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Lost Lamb - Teter Keyes, Author

Lost Lamb

Deidra Ann is a twelve-year-old girl living in southern United States during the mid-1960s. Living with her grandmother and aunt, Deidra Ann has never met her mother.

Behind their house is a forest where mysterious things happen; a forest that is off limits to Deidra Ann. Some claim that her grandmother is a witch.

Begin the journey here with the first chapter.

Chapter 1

My name is Deidra Ann. I am twelve years old and I have big problems. First, I don’t know where my Mama went off to, and I have no idea who my Daddy is. Granny said the only thing Mama told her when she dropped me off at two weeks old was that the devil got through her defenses. Sometimes I turn my head from side to side in the mirror trying to separate my parts—nose, mouth, ears—to see if they resemble the ones in the family pictures that line the hall, or if they are different. One thing for sure, no one in those old photos has red hair with wild curls and my grass-green eyes.

Another problem is that behind Granny’s house is a haunted forest with twisted trees. It is so thick in there, among the trees, scrub and vines, that darkness leaks out into the meadow. Granny claims it isn’t really haunted but if not, then why doesn’t she let me go in? After all, there is a footpath into the forest marked by two pines leaning against each other. It isn’t easy to see the entrance from granny’s house on the opposite side of the wide meadow, lessen you know about the leaning pines.

Maybe it’s because we live downwind from the crematorium that sits on McCaw Hill and when it’s going, the tops of the trees reach out to catch the wisps of smoke that escape the crematorium’s tall round smokestack. Sometimes, if that person’s death comes sudden or by some foul means, those wisps whisper their truth. Least it does for those who can hear such things.

Restlessness tugs me from sleep this June morning. The same feeling makes me dress real quick and, after I use the toilet and scrub the yuck from my eyes, I go into the kitchen. Normally, by the time the sun is up, Aunt Willa is sitting at the kitchen table in a dress and low heels, hair piled on her head, and lipstick in place, ready for the day. On a normal day, she has a coffee cup in hand and the Bible open atop the Formica table. This morning, she’s standing at the kitchen window staring at something outside.

Here’s the thing about my auntie. Something happened before I was born and whatever it was scared the bejesus outta her. I don’t know what happened, seeing as how everybody claims it’s not for children’s ears, even though I’m nearly thirteen. She fled to my granny’s house, new husband following, stumbled into her mama’s arms, and locked the door against the outside. Sure, she sometimes ventures out in the daylight far enough to work in the garden, but beyond the picket fence is danger and she refuses to venture into what she claims is shark-infested waters.

That explains why she’s in Granny’s kitchen staring out the window.

“What’s you looking at?” I ask joining her.

“Mama,” she answers.

When I pull back the curtain to see for myself, there is my granny standing at the

garden gate, still as a statute, watching the dark woods. Her head is tilted like she’s listening to something, one silver strand of hair escaping the hooded jacket she’s wearing.

“Not good,” I say.

“Nope,” Aunt Willa agrees.

“I’d better…”

“Best you do,” my aunt concludes. At that, she moves back to the table to finish her coffee and the daily scripture reading. I pull on a jacket hanging on the hook by the back door and go out to join my granny. It hits me as soon as I open the door, a great wave of desolation and fear that rolls over me like fog on a late fall morning.

“Augh,” I grunt.

“And praise God Almighty,” my aunt prays as I close the door behind me.

Remember what I said about the crematorium? Some people say that a person’s soul leaves their body when they pass. What I’ve come to believe, what most natural-born issue of my granny believes, is that some residue of what makes one person different from another remains behind. When the flames of the crematorium ignite a body, that residue floats up the tall smokestack, eddies and swirls in the breeze, and is caught in the tall Loblolly pines behind Granny’s house. That usually explains the emotions that catch me by surprise when I step outside. This morning what I feel is different; something stronger and more alive. Instead of being wispy like smoke, this is potent enough to smell. Something has gone terribly, unexpectedly wrong.

“Granny?” I ask, walking toward her. I don’t want to startle her, seeing how deep she is inside her mind. She has one hand on the gate latch like she’s about to open it.

“Morning, baby,” she tells me, quickly taking her hand off the gate and putting it around my shoulder. We stand there, just inside the picket fence, watching dawn brighten the yard.

“Something really bad happened,” I tell her.

“Yes, it did. Not an unnatural death this time, but something different, something bad.”

“We gonna find out?” I ask, already suspecting the answer.

“We are, but first I have to see Mrs. Lambert. She’s coming by as soon as the Bible School bus picks up their young’uns.”

Some places, like this southern state with too many vowels, Granny might be called a witch, but here in this isolated place, it’s simply explained that she’s got the touch. It’s inherited, like her brown eyes. Granny has the touch. I do, too. I suspect my aunt does but she refuses to acknowledge it. I tend to believe my mama is still running from it.

People come from all around, even from farther than nearby Clemmons, seeking Granny’s advice. They talk to her of illnesses, unfaithful spouses, bad children, or problems between them and God. Some bring dollar bills for payment, but mostly they bring fresh eggs, a chicken, fruit jams in every hue, and sometimes even fresh-baked bread wrapped in dish rags. I’m happy to learn Mrs. Lambert will be arriving because that most likely means we’ll have smoked pork roast for dinner, seeing how her family raises pigs. Yummy.

“Well, Diedre Ann,” Mrs. Lambert tells me when I answer the door. “I thought sure you’d be at summer Bible School.” She narrows her eyes. “Why aren’t you?”

Like that’s anyone’s business, I think, but don’t let those words out. Instead, I shrug and say, “I’m staying here to help my granny with canning the green beans.” I point to the corner of the garden where the beans look like they’re ‘bout ready to explode off the vines they’re growing so fast.

“Well, no reason why your auntie can’t help her ma out?” she snarks.

I narrow my eyes. She knows darn well Aunt Willa doesn’t go outside. Maybe Mrs. Lambert’s kids need to share with their mama what they learn in Bible study about being kind to others.

She waves her hand dismissing both her slight and my steely silence, “Never mind that, where’s your granny?”

After Mrs. Lambert leaves, a satisfied smile on her face, a bag of garden herbs for whatever ails her, and minus one roast, Granny and I pick strawberries and green beans from the raised garden beds and cut tender leaves of lettuce. After that’s done, Willa’s husband, Billy, comes home from his job at the sawmill. I run to meet him, and he picks me up and twirls me around.

“How’s my favorite little monkey,” he sings before sitting me back down. “Whew, honey, you’re gonna kill me yet.” He puts a hand on his lower back and fake wipes the sweat off his brow. It’s a routine we’ve been doing forever, but it still makes me giggle. Uncle Billy is the most handsomest man I know with straight blonde hair that he keeps having to sweep off his brow, and brown eyes shot with rays of gold. Sawdust powders his hair and shoulders making it look like he’s been anointed with fairy dust. He’s smart, too. After he realized the only way his new wife was going to leave her mama’s house was in a pine box, he built a little cottage for the two of them just up the rise and connected their house to his mother-in-law’s by way of an enclosed pass-through so Willa wouldn’t have to venture outside.

“Smells great,” Billy exclaims when he comes inside.

“Smoked pork,” Willa answers.

My auntie is standing over the kitchen sink smashing up cooked potatoes in the pot that she has placed inside the sink so she can get leverage with the smasher. Granny is fixing a salad of strawberries and lettuce I helped her pick earlier.

“Set the table, Deidre Ann,” Granny tells me, bringing the salad bowl to the table. “And you,” she says pointing to Billy, “get yourself cleaned up, dinner’s almost ready.”

“Yes, ma’am,” Billy says and winks at her.

By the time dinner is done and the dishes washed and put away, it’s too late to have Billy drive us into town so we can learn what had haunted our morning. Plus, my aunt and uncle have already gone up the pass-through to their own home.

Granny is nodding over the book she’s been reading.

“Good Lord, is it that late already?” Granny asks when she rouses herself. The book she had been reading has fallen from her hand and now lies in her lap.

I had been engrossed in my own book—one of the Nancy Drew mysteries I checked out last time we went to the library. “Near ten o’clock,” I say, glancing at the clock on the fireplace mantel.

Granny yawns. “I’m going to bed. Don’t forget to turn out the lights and check the door locks,” she instructs.

“I will,” I say and go back to reading.

I wait for a while, listening to the toilet flush and the squeak of bedsprings as Granny settles in for the night. Then I put a marker between the pages, close the book, and walk on bare feet through the kitchen and out the back door to stand on the stoop.

I’m not afraid, even though the moon is just a sliver and it’s always pitch black out beyond the fence. The air is scented with pine and stars shine in the night sky. Looking up, I find the Big Dipper and the swirl of brightness that marks the edge of the Milky Way. There is just enough breeze to whisper in the treetops. I listen for a long time trying to summon the troubled spirit we had sensed this morning, but it’s gone. I go inside, turn the thumb lock, click off the lights, and go to my own room.