin round in bowls of butter and sugar,
vanilla sweetens the air, ginger spices it; melting, nose-tingling odors
saturate the kitchen, suffuse the house, drift out to the world on puffs of
chimney smoke. In four days our work is done. Thirty-one cakes, dampened
with whiskey, bask on windowsills and shelves.
Who are they for?
Friends. Not necessarily neighbor friends: indeed, the larger share is
intended for persons we've met maybe once, perhaps not at all. People
who've struck our fancy. Like President Roosevelt. Like the Reverend and
Mrs. J. C. Lucey, Baptist missionaries to Borneo
who lectured here last winter. Or the little knife grinder who comes
through town twice a year. Or Abner Packer, the
driver of the six o'clock bus from Mobile, who exchanges waves with us
every day as he passes in a dust-cloud whoosh. Or the young Wistons, a California couple whose car one afternoon
broke down outside the house and who spent a pleasant hour chatting with us
on the porch (young Mr. Wiston snapped our
picture, the only one we've ever had taken). Is it because my friend is shy
with everyone except strangers that these strangers, and merest
acquaintances, seem to us our truest friends? I think yes. Also, the
scrapbooks we keep of thank-you's on White House
stationery, time-to-time communications from California and Borneo, the
knife grinder's penny post cards, make us feel connected to eventful worlds
beyond the kitchen with its view of a sky that stops.
Now a nude December fig branch grates against the window. The kitchen is
empty, the cakes are gone; yesterday we carted the last of them to the post
office, where the cost of stamps turned our purse inside out. We're broke.
That rather depresses me, but my friend insists on celebrating—with two
inches of whiskey left in Haha's bottle. Queenie
has a spoonful in a bowl of coffee (she likes her coffee chicory-flavored
and strong). The rest we divide between a pair of jelly glasses. We're both
quite awed at the prospect of drinking straight whiskey; the taste of it
brings screwed-up expressions and sour shudders. But by and by we begin to
sing, the two of us singing different songs simultaneously. I don't know
the words to mine, just: Come on along, come on along, to the dark-town strutters' ball. But I can dance: that's what I
mean to be, a tap dancer in the movies. My dancing shadow rollicks on the
walls; our voices rock the chinaware; we giggle: as if unseen hands were
tickling us. Queenie rolls on her back, her paws plow the air, something like a grin stretches her black lips. Inside
myself, I feel warm and sparky as those crumbling logs, carefree as the
wind in the chimney. My friend waltzes round the stove, the hem of her poor
calico skirt pinched between her fingers as though it were a party dress: Show
me the way to go home, she sings, her tennis shoes squeaking on the
floor. Show me the way to go home.
Enter: two relatives. Very angry. Potent with eyes that scold, tongues
that scald. Listen to what they have to say, the words tumbling together
into a wrathful tune: "A child of seven! whiskey
on his breath! are you out of your mind? feeding a child of seven! must
be loony! road to ruination! remember
Cousin Kate? Uncle Charlie? Uncle Charlie's brother-inlaw?
shame! scandal! humiliation! kneel, pray, beg
the Lord!"
Queenie sneaks under the stove. My friend gazes at her shoes, her chin
quivers, she lifts her skirt and blows her nose and runs to her room. Long
after the town has gone to sleep and the house is silent except for the chimings of clocks and the sputter of fading fires, she
is weeping into a pillow already as wet as a widow's handkerchief.
"Don't cry," I say, sitting at the bottom of her bed and shivering
despite my flannel nightgown that smells of last winter's cough syrup,
"Don't cry," I beg, teasing her toes, tickling her feet,
"you're too old for that."
"It's because," she hiccups, "I am too old. Old
and funny."
"Not funny. Fun. More fun than anybody. Listen. If you don't stop
crying you'll be so tired tomorrow we can't go cut a tree."
She straightens up. Queenie jumps on the bed (where Queenie is not
allowed) to lick her cheeks. "I know where we'll find real pretty
trees, Buddy. And holly, too. With berries big as your eyes. It's way off
in the woods. Farther than we've ever been. Papa used to bring us Christmas
trees from there: carry them on his shoulder. That's fifty years ago. Well,
now: I can't wait for morning."
Morning. Frozen rime lusters the grass; the sun, round as an orange and
orange as hot-weather moons, balances on the horizon, burnishes the
silvered winter woods. A wild turkey calls. A renegade hog grunts in the
undergrowth. Soon, by the edge of knee-deep, rapid-running water, we have
to abandon the buggy. Queenie wades the stream first, paddles across
barking complaints at the swiftness of the current, the pneumonia-making
coldness of it. We follow, holding our shoes and equipment (a hatchet, a
burlap sack) above our heads. A mile more: of chastising thorns, burrs and
briers that catch at our clothes; of rusty pine needles brilliant with
gaudy fungus and molted feathers. Here, there, a flash, a flutter, an
ecstasy of shrillings remind us that not all the
birds have flown south. Always, the path unwinds through lemony sun pools
and pitchblack vine tunnels. Another creek to
cross: a disturbed armada of speckled trout froths the water round us, and
frogs the size of plates practice belly flops; beaver workmen are building
a dam. On the farther shore, Queenie shakes herself and trembles. My friend
shivers, too: not with cold but enthusiasm. One of her hat's ragged roses
sheds a petal as she lifts her head and inhales the pine-heavy air.
"We're almost there; can you smell it, Buddy'" she says, as
though we were approaching an ocean.
And, indeed, it is a kind of ocean. Scented acres of holiday trees,
prickly-leafed holly. Red berries shiny as Chinese bells: black crows swoop
upon them screaming. Having stuffed our burlap sacks with enough greenery
and crimson to garland a dozen windows, we set about choosing a tree.
"It should be," muses my friend, "twice as tall as a boy. So
a boy can't steal the star." The one we pick is twice as tall as me. A
brave handsome brute that survives thirty hatchet strokes before it keels
with a creaking rending cry. Lugging it like a kill, we commence the long
trek out. Every few yards we abandon the struggle, sit down and pant. But
we have the strength of triumphant huntsmen; that and the tree's virile,
icy perfume revive us, goad us on. Many compliments accompany our sunset
return along the red clay road to town; but my friend is sly and
noncommittal when passers-by praise the treasure perched in our buggy: what
a fine tree, and where did it come from? "Yonderways,"
she murmurs vaguely. Once a car stops, and the rich mill owner's lazy wife
leans out and whines: "Give ya two-bits" cash for that ol
tree." Ordinarily my friend is afraid of saying no; but on this
occasion she promptly shakes her head: "We wouldn't take a
dollar." The mill owner's wife persists. "A dollar, my foot!
Fifty cents. That's my last offer. Goodness, woman, you can get another
one." In answer, my friend gently reflects: "I doubt it. There's
never two of anything."
Home: Queenie slumps by the fire and sleeps till tomorrow, snoring loud
as a human.
A trunk in the attic contains: a shoebox of ermine tails (off the opera
cape of a curious lady who once rented a room in the house), coils of
frazzled tinsel gone gold with age, one silver star, a brief rope of
dilapidated, undoubtedly dangerous candylike
light bulbs. Excellent decorations, as far as they go, which isn't far
enough: my friend wants our tree to blaze "like a Baptist
window," droop with weighty snows of ornament. But we can't afford the
made-in-Japan splendors at the five-and-dime. So we do what we've always
done: sit for days at the kitchen table with scissors and crayons and
stacks of colored paper. I make sketches and my friend cuts them out: lots
of cats, fish too (because they're easy to draw), some apples, some
watermelons, a few winged angels devised from saved-up sheets of Hershey
bar tin foil. We use safety pins to attach these creations to the tree; as
a final touch, we sprinkle the branches with shredded cotton (picked in
August for this purpose). My friend, surveying the effect, clasps her hands
together. "Now honest, Buddy. Doesn't it look good enough to eat!" Queenie tries to eat an angel.
After weaving and ribboning holly wreaths for all the front windows, our
next project is the fashioning of family gifts. Tie-dye scarves for the
ladies, for the men a homebrewed lemon and licorice and aspirin syrup to be
taken "at the first Symptoms of a Cold and after Hunting." But
when it comes time for making each other's gift, my friend and I separate
to work secretly. I would like to buy her a pearl-handled knife, a radio, a
whole pound of chocolate-covered cherries (we tasted some once, and she
always swears: "1 could live on them, Buddy, Lord yes I could—and
that's not taking his name in vain"). Instead, I am building her a
kite. She would like to give me a bicycle (she's said so on several million
occasions: "If only I could, Buddy. It's bad enough in life to do
without something you want; but confound it, what gets my goat is
not being able to give somebody something you want them to have.
Only one of these days I will, Buddy. Locate you a bike. Don't ask how.
Steal it, maybe"). Instead, I'm fairly certain that she is building me
a kite—the same as last year and the year before: the year before that we
exchanged slingshots. All of which is fine by me. For we are champion kite
fliers who study the wind like sailors; my friend, more accomplished than
I, can get a kite aloft when there isn't enough breeze
to carry clouds.
Christmas Eve afternoon we scrape together a nickel and go to the
butcher's to buy Queenie's traditional gift, a good gnawable
beef bone. The bone, wrapped in funny paper, is placed high in the tree
near the silver star. Queenie knows it's there. She squats at the foot of
the tree staring up in a trance of greed: when bedtime arrives she refuses
to budge. Her excitement is equaled by my own. I kick the covers and turn
my pillow as though it were a scorching summer's night. Somewhere a rooster
crows: falsely, for the sun is still on the other side of the world.
"Buddy, are you awake!" It is my friend, calling from her
room, which is next to mine; and an instant later she is sitting on my bed
holding a candle. "Well, I can't sleep a hoot," she declares.
"My mind's jumping like a jack rabbit. Buddy, do you think Mrs.
Roosevelt will serve our cake at dinner?" We huddle in the bed, and
she squeezes my hand I-love-you. "Seems like your hand used to be so
much smaller. I guess I hate to see you grow up. When you're grown up, will
we still be friends?" I say always. "But I feel so bad, Buddy. I
wanted so bad to give you a bike. I tried to sell my cameo Papa gave me.
Buddy"—she hesitates, as though embarrassed—"I made you another kite."
Then I confess that I made her one, too; and we laugh. The candle burns too
short to hold. Out it goes, exposing the starlight, the stars spinning at
the window like a visible caroling that slowly, slowly daybreak silences.
Possibly we doze; but the beginnings of dawn splash us like cold water:
we're up, wide-eyed and wandering while we wait for others to waken. Quite
deliberately my friend drops a kettle on the kitchen floor. I tap-dance in
front of closed doors. One by one the household emerges, looking as though
they'd like to kill us both; but it's Christmas,
so they can't. First, a gorgeous breakfast: just everything you can
imagine—from flapjacks and fried squirrel to hominy grits and
honey-in-the-comb. Which puts everyone in a good humor
except my friend and me. Frankly, we're so impatient to get at the
presents we can't eat a mouthful.
Well, I'm disappointed. Who wouldn't be? With socks, a Sunday school
shirt, some handkerchiefs, a hand-me-down sweater, and a year's
subscription to a religious magazine for children. The Little Shepherd.
It makes me boil. It really does.
My friend has a better haul. A sack of Satsumas,
that's her best present. She is proudest, however, of a white wool shawl
knitted by her married sister. But she says her favorite gift is the
kite I built her. And it is very beautiful; though not as beautiful
as the one she made me, which is blue and scattered with gold and green
Good Conduct stars; moreover, my name is painted on it, "Buddy."
"Buddy, the wind is blowing."
The wind is blowing, and nothing will do till we've run to a Pasture
below the house where Queenie has scooted to bury her bone (and where, a
winter hence, Queenie will be buried, too). There, plunging through the
healthy waist-high grass, we unreel our kites, feel them twitching at the
string like sky fish as they swim into the wind. Satisfied, sun-warmed, we
sprawl in the grass and peel Satsumas and watch
our kites cavort. Soon I forget the socks and hand-me-down sweater. I'm as
happy as if we'd already won the fifty-thousand-dollar Grand Prize in that
coffee-naming contest.
"My, how foolish I am!" my friend cries,
suddenly alert, like a woman remembering too late she has biscuits in the
oven. "You know what I've always thought?" she asks in a tone of
discovery and not smiling at me but a point beyond. "I've always
thought a body would have to be sick and dying before they saw the Lord.
And I imagined that when he came it would be like looking at the Baptist
window: pretty as colored glass with the sun pouring through, such a shine
you don't know it's getting dark. And it's been a comfort: to think of that
shine taking away all the spooky feeling. But I'll wager it never happens.
I'll wager at the very end a body realizes the Lord has already shown
Himself. That things as they are"—her hand circles in a gesture that
gathers clouds and kites and grass and Queenie pawing earth over her
bone—"just what they've always seen, was seeing Him. As for me, I
could leave the world with today in my eyes."
This is our last Christmas together.
Life separates us. Those who Know Best decide that I belong in a
military school. And so follows a miserable succession of bugle-blowing
prisons, grim reveille-ridden summer camps. I have a new home too. But it
doesn't count. Home is where my friend is, and there I never go.
And there she remains, puttering around the kitchen. Alone with Queenie.
Then alone. ("Buddy dear," she writes in her wild hard-to-read
script, "yesterday Jim Macy's horse kicked Queenie bad. Be thankful
she didn't feel much. I wrapped her in a Fine Linen sheet and rode her in
the buggy down to Simpson's pasture where she can be with all her
Bones...."). For a few Novembers she continues to bake her fruitcakes
single-handed; not as many, but some: and, of course, she always sends me
"the best of the batch." Also, in every letter she encloses a
dime wadded in toilet paper: "See a picture show and write me the
story." But gradually in her letters she tends to confuse me with her
other friend, the Buddy who died in the 1880's; more and more, thirteenths
are not the only days she stays in bed: a morning arrives in November, a
leafless birdless coming of winter morning, when
she cannot rouse herself to exclaim: "Oh my, it's fruitcake weather!"
And when that happens, I know it. A message saying so merely confirms a
piece of news some secret vein had already received, severing from me an
irreplaceable part of myself, letting it loose like a kite on a broken
string. That is why, walking across a school campus on this particular
December morning, I keep searching the sky. As if I expected to see, rather
like hearts, a lost pair of kites hurrying toward heaven.
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