give your mother. I give the doctors a thousand bucks and the government give them ten thousand more and they never done a damn thing for me."
Billy called Mother. She came in. "This woman says she gave you a hundred dollars."
"I didn't ask for the money," Mother said.
"Give it back," Billy said.
Mother took the money out of her apron and gave it back. The woman clucked about how she didn't mind either way and left.
"I ain't no Bucky Fay," Billy said. "Of course you ain't," Mother said. "When people touch you, they get better."
"No money, from nobody."
"That's real smart," Mother said. "I lost my job last week, Billy. I'm home all day just keeping them away from you. How are we going to live?"
Billy just sat there, trying to think about it. "Don't let them in anymore," he said. "Lock the doors and go to work."
Mother started to cry. "Billy, I can't stand it if you don't let them in. All those babies; all those twisted-up people, all those cancers and the fear of death in their faces, I can't stand it except that somehow, by some miracle, when they come in your room and touch you, they come out whole. I don't know how to turn them away. Jesus gave you a gift I didn't think existed in the world, but it didn't belong to you, Billy. It belongs to them."
"I touch myself every day," Billy whispered, "and I never get better."
From then on Mother only took half of whatever people offered, and only after they were healed, so people wouldn't get the idea that the healing depended on the money. That way she was able to scrape up enough to keep the roof over their heads and food on the table. "There's a lot less thankful money than bribe money in the world," she said to Billy. Billy just ate, being careful not to spill hot soup on his lap, because he'd never know if he scalded himself.
Then one day the TV cameras came, and the movie cameras, and set up on the lawn and in, the street outside.
"What the hell are you doing?" demanded Billy's mother.
"Bucky Fay's coming to meet the crippled healer," said the movie man. "We want to have this for Bucky Fay's show."
"If you try to bring one little camera inside our house I'll have the police on you."
"The public's got a right to know," said the man, pointing the camera at her.
"The public's got a right to kiss my ass," said Mother, and she went back into the house and told everybody to go away and come back tomorrow, they were locking up the house for the day. Mother and Billy watched through the lacy curtains while Bucky Fay got out of his limousine and waved at the cameras and the people crowded around in the street.
"Don't let him in, Mother," said Billy.
Bucky Fay knocked on the door.
"Don't answer," said Billy.
Bucky Fay knocked and knocked. Then he gestured to the cameramen and they all went back to their vans and all of Bucky Fay's helpers went back to their cars and the police held the crowd far away, and Bucky Fay started talking.
"Billy," said Bucky Fay, "I don't aim to hurt you. You're a true healer, I just want to shake your hand."
"Don't let him touch me again," said Billy. Mother shook her head.
"If you let me help you, you can heal hundreds and hundreds more people, all around the world, and bring millions of TV viewers to Jesus."
"The boy don't want you," Mother said.
"Why are you afraid of me? I didn't give you your gift, God did."
"Go away!" Billy shouted.
There was silence for a moment outside the door. Then Bucky Fay's voice came again, softer, and it sounded like he was holding back a sob. "Billy, why do you think I come to you? I am the worst son-of-a-bitch I know, and I come for you to heal me."
That was not a thing that Billy had ever thought to hear from Bucky Fay.
Bucky Fay was talking soft now, so it was sometimes hard to understand him. "In the name of Jesus, boy, do you think I woke up one morning and said to myself, 'Bucky Fay, go out and be a healer and you'll get rich'? Think I said that? No sir. I had a gift once. Like yours, I had a gift. I found it one day when I was swimming at the water hole with my big brother Jeddy. Jeddy,