New neighbors?
Otis looked the coffee table over, “ain’t ‘nough money in the ho wide world make me be a school teach.”
Oscar had had enough of this visit. “There ain’t enough money in the universe to get you to work let alone choose a field to work in.”
“No need to be ugly. I stopped to see ‘bout you.”
Oscar glared at Oat.
“Don’t be lookin’ at me like that.” His brother scoffed as he pushed the recliner open. “Called like twenty times. I ain’t leavin’ no message. Goberment done got my number. I’m keepin’ what’s left.”
Alright, Oscar thought to himself as he leaned forward. His cell phone indeed did show six missed calls from Oat. “What makes you so special that Uncle Sam wants to keep tabs on you?”
Otis just laughed, “if’in I told you that, I’d has ta kill ya.”
“Of course,” as they were talking a moving van pulled up in front of the old Morrison house.
“Whoooo, looks like you be gettin’ new neighbors,” Oat drew a sharp breath through his teeth. “City trash.”
“Any idea who it might be?”
“Pussy heard town talk is’t Morrison grand youngan.”
Oscar got up from his seat disappearing into the house. When he came out, he had on shoes and a coat.
“Tell me you not gonna help city trash.”
“Yes,” Oscar smoothed down his collar.
“Shoot,” Oat jumped out of the recliner without closing it. “I worked all darn day. I’m goin’ home.”
Oscar roared with laughter despite his headache. “What have you done all day?”
Oat puffed out his chest at the insult. “Ben a daddy.” He slammed the door behind himself.
Oscar would have rather been hit than reminded of that. So what, he was fifty and unmarried. He was relying on God to help him find a wife. He wasn’t doing a very good job on his own. And he really didn’t feel like helping this person but it did get rid of his brother. He took a deep breath and braced himself for the cold. Snow was one thing, wind was something totally different.
Especially since he didn’t feel like himself.
It was probably wrong of him not to want to spend any time around his brother or his family. The truth of the matter was he didn’t like them very much. He loved his brother because they were brothers but he didn’t like the person he had grown up to be. If it wasn’t for the fact that they were brothers, Oscar wouldn’t even know Oat.
There was this small piece of him that was praying that when Oat became a father that he would be able to have a relationship with any nieces or nephews. Oscar was there for all their births. He sat in the waiting room with his mother as each new Patterson came into this world. But when it all became about the money; can you bring diapers when you come out? Will you bring formula? We forgot milk? Pussy’s sick, will you stop by Dillon’s and pick up her medicine; neglecting to mention that you are going to have to pay for it. He stopped going all together. Christmas his presents was demanded. He would give them that. He figured at this point he would get to know his nieces and nephews when they went through his class.
Oat was continually telling Oscar that he had gotten above his raisin’. A phrase Oscar couldn’t understand. He guessed it was impossible to make a better life for yourself; to not be what you have always known. In order not to stress over it, he told himself that Otis was jealous. It always helped him feel better for a little while. But never for long.
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