He bounded down the steps, then held out his arms and she jumped to him, he caught her and staggered back, turning around and around, out on the lawn in the rain, in the wind, free of the house. He held her in his arms, dancing again, only this time no dream of old waltzes, now it was real and cold and wet and the woman in his arms was alive and crying and laughing for joy.
He stopped. He kissed her. Her lips were wet with rain, but her mouth was warm, and she held him, not lightly, but with tight, eager arms.
Chapter 22 Freedom
A voice came from across the yard. "Pardon me, but don't you two have sense enough to come in out of the rain?"
They looked over at Miz Evelyn standing behind the picket fence, holding an umbrella. Even by the light of the streetlamp she looked stronger than yesterday. Invigorated.
"We did it, Miz Evelyn," he said. "We put things back to rights."
"House is weaker now but it ain't dead."
"It will be soon," he said. "And we're alive."
"Just barely! Look at you, bleeding like a stuck pig."
It was true. Blood was still seeping from the wound in his hand. Now that he thought about it, now that the adrenaline was wearing off, he hurt all over.
"Oh," cried Sylvie softly. "There are nails still in your head. Turn around."
"Get over here," said Miz Evelyn. "I can help." As they walked around the picket fence and into the carriagehouse yard, Miz Judea came out onto the porch and waved them over. "Get on up here out of the rain," she said. "Come on, I've got what you need." Steam rose from a pitcher. She held a basket full of bandages and ointments. Some of them looked like the FDA had never certified them, but he figured Gladys knew things that the FDA never heard of, so there on the porch he stood while they pulled nails out of his legs and backside.
"Somebody nailed you good," said Miz Judea. Then she cackled with such mirth, you'd think she hadn't laughed for years.
As soon as he could, he sat on the porch swing and let them strip off his shirt and start anointing his wounds with foul-smelling salves that stung and then felt good. The old ladies introduced themselves to Sylvie and Sylvie smiled and introduced herself back again. Don just sat and watched, deeply weary but also satisfied.
"So you're the haint that's been living in that house all these years," said Miz Evelyn.
Sylvie reached up and touched her own cheek. "Not anymore, though," she said.
"I told Miz Judy here, I said if anyone can put things to rights, it's that boy Don Lark."
"Said no such thing," said Miz Judea. "You just said nobody could ever put things to rights."
"The memory is the first thing to go," said Miz Evelyn.
They watched as a man in sweats carrying an umbrella padded across the street to them. "What's going on in that old house there?" he demanded. "I thought I heard such a crash. And a woman screaming."
"That was us, I'm afraid," said Don. "I'm the one who's been renovating it. It wasn't as sturdy as it looked. A main load-bearing wall collapsed."
"That house ought to be condemned."
"You're telling me," said Don. "I'm not spending another night under that roof. I'll have a wrecking crew out here to tear it down first thing tomorrow."
"Wait till after eight in the morning, would you?" said the neighbor.
"Count on it," said Don.
"Can I give you some coffee?" said Miz Judea.
"No thanks, ma'am," said the neighbor. "I don't want to be awake."
"They barely escaped with their lives," said Miz Evelyn.
"Yeah, well, nobody was hurt, right?"
"All of us are fine," said Don. And, in fact, with Gladys's salves going onto his body and Sylvie there in the flesh before him, it was true.
The neighbor trotted back across the street.
"I think the rain is letting up a little," said Miz Evelyn.
"I love the rain," said Sylvie.
"You'll love the sun, too, come morning," said Miz Judea. "Now let's get this poor boy inside and in to a bed. I'm afraid he's going to have to buy himself some new clothes. Everything he's got is either in that house or full of holes and covered with blood."
"I guess I can go shopping for him in the morning," said Sylvie. Then she burst into tears. "Oh, Don," she said. "I can go shopping. I can go out."
In answer he held her hand,