The Wilful Daughter (39 page)

Read The Wilful Daughter Online

Authors: Georgia Daniels

BOOK: The Wilful Daughter
2.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The women immediately turned their attention to Cora. “You kept company with a piano playing man?” Ella said.


A younger than you piano playing man?” Fannie grinned.


And you didn’t marry him?” Ella went on.


Or make him settle down with you?” Fannie added.


You just had fun, for a while. Is that it Cora? You had fun for a while and your son can’t.” Ella was smiling at the irate Cora.

They waited for her answer. Waited while she breathed in and out like a bull spewing fire. “He likes her for her hair and her light skin. He ain’t never seen nothing like her before and you know it.”

June mumbled something only Cora seemed to hear.


What did you say you little. . .” Ella cleared her throat to cut her off.


I told you before I would never hurt him. He’s my friend.”


Friend? I told YOU girls like you don’t got no friends. You trouble wherever you go. You didn’t even tell your parents who’s the father of that baby you so easily gave away. . .”


That wasn’t easy! I did what was best for my child.” June screamed back at her and let the tears fall as Cora kept on talking.


Girls like you are always trouble. And I bet you,” she said turning to the other women, “that baby’s father is married. That’s why she couldn’t tell nobody, tramp that’s what she is. . .”


Cora, now that is enough!” Fannie shouted. The old woman’s voice was shaking with fury. “You forget that June ain’t the only one with a say in this relationship. You forgot about Michael.”


She forgot him all right.” Maude mumbled.


Hesh up,” Fannie went on. “Michael is a man. Been a man since his daddy died and you don’t see it. If he wants to be with June, to marry June. . .”


Marry her?” Cora shouted back. “I’ll be damned if this bitch marries my son. Do you hear?”


What you gonna do about it, Cora, if he wants to? Boy’s got a job and a mind of his own. You don’t need him to take care of you or Millie. We pay you plenty. You stay here most of the time. You need to. . .”


Ain’t no way I’m letting this heifer sink her hooks in my son and make him miserable.”


It ain’t up to you. It’s up to Michael,” Fannie replied.

Cora pulled away from them staring at June with enough evil in her eyes to scare the devil. “We’ll see about that.” She didn’t even bother to clean her hands or take off the apron that smelled of fried chops and greens. She marched away from the women as if off to war.

June disappeared into the house. She lay on the bed with her torn housedress in her hands, her breasts still aching for the child that wasn’t there, her heart breaking for a love she wasn’t sure she’d ever have again. She cried and cried. By the time Fannie and Ella walked in to comfort her she was asleep.

 

* * *

 

At lunch time the table was filled with dog tired men folks and talkative womenfolk. A big shiny white car was parked on the front meadow and at the table were a few extra men, musicians. Madman Jeffries and his band had been invited by Toby to come and have some food. They would only be in town one night and everyone knew they’d be playing at the juke. So it was extra exciting, considering the earlier events of the day, to have them as guests of honor at the noon table.

June, Cora and Michael were nowhere to be found. Millie said she would go get June from her room, but Old Ma made her sit to the table and eat. “June not up to eating with us this afternoon. She got to rest.” Millie didn’t believe her but realized that this was one of those things grown ups said when something was wrong and they wouldn’t explain it to young folks. Like a good girl she ate quietly and waited.

Millie knew grown ups couldn’t never keep a secret. They were going to start talking about it soon and forget she was there. So she ate her food in silence taking small ladylike bites like she had learned from June. The only thing opening wide were her ears. And she heard plenty.


Came and got him off the field she did. Slapped him with her hand so hard I felt it myself. Started shouting at him something awful. Said he wasn’t going to ruin his life. . .”


He took off running. Running from his mama. She was all crazy.”


Screaming, screaming about some woman. I guess she’s ‘fraid Michael gon’ get married and not take care of her and Millie no more.”

A few heads turned to Millie but she sucked on her corn on the cob pretending she had not heard a word they said. Once they were busy talking again, Millie slipped away from the table mumbling: “Grown ups think they know everything.”

She wanted Michael to marry June so June could be her real sister and not just someone who played the game with her. She had been there when June cried because her sister was coming to take the baby. Millie had heard Michael say he would marry her if she wanted to keep it.

Her mama was wrong. June wasn’t bad or spoiled. She could be in love with Michael if she wanted.

Since no one was paying attention to her, Millie ran around to the front of the house and slipped in the big doors and up the stairs. She tiptoed to June’s room and slowly opened the door. Inside a teary eyed June was packing a large valise.


What you doing?” Millie asked fearing the worse. “What you doing, June?”

June wiped her reddened eyes and looked at the thick braids on the girl child’s head.


I have to go Millie,” she said trying not to face the child. “It’s too much trouble, me being here.”


No!” Millie screamed and ran in and hugged her around the waist, the force of the hug knocking June to the bed as tears filled the little girl’s eyes. “No, no, no,” she kept crying.

June tried to comfort her. To pat her head and cradle her the way Bira had cradled her. The way she had never done and would never do to Ophelia. “I was going to have to go back sooner or later, Millie. You knew that.”


But you said you didn’t want to. You said you wanted to stay here with your baby.”

June sighed. “I had to give my baby to my sister. I told you it was for the best.”

Millie sniffed then added. “You said you wanted to stay with me and Michael.”

She waited for June to speak. She waited for June to say that she was staying that she would be there forever, that they would be sisters.

And June waited to find the words. For more than seven months Millie and Michael had been the biggest parts of June’s life. She taught Millie how to read, to take care of her hair, to be a dainty little lady. They were a big part of her life.


I don’t want to cause problems here, like I caused at home.”

Michael, dear sweet Michael. After all they shared, after all his sweetness, there was one thing missing.

He wasn’t the Piano Man.


I don’t belong here,” she told Millie. Then she stood and went back to her packing.


You’re lying,” Millie screamed. “You’re lying. You mad ’cause my mama went into the field and got Michael and beat him ’cause he was with you and you don’t want him to get hurt and. . . .”


Your mother did what?” Millie told what she had heard at the table.


Is he all right? Did you go home to see. . .”


He ain’t going to go home. He got a place he hides. It’s s’posed to be a secret but I followed him one day. . .”


Take me to him.”

 

* * *

 

Michael sat in the rafter of the field house as his mother searched the town and the farm for him with maddening persistence. This had been his hiding place since he was little, and she had never found him. Deep in the corner wall of the rafters Michael had hidden all the things he held dear: three pennies that his father had given him as a child, dollar bills that he had been saving and a few strands of hair that he had stolen from June’s brush when she had been pregnant and asleep. His new shirt and vest tucked away in the corner, he decided to just lie there until it was dark.

That’s when he would go to June and take her away. It was what he dreamed of-being alone with her-for as long as he could remember. They would go to Montgomery, or even cross the border back to Georgia. Maybe Savannah where he heard it was real pretty and he could get work on boats.

June had told him she wanted to see the ocean. So had he. Perhaps this way. . .


Michael,” the sweet voice called out. “Michael, are you here?”

It wasn’t his mother’s angry screaming voice. It was June. He peered down to see her standing there with Millie. “How can he hide in here, Millie? There’s no place to hide.”

Silently he went to the rope and slid down a beam in the dark corner. When he appeared they were both caught off guard. Millie jumped, but June ran to him and held him.


Are you all right?” she asked. “Millie said your mother. . .”


I’m leaving, June. I’m gonna leave and go to Savannah. I can work near the ocean. Come with me.”

June pulled away from him, stepped back closer to Millie and then said: “Millie, wait outside. Watch for your mother.”

Millie nodded, ran outside and hid behind a tree in case Cora was lurking nearby.


I can’t go with you, Michael. You know that. I have to go back to Atlanta.”


No, you don’t. You don’t even like your father. Your family treats you mean you said, ‘cept for your mother. They even made you give up your baby.”

June hung her head. “I don’t want to cry about Ophelia again.”


You go with me, you marry me and we can do whatever we want.”


Michael, I’m not sure I want to marry you.” A pain hit Michael’s chest. She felt it across the field house. “Or anybody.” There she had said it. Hard to say to such a sweet boy, such a sweet face. Hard to tell a man that was going to save you from yourself that you didn’t want him, didn’t need for him to save you.

Michael didn’t speak. “Your mother is right: I’m not good enough for you. You need a woman who’s going to be happy cleaning house and having a farm and having lots of babies. I’m not like that. I’d like to be at the juke every night. I’d like to never be pregnant again. I’d like to. . .”


Then we’ll go out every night. I’m sure they got places like that in Savannah, if they got them here and in Atlanta. And we don’t have to have no children.” He pleaded: “I know how you feel. They can be a handful like Millie.”

June hesitated before she spoke. “I want to meet other men, Michael.”

The words fell on his soul like a stone. “I’m not ready to settle down yet Michael, that’s why they took my baby. That’s why I let them. I made one mistake. I don’t want to make another one.”

They stood in the field house in awkward silence. Suddenly Michael’s empty stomach growled reminding him that he had not eaten since dawn.


I’m still going to Savannah,” he finally said with manly pride. “Just don’t tell Millie, or she’ll tell mama.”

June nodded in agreement. “When are you going?”


When you going?” he asked her.


Tonight. There’s a five o’clock train to Atlanta. . .” she sighed. “They sent me money weeks ago for me to come home. Fannie and Ella been telling them I ain’t up to coming back yet because I wasn’t ready.” She shook her head. “I’m still not ready.”


Then don’t go back.” He moved to her touching her hair then her face for the last time. “Go where you want. The ocean, even if you ain’t gonna be with me. Or New York. You could sing. You got a pretty voice, June.”

She smiled at him. “It’ll just be more trouble if I don’t do what I’m supposed to do.”

He grabbed her and kissed her, longer and harder than ever before. “I guess we better get a move on.” He disappeared up the rope to the rafters, leaving June standing in the middle of the room wondering where he had gone.

She went outside and gathered Millie to walk to the house with her, where she sat at the table as prying eyes watched her eat a little of this and a little of that.

When Toby stood, she called to him. “I need to go to the train station today, Toby. There’s one that leaves at five.” When the stunned silence remained she lied. “They’re expecting me in Atlanta.”

Toby nodded and looked to Fannie and Ella who shook their heads for him to comply. People got up and went about their business, back to their jobs, back to the fields. But Madman Jeffries stayed and stared at the beautiful young thing.

When the table was empty and his men were flirting with the girls cleaning and washing the dishes, he got up and walked down the long stretch of mismatched chairs until he sat opposite the pretty doll taking ladylike bites of a biscuit.


I hear you’re Peter Jenkins’, you know the Piano Man’s, sister-in-law.”

June looked up at him. She hadn’t even noticed him before at the table. “Yes,” she said without expression.


I hear you got a nice little voice, too.”

She stared at him as she placed her hands in her lap. “Who are you?”

Madman sighed at the lovely creature. “I’m Madman Jeffries. I got a band. We travel around, play a lot of places here and there. We going up north soon.”

Other books

A Night of Gaiety by Barbara Cartland
Day of the Damned by David Gunn
Oblivion: Surrender by Cristina Salinas
The Highwayman by Catherine Reynolds
Sapphire: New Horizons by Heather Brooks
The Surgeon's Mate by Patrick O'Brian
Hitler's Panzers by Dennis Showalter
Love Kills by Edna Buchanan