Everything  in  the house   was damp.   A   fine    green   mold    spread  over    the
books   and papers  and paintings   that    were    stacked so  high    and piled   so
deep    you could   hardly  cross   the room.   Tiny    mushrooms   sprouted    up  in
corners.     The    moisture    ate away    at  the wooden  stairs  leading up  to  the
house,  and climbing    them    became  a   daily   hazard. Mom fell    through a
rotted  step    and went    tumbling    down    the hillside.   She had bruises on  her
legs    and arms    for weeks.  "My husband doesn't beat    me,"    she'd   say when
anyone  stared  at  them.   "He just    won't   fix the stairs."
The porch   had also    started to  rot.    Most    of  the banisters   and railing had
given   way,    and the floorboards had turned  spongy  and slick   with    mold
and algae.  It  became  a   real    problem when    you had to  go  down    under   the
house   to  use the toilet  at  night,  and each    of  us  had slipped and fallen  off
the porch   at  least   once.   It  was a   good    ten feet    to  the ground.
"We have    to  do  something   about   the porch   situation," I   told    Mom.    "It's
getting downright   dangerous   to  go  to  the bathroom    at  night." Besides,    the
toilet  under   the house   was now totally unusable.   It  had overflowed, and
you were    better  off digging yourself    a   hole    in  the hillside    somewhere.
"You're right," Mom said. "Something has to be done."
She bought  a   bucket. It  was made    of  yellow  plastic,    and we  kept    it  on  the
floor   in  the kitchen,    and that    was what    we  used    whenever    we  had to  go  to
the bathroom.   When    it  filled  up, some    brave   soul    would   carry   it  outside,
dig a   hole,   and empty   it.
ONE DAY WHILE   Brian   and I   were    out scrounging  around  on  the edge
of  our property,   he  picked  up  a   piece   of  rotting lumber, and there   among
the pill    bugs    and night   crawlers    was a   diamond ring.   The stone   was big.
At   first   we thought it  was just    neat    junk,   but we  spit-polished   it  and
scratched   glass   with    it  like    Dad had shown   us, and it  seemed  real.   We
