Hummingbird House

Hummingbird House

by Patricia Henley
Hummingbird House

Hummingbird House

by Patricia Henley

Paperback(Reprint)

$17.95 
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Overview

Kate Banner is a North American midwife helping flood victims in Nicaragua in the 1980s. When she loses another patient-a young woman who gave birth only the night before in the bottom of a swamped wooden boat-Kate knows it is time to go home. But her journey home leads her first into the seething secret wars of Guatemala, where she discovers her greatest challenges, and her greatest chances to love.

A finalist for the National Book Award and The New Yorker Best Book Awards when it was originally published in 1999, Patricia Henley's Hummingbird House is the devastatingly powerful and emotionally unforgettable story of a human heart unbinding itself in the most unjust of worlds. This beautiful novel of women in war delivers an ending marked by its passion, strength, substance, and beauty.

This 20th anniversary edition includes a foreword by Steve Yarbrough, a Book Club Readers Guide and a new Q&A with the author.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781950182015
Publisher: Haywire Books
Publication date: 11/05/2019
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 334
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.20(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Patricia Henley is the author of the novel In the River Sweet, four short story collections (including the Montana First Book Award-winning Friday Night at the Silver Star and, most recently, Other Heartbreaks), two chapbooks of poetry, a stage play, and numerous essays. A professor at Purdue University for more than 20 years, she currently lives in Frostburg, Maryland.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter One

Father Dixie Ryan got off the bus on a wide boulevard in Zone 2, Guatemala City, carrying a soft-sided suitcase patched with duct tape. Sunlight slashed here and there into the shady street where traffic stood nearly still in black waves of exhaust. He imagined the oily mix coating his lungs. The orphanage, a gas station fenced on three sides with tall blue planks: these were familiar landmarks.

A Cherokee, its windows glossy black, crept out from an alley clotted with houseware vendors. The priest turned--his neck hair bristling--and maneuvered in an oxbow through the people on the street. At the gas station he asked the attendant if he could use the restroom. "Sí, sí, padre," the man said, wiping his hands on a rag. "The night watchman lives back there." The priest slipped through the blue gate and into a dirt yard where there stood a brand-new cement-block toilet stall with grainy newspaper photos of Michael Jordan plastered above a basin. Inside he relieved himself. Then he leaned his head against the cement wall. His vision swam. He took out the scrap of paper with Sunny's address. El Pacífico Sueño.

He waited as long as he could manage without arousing suspicion before slipping back into the street and the neighborhood, through the park where trash drifted, where street kids congregated, sucking on brown paper bags of cobbler's glue, past bakeries, past market stalls with radios on and mothers combing out the hair of little ones or men waiting for customers to make the smallest affordable purchase, a cigarette or two, a box of Black Cat matches, a cup of white rice. The Cherokee did not reappear. At El Pacífico Sueño--the peaceful sleep, the peaceful dream--he knocked on the red front door. A wooden sign creaked above him; a star the size of a butter cookie had been carved after the word Sueño.

Sunny answered his knock.

"Dix." She took his hand, drew him inside.

A blinking fluorescent tube lit the foyer. Child-sized coffins stacked against two stucco walls were dusty, though he could still detect their piney smell. A three-year-old picture calendar of churches--turned to November 1985--hung over a desk in whose many open cubbyholes lay the yellowing invoices of funerals past.

He said, "I might have been followed."

Sunny turned to the desk and plucked a tiny manila envelope from a drawer.

"Here it is," she said. She took his arm, kissed his cheek. "Make yourself at home."

He pocketed the key and left at once.

He found a café in the same block and settled into its dim cool interior, his Roman collar and Panama hat on the table. The last bus would leave a little after seven. He could be at Sunny and Ben's Antigua house by eight o'clock. He'd do as the Canadian doctor advised: rest until the breakbone fever gave up its hold on him.

Waiting for dusk, he drank limonada and read Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair. Out on the street a vendor hawked toy skeletons for Day of the Dead and an old woman scattered flowers on the sidewalk: golden flores del muerto. So that the dead may find their way home

"Go on now. I can't keep you anymore."

The man on the motor scooter lifted Marta by her wrist and Eduardo caught his little sister. They stood in sunshine at the edge of a park scruffy with trash and tree limbs blown down by wind. Flocks of children loitered, squatting, poking each other, hunching head to head.

"Es Guate, Marta," Eduardo said, taking her hand in his. "El capital!" He fingered the wrinkled dollar bill the gringo had given him. He kept it in a secret pocket inside his shirt, a patch pocket his mother had sewn for him so that he could run errands for her without being robbed.

Marta said nothing. Her hair tangled in permanent greasy knots. She was eight years old, Eduardo twelve. The sun was bleached like straw where an animal slept.

In the park they watched the beggar who shared their bench. With his white beard, his gray hair thatchy, his trousers rolled to the knees, his legs streaked with dirt, his feet--Eduardo had never seen such feet. Big, thick-skinned, with toenails as black as tortilla blisters. His dusty bolsa had been crocheted in a design familiar to Eduardo: purple and green stripes with the plumed quetzal worked in. It was a design from the village nearest the village where Eduardo and Marta had been born in the highlands above the Chixoy River. A similar bolsa hung in front of the statue of the Virgin in the village church; his mother had sometimes filled it with corn as an offering.

Tall trees shaded their park bench. The smell of rotting fruit nearby. Marta perched primly beside Eduardo, her eyes wide, her red corte tattered along its folds. She had to be vigilant about adjusting the folds and retying her sash; the fabric was soft and worn and if she did not watch, her corte would slip down. It was her one last piece of clothing. Her grandmother had made this corte. Her grandmother had woven her sash on a backstrap loom; the sash was gray and red and black: sturdy stripes. When the sash and the corte had been brand new, she had worn a red glass-bead necklace tied in a knot against her chest. The necklace had been long lost. Trucks and cars and bicycles dodged and swerved, bright and ramshackle, horns blurting. She had never before seen the capital, the traffic and the big advertisements and the capitalistas in glistening bloody lipstick, their spiky leather shoes. The gringo with the motor scooter was a man so tall that Marta had to tilt her head back to see his long horsey face. He had peanut butter in his backpack and he had bought them hot-from-the-griddle tortillas in Los Encuentros. Early in the morning, before daylight.

Go on now. I can't keep you anymore.

They had ridden, clinging to him, clinging to each other, in the dust, in the oily exhaust, in the itchy vibration of the worn-out tires against the washboard roads, all the way from Chichi.

The beggar reached into his bolsa. He glanced around guardedly and pulled out part of a loaf of brown sugar. He took a bite. Eduardo salivated. Marta squeezed his kneecap. Their mother had nearly always kept a piece of such sugar in a tin on the shelf. She had shaved curls of the coarse brown stuff on their hot cereal or rice. Eduardo did not like to think about his mother but she and his father were never far from his thoughts. He had last seen his father at the municipal hall in the center of the village. A rainy night, a night of fiesta. Eduardo had peeked through the loose fenceboards and there he had seen his father dancing like a marionette to marimba in a line of drunken men. The courtyard of the municipal hall had been slick with mud and the birds-of-paradise had been coated with mud and the mud had soaked up the striped trousers of the drunken men who shouted and slurred the monotonous and mournful songs. They danced and laughed, although they looked as though they cried, with the whites of their eyes sore and red. Rain and clouds bled like ink over everything. After the fiesta the military had come. Soldiers with hard eyes. Shiny bayonets. Steel-toed boots. Helicopters had chopped like razor wings above the village.

With his dirty thumb the beggar pressed out two hunks of sugar from the loaf and offered them to Eduardo and Marta. They hurried down the concrete bench, hovered over his open hand. The beggar shrugged. Eduardo plucked the sugar--hunks the size of small bird eggs--from the old man's hand and ate. And Marta ate. The sugar melted on their tongues, at once rough and velvety; the palm trees swayed, their palm leaves clacking; the scent and oil of oranges burst in invisible clouds nearby where a man unloaded oranges in red net bags from a flatbed; and the capital was for that moment a place of generosity.

A boy swaggered up to the bench. His knuckles were bony, his skeleton visible under his ashy dark skin. "Give it to me," he said.

The beggar crammed the sugar into his bolsa, hugged the bolsa to his chest. Eduardo and Marta scrambled to the end of the long bench.

"For--my--boys." The intruder called his boys forward with a chop of his hand. His flat cheeks were chalky, his eyes devoid of light. Busy people passed by. They swarmed along the sidewalks. No one took notice.

One of the boys--a little older, perhaps fourteen, in a plaid shirt that had all its buttons--stared with malevolent eyes at Eduardo and Marta. "Are you with the old one?"

The first boy hit the beggar's face with a stick.

Eduardo said, "No lo conocemos a él."

He grabbed Marta's trembling hand and slipped away to a palm tree behind a fruit vendor's stand. They squatted at the base of the palm tree, stealing glances, watching but not watching the beggar and the boys, their hearts beating hard within the spark and boom of the strange city. The fruit vendor's plywood stand had been painted to resemble a bunch of bananas. Beneath the stand was a bodega. Eduardo imagined sleeping under there. That was on his mind, finding a safe place to sleep.

"Piña y mango, piña y mango," called the fruit vendor. "Piña, piña."

The beggar folded his body over his bolsa. The gang of boys pounced, kicked the beggar's ribs. Eduardo could see only the back of the beggar's brown coat puffing out like a bird's feathers.

One boy jerked the bolsa from its strap and sprinted into a straggly grove, a lean shadow among the white-barked trees. The others kicked the beggar again and again. They kicked, cursed, grunted, laughed. Dust as fine as incense rose around them.

"I have it," shouted the boy in the trees.

"Get out of here," the fruit vendor growled at Eduardo. "You are like animals. Animals! Mierda! Get out of here." He pitched a mango pit and it landed in dirt at their feet.

A morsel of fruit clung to the pit. Sunlight shone on the fleck of mango as it flew but it was dusty now, wasted. The molasses taste of the brown sugar had made Eduardo's stomach growl. He pulled Marta by the hand and walked across the street, walked away from trouble, thinking, We are in the capital now and we must never carry a bolsa.

The Nicaraguan National Cathedral in Managua was not a sacred place. Kate Banner ventured inside despite that; she wanted to see the damage for herself. Weeds had taken over the sanctuary; statues had fallen out of their niches, their porcelain fragments long since ground into dust. Piss and shit everywhere, broken glass winking, black streaks from mortar fire staining the columns.

She picked her way to the foot of the altar. Some evenings, on her way home from the clinic, she glimpsed men playing softball inside the cathedral. Still, it was not hard to imagine that it had once given refuge to women, women tired of babies crying and children pulling and men reaching into their blouses. Christ loved women and they love Him. She pictured the Nicaraguan women in the cathedral praying for their men to quit drinking or praying for Somoza's plane to crash, whatever they had prayed for. She thought of the quiet of the cathedral, the peace of it, the gratitude of the women.

And then a witchlike voice spoke. "Brigadista!"

Kate's heart sped up. "Qué pasa?" she asked, startled, peering around.

An old man broke cover from behind a marble column. Sunshine half hid his face, sunshine pouring through the caved-in roof. "Brigadista, brigadista, brigadista," sing-songy like a bully, he said, "You do not belong here." A few steps above her, his hands clutching weeds. Dancing wickedly in rags. Skin and bones. Kate thought that she could smell him, smegma, sweat, piss and all.

She ran from the altar, tripped, stumbled to the entry.

"Go home, brigadista. Go home." He fired a bit of gravel and cackled.

On the street the people waited endlessly for a bus. There weren't enough buses; because of the embargo, vehicles had been abandoned all over Nicaragua. Sweat ran down her sides. She sweated all the way to the apartment.

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