Authors: Alex Haley
be hers, and hers alone, was hardly hers at all. Except at night, when
Miss Mandy had gone to bed, and then Queen would take her child from his
cot, and lie on her bed holding him to her, trying to make up for all the
time she had missed.
Curiously, Queen thought that Miss Gippy was on her side. Miss Gippy was
quite fond of Abner, but his crying distressed her. She often complained
of being wakened in the night. On several occasions she suggested that
Miss Mandy should give the boy to his mother. Sometimes when she came
into the kitchen to tell Queen that Miss Mandy wanted Abner fed, or be
looked after in some way, Queen would say it had been done, or that she
was busy, and Miss Gippy seemed to understand.
"I know," she said, "but you'd better go see what she wants." She, not
Abner.
On one occasion, Miss Gippy had told Miss Mandy that she was spending too
much time with Abner, and was neglecting her prayers and Bible studies.
Miss Mandy was angry then, and told Miss Gippy she didn't know what she
was talking about. Then she had even wept, and said that no one under-
stood what she was trying to do for the boy.
As Abner grew, the situation became worse. What was most difficult for
Queen to accept was that Abner seemed to prefer Miss Mandy to her. For
all the attention she gave the boy, Miss Mandy seldom disciplined him.
If he was fretful and crying, Miss Mandy would get irritated with him,
and call for Queen. It was Queen who had to introduce Abner to the word
I I no," not Miss Mandy. Because Queen was so often tired from her work,
she said "no" to Abner rather more than she
QUEEN 675
wanted, even though he was too little to fully understand the word. Miss
Mandy made jokes about it.
"Be careful, Abner," she would say, "or I'll send for nasty Mammy."
Queen lost her temper.
"I ain't nasty," she flared, not for the first time. "An' why don't you let
me decide what's best for my boy?"
"Because you don't have a very strong sense of responsibility, Queen," Miss
Mandy replied smugly. "If you did, Abner wouldn't be here, would he?"
Slowly it dawned on Queen that Abner always laughed and looked happy when
he was with Miss Mandy, and was always whimpering and difficult when he was
with Queen. It was more than she could bear,
On her afternoons off, Queen was allowed to take Abner with her on short
walks about the garden or down the back lane, but never into the streets or
into town, if Queen had to go shopping. Queen wanted to take Abner farther
afield, to the park, to be in the open air with her son, and had put him in
the pram once, but Miss Mandy stopped that.
"I cannot have you parading the proof of your sin in public, Queen," she
said.
"You parade him!" Queen shouted. "You take him everywhere! "
"That's different," Miss Mandy said. "He isn't my sin. I am saving his
soul."
That salvation was more like thievery, and that was when Queen decided Miss
Mandy was trying to steal her baby from her. She became frenetic with
Abner, clutching him to her in her room, hugging him, holding him,
whispering to him, begging him, desperate for some proof that he loved her.
It disturbed the boy, and made him cry even more. Queen was distressed
because.she didn't understand what she had done to make him cry so, and
would shout at him. Sometimes Miss Mandy heard her, and came in to see what
the fuss was about. Then Abner would stretch out his arms to Miss Mandy and
cry to go to her, and when she took him he would quiet down. On more than
one occasion, Miss Mandy threatened to move Abner's cot into her room if
Queen couldn't look after him better. They would argue about that, and
Queen would shout
676 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
at Miss Mandy, and that made Abner cry even more.
Yet sometimes, when she was not so tired, she would sing lullabies to him,
and he would smile and laugh at his mother, and stretch out his tiny hand
to her face, squeeze her nose gently, or pull on her hair, and it was sweet
and lovely to her.
She had to talk to someone about what was happening, but had few friends.
She never went to her own church, by agreement with the sisters, and seldom
saw Joyce, as the sisters had commanded. Now she missed Davis. If he had
stayed, she would not be in this predicament; he would have put Miss Mandy
in her place. Or if they had run away together, Miss Mandy would be only a
distant memory. Now she realized the depth of her love for Davis, for any
kind of life with him was preferable to any kind of life without him, for
the sake of their son. Now she was angry with Davis, for the boy needed a
father. He had mothers enough.
She went to Joyce. It had been three months since they had met. Joyce
hadn't changed, and was delighted to see Queen. Her warm, motherly embrace
brought all of Queen's frustrations wrenching to the surface, and she held
on to her friend for dear life, and wept. Joyce was astonished at the
flood.
"Chile, chile, whatever's wrong?" she comforted. Queen gulped away her
tears, and told Joyce the sad story.
"I ain't his mammy no more," she cried.
Joyce calmed her down, and stroked her hair.
"You gotta tell her, girl," she advised. "She cain't steal yo' baby. "
"That's what she's doin'," Queen agreed.
They talked it through, and Joyce decided Queen must leave the sisters'
employ, and find another job. She could come and stay with Joyce and her
family. Queen resisted mildly, for she knew she and Abner would be a
burden, but Joyce would have none of it. They were welcome for as long as
they needed. So Queen agreed,
"I'm leavin', quittin'," she told Miss Mandy, who was nursing Abner. "Me
an' Abner's goin'."
It was a wonderful moment. She thought she saw fear in Miss Mandy's eyes.
Miss Gippy, who was reading her Bible, looked up in surprise.
QUEEN 677
"And why is that?" Miss Mandy asked carefully.
"Coz you tryin' to steal my baby from me," Queen snapped, believing her
case to be impeccable, and delighted to be having her say at last.
But the fear she had seen in Miss Mandy's eyes was replaced by something
else, something more like relief.
"Don't be ridiculous," Miss Mandy said.
"I ain't ridiculous!" Queen answered. "I never gets to see him no more,
he's always with you. You wash him, change him, play with him, take him
out. You'd feed him if you could, only you's all dried up so you cain't!
"
And the relief was replaced by a flash of anger.
"So we's leaving," Queen said again.
"I can't imagine you'll find another job very easily." Miss Mandy seemed
almost calm.
"I don't need another job; friends is lookin' after me." Queen was
defiant, but a little unsettled.
"Joyce, no doubt," Miss Mandy guessed, and knew from the look on Queen's
face that she was right,
"If you leave our employ after all we have done for YOU,she said, "I
shall go to the authorities and have you declared unfit to be a mother."
Queen reddened. She was frightened of the authorities. It was the chink
in her armor, for her earliest training was her downfall. As a slave,
she'd seen that white Massas had all the authority they needed. She
wasn't certain that anything had changed. "They wouldn't do that," she
said,
"Oh, yes, they would," Miss Mandy told her. "Look at it from their point
of view. You would be walking out on a good, well-paid job, and taking
your illegitimate son from a safe and secure home, where he is loved and
provided for, to bring him up in shantytown. All because you have some
silly idea that I am trying to steal him from you."
Queen shifted uncertainty. It didn't sound so simple when it was put like
that.
"Because you stealin' him!" she insisted.
Any charity that Miss Mandy had ever felt toward the black race seemed
to disappear for a moment.
"Why would I want to steal your nigger baby?" she asked, steel in her
eyes. "I am white. Or had you forgotten?"
678 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
Queen was horrified, believing what she was told. No white authority was
going to listen to her side of the case, and all authority was white.
"Now I suggest you go to your room, and forget all this silly nonsense
about leaving," Miss Mandy said. She sat, and cooed at Abner. Queen moved
forward to take the boy, but Miss Mandy held on to him.
"Abner can stay with me for a while," she said.
Queen was almost blind with impotent rage. All she could see was her
darling son in the white woman's arms. She ran forward and grabbed Abner
from her.
"You give me my baby," she shrieked. "You cain't have him! I'll kill you
first!"
The vehemence of it shocked both sisters, and Miss Gippy hissed in
disbelief.
"Harlot. Jezebel," she murmured, but for the moment, Queen had won. She
ran from the room, clutching Abner to her.
She sat on the floor of her room rocking Abner in her arms, desperately
calling to God for some answer to her distress. She'd lighted a little
fire to keep them warm, and was staring at the flames of it, and the
flames licked and danced in her mind, and reminded her of other awful
fires, at other times, in other places.
The door burst open, and Miss Mandy swept in, followed by Miss Gippy.
They ignored Queen, and went to Abner's cot.
"I haye decided to move Abner into my room," Miss Mandy told Queen. "Take
that end, Gippy."
The sisters moved to the cot, and Queen jumped to her feet.
"You leave that be!" she cried.
"I believe it is best for Abner," Miss Mandy said calmly. "You are a
fallen woman and he can't stay with you. It puts his soul in danger."
"Harlot. Jezebel," Miss Gippy hissed again. She had been deeply shocked
by Queen's outburst downstairs, and any sympathy she had for Queen's
plight had disappeared at that moment.
Queen begged the sisters not to be so cruel, but Miss Mandy was adamant,
and called her hysterical. If Queen did not con-
QUEEN 679
trol herself, Miss Mandy would call on the authorities first thing in the
morning and tell them Queen was mentally unbalanced. She had a witness, Miss
Gippy, who had heard Queen threaten to kill her.
"The sixth commandment," Miss Gippy chimed in.
It was true. At that moment, Queen was mentally unbalanced. And the flames
of the fire, the flames of her torment, lighted some dark comer in her
mind. The only way to escape fire was to run away from it. She calmed
herself, and seemed to accept what Miss Mandy was telling her. But she
asked to be allowed to have this last night with Abner. Faced with an
apparently more rational Queen, Miss Mandy relented. The sisters left the
room.
Queen stared at the fire again. The flames glittered in her eyes, in her
mind, frightening her but making her determined on survival. She would run
away from the fire. She would run away from the sisters. She would take
Abner with her to someplace where no one would ever find them, and they
would be safe.
There was nowhere in Huntsville. She couldn't go to Joyce, for the sisters
would hear of it, and find her, and take Abner away from her. She couldn't
even tell Joyce that she was going, for Joyce might try to talk her into
staying.
South, perhaps. Everyone expected nigras to go North, so maybe if Queen
went South no one would find her. But exactly where. she would go was a
decision for later. She had a little money in her purse, saved from her
wages. They could go anywhere. The most important thing was to get away.
She was sly as any vixen. She turned down her lamp, so that Miss Mandy
might think she was asleep. She put Abner in his cot and lay on her bed,
and waited until the distant clock struck two, and she was sure the sisters
were asleep.
She turned up her lamp a little so that she could just see. She put a few
things for herself and Abner into a bag, and wrapped the boy in a blanket.
Quietly as she could, she opened her door. The house was dark and silent.
She walked carefully, Abner on one arm, her bag and her shoes in the other
hand. She crept softly down the stairs into the hall. The front door was in
front of her. They were only yards from freedom.
680 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
A floor board creaked. Queen froze, but Abner stirred in her arms.
"Hush now, chile," Queen whispered. "You love yo' mammy, you hush, you