Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  A Note from the Publisher

  Time, Dirt, and Money

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  Notes

  Papa and the Bull

  Photographs

  Olive Ann Burns A Reminiscence

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  First Mariner Books edition 2007

  Copyright © 1992 by the Estate of Olive Ann Burns

  A Reminiscence copyright © 1992 by Katrina Kenison

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

  For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.

  www.hmhbooks.com

  The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:

  Burns, Olive Ann.

  Leaving Cold Sassy : the unfinished sequel to Cold Sassy tree / Olive Ann Burns ; with a reminiscence by Katrina Kenison.—1st Mariner Books ed.

  p. cm.

  “A Mariner book.”

  ISBN-13: 978-0-618-91980-2 (pbk.)

  ISBN-10: 0-618-91980-5 (pbk.)

  l Family—Georgia—Fiction. 2. Georgia—Fiction.

  3. Domestic fiction. I. Kenison, Katrina. II. Title.

  PS3552.U73248L4 2007

  813'.54—dc22 2007018680

  eISBN 978-0-547-52729-1

  v2.0313

  All photographs are courtesy of Mr and Mrs. Nathan LeGrand, Becky Sparks, and John Sparks, unless otherwise credited.

  A Note from the Publisher

  AT THE time of her death in 1990, Olive Ann Burns had been working for five years on a sequel to her best-selling novel, Cold Sassy Tree. Since its publication in 1984, Cold Sassy Tree has become a phenomenon, taking its place alongside such American classics as The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and To Kill a Mockingbird. It is the story of life in a small Georgia town at the turn of the century, as seen through the eyes of fourteen-year-old Will Tweedy. In the course of three momentous weeks, Will mourns his grandmother’s death and then watches as his grandfather scandalizes all of Cold Sassy by up and marrying a fresh-faced young milliner thirty years his junior.

  In Time, Dirt, and Money (the working title for her novel), Olive Ann picks up Will’s story in 1917, just as he is falling in love with his own wife-to-be and grappling with the changes time has wrought in his beloved hometown. Fifteen chapters of the novel are complete, and Olive Ann had mapped out the rest of the story in her mind. Despite a long battle with cancer and congestive heart failure, she continued to write with tremendous energy and pleasure.

  To the end of her life Olive Ann Burns was passionately interested in Will Tweedy’s future—as were her thousands of fans, who have waited eagerly for a second book. In large part, we are publishing her unfinished novel for those readers. Anyone who came under the spell of Cold Sassy Tree will welcome this glimpse of Will Tweedy, now on the brink of adulthood; of the feisty young schoolteacher who captures his heart; and of Cold Sassy itself, a town that has claimed a permanent place in our imaginations.

  We would not undertake such a publication were we not certain that Olive Ann herself wished it. For years, Olive Ann promised her readers a sequel; she dictated the first draft when she became too ill to write. She endured nearly three years of complete bedrest without complaint, for she spent long afternoons in Cold Sassy, Georgia, chronicling the adventures of our old friends. But during her last hospitalization, she realized that she might not live to complete the novel. Late on the night of June 22, 1990, while lying awake in the Georgia Baptist Hospital, she dictated a letter to her next-door neighbor, Norma Duncan. It said, in part, “I’ve figured out a way that if I don’t get to finish the novel it might still be marketed as a small book.” With this publication, we fulfill Olive Ann’s wish to let people know what happened to Will Tweedy, and we trust that her many fans will welcome her final pages.

  Time, Dirt, and Money

  1

  I THOUGHT I was roaring into Sanna Klein’s life, but if I’d been on tiptoe instead of a motorcycle, it wouldn’t have made any difference. She didn’t even hear me coming. Everybody in Cold Sassy was at the watermelon cutting that Sunday afternoon except the bedsick, and to her, meeting them was more of an ordeal than a party.

  The school board always put on a watermelon social the day before school started in September to introduce the new teachers to the townspeople. I’d never missed a one, but this year I wasn’t going. I didn’t much feel like facing that many homefolks. It was 1917, the United States had got itself into a world war, and I was twenty-five years old and not even in uniform. While some of the fellows I grew up with were already dying in France, I was working for the University of Georgia over in Athens, twenty-three miles from Cold Sassy. I told myself I’d outgrown a small-town watermelon cutting. But the truth is, I didn’t have the nerve to go. Then on Thursday I ran into my old friend Smiley Snodgrass at the Athens Hardware Store. “Well, if it ain’t Will Tweedy!” he yelled, slapping me on the back. “Hey, Will, you go’n get over to P.C. for the watermelon cuttin’ Sunday?”

  I need to explain “P.C.” Back in 1907 our town council decided Cold Sassy sounded too countrified for an up-and-coming business community, and they changed the name to Progressive City. My Grandpa Blakeslee wouldn’t have allowed it, but he was dead. In the nearly ten years since, the town had progressed, but the new name still hadn’t caught on. Progressive City sounded silly and took too long to say. Those of us who didn’t keep calling it Cold Sassy just called it P.C. Old Doc Slaughter still had COLD SASSY, GEORGIA, on his office letterhead. “Anybody you hear callin’ our town Progressive City,” he said, “you know he’s just passin’ th’ew.”

  Anyhow, here was Smiley, come to Athens to buy some plumbing pipes. Smiley was bursting with news. “I done got you a teacher picked out, Will. Her name’s Miss Klein and she’s from over in Mitchellville. We ain’t got but three new teachers this year,” he added.

  “Yeah, Papa told me.” Papa was head of the school board.

  “I reckon I’ll see you there.”

  “Cain’t make it this year, Smiley. I’ll meet her later.”

  “Well, I’ll gar’ntee you, Will Tweedy, if your later ain’t soon, somebody’s go’n beat you to her. She’s a pure-T beauty, Will. Real foreign-lookin’. I-talian maybe. Or Spanish. Might could even be a Gypsy. Anyhow, she’s got heavy black hair, and black eyes, and her eyelids—law, they’s so smoky-dark it’s like she reached in the f’arplace and got herself some sut and smeared it on.”

  When I didn’t say anything, he added, “I reckon you know that her and them other two teachers are rentin’ the upstairs rooms at Miss Love’s house.”

  “Yeah, I know.”

  “I built a bathroom up there so Miss Love could rent to’m.”

  “I’ve seen it. How’d you think up puttin’ it on the roof?”

  “Miss Love thunk it up, to save space indoors.”

  The bathroom was set into an L-shaped corner of the roof. From the street it looked like a playhouse. Had a roof, a porch, a corner column, banisters, a door, and two little windows. Smiley had cut a door to the bathroom porch from the upstairs hall. This bathroom was an improvement over th
e backyard privy Miss Love had to use when she married Grandpa Blakeslee, but nobody would look forward to going out there on a freezing-cold, rainy night.

  The clerk came over to Smiley. “I’ve got up your order, sir, and toted the sum. You want to come see is it right?”

  Smiley started to follow, then turned back to me.

  “Well, anyhow, but...well, you know...” Smiley kept the conjunctions coming whenever he was trying to think what he wanted to say. “Well, ain’t it about time you quit bein’ hurt about Trulu Philpot or whatever her name was?”

  “You tend to your business and I’ll tend to mine.”

  He shrugged. “Well, so anyhow, yesterd’y I took Miss Klein’s trunk and thangs upstairs to her room, and I’m sayin’ you better latch on to her.”

  I picked up a tenpenny nail, tossed it, caught it, and put it back in the barrel. “I know I’m God’s gift to women, Smiley, but you met her first. How come you’re so willin’ to give her to me?”

  “Shoot dog, Will, Miss Klein is—well, refined as heck. She wouldn’t give somebody like me a second look. Now I don’t go so far as to say you’re refined, but, uh...at least you’re educated.”

  Smiley wasn’t the only one who already had me matched up with Sanna Klein. The next day I got a note from Miss Love, my grandpa’s widow. The word widow sounds like “old woman,” but Miss Love was still high-style and beautiful, and looked young despite the fact her hair turned solid white in the month after Grandpa died. Every widower and bachelor in town would be courting her if she’d give them half a chance.

  As usual, she began the letter “Dear Will Tweedy.” Grandpa Blakeslee used to call me both names, and Miss Love had kept it up—in his memory, so to speak. Maybe it was in his memory that we both still called our town Cold Sassy instead of Progressive City or P.C.

  ***

  Dear Will Tweedy,

  You must come meet “my girls”—all twenty-two years old. The first to arrive was Miss Isa Belle Hazelhurst, from Ty Ty. She has dimples and a sweet face, but is a little empty and silly, I’m afraid. You’ll be interested in her south Georgia accent. She pronounces the “i” in “nice” and “ice” like the sound of “i” in “bicycle,” Those sixth-graders will be mocking her from the first day, poor thing. “Isa Belle” is pronounced like “Isa-belle” but she says just call her Issie.

  She is sharing the large upstairs bedroom with Miss Lucy Mercer Clack from Clarkesville, a nice plain sensible young lady.

  Miss Sanna Klein has the small bedroom by herself. I think you may be really interested in her, Will. She’s a beautiful little brunette.

  Judging by the quality of her clothes and her manners, she obviously has what your mother would call “background.” She’s from Mitchellville and is to teach fourth grade. Just a lovely girl.

  See you at the watermelon cutting if not before.

  Hastily,

  Love Simpson Blakeslee

  P.S. I guess you’ve heard that your Aunt Loma came in on the train Tuesday.

  ***

  Two years before, Aunt Loma had gone off to New York City to seek fame and fortune on the stage, leaving her son, Campbell Junior, for my parents to raise. She claimed to feel guilty about it and had just gone back to New York after being home for a month “to be with my boy.” But from what I heard, she didn’t spend any time with Campbell Junior except to tuck him in bed at night like he was still little bitty instead of twelve years old.

  I wondered briefly why Aunt Loma was back again so soon. But I was more interested in Miss Sanna Klein. Sanna...Sanna...What an odd name. Vaguely familiar, though I was sure I’d never known a Sanna before.

  Sanna Klein was exotic and beautiful. She was refined. Miss Love approved of her. Suddenly nothing this side of dropping dead could have kept me away from the watermelon cutting.

  ***

  Usually when I went home, I took the train from Athens and used Papa’s car after I got to Cold Sassy. But that Sunday I rode my motorcycle, with the sidecar attached so I could take two pillowcases full of dirty clothes for Mama’s washerwoman to do up. There’s nothing like a Harley-Davidson for getting around mud holes, rocks, and wagon ruts on dirt roads—or for making an impression on girls. I stopped by home, left the clothes on the back porch, and went directly to Sheffield Park.

  Saddle horses and buggy horses were tied under trees on the far side of the baseball field. Cars sat in a straggly row near the wagon road into the park, so as not to scare the horses or make dust. I stopped the Harley-Davidson between Miss Love’s old black Pierce automobile and Wildcat Lindsey’s new Model-T Ford, and lit up a cigar. Most of the university students smoked cigarettes, but I favored Tampa Nuggets.

  Then I headed over toward the town band, already playing in the big eight-sided pavilion for the crowd gathered in the shade of some huge oak trees. The dusty, dried-up grass was thick with low-hovering yellow jackets, but I barely noticed them. My mind was on Sanna Klein.

  2

  IT COULD have been a scene in a moving picture show—except I was walking into the picture. And instead of everything being black and white or gray, I was seeing blue sky, green trees, and ladies in bright-striped or flowerdy dresses, dazzling in the sunlight.

  It was a hot day. The very old sat on benches in the shade, some holding babies, all tapping their feet to the band music, and all smiling except for poor old Dr. Hedge Rufesel, the dentist, who used to travel from town to town, filling teeth and making dental plates right in people’s homes. A year after finally settling in Cold Sassy, he’d had a stroke. Today Dr. Rufesel’s wheelchair was parked beside the bench where Miss Effie Belle Tate had sat at the watermelon cutting in 1914, not long before she died. A Negro man was pushing bits of watermelon into his mouth.

  Long planks had been laid across sawhorses to make tables, and people stood around in clusters, talking. Every few minutes they parted like the waters to let one of the Negro men get through with a huge watermelon that had been cooling in the creek. With much laughter and howdy-do-ing, the colored men would tote melons to the tables and slash them open with a flourish of their big sharp knives. The slices fell like red dinner plates on each table, as neat as place settings.

  Loomis Toy saw me before I saw him. “Hey, Mist’ Will! How you doin’, son?” I loved Loomis, a very tall, very black man who had worked for my family for as long as I could remember. He taught me how to garden long before the university’s School of Agriculture taught me to farm.

  “I heard your little girl took sick last week, Loomis.” I’d never noticed the sprinkle of gray in his hair before.

  “Yassuh, Mist’ Will, but she doin’ mo better now, yas-suh. And she sho ‘predate that doll Miss Mary Toy sont her. Lawdy, I ’member Miss Mary Toy playin’ wid dat doll her ownself. Don’t seem lak that long ago, does it?”

  Mrs. Avery came up from the creek with some wet towels. “For when folks are ready to wipe their hands,” she said, smiling at me. “Will, go put’m on that sycamore stump over yonder.”

  Near the stump I saw the Widow Abernathy and her eight children lined up at a table in front of eight watermelon slices, like dairy cows at their feeding troughs. The mother opened her purse, took eight spoons out of a napkin, and handed one to each child.

  I wondered where Sampson was. Several young boys were dodging out from behind trees to spit watermelon seeds at each other, but he wasn’t with them. Nor was he among the clusters of parents and children who stood with favorite teachers from years past. My own favorite, Miss Neppie, had died of appendicitis in the spring.

  I headed for the biggest oak tree, where the rest of Cold Sassy would already be waiting in line to meet the new teachers. Snatches of conversation drifted in the air:

  A young woman jiggling a fretful baby was talking to Mrs. Means. “I don’t know if he’s teethin’ or just tired.”

  “Most babies are teethin’ or tired, one. Unless they’re hungry or wet. What I call a good baby is one that’s asleep. I never have...”
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  “In the paper it says we ’sposed to join the Women’s Army Against Waste. What in the world’s the Women’s Army?”

  “It’s just a way a-talkin’, honey. What the gov’ment really wants, they want us women to serve less meat. They say raise more hogs and chickens, quit fryin’ the pullets, let’m grow up to hens. Can more vegetables. They say quit cookin’ light bread and biscuits. Save the wheat for our soldier boys, and...”

  “...seen that new teacher?”

  “Miss Klein? The dark-complected one? She’s a pretty little thang, ain’t she?”

  Mrs. Snodgrass, Smiley’s mama, was talking to two women I didn’t know. One had a voice like a crab. “You wouldn’t think mill hands would come to a town social,” she rasped.

  “They got chi’ren in the school same as us,” said the third lady.

  “But they ain’t comf’table here,” said Mrs. Snodgrass. “Look at ’em, standin’ off to theirselves, starin’ at all us. Not to change the subject, but have y’all seen that great big diamond Loma Blakeslee Williams is flashin’? I hear her fee-ance is a rich Yankee banker!”

  “It’s all right to marry rich, Wi-nona, but anybody marries a Yankee is a lost cause. Loma’s daddy fought in the War, for heaven’s sake!”

  “Sometimes I wonder bout Loma,” said Mrs. Snodgrass. “It’s like her corn bread didn’t git done in the middle.”

  This was my Aunt Loma they were talking about. I paused to relight my cigar, took some slow puffs, tried to act like I was looking for somebody.

  “...Well, Loma left here two year ago to make her fortune in New York City,” the crab-voiced lady commented, “and if’n that diamond is any measure, Wi-nona, I reckon she has did it.”