A Live Coal in the Sea - Part 24
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Part 24

Mac grinned. 'What's in yours?'

'More of the same. Plus a few books on astrophysics, so we can talk with Camilla.'

It was the beginning of a happy week. The first morning, when Camilla and Mac went into the children's room, Frances Madeleine L'Engle-214 was asleep in her crib, but Taxi was not there. For a moment Camilla's heart lurched with terror. Where She hurried into the living room and saw Art coming toward her, carrying Taxi.

He explained, 'Sometime in the middle of the night I felt breathing on my face, and there was this little one. So he got into bed with Olivia and me andspent the rest of the night.'

'Papa, I'm sorry.'

'Don't be. He was a charming bedfellow, no trouble at all, and didn't wake up till just a few minutes ago.'

Mac laughed. 'His crib at home has much higher sides than the one you have for him. He couldn't have climbed out of that. Tonight we'll try to keep him where he belongs.'

The bishop set the little boy down, who kept his balance by clinging to his grandfather's leg. His grandfather? -Yes, Camilla thought. Please, yes.

'Don't worry about it,' Art said. 'Let be whatever will be.' And what was, was that somehow or other Taxi managed to get out of his crib, cross the living room on his wobbly legs, and get into bed with Art and Olivia. Into their bed and into their hearts.

One evening as they sat out on the veranda after dinner, watching the pale rose of the afterglow fade from the sky, the bishop rocked gently back and forth in his green rocker, mur muring, 'Tell me, brother, What are wet / Spirits bathing in the sea / Of Deity.'

Mac raised his arms over his head luxuriously, looking out over the ocean gently rolling in to sh.o.r.e. 'That's beautiful, Papa. One of your favorite unknown poets?'

'Christopher Cranch. Apt, isn't it, for this place, this peace.'

Olivia gave a small shiver. 'This peace. Yes. May it last. Do you ever wonder who Taxi's father might be?'

The bishop turned toward his wife, shaking his head. 'My dear-'

A Live Coal in the Sea 215.

'No,' Camilla said firmly. 'I don't wonder. Very carefully I don't wonder.

The four of us and my father are the only people who know that Taxi's father isn't- Maybe whoever it is doesn't know. To the rest of the world, my father is Taxi's father. He's getting old, he travels too much to care for an infant. He's getting arthritis. Taking Taxi's the natural thing for us to do.'

The children were asleep. Mac glanced up as though he could see into their room.

'Camilla and I don't think of Taxi as her brother. Not now, if we ever did.

He's our son.'

'He's a love of a child,' Olivia said. 'He certainly doesn't look like Rose, or whoever-'

The bishop said, 'Rafferty talked bitterly of some Frenchman they met at a party. Who knows? Taxi looks enough like Camilla to be her natural son.'

Olivia said, 'Darling Frances has considerable Rafferty in her.'

'Father?' Camilla asked in surprise. 'I think she looks like Mac.'

'She does, but Frances is not going to be small like the Xanthakoses. Height is what she has from Rafferty.'

Art said, 'Let them be who they are.' 'Precious lambs.' Camilla nodded.The bishop reached for his wife's hand. 'They're our grandchildren. We are very blessed.'

But the blessing, it seemed to Camilla, was precarious. Frank came to the United States for three months' home leave. Bethann was pregnant and had gone to stay with her parents. Frank flew down to Georgia to spend a long weekend with Mac and Camilla.

'Your timing is marvelous,' Mac said. They were sitting at the table under the pine tree, a wooden picnic table Rafferty had sent them to replace the old card table. The children were in an enclosure Mac had made, about the size of half a dozen playpens, where they kept their outdoor toys. 'Camilla and I have a big decision to make.'

'We've made it, haven't we?' Camilla asked.

'Yes. I wish I felt surer that we're doing the right thing.' Frank put down his tea, gla.s.s and stretched. 'Dear Mac, if you think you can be absolutely sure about anything, you're in the wrong business. What's this about?V 'I've been offered a parish in Jacksonville. We need to leave Corinth.

Everybody who sees Taxi knows that his mother was killed in an accident, and that she was Camilla's mother. They see a tragic story, not a happy little boy.' He looked toward the pen, where the two children were pummeling each other. Peals of laughter rang like bells against the evening air.

'You'd be a priest in your father's diocese,' Frank pointed out.

'I don't think that would be the problem. If we want a new and fresh life for Frances and Taxi, even Jacksonville's too close to everything that's happened.

Too many people know.'

Frances's laughter was joyous as she scuttled away from Taxi and sat on a large stuffed polar bear.

'Fankie!' Taxi shouted. 'Fankie.'

Frank laughed delightedly. 'He calls her Frankie! My little namesake. I think you're right, Mac. Frankie and Taxi are sister and brother. They need to be somewhere where they can live out of the spotlight.'

'Meanwhile,' Mac said, 'we're in Corinth. Taxi's beginning to talk. Frances tries to imitate him but she is, after all, considerably younger than he is, in baby terms.'

'What does Taxi call you?' Frank asked.

Was that everybody's question? Camilla asked, 'What do you think?'

Mac said, 'Taxi says Dadada, and Mamama, and Frances comes close.'

A Live Coal in the Sea217 Frank nodded. 'You're letting them do what comes naturally.'

Taxi's laughter turned to a whine, and Camilla stood up. 'When they stop having fun, it's time for bed.' She picked the two children up, tucking one under each arm, and headed for the house.

'Good for you,' she heard Frank say. 'You're not spoiling them.'

'It's easier not to spoil two than one. It's simply selfpreservation.' The slamming of the screened door cut off their voices.

When she returned to the pine tree, Mac was alone. 'Where's Frank?V 'He went in to take a shower. I told him.'She sat down beside him on the bench. 'Told him what?V 'That Rafferty's not Taxi's father.'

'Oh, Mac, no,' she protested.

'It's Frank, Cam. I'd trust Frank with my life. I do. You know that.!

'I trust him, too. But the fewer people who know, the better.!

'Frank will never say anything.'

'I know that, but-it's Father-it's so hard on himhumiliating-'

'I needed to have Frank know. Taxi has become as dear to us as Frances. But he is, in fact, not our child. He has no blood tie to me.!

'He does, to me.!

'Frank won't tell anyone, not even his wife. I just have this weird feeling we're on the edge of a precipice.!

'A premonition?' she asked anxiously.

'No. Just-the secrecy. I know we have to protect your father. But one secret leads to another. Sooner or later Taxi will have to know the truth.'

Madeleine L'Engle218 'Not sooner. He's just a baby.' 'He won't be a baby forever.' 'But not yet, Mac, and not ever, about Father-'

'Not now. I know. But-' He shook his head. Changed the subject. 'I'm glad Frank agrees that Jacksonville is too close to home. That's another reason I had to tell him, so I could talk to him honestly about the whole thing.'

She nodded, still wishing he had said nothing about Taxi's paternity. 'We need to leave Corinth. Taxi's bright, almost too bright. I don't want some troublemaker like Mrs. Lee hurting him.'

,Or Frances.'

'Or Frances. But Taxi's in the vulnerable, position.' 'We can't protect them forever.'

'Maybe not from the normal things, the ordinary, growing-up things. But vicious gossip?'

Mac bent down and picked up a handful of pine needles, letting their rust-colored stickiness slip through his fingers. 'It needn't even be vicious to hurt them. Cam, darling, I think I do want to go for my doctorate.'

'If you're sure it's what you want.'

'As much as I want anything right now. I've done a pretty good job here. Mama and Papa will understand about Jacksonville. I think they'll agree. But maybe we could go to the beach to be with them for a couple of days, talk it all over, get their advice.'

'In the end,' she said slowly, 'we have to make the decision ourselves.' She had made her major decisions on her own, not even considering consulting Rose and Rafferty. But then, Rose and Rafferty were nothing like Olivia and Art.

Frank came back out, wearing a fresh shirt and clean shorts. 'I'd forgotten this kind of heat. Your little ones are sound asleep, glistening with sweat. I guess they're used to it. Acclimated.'

'I'm not,' Camilla said. 'I wanted to get another air con A Live Coal in the Sea-219 ditioner, but Taxi tends to croup, and the air conditioner isn't good for him.

Thank heaven Frances seems to thrive, no matter what. We tried having her sleep away from Taxi, but it didn't work. They both howled till we put them back together.'

'What a good and pleasant a thing it is,' Frank quoted, for brethren to dwell together in unity. Not much of it in the rest of the world. Or all. around you, with racial unrest increasing. How's Corinth?'

Mac shrugged. 'Still living in the dark ages. Sooner or later the world will catch up with us, but for now we're quiet. Segregated, but quiet.'

Frank sat across from them, stretching his legs along the bench. 'Enjoy it while you can.'

'I'm not exactly enjoying it.' Mac scratched his head. 'The thing is, how much can I say without creating so much antagonism that nothing is accomplished?'

Camilla said, 'The kids talk a little, on Sunday evenings. Gordie is such a reactionary he tends to make the others more open than they might be. Freddy Lee is applying to Harvard, and he'll probably get in.'

'Harvard's not exactly a hotbed of integration,' Frank said.

'It would be a start, and I think Freddy's open to it.' Camilla wrapped her arms about herself as though a cold breeze had blown across the table. The violence that was spreading in the South had not touched Corinth, and she had isolated herself to some extent through her preoccupation with her little family. With half her mind she listened to Mac and Frank, while still keeping an ear alert to the house and the children's open bedroom window.

When she was in Athens she usually dropped into the library's reading room to catch up on The New York Times. If they went to New York for Mac to get his Ph.D. she would return to the world, the wider world, where she could forget Madeleine L'Engle220 that Mrs. Lee did not think she was quite what a rector's wife ought to be, and could remember to be a member of the larger universe.

The children were not an excuse but they were the reason for her isolation.

Although Taxi looked st.u.r.dy, he was not as strong as Frankie-as they were now calling her. When Frankie had a mild case of chicken pox, Taxi had a bad one, and Camilla and Mac took turns sitting up all night with him until his fever abated and his running sores had dried up.

Frankie was growing into an independent little girl, wanting to do things on her own, to feed herself as soon as Taxi did, to drink from a cup, to imitate everything. Taxi was willing to be dependent, to need cuddling, to count on the unvarying nighttime routine, the same songs, the same prayers, in the same order.

The cribs were replaced by two youth beds, sent by Rafferty. Taxi was usually the first one to waken in the morning, calling softly, 'Ma-ma.' Camilla was his mother, there was no question about that; he was her child as much as Frankie, the little tomboy.

When Mac came home, Taxi would rush at him, 'Daddy, Daddy, Daddy!' followed by Frankie, equally loud, both of them waiting for Mac to pick them up and swing them. Quan tum, unwilling to be left out, would make one of his leaps onto Mac's shoulder, and then purr loudly enough to be heard over the children, while Camilla laughed with pleasure.When the children were in bed, Camilla, often joined by Mac, read to them.

One night Taxi looked at them, asking, 'Who bought Frankie and me?'

Mac said, 'No one could possibly buy either you or Frankie. You're both much too precious to buy.'

'Extweemly pwecious,' Frankie announced.

A Live Coal in the Sea,221 'But who bought us?' Taxi persisted.

Camilla tried to help. 'You couldn't be bought, Taxi. G.o.d gave you and Frankie to us.'

'For Cwistmas,' Frankie said.

'But we was tiny babies. How did we get to be tiny babies?' Mac said, 'You know how we put seeds in the garden, and they turn into flowers and vegetables?

You might say you and Frankie were grown from seeds.'

Camilla looked at him. He was right. Ultimately Taxi would want more accurate stories of his birth.

'But how did you get the right seeds?' Taxi asked.

Mac answered seriously, 'We do have to have the right seeds, son. If we got the wrong seeds, you could have been a tomato instead of a Taxi.'

He and Frankie broke into delighted giggles at this fancy. 'Bedtime, bedtime,'

Mac said. 'No more questions tonight.' He and Camilla kissed the children.

Then Camilla went outside and stood looking up at the night sky, at the familiar patterns of the stars, until she felt relaxed enough to go to bed.

,Star-gazing?' Mac asked as she came into their room. She laughed. 'Yes. Most astronomers don't actually go out and look at the stars, but it's something I've always liked to do, maybe because there weren't many stars visible in the New York night sky. The stars at night were one of the things that got me through my years in boarding school. They're especially beautiful, here, in Corinth.'

Mac rubbed his hand gently against the back of her neck. 'I go into the church and pray, and you go out and look at the stars.' He stretched his arms high.

'G.o.d, it's good.' Then he turned to her and pulled her to him.

Later that night, waking from a dream, Camilla went downstairs to write her weekly letter to Rafferty, whose arthritis was worsening, and who had moved from Chicago to New Mexico. New Mexico was far enough away so that Mrs.