©2008/9AdrianLeverkuhn
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Her name was Dreamaway and she was quiet, almost shy as a little girl -- some said she was as quiet as her name. She'd always been a fairly withdrawn girl and seemed to get along reasonably well in a full world of noisome contradictions. For reasons unknown her mama had given her the name long before she was conceived, and though not a soul knew why it seemed to fit the little girl perfectly. Needless to say the name had, from time to time, been reason for a fair amount of ridicule; over time the name morphed and cousins and brothers took to calling her DeeDee, and as a result she grew a little self-conscious about her name, and all it implied. And while her mother well understood the cascade of humiliation her daughter endured it surprised some when the girl's mother jumped on the bandwagon; perhaps it was more than mere wanderlust that sparked the odd name into existence. Perhaps it was a desire to escape the shadows that haunted all Dreamaway's family's hopes and dreams.
Dreamaway's people were from the hills of western North Carolina, and by that I mean not from a small town, nor even a smaller village; no, Dreamaway was born and had come of age inside a thirty-something foot long mobile-home on land that might have been called a farm were it not for the fact that most of the land was too steep and rocky to walk across. The family's farm had been, for all of their lives, hidden from the world below by forests of thick oak and hickory -- by a forest so thick that traffic on the road down the steep, hardscrabble hill was all but invisible. Dreamaway grew up in this private world, a home full of boisterous brothers and silent, hard-working parents. Yet Dreamaway was not quite a part of this world: she inhabited an insulated but hyperbolic world of her own that seemed to tumble along inside this small constellation of family, and the girl came of age knowing little of the world down the mountain. Her world might have been dwarfed by unknown rhythms within a universe of vast, lurking sin -- had she but known even the barest contours of the world -- but that other world had been defined for her by Preacher-Jim at the little Baptist church her family went to every Sunday. She had yet to be bitten by one of the preacher's rattlers so all knew her heart was pure.
Beyond the wall of forest temptation stalked the unwary: the lesson had been drummed into Dreamaway all her life. Conversely, behind their forest wall time had stopped, they were lost to the present and all of them were safe; in this insular world all the little girl's dreams derived from absolute good and unwavering evil. She knew of no other life beyond that which she experienced on the farm, or in church -- in effect she knew nothing of the greater world beyond the mountain, no other ways of being. Coming of age in the 1990s, all she had experienced was life on an isolated mountain in Appalachia, and even within that context she was considered by most to have withdrawn into a world of her own design.
Dreamaway's mother had instinctively known better than to waste time daydreaming about a better life -- which if you think about it made the choice of her daughter's name all the more odd -- and yet her mother did not pass on this restraint to her daughter. The girl was encouraged by her mother to daydream and she grew up wondering what lay beyond the wall of trees and with nothing concrete to base her musings she constructed vast, fantastic worlds to contain her flowering dreams that drifted by on the clouds.
She grew slowly, some said too slowly, but the little girl grew up with her bare-feet skipping through knee-high grass, her eyes always sifting the sky for drifting, cloud-borne dreams. She would look at clouds and ask her mother where they went, what secrets they might conceal -- but her mother had no idea -- she had never considered the matter. Dreamaway wondered if clouds had dreams, if their wispy musings lived-on once they were beyond the dark forest wall. She began to see the forest as something that held her back from the world, as something sinister. How she wanted to take wing on a billowing cloud and simply drift away...
Even so, Dreamaway helped tend the family's small herd of dairy cattle; she helped milk cows on frosty mornings and collected eggs on sunny afternoons and by the time she was in her teens was known to one and all as the sweetest soul that had ever drawn a breath -- even if she was still tiny and possessed of a faraway look in her eye. She managed to go to school one day for the first time when she was fifteen but didn't take to the experience very well and never went again: Dreamaway had the uncomfortable feeling she didn't fit into a world full of thinkers, she preferred to dream with the clouds instead and had no regrets. And no one seemed to mind, either.
So, in a world full of cracks Dreamaway somehow managed to slip through them all. She never went to school, never learned to read or write, and she knew not one thing about the world beyond the hills. She had no need for thinkers and remained at ease with her dreams.
In the end Dreamaway's mother taught her most of the things she needed to know about life and told her she would pick-up things as she went along. After all, the little girl knew how to handle copperheads and timber rattlers as well as Preacher-Jim, and besides that, she could cook up a storm. What else did a little girl need to know?
She met a boy from Elkin, Jimmy MacDonald was his name, one October day when her family went down the mountain for the first time in fifteen years to the Fair down in Boone; one thing led to another and before she knew it she was pregnant. She thought she loved Jimmy, whatever love was, yet despite all the wonder and joy she felt she knew there was something wrong about the relationship. Something Preacher-Jim had said about living in Sin. She knew she was doomed, her baby too.
Then she'd missed her period and told her mama, discovered she was with child, and within a few days learned Jimmy had joined something called the Coast Guard and was going away to someplace she'd never heard of. The cramps and bleeding that started that night had an air of finality about them -- and she knew the baby had left her as uneasily as it had come. She was crushed by the turns her life had taken but she picked herself up and brushed herself off and got on with with her chores -- because that's what you did. Still, in her heart she knew she loved Jimmy, and she missed him terribly when he went away. Dreamaway had been sure since she'd first laid eyes on him that he was the one to lead her away from the mountain, and onward, to her dreams. What had happened? What had she done wrong?