It were Franny's idea that we oughta keep bees, so, in the end, whatever the joke is, it be on Franny more'n on me.
"We need more than what we can grown on this land now that we have another mouth to feed," she had said. Her sayin' "we" struck me hard at the time, as it had done ever since I'd asked her pa for her hand over in Pearisburg, where we'd both been at school, she bein' from the flatland and me from the mountain. She'd gotten herself in a bad way and people were talking about me too, and it seemed the right answer to two problems at the one time. It seemed the right thing for us to take up the old Tolbert place too, abandoned since my Uncle Eddie died two years before that, up Sugar Tree Holler on Sugar Run Mountain. Everything around here seemed to be somethingorother sugar. I shouda knowed that takin' on honey bees would be trouble, honey bein' a form of sugar, as we all know.
"We can talk about it if you be wantin' more work, Franny," I said. "I got my hands full adding to the cleared land. But you be right that we need more out of the land than we are gettin' this growing season. We're still beholden to family for gettin' by, and we won't want to be in that way any longer than he have to."
I were watching her feed Billy Junior with her tittie, looking at his little screwed up face again, tryin' not to see the red hair. There was no red hair in the Tolbert family, or Franny's Gleason family neither, as far as I knowed. I couldn't see how people couldn't see it right off. The redheads around in the Blue Ridge Mountain section of Giles County, Virginia, were the Previes. And it had been Jamie Previe who'd been at Franny that fall. Folks should tell how things were right off, I would think. But I guess not, if folks don't see the baby. That's why Franny had said yes to comin' up here in Sugar Tree Holler, high up on the mountain. Franny was a flatland girl by raisin' and she knowed how flatland folks could gossip and criticize. Mountain folk are more for keepin' their mouths shut and lettin' be what be and knowin' that, in most cases, folks are just getting' by as best they can.
Still,
I
could see the red hair every day, and I knowed what was what, and I couldn't feel a family or a daddy much at all—at least not yet. Franny had said that would come in time. I'd said somethin' to my pa, Michael Tolbert, about it when he was helping me figure what to do about the rumors—and what were behind them. He told me not to be a fool about it. He tole me to take it as a lesson and to fight the urge and to make peace with it. He'd seen Franny's problem as a chance for me.
"Make a family," he'd said. "Forget what else you been up to."
"Easier to say than to do," I told him, "under the situation." He'd been forgiving but not understanding. But in telling me that there was Uncle Eddie's abandoned spread we could have—the old, original Tolbert place—he'd told me that I was being given a second chance, a second chance not to be a fool. I couldn't say he were wrong. Somethin' was tellin' me, though, that I could maybe deny myself if I tried real hard and temptation didn't come my way, but was I bein' fair to Franny? Could I ever be enough for her? Would she ever be enough for me?
"She'll have the baby," pa had said. "She'll be a damn sight better with a Tolbert than lettin' those Previes take the child." I couldn't say he was wrong about that either—or that I should expect better from him in understandin'. Some pas would have taken me out in the woods and shot me fer bein' unnatural. And nobody on the mountain would have blamed him.
"Bees don't take much care," Franny had said. "All you need do is make boxes; I'll take care of the bees. Two boxes. I got the directions for that. I already put in an order down at the general store in Thessalia when I met my folks down there for them to give us staples to tied us over."
"You've already put in an order?" I asked. "For what?"
"I asked that the bee man bring us bees for the first hive. Will Lambert down at the store told me we should make two boxes, but only put one out. The bee man would bring bees when he got around to us for the first box. We're not to put the second box out until that one fills with comb. Then the bee man will bring us another colony. And so on. One box will meet our needs. If we can fill more, we can be making cash money off it. Will told me what to do to bottle what's above our own needs and that we can bring it down to him to sell."
"We can bring honey down to Will to sell in Thessalia?" I guess Franny didn't know. She knew I married her out of more than the goodness of my heart, but she didn't know it all. She didn't know that I wouldn't want to be goin' to Will Lambert down at the Thessalia general store for anything. And the bee man. "What bee man would this be?" I asked.
"Why Honey Tom," she answered, all innocent and unknowing. "It's already done. He'll be bringing bees in another couple of weeks, Will says. We need a box by then. You best make two off the bat. We won't know how fast the first swarm will fill a box with comb."
I couldn't look at her direct. She weren't in the know of it. It weren't her fault. But it were her doin' if the temptation of it got to me. She'd be the fool of the piece. She will have done fooled herself.
"I might be out working the field when he comes," I said, lookin' out of the window of the two-over-two wood house my grandpappy had built with his own hands, with the help of a few neighbors. There weren't many around here close enough to call neighbors anymore, not that there ever were. The black hermit, Rufus Jefferson, up beyond the Sugar Holler pools at the top of the holler were the nearest neighbor, I guess. But I ain't seed him for years. After Uncle Eddie passed on, I hadn't come up here at all—not until we needed to to hide our shame and from the gossips, Franny and me both. "You might be the only one here at the house when Honey Tom comes in with a swarm."
"That would be OK with me," Franny said. "I do hope it's soon, though. The directions for the boxes are over there on your grandfather's desk. Sooner is better to build them than later, I think, Billy Ray."
"I'll get right on that," I answered. "And then I'll go look for someplace to put down the boxes."
"In sight of the house, I think, but not too near that we'll worry about getting stung. Will said in a cleared area of milkweed, dandelions, clover, and goldenrod—that's what they like to gather from, he says. As much as they can have near if we want them to fill the box fast."
"I guess up at the top of the meadow, by the sycamore stand, will do," I said. "Just be knowin' that I can't stand around waitin' for Honey Tom to show up. I'll probably be off in the field when he comes and goes. He comes and goes as he likes—and does what he likes too. Always has."
"He's a wild man for sure," Franny said. "But he's a fine looking man too, a golden man, a man standing in the sunshine. Half the ladies up the mountain swarm over him no different than those bees of his do."
"That they do," I said, "that there's a fact." And some of the men too, was my thought—but no way in hell I was gonna say that. I decided there and then that I damn well would make sure I were off in the field and would miss him comin' and goin'. 'Stead of fightin' her on this and makin' her curious, I picked up the paper Franny had writ the directions for the bee boxes on and went out to the wood shed to get to work on them boxes.
* * * *
It were the last day of June and it were hotter than normal for this day. I'd been weeding in the new field south of the house all morning and was right tired and hotter than blazes. Franny was down on the flatland at Staffordsville, with her kin, sayin' it were just too hot and close up here in the holler for her and the baby. I didn't expect her back in the pickup before sundown.
It were too hot to work and nobody were there to say otherwise, so I took myself off to the pools up at the top of the holler. This was where we came whenever the season allowed to do our bathin'. The stream that came down near the house came from a spring up here. When the rains were good, as they'd been this year, water ran down the rock walls up there from one pool into the next before it ran out into a steady stream and by our house. The pools were deep and there was room to stretch out and dry on the rocky ledges around them.
I was doin' that—stretchin' out on a ledge after bathing in the cool water—and, I admit, I was naked and takin' care of myself. I did that whenever I come up here alone, as a way to find relief. Franny was of a mind that we could do it—she said she wanted to do it—but I'd been puttin' that off. That seemed just a might too far of this pretendin'. I supposed we'd have to do it eventually, though. I kept thinkin' of my pa's advice to just be normal now—to forget all of that other stuff and foolishness.
Well, I was layin' there, stretched out, pulling on myself, gettin' hot and bothered and real big—I was sort of prideful that way, although there were men around who were bigger than me—not that Will Lambert, but Honey Tom, most certain—and comin' real close to flaring off when I heard rustling in the bushes off the trail leading up to here. Well, I curled into a ball right quick then and looked t'ward where I'd heard the noise comin' from. There had been something out there, I was sure, but it wasn't there now.
For some reason the name Rufus stuck in my mind—probably because the only other one living this high up in the holler now was the black hermit, Rufus Jefferson. He had a cabin not more than a mile from here on the rim of the holler, near the top of Sugar Run Mountain. I don't know what Rufus did to keep himself goin'. He came down to Lambert's store in Thessalia now and again for supplies, but I knew seed him workin' anywhere down there, and folks gave him a wide berth, as big and hulking as he was—and black. More of a chocolate brown, of course, but a black is a black. I admit when I
did
see him, it gave me pause, standin' there and lookin' at him with a funny feeling coming on me. It probably was because of what I heard about him from one of the men at the mill. At one time he was a trapper, I heard, but I didn't rightly know if there was a market for skins anymore.