 Author S. Joan Popek |
"Ain't never been no white trash in this family, and there won't never be if I can help it!" His mother's deep chocolate eyes blazed. She stamped her foot and placed her aristocratic
hands on her ample hips defying anyone to dispute her. Her nearly hysterical voice took on the deep southern drawl she detested. She called the dialect uneducated slang, and she had fought for thirty years to lose it, but it always came back when she got upset.
Sam and his father were
used to her ranting about the purity of their race. Both had heard it numerous
times.
Sam turned to face his father.
"I'm sorry, Dad, but this time I can't let her say these things about Laura.
I love Laura, and I intend to marry her--with or without Mama's approval.
I can't change the fact that Laura's white any more than I can change the
way I feel about her. And the truth is, I wouldn't change anything about
her if I could. I searched for a long time for someone I could feel this
way about. I can't give her up just because she's not black."
The deep ebony of Sam's
father's skin accentuated his tall, still muscular body as the two men
stood almost inch for inch. The father was just a little heavier and displayed
a touch of silver around his temples--the only indication most people had
that he was older. Sam's Mama had always been proud that he had inherited
his father's strong cheekbones and aristocratic nose, which symbolized
their heritage, but Sam knew that right now, she wasn't proud of anything
about him.
A frown creased his father's
high forehead, and his sensitive eyes held Sam's. "Son, I--"
Mama pointed her finger
at her husband. "You stay out of this, Old Man, it ain't none of your concern.
I know you gonna side with the boy here. You always take up for him against
me. Ever since he was born."
His father's eyes left Sam's,
and he turned to face his wife. "Now, Honey, you know that ain't true.
Only if I think he's right. You know I--"
"Only when he's right? See?
There you are sidin' against me again. He's wrong. Dead wrong. And I won't
put up with your defendin' him. You hear me?" She shook her finger intimidatingly
in his face.
Used to his wife's flailing
digits when she was angry, he ignored the gesture and said gently, "I'm
not defending him. He's a grown man. He can make his own choices."
"Then you just hush, and
let me make mine." She balled her hands into fists and set them firmly
on her hips. Then she twirled with surprising grace, for her stature, to
face her son.
Sam searched her glaring,
dark eyes for some hint of forgiveness and found none. He lowered his eyes
and studied the polished, hardwood floor. He could almost see his face
in it, and he wished he could really be inside of it, away from the wrath
of his mother. His palms were damp, and his voice trembled as he spoke
against her wishes for the first time in his life. "Mama, please try to
understand."
Her rich, mahogany face
flushed, and her lips set into a firm line. "I'll never understand how
you could betray your ancestors like this. Your grandmother is probably
squirmin' in her grave right now. You are Black, Sam. You have the blood
of African Kings runnin' through your veins. Mandingo blood. Why would
you want to pollute it with that trash's white blood? I waited 'till I
was thirty years old to marry your father because I wouldn't settle for
anything less than the purest man I could find.
"Why can't you understand,
Mama? Dad had a mixed blood grandmother. That didn't stop you from marrying
him."
"That's as good as I could
find. What with all that race mixin' and unholy marriages that was goin'
on, I was lucky to find a man as pure as he is. At least he ain't got more
than a drop or two of white blood defilin' up his veins." The drawl returned
even thicker than before.
"How can you be so sure,
Mama? How can you know for sure that you don't have some Anglo blood floating
around in those royal veins of yours?"
"I'm positive. I know I'm
pure! If you ever dare to sass me like that again, I'll smack your mouth
so hard, you'll bite that evil tongue of yours off!" Her angry fist left
her hip as she raised it into the air, and it descended within inches of
his nose.
He flinched away from her
fist's orbit around his face. Embarrassed and angry, he turned to his father.
"Dad, I'm sorry. I've gotta go. Laura's waiting for me." Glancing at his
mother's angry face once more, he knew that if he didn't leave that second,
he would say something he couldn't retrieve. As he marched out of that
always-immaculate house, the stern portraits of famous, African Americans
stared accusingly at him as he rushed past the rich, Asian silks and elegant
sculptures created by Black artists that adorned his Mama's house. Always
Mama's house, he thought. Never my home. Never Dad's. Always Mama's.
He stormed down the front
steps on trembling legs and cursed aloud as he slammed the door behind
him.
His mother followed him
onto the steps and yelled at his back, "Don't you never be slammin' my
door, young man, and don't you bring that bitch here. And, don't you come
back neither. I have no son!"
Those were the last words
he heard from his mother's lips.
Two years later, Sam's father
came alone to the hospital to witness the birth of his first grandson.
"We named him Joshua." Sam
handed the tiny bundle to the proud grandfather. Tears of joy swam in the
old man's eyes as he gently unwrapped the baby.
His startled gasp when he
saw the child inside the blanket stung Sam's heart.
"Yeah, Dad. It's a pigmentation
phenomenon. The doctor thinks it's a DNA anomaly. Mama would say the sins
of the fathers are visited upon the children, but he's ours, Dad, mine
and Laura's, and we love him. No matter what. He can be yours too, if you
let him."
The new grandfather stood
immobile and stared at the baby in his arms for a long time. Touching him
gently with a thick, work hardened finger, he traced around the tiny face,
across the child's broad, yellow-gold forehead to the prominent little
nose, then across the exquisitely shaped neck and right shoulder. When
he reached the baby's shoulder, his hand hesitated for an instant, then
gently circled the dime-sized, ebony, star shape on the child's skin. Slowly
his fingers traveled down the length of the baby's arm, across the tiny
stomach, and down his chubby, right leg until his huge hand folded gently
over the perfectly shaped foot.
"His eyes are gold," he
whispered, then bent his head to gently kiss his grandson's forehead with
all the love of any grandfather.
Six months later, Sam sat
down beside his father on the sofa. Joshua was perched on his grandfather's
lap. The baby looked up at his grandfather, grinned and gurgled. Grandpa
made cooing sounds and tickled the soft, glowing skin of Joshua's plump
tummy. Over the months, Joshua's skin tone had turned from a soft yellow
to an almost luminescent, golden hue.
Sam watched the two silently
for a while, then asked, "Dad, why do you sneak over here all the time?
Why don't you just tell Mama you're coming? Maybe she would give in and
come see him herself."
The old man smoothed Joshua's
silky hair back off the boy's forehead and sighed. "No Son. It ain't gonna
happen. She won't even use his name. If she speaks of him at all, he's
Sam's son, not Joshua. Hell, I call him that myself half the time. Kinda'
fits though, you know?
Sam's son--Samson. Lord
knows he needs all the strength he can muster to get through this life."
"Why do you say that, Dad?
He's not retarded, or deformed, or crippled. It's just his coloring, that's
all. In fact, he's just the opposite. Dr. Rainey says he's months ahead
of other babies his age. He wants to have his IQ tested as soon as he's
two years old. Doc says we may have a child genius here. What's wrong with
that?"
"Nothin', Son. Nothin'.
Listen, Sam, I'm not just here for a visit this time. I have some bad news."
Bad news?" A feeling of
dread shuddered across Sam's stomach causing it to lurch sickeningly.
"It's your Mama, Son. She's
sick. Real sick. Cancer."
"Cancer? But can't they
do something?"
"No. The doctor says it's
in her pancreas. She doesn't have long, Son." He sat Joshua down onto the
floor and buried his face in his large, callused hands. Sobs shook his
broad shoulders, and Sam reached to comfort him, but stopped his hand in
mid-air as Joshua crawled over and bobbed up at his grandfather's knee.
"Papa hurt?" He patted his
grandfather's leg with a chubby hand and repeated, "Papa hurt?"
The grandfather froze, dropped
his hands into his own lap like they were heavy stones and stared down
at the baby. "He--he talked. He's only six months old. He shouldn't be
able to talk like that."
"And he knows something's
wrong," Sam stammered.
Both men stared at the plump
baby standing between them. Neither spoke.
Joshua rested his chin on
his grandfather's knee and looked back at the two men with his clear, golden
eyes. Then he crawled onto his grandfather's lap, wrapped his short arms
around his muscular neck and hugged him. "Joshua help," he said clearly.
The boy kissed the palm of his tiny hand and began to stroke his grandfather's
cheek. "Take love to her," the baby whispered. "If she accepts love, she
live." He sat back stiffly, closed his eyes and said, "Joshua tired." Slumping,
he collapsed into his grandfather's lap.
"My God, he's passed out."
Sam clutched his son, pulled him up and cradled him in his arms. Joshua's
small chest expanded and relaxed with the deep, gentle breaths that only
a sleeping innocent can attain. Sam's heart pounded into his throat. His
guts churned, then an overwhelming sense of peace fell over him as he stood
there holding his baby. "No. He's just sleeping."
Sam's father sighed with
relief, and slumped back onto the sofa. "What did we just witness?"
"I don't know, Dad."
"A gift from God," he said
with a reverence Sam had never heard in his father's voice. "That baby
made me feel good. Even though I was surprise and a little bit scared,
when he touched me with his hand, I felt better. Sam, I know it's impossible,
but he took the pain away!"
The shock of the moment
blunted the importance of what his father said.
Sam gazed down at his sleeping
baby and asked tentatively, "What was that he said about Mama?"
"He said, to take love to
her and she would live."
"But, how could... "
I don't know, son, but you
said he was special. Maybe we don't know just how special. Has he talked
like this before?"
"No. Not like that. Oh,
he says Mama and Dada, but nothing like what we just heard."
"Son, you know that I'm
not an overly religious man, but I think this is a message. I'm gonna go
tell your Mama about Joshua. Maybe it's God's way of making her see things
right." He kissed the sleeping boy Sam still held in his arms, gripped
Sam's shoulder with affection, then left without saying another word.
Sam was still sitting on
the sofa, holding his sleeping son, when Laura came home. He hadn't realized
the afternoon had faded into evening until she turned on the light. Joshua
stirred, opened his eyes and gurgled happily when he saw his mother.
Just like any baby, Sam
thought as he watched his child reach his chubby arms toward his mother.
She kissed Sam's lips gently,
took the baby from him, balanced the laughing boy on her hip and asked,
"How did your visit with your father go, Honey? I'm sorry I missed him,
but I had to be at that meeting. It looks like I might be offered a full
partnership in the firm. Isn't that great? Sam, what's wrong? Why are you
just sitting there so quiet. Did something happen?" She settled Joshua
onto the floor with his toys and sat down next to Sam. "What is it, Honey?"
"What is it?" he parroted.
Jumbled thoughts rushed through his head. Flashes of what his son had done
and said burned into his brain. "I'm--I'm not sure," he answered.
She took his hand in hers,
held it to her soft lips and kissed it tenderly.
Sam clung to her delicate
hand as if it was a lifeboat.
"Darling," she said, "What's
wrong? Is your father okay? He's not sick or anything, is he?"
He told her. He heard his
own voice, droning non-stop, almost hysterically, in his ears as if someone
else was speaking. He told her about his mother's cancer--his dad's crying--Joshua's
reaction--everything.
When he finished, she stared
at him for a moment, then at Joshua who was busily playing with a red ball
almost as big as he was, and she laughed. Immediately, she sobered, "Oh,
Honey. I'm sorry. I wasn't laughing about your mother. That must be terrible
for you. I was just surprised by what you said about Joshua. Honey, he's
just a little ahead of his age. That's all. I'm sure that in the pain of
the moment, his hugging his grandfather and talking baby jabbers just sounded
like words because both you and your father needed comfort right then."
She put her arms around Sam and hugged him.
"It didn't just sound like
words, Laura. Joshua said, 'Take love to her. If she accepts love, she
live.' I heard it. I did not imagine it."
Her blue eyes sought her
husband's. A frown fixed itself on her ivory forehead, and she raised her
eyebrows in disbelief. "Sam, he's six months old. He couldn't possibly
have said that."
"Dr. Rainey says he's very
advanced."
She stood up, and her knuckles
turned white as she balled her fists at her side. She hissed through tight
lips, "Advanced doesn't mean psychic. It doesn't mean my baby is some kind
of freak. Okay, his skin is different. He's smart. It doesn't mean more
than that. I'm going to make dinner, and I refuse to listen to any more
of this nonsense."
As she retreated to the
kitchen, she scooped Joshua into her arms and hugged him protectively to
her bosom. Then depositing him into his high chair, she handed him a cookie,
kissed his cheek, turned and began slamming pans onto the counter.
Sam watched his wife and
son in the kitchen and reviewed in his mind all that had happened this
afternoon. He felt like he was on a mental roller coaster. Like his emotions
were speeding toward a sharp curve and he didn't know if he would make
the turn or fly off into the void. I'm not imagining it. He told himself.
It happened. A fluttering sensation deep in his guts told him that his
life was about to change drastically, but he had no clue as to which direction
or what course he would be compelled to follow. Somehow, the feeling was
not unpleasant. In fact, he was filled with an almost tranquil calm beneath
his confusion.
The next morning, the family
dog, Zinger, ran into the street and was hit by a passing car. One of his
back legs hung at an odd angle as Sam carried him into the house. He laid
him, whining and licking at his injured leg, on the kitchen floor and called
to Laura to watch him while he called the vet. When he returned to the
kitchen to retrieve the dog, he froze in the doorway. His stomach launched
into his throat.
Laura was backed against
the wall. Wide-eyed shock shrouded her pale face as she stared at the floor
where Joshua sat. Zinger romped around the boy, licking his laughing face.
The baby cooed and giggled as he caressed the dog's leg.
Laura turned to face Sam,
her back still hugging the wall. She whispered in a choked voice, "He...
he said, 'Doggie hurt.' And... and then he touched the dog's leg, and the
leg bent back the way it should be. I watched it bend like a licorice stick,
waving around until it set itself back. I saw it." Her voice rose to a
hysterical shriek. "I saw it!" She collapsed in slow motion. Her body slid
down against the wall, like she had suddenly lost all of her bones, until
she was sitting on the blue tile floor. She started to cry softly, still
staring at the child and the dog playing in the middle of the kitchen floor.
Joshua turned from Zinger
and crawled toward his mother. Laura pulled her body into a ball against
the wall, wrapped her arms around her knees and held them tight against
her chest. She cringed as he reached for her knee. "Don't," she croaked.
"Mama?" He reached for her
with both chubby arms stretching--his face screwing up for baby tears.
"Mama? Joshua tired."
Her frightened eyes looked
up at Sam, still a statue in the doorway, then back at her son's face.
Slowly she opened her arms. He crawled onto her lap and fell asleep almost
instantly. She gazed down at him, looked back at her husband and said,
"Sam, I just watched my baby heal a dog's broken leg. Am I going crazy?"
Thawing, Sam knelt on the
cool tile floor beside her. Zinger came over and nuzzled his hand with
his nose. Absent-mindedly, he began stroking the dog's shaggy head. "Maybe
it wasn't really broken," he said. "Maybe it just looked like it."
"Sam, it was broken!"
"I'll call Dr. Rainey. He
said Joshua was advanced. Maybe he can help us figure out what's going
on." Sam didn't believe that this was in a pediatrician's or any other
doctor's realm, but he hoped it would put Laura's mind at ease.
She nodded helplessly. "Yes.
That's a good idea." She looked back down at Joshua, sleeping in her lap.
"Could you take him, please? Put him to bed?"
The next morning, Dr. Rainey
finished examining Joshua, gave him a sugar free sucker and scooped him
up off the examining table. He deposited him into the playpen in the corner
of his child oriented examination room and handed the baby a stuffed bear.
The boy gurgled happily,
slurped the confection, then tried to feed it to the stuffed toy.
Dr. Rainey turned to Sam
and Laura. "Physically, he's perfectly normal. Mentally, he's progressing
very fast. His hand-eye coordination is about on a three-year-old level,
and his motor functions are excellent. From what you told me, his verbal
skills are accelerated too. As for the grandfather and the dog, I just
don't know."
"Could we have imagined
it?" Laura asked. Her expression begged him to say yes.
"It's possible. The news
about your mother, Sam, was very stressful. As for the dog, well, maybe
his leg wasn't really broken. Maybe it just looked like it. I'd like to
run a few tests on Joshua though. Nothing painful; just mental and physical
evaluations. I'd like to call in a colleague, a child psychologist, to
help."
Laura looked at Sam, then
back at the doctor. "Psychologist? You think that Joshua needs a psychologist?"
Her voice took on a hysterical edge. "Or maybe, you think that Sam and
I are insane. Is that it?"
"Oh, no," Dr. Rainey answered
quickly. "Dr. Langly is a specialist in treating gifted children. No, Laura,
if any thing, Joshua is blessed with above average intelligence, not the
reverse. And I don't think either of you needs a psychologist." He hesitated
a moment, then added, "Except maybe to help you deal with an exceptional
child like Joshua obviously is."
Two weeks later, Joshua
was speaking full sentences and walking.
Laura refused to attend
any of the sessions with Dr. Langly and began to spend more time at the
office. She came home late, after the baby's bedtime, and left early, before
he woke up.
The baby-sitter quit when
she cut her finger peeling potatoes, and it healed instantly because Joshua
kissed it. That night, she met Sam at the door. With her strong, Spanish
accent even more pronounced than usual, she said, "Señor Manning,
Your child is of God or of the Devil. I do not know which, but I am afraid.
I will not be back." She made the sign of the cross on her ample bosom,
wrapped a scarf around her thick, black hair and rushed out the door before
Sam could respond.
Sam knew the same thing
would probably happen to the next baby-sitter, so he gave up his downtown
office and moved his accounting business into the den. He could work at
home and care for his son at the same time. Laura was so involved in her
job at the law firm and working so many hours, they decided it made more
sense for him to move than for her to try to juggle her work responsibilities
from home.
"Thank God I own the business,"
he said when they discussed it. "It's not really a problem this way. I
can do my job from just about anywhere."
"Yes," she murmured from
behind a stack of legal briefs she was reading. "No problem." Then, she
went to her desk and turned on the computer. "Oh, Honey, would you mind
putting Joshua to bed? I've got to finish this tonight. I've got to be
in court at eight a.m."
Sam watched her work for
a moment, then picked Joshua up and took him in to bathe him.
A week later, Sam's father
came to help him move the office. Over a cup of coffee in the sunny kitchen
he confided, "Son, I told your Mama about what Joshua did." He stared down
at his coffee and stirred the steaming, liquid gently with his spoon.
Sam knew by his father's
preoccupation that he was about to receive bad news. He steeled himself
and asked, "How is she, Dad?"
"Worse. She can't last much
longer." Sadness filled his father's eyes.
Sam sat silent, feeling
helpless. He clutched his warm cup with both hands and thought, He seems
so much older now. His gaze took in his father's profile. His dad's usually
straight back had developed a beaten slump, and dark shadows under his
eyes testified to a lack of sleep. His dark skin had become ashen, and
the gray on his temples had spread over his head lending him a halo of
silver hair.
"Will Mama see us now? Meet
Joshua?"
His dad contemplated the
coffee again, a frown furrowed into his forehead. Quietly, apologetically,
he said, "No, Son. She says that Joshua is--is--"
"From the devil?"
He nodded. "I tried to tell
her, but she won't listen. She says he's your punishment."
Three months later, Sam's
mother died. He went to the hospital to see her many times, but she had
left orders that he not be admitted to her room.
Laura refused to go to the
funeral.
Sam took Joshua who stood
between his grandfather and his father, gripping their hands. Joshua cried
deep sobbing tears. Sam was surprised that although he was a baby, Joshua
seemed to understand everything about the ritual of the funeral and even
its reason. Sam was sad, but somehow felt strangely at peace. Maybe it's
the release of the stress of waiting for it to happen, he thought.
But after the funeral, his
father said that Joshua must have absorbed their pain like the time before,
because he had felt the same peacefulness.
When they returned home,
Joshua slept soundly for twenty-four hours.
Laura left two months after
Sam's mother's funeral. Sam didn't blame her. He knew that when Joshua
healed the tumor in his grandfather's throat and began to read medical
books, it was the final straw for her. She couldn't understand, and she
was afraid of what she couldn't explain.
Joshua stopped asking for
her after about a month.
Sam asked his father to
sell his house and move in with Joshua and him. He did. Joshua's name for
his grandfather, Papa, stuck, and everyone, including Sam, called him that
for the rest of his life. Sam suspected that his father loved it even when
he protested vehemently the first time Dr. Rainey called him, Papa.
When Joshua was one year
old, Dr. Rainey called and asked for a meeting with him and Dr. Langly.
As they entered the office,
Dr. Rainey stood and smiled. He shook hands with Sam. "Hi, Sam."
"Hi, Doc. How are you?"
"Fine. Just fine. You know
Dr. Langly?" He nodded toward the second man in the room.
"Yes. Of course." Sam moved
to the stocky man and greeted him with an outstretched hand.
Dr. Rainey turned to Joshua.
"Hi, Joshua, how are you, my boy?" He held out his hand to Joshua.
Joshua wrapped his small,
pudgy hand around two of Rainey's fingers, shook them and smiled. His wispy,
flaxen hair waved in the breeze from the air conditioner. "I good, Dr.
Rainey. I learn about computers today. Daddy says he get me one for my
next birthday."
Sam sat down and watched
Doc and Joshua. He noticed that the baby's voice gave the adult words a
singsong lilt like a child reciting a nursery rhyme.
Dr. Langly moved to stand
near the corner of the room with a thoughtful look on his round face. He
too silently watched the greeting ritual between Dr. Rainey and Joshua.
His arms were crossed as he supported his chin in his right hand and absent-mindedly
stroked his short, neat beard.
Even though he was Polynesian,
Dr. Langly always reminded Sam of the Chinese detective in the old Charley
Chan movies he had watched as a child. Every time he saw him, he expected
the doctor to introduce a Number One Son. But Sam knew that Langly and
his wife had never had any children of their own and often wondered if
that was the reason he had gone into child psychology.
Sam's attention returned
to his son and Dr. Rainey. He thought, What an incredible scene! A chubby,
golden skinned baby, just over one year old, standing straight, in his
suspendered short pants, white shirt, and tiny bow tie, shaking hands with
a grown man and talking about computers.
Still holding the boy's
tiny hand, Dr. Rainey smiled and said, "That's great, Joshua. And, Dr.
Langly has some more good news for you. How would you like to meet a little
girl, just a bit older than you?"
The smile faded from Joshua's
face. He looked at Sam, then back at the doctor. "No, thank you."
"Other children make him
nervous," Sam explained to the two medical men. "He can't play their games,
and older kids tease him."
Dr. Langly left his observation
corner and sat in the one remaining chair in the small office. "Joshua.
Come here. I want to tell you something about this little girl." He held
out his arms to the baby.
Joshua's smile returned,
and he ran to sit on his lap. Since Langly began testing him, they had
become friends. Joshua sensed that Langly was truly fond of him, and Sam
could see in the man's face that although Joshua's abilities puzzled him,
his affection was genuine. Langly supported Joshua on a knee with one hand
and dug into his coat pocket with the other. He pulled out a small, square
puzzle. "Joshua, can you make all the colors the same on each side of this?"
Grinning, his cheeks dimpling,
Joshua said, "Sure." He held it in both hands and began turning the small
blocks in the larger block.
"I understand why other
kids make you nervous, Son," Langly continued. "But this little girl is
different. She's like you. Her name is Alice, and she put that puzzle right
in two minutes. Can you do it that fast?"
"Yep." Joshua smiled and
handed the cube back to Langly.
"One minute, twelve seconds,"
Rainey gasped as he checked his watch.
Langly nodded and took the
puzzle. "Yeah, you did it all right. Faster than Alice. If I promise she
won't laugh at you, would you meet her?"
"Okay." Joshua didn't sound
convinced, but Langly was his friend.
The next morning, Papa and
Sam drove Joshua the fifty miles to Gainsbouro to meet Alice. Sam was surprised
that other children like his son existed, but if it was true, he felt it
would be nice to have other parents to talk to about their uniqueness
Dr. Rainey and Dr. Langly
met them at the girl's home.
Everyone was a bit nervous,
but after the preliminary introductions, the adults settled into lawn chairs
on the patio and watched the two, golden children play in the sand box.
Alice's mother was a small
Oriental woman with bright, brown eyes and a perpetual smile.
Her father said that he
was half Apache and half Navaho Indian. His skin was almost as dark as
Sam's, and his serious eyes flicked from the children back to Sam and Papa
as if he was measuring their reactions. His dark eyes settled on Dr. Langly's
face. He asked, "Doctor, you said there are more of them? The kids, I mean.
More like them?"
Langly's sharp eyes kept
studying the children as they worked wordlessly in unison building a sand
castle. "Yes. I've heard of at least fourteen more. Three in Japan, two
in Spain and the rest scattered over Europe. There are probably more. I've
contacted a colleague in Paris. She's doing some checking for me."
Sam asked, "Do you have
any more clues as to why they're this way?"
"No, Sam, not really. As
I told you, their DNA patterns are different. To put it simply, sort of
an extra chain or two. Neither you nor your wife have that extra link,
and neither do you, Mr. and Mrs. Blackwater." He nodded toward Alice's
parents sitting with their fingers laced tightly together. "In fact, if
you did, you probably wouldn't be alive."
Alice's mother gasped, and
her free hand flew to her throat as if to stifle the fear that inspired
the sound escaping her lips. "But they are healthy, aren't they? Not sick
or anything? They won't... "
Rainey leaned forward, an
expression of empathy on his face, to reassure her. "Oh no, Mrs. Blackwater.
They aren't ill or in any danger. That's what Dr. Langly is saying. These
kids are extremely healthy, even though medical science dictates that they
shouldn't be. They're fine."
Mrs. Blackwater relaxed
her stiffened back, and her hand settled back into her lap, but she still
clutched her husband's hand tightly.
As Sam watched the couple,
Laura's delicate face flashed in his mind, and an aching emptiness in his
stomach surfaced for an instant. He caught himself wishing that Laura was
here to hold his hand like that.
Langly caught his glance
at the couple's hands, smiled understandingly and continued, "But I've
analyzed both children, and their patterns are exactly alike. I would stake
my reputation that the other children I just mentioned have the same patterns,
and that their parents don't. In fact, if the parents did, they probably
wouldn't have lived long enough to become parents."
Mrs. Blackwater asked, "What
does that mean?
Dr. Langly's eyes narrowed
in concentration making his oval face seem even rounder. "I'm saying that
these children seem to disprove what we know, or thought we knew, about
DNA patterns. We just don't know for sure yet. We'll have to wait for the
results from the other children before we know more, but I do have a theory."
Papa broke into the conversation.
"Look folks. Maybe we're making too much of this. Sure, the kids are different,
but look at 'em." He pointed to the children in the sandbox. "Except for
their skin, the kids look like two normal babies playing. Why can't we
just accept that?"
Dr. Langly spoke quietly.
"Not quite normal, Papa. See how they share the toys? No argument. No tug
of war. They both have advanced vocabularies, but neither has said a word
since they met an hour ago, yet, they are communicating. Quite successfully,
I'd say."
Alice's mother whispered,
"You mean they're reading each other's minds?"
"Exactly."
In the car, on the ride home,
Papa glanced at Joshua who had fallen asleep in the back seat. He said
quietly, "Sam, you know I've never been real religious, but ever since
your Mama died, I've been thinking about Joshua and everything that's happened.
I started reading your grandmother's old Bible. Thought I might find some
answers in there. When I was just a little tyke, she used to read it to
me. She always said she found the answers to all her problems in there.
She used to tell me that if I wanted to know the why of somethin', I should
look it up in the Good Book." The oncoming headlights illuminated his face
for an instant, then left it in darkness until the next car passed.
"Yeah, Dad? Did you find
them? The answers?"
"Well, you know how Langly
said that Joshua and Alice, and the others might be the next step in evolution?
I mean with their DNA patterns being different and all?"
"It's just a theory, Dad."
"I know, but what if it's
the opposite?"
"Opposite?"
"Yeah. What if, instead
of evolution, it's back to square one? What if God got fed up with us screwing
up everything he made and decided to start over? Genesis says that Adam
and Eve were created perfect. What if He decided to make new Adams and
Eves so they could clean up the mess we got ourselves into?"
"That's interesting, Dad,
but wouldn't God just wipe us all off the slate before He started over?
Isn't that what the Bible says?"
"I don't know. I ain't God.
Maybe He's tryin' to give us one more chance."
"Well, I suppose it's not
any more far-fetched than Langly's theory."
Papa glanced toward the
back seat at the sleeping boy and laughed. "Maybe we should ask Joshua."
"Maybe he could tell us,"
Sam answered.
Neither of them laughed.
End Excerpt, Sound The Ram's Horn.
Coming Soon From Hard Shell Word Factory http://www.hardshell.com. For more information, see http://www.sjoanpopek.com or email the author at
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Copyright (C) 1999 S. Joan Popek. All Rights Reserved.
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