The Education of Dixie Dupree
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Synopsis
In 1969, Dixie Dupree is eleven years old and already an expert liar. Sometimes the lies are for her mama, Evie's sake-to explain away a bruise brought on by her quick-as-lightning temper. And sometimes the lies are to spite Evie, who longs to leave her unhappy marriage in Perry County, Alabama, and return to her beloved New Hampshire. But for Dixie and her brother, Alabama is home, a place of pine-scented breezes and hot, languid afternoons.
Though Dixie is learning that the family she once believed was happy has deep fractures, even her vivid imagination couldn't concoct the events about to unfold. Dixie records everything in her diary-her parents' fights, her father's drinking and his unexplained departure, and the arrival of Uncle Ray. Only when Dixie desperately needs help and is met with disbelief does she realize how much damage her past lies have done. But she has courage and a spirit that may yet prevail, forcing secrets into the open and allowing her to forgive and become whole again.
Release date: October 25, 2016
Publisher: Kensington Books
Print pages: 352
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The Education of Dixie Dupree
Donna Everhart
Mama stood in the kitchen chatting with him while I went to my bedroom to get it. Reaching under my mattress like I’d done a thousand times before, I realized this would be the last time I would do that. I hesitated. Could I give it up? If I did, who would I “talk” to once it was gone? Who would I tell my deepest secrets and fears to?
Mama came down the hall, calling my name, “Dixie?”, and I snatched it from its hiding place, hurrying to pull the pink chenille bedspread back in place.
I came out of my room, the familiar feel of it in my hand more pronounced than usual, the weight of my words and private thoughts sitting heavy in the palm of my hand.
“I have it,” but I held on to it tight while we walked back into the kitchen, where Mr. Evans stood waiting, looking like he was in no big hurry. He was tall, with gray hair and glasses. I liked his blue eyes, they were friendly and they didn’t seem to hold any judgment of me. Just as I lifted my hand to give him the diary, my fingers tightened and there we stood, me clutching it and him ready to take it, yet I couldn’t turn it loose. He dropped his hand and waited patiently. I think he knew I was trying to be brave about giving it to him, but it was a big decision and I understood what it meant. After a few seconds, I took a breath, and let it go. He nodded, as if in approval.
It’s 1969, the Age of Aquarius, at least according to The 5th Dimension on the radio. Being one of my favorite songs, I’m always listening for it so I can turn the volume up, flip my hair over my shoulders like Cher, and sway to the music while hoping Mama won’t yell at me to turn it back down. The 5th Dimension’s song said that when Jupiter aligned with Mars, peace would fill the planets. I figured if that could happen, there was a chance things could be perfect here, as well. Nineteen sixty-nine has been hard, a year when everything in my life and those around me got forever turned upside down. I’ve been smack-dab in the middle of it, well, me, and now my diary.
It was one of the few presents I ever got that was exactly what I wanted. Mama gave it to me three years ago, a present for my eighth birthday, and when I removed the pale pink paper she’d wrapped it in, saw the blue and green cover with the gold latch and special little key, I was thrilled. I wore the tiny key around my neck all the time, only taking it off to bathe, so having to part ways with it was going to be like losing a hand or something equally important.
From the beginning, I’d written about all kinds of things, although now, at the ripe old age of eleven, I realized some of those earlier entries were childish. I’d written about certain foods I hated, but Mama still made me eat. I wrote how my best friend, Barbara Pittman, loved the color orange. I even wrote about her stinky brother, Bryan, who was always trying to show his whatchamacallit to the girls in my class, in other words, mostly non-important stuff.
I’d written about Mama, too. In some ways, she was a mystery, an enigma I’d yet to figure out. There were many facets to her, like a diamond under a microscope; depending on which way it was turned, there was something else to see. Her unhappiness and that sporadic temper that would burst out of her were puzzling. I didn’t understand her, and I thought she certainly didn’t understand me. Sometimes she would say, “You’re too much like me for your own good,” which in turn made me study her, trying to find the parts of her that were me.
For a time, I’d thought our family was happy, but my na-ïveté was only a safeguard from reality. As things fell apart between Mama and Daddy, I blamed myself, feeling responsible for how it started. But it was what Daddy did that sealed our fate. And when Uncle Ray showed up appearing to be full of good intentions about helping us out, he ended up causing more than his own share of trouble.
Uncle Ray. I always shiver when thinking about him, and Granny Dupree said when you shiver and its ninety-some degrees outside, that’s someone walking over your future grave. It was hard writing about what he did, and I couldn’t go back and reread those entries like I did some of the other ones. You could say what was on those pages about him was akin to a coming storm, like dark clouds gathered on a horizon, persistent in their approach. If someone else had read those words, they might have wondered: Would they bring rain or something worse, something destructive? But the only one reading them was me, and I was too close to it all, too young to see how twisted up it was, too innocent to consider the danger and heartbreak.
Intent on Mr. Evans’s every move, I watched as he put my diary in his briefcase, and only when it was out of sight could I look at him again.
He said, “Dixie, you understand, you might not get it back.”
I had suspected this, but knowing it was another thing.
Still, all I said was, “That’s okay.”
Really, it wasn’t, and my eyes felt like they consumed my entire face as I kept staring at him, the implications of it all too big for me to handle right then. I supposed the only reason to give it up was knowing it held the truth, the truth I wouldn’t have to tell to a room full of strangers. At the time, I hadn’t worried it was going to be exposed for all to read and then dissect. I mean, who cares about a young girl’s diary except her? When I’d told Mama I had everything written down about what happened, she acted surprised.
“What do you mean you have it written down?”
“In my diary. I wrote about what happened with Daddy, and about Uncle Ray, too.”
“You wrote about what happened with him . . . ?”
“Yes, ma’am, most of it.”
I noticed how she wouldn’t say Uncle Ray’s name anymore. I didn’t see what the big deal was, but she went to the phone and called Mr. Evans. Next thing I knew, he was here, taking the diary and explaining to Mama and me why it was so important. It was key evidence.
He said, “Well, with what happened, not much more needs to be known, but it certainly won’t hurt. You are a smart young lady, Dixie.”
That was all fine and good, but I didn’t like the way people’s faces changed once they had the facts, because I sure didn’t want their god-awful pity. Before we left New Hampshire, I’d already been subjected to it all from the police, the doctors, and the nurses. They had looked at me with that “bless her heart” look. When we got back here, Daddy’s folks acted different toward me too, like they were embarrassed, even my cousin, Debra, Uncle Elroy and Aunt Margie’s daughter. I didn’t think she could ever be embarrassed about anything, she was too damn mean. I tried to ignore the looks, but when I caught people unaware, their faces were open and revealing. That’s when I got uncomfortable. I knew they knew, and they were thinking about it.
Mr. Evans asked me how I’d been so good about writing almost every day.
I told him, “Well, Mama said I’m stubborn, about as stubborn as Alabama dirt.”
I thought of a good comparison.
“Do you know how hard it is to grow grass, Mr. Evans?”
We were now standing out in the front yard, and I scratched my toe through a patch of the red dirt I loved, but Mama hated with the wrath of someone who thinks it’s out to get her. I stared down at the line and realized it was just like I’d issued a dare to Mr. Evans to step over it.
He glanced down at the dirt, and with a slight smile on his face, he said, “Sometimes soil just needs a little bit of TLC, right?”
I’d learned stubborn worked two ways; it could help you or hurt you. For me, it usually meant trouble, particularly when Mama was in the mood to conform me to her idea of respectful.
If things weren’t going good with me, she’d say, “Well, I guess when life hands you lemons, you make lemonade.”
Most of the time I’d felt like a fly in her glass of lemonade and just when she went to take a big swallow, there I was, ruining her attempt at making the best of things. Our relationship might have gone a bit more smoothly in the earlier days if she’d considered me as being tenacious. It was AJ who’d told me that word, AJ, who never caused her any grief. Once I overheard Mama telling Aunt Margie it was like having birthed an angel, then a small she devil.
AJ’s two years older than me, and for the most part, he’s the typical big brother, doing things like purposefully tripping me when I walk by him, or eating the last chocolate chip cookie when he knew I wanted it. But sometimes, he did nice, non-brotherly things, like trying to help me with homework, or letting me talk when I needed to talk, as well as giving big brotherly advice.
One day after Mama had got on me for persisting in talking to her when she was concentrating on her grocery list, he said, “Tell her you’re not being stubborn, you’re just being tenacious.”
Maybe AJ was right, so next time, I was quick to let Mama know I wasn’t stubborn.
I said, “I’m just tenacious, Mama, not stubborn.”
Her hand connected to my cheek before I had a chance to take my next breath. AJ didn’t mean to get me into trouble. We both knew there were times when you could say something like that and she’d laugh, or she’d unexpectedly snap, and neither of us could figure out when it would be one or the other.
Mr. Evans looked down at the bare patch I’d scraped my toe through and said, “You’ve got to give something to the soil before it will return the favor and give something back.”
His smile broadened and the crinkles around his eyes showed he smiled a lot. I liked his explanation of TLC, and I made a decision right there; I would take him for his word from that point on.
He said, “I’ll be in touch, Mrs. Dupree. And young lady, you don’t need to worry, this will be over with before you know it.”
I nodded my head, all the while wishing he’d tell me how that was going to happen. Mama watched as Mr. Evans got into the waiting taxi and left for the airport. I watched him, too, thinking, He’s taking my best friend, the one way I’ve been able to cope. The knowledge my beloved diary was no longer under my mattress left a hole that couldn’t be filled. I was sorry and blaming myself for everything, including opening my big mouth about it.
Mama turned without a word and walked into the house, and I thought, She’s probably sick and tired of it all by now. I stood until I saw the last of the taxi’s taillights disappear in the curve of the road and then I turned to follow Mama inside. Before I got to the screen door, it opened and she came toward me, her hand outstretched, something small and black held in it.
Her voice was quiet, “I want you to have this.”
It looked like what Mr. Evans had just put into his briefcase, only it was bound in black leather. I stared at it and at Mama, puzzled.
“What is it?”
Her expression became detached, with a hint of sorrow.
She sighed and said, “It’s my diary. I got it when I bought yours. I want you to read it.”
I stared at its dog-eared appearance, and I could tell she’d been as intent on writing in it as I’d been in mine.
She turned to go back inside, and hesitated, “Dixie?”
“Yes, ma’am?”
“You know, none of this was your fault. I hope you’ll understand things after you read it, if not today, then someday. It’s going to get better, I promise.”
I could only nod, mouth hanging open, dumbstruck by what I held. I walked into the house, finding it hard to stay behind her. I was anxious to be in my room and reading, and I had to fight the urge to push her out of the way so I could get there quicker. Mama went to the kitchen and picked up the phone, probably to call Aunt Margie while I hustled down the hall to my room.
I sure was glad AJ was down at the creek catching crawdads to go fishing so he wouldn’t be pestering me to go outside with him. I sat on the edge of my bed and flipped it open, staring at the first entry. It was dated 1966, and what she wrote sent a shiver down my back and my heart to thumping.
It said, She lied. Just like I asked her to, but, what kind of life do I have when I have to ask my own child to lie for me?
She was writing about me. I’d been eight years old and I’d gone and got her in trouble with Daddy and Granny Dupree. It occurred to me this was when it had started, when we’d all begun to lose our way with each other. It happened so gradually, none of us saw it coming, until there was nothing left but empty conversations and useless arguments inside a house that had anticipated love, but had only seen sadness.
1966
When I went and got Mama in that mess with Daddy and Granny Dupree, my way of making up for it was to help cover up what she’d done. She told me what to say and I said it. She said, “Don’t tell,” and I didn’t. That was when I first noticed Mama and Daddy had a problem and I became fixated on them. Like a cat stalking a bird, I watched, wondering just when they’d started to come apart. Their trouble took such a hold of them it was like they’d got caught in a riptide, tossed and turned, neither one seeming to know which way to go to get free. The day it happened was like most days around our house. Mama didn’t like chaos, she liked things in their place, meaning me and AJ, too, and it would start like this.
After Daddy went to work, Mama would throw open the doors to our rooms saying, “Get up! Get up!” while throwing the covers back on our beds while we were still huddled in them. Then, she’d throw the curtains open so the sun hit you right in the eyeballs.
Her next sentence was, “Come on, the sun’s shining and I’ve got a million things to do!”
I’d often speculated how someone could have a million things to do every day if they’d just done a million the day before. Half-awake, we’d stumble out to the kitchen, where she’d shove a sausage biscuit in one hand, a glass of milk in the other, and we’d go sit on the back steps and eat. Most days AJ and I didn’t mind eating outside if it was warm, and we’d sit out there stuffing buttery biscuits in our mouths, grease running down our chins. We’d drink our glasses of cold milk and feel full and happy. What did we care if we were in our pajamas playing in the yard at seven o’clock in the morning? If we did as she said, things were fine. Later on we’d go back inside and go about the rest of our day, Mama talking to us about this and that, or we’d play games until Daddy came home.
On that particular day, I resented her getting us up so early. It was a Saturday, and after being in school all week, I had decided we ought to be able to sleep in. All my friends talked about how their mamas let them do that, and then get up to eat a leisurely breakfast while sitting at the kitchen table. I stood defiantly by the screen door and Mama’s frenzied vacuuming came to a stop. It was too late by the time I realized I’d made a mistake, too late to head for the back door. She grabbed me, shaking me so hard, my head snapped back and forth, turning everything blurry and causing me to drop my sausage biscuit on the floor.
“Look what you’ve done to my clean floors! You’ll get nothing else, do you hear me?”
“But . . . you made me drop it!”
Mama froze for a split second, and then, like I’d seen before, something took over, an anger that could come and go as fast as a summer storm. She drew back her hand and smacked me in the face so hard my ears rang. The blood from my busted lip tasted strange, a tinny flavor I found nasty. I wiped what trickled down my chin with my hand while Mama watched me, her expression calculating to see if I was sorry enough. No longer defiant, I crept out and sat beside AJ, sniffling, as I tried to clean my hand by scraping it against the edge of the porch. I sat, staring at the ground, letting my lip drip blood onto the cement step.
He hadn’t seen anything, sitting there, oblivious, and happily cramming the rest of his biscuit in his mouth. He turned to me, his hand held out expecting me to give him mine since I didn’t always eat it. He gawked at my red-stained mouth and my cheek, already starting to bruise.
“How’d that happen?”
Without turning around, I pointed over my shoulder at Mama. He looked at her through the screen door cleaning up biscuit crumbs off the floor. Without a word he jumped off the back steps, went to the swings, and started swinging, staring at me, shaking his head. He figured I’d done something wrong. I went down the back steps to the far end of the yard where the sandbox was, sucking on my swollen lip and touching my throbbing cheek. For the rest of the day, I stayed in the yard swatting at flies that seemed attracted to my mouth and feeling miserable. I refused to go in to get a drink or eat, and Mama didn’t make me.
When Daddy came home, I ran up to his car. He got out and I gazed up at him, knowing by the way my face felt, how it must look. He squatted down and grabbed my shoulders, looking in alarm from my cheek to my lip.
“Dixie, what in the hell happened to you?”
“Mama socked me in the face.”
“She did what?” he asked, disbelief in his voice.
I looked over at the kitchen door and my heart skipped a beat. She stood there staring, and I could see she was still not herself. Her eyes jumped out at me through the screen door like they were going to burn me. I could hear her voice in my head saying shut your mouth, while her fingers fluttered against her leg in a strange manner I’d never seen, tapping to a rhythm only she could hear. I tore my gaze away, looking anywhere but at that screen door. Daddy looked at Mama, a vein pulsing in his forehead.
He said in a tone that wouldn’t stand any arguing, “Go play with your brother.”
AJ was digging in the dirt beside the sandbox and I ran over to him. When I looked back, Daddy was walking fast toward the house, arms swinging, fists clenched.
I worried, What’s he gonna do?
He went inside, slamming the screen door and yelling, “Evie!” even though she stood right there.
She backed up and then he blocked her from view. The anger in his voice as he yelled made me feel vindicated, yet afraid. There was a thump, an unpredicted sound that made me stare toward the house. I heard it again, and then again. It was bad enough knowing what it was, but the silence while that beating went on was the worst. What would Mama think of me now? She would hate me, I was sure of it. I turned and ran toward the back of the yard again, away from the dull sound of his fists on her body. I put my hands over my ears and waited. The thought of him beating on Mama on account of me made me sorry I’d said anything, and I wondered when those blows would stop.
She crept ’round us the rest of that evening, refusing to look at anyone. Her face was like mine, like Daddy wanted her to know how it felt. She put supper on the table, but when she sat down, she only pushed the food around on her plate and didn’t eat. I ate because I was starving, despite my lip splitting all over again soon as I took a bite. I had to keep dabbing it with a napkin, but it didn’t stop me from cramming food in. Daddy sat at the table, head in his hands, perhaps sorry he’d done it, but then he’d see me dab at my mouth and he’d look at Mama, angry all over again. She refused to meet that look.
After we went to bed I heard them arguing.
Mama cried, “Why did you call and tell your mother, for God’s sake? There is no need to involve your family!”
“She’s just a kid, and if you didn’t do it, how’d it happen?”
“I don’t know how it happened!”
I was sitting up in bed, about to write in my diary, and I caught my breath at Mama’s out-and-out lie. Why would she lie? What she said made me more nervous than when Daddy hit her. It grew quiet and after a minute, I wrote: Mama lyed about what she did. Is she scared of Daddy?
A couple days later I stood in front of her, stiff and uncomfortable. It felt cramped in the small bathroom, being she was in such a foul temper. She wielded a brush in her hand like it was a weapon; her rough strokes through my waist-length hair were a measure of her aggravation about a visit to go see Granny Dupree. She acted even more annoyed, if that was possible, as she stared at the bruise on my face, which had turned all sorts of interesting colors. Continuing to tug on my hair to straighten out the tangles, she began telling me what not to say.
Like a record with a scratch on it, she repeated, “Don’t you tell your Granny I hit you, do you understand me?” as she worked out the snarls, my quiet “ouches” disregarded.
Sounding exasperated, as if I was responsible for the green and purple spots on my cheek and mouth, she went on, “Hell, I can’t help it if you’re so damn clumsy! You’re always falling down when you and AJ are playing,” providing me a reason without coming right out and saying it.
I nodded my head, obliging her by agreeing. All I wanted was to be back in her favor, to make sure the other mama wasn’t going to show up. When she was herself, she’d tell us stories about growing up in New Hampshire, she’d hug me like she couldn’t let go, and she’d let me stand close to her while she cooked. I’d get to twirl my fingers through her dark brown hair while she put on her makeup. She always said it felt good and eased her headaches. Her hand smoothed down stray hairs, taking a moment to rest over my bruised cheek, like she wanted to keep it there to cover it up.
She mumbled, “It pisses me off. I shouldn’t have to go down there and explain jack shit to anyone. Sometimes I wish I could just go home and get away from this place.”
Anger simmered off of her, baking me in its heat like sun in the summertime and I stood there in it, unable to escape, hoping she was almost done. While I waited, I pictured Mama’s “home,” wondering what was so different about it there. I wanted to ask, but not while she held the brush. She finished and then fastened in a barrette to hold the hair back off my face. In the next instant, she took it back out. She didn’t know what to do about my appearance, and she knew there was no way she could hide what had been done.
“Damn it all to hell.”
Her anger, wadded up in those words and tossed out in the tiny bathroom, reverberated around the both of us. She gave a sigh, a sound of defeat. Spinning me around toward the door, she shook her finger as a warning to go along with her words, “Go wait in the car and remember what I told you, do you hear me, Dixie LuAnn Dupree?”
I nodded, “Yes, ma’am.”
I barely had time to clear the door before she slammed it behind me, staying in the bathroom. I stood for a moment listening, and when I heard the medicine cabinet door shut, I turned and ran to the car.
We didn’t live far from Granny Dupree’s house. Daddy’s family has lived in Perry County, Alabama, along the same stretch of road for five generations. A two-lane road, once a dirt track, Daddy said the only thing that had changed was going from dirt to asphalt. It was still walled in on either side with tall pine trees like it had been when he was growing up. Most days he’d roll the windows down, letting the fragrance from the pines waft into the car, and I would habitually put my arm out the window allowing the warm breeze to push against my hand, an unseen force I was fascinated by. That day he didn’t roll them down. It was silent, even AJ wasn’t chattering away, him being notorious for talking everyone’s head off soon as the car engine started.
Mama and Daddy stared straight ahead, and Daddy’s hands gripped the steering wheel tight, not relaxed like usual when he drove. Most times I’d sit in back, but on this trip Mama hauled me into the front seat to sit between them. She looked nervous, and I could hear her swallowing over and over like her mouth was dry.
She asked Daddy in a quiet voice, “I suppose Elroy will be there, as judge and jury?”
Uncle Elroy is Daddy’s younger brother, and he’s married to Aunt Margie, who got the religion a couple years ago and now carries her Bible around all the time. Their daughter, Debra, I have concluded, has got to be the meanest cousin anyone could ever have. She seems partial to chasing me around Granny Dupree’s yard while waving a switch and hollering, “I’m gonna beat the tar outta you!” I prayed in . . .
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