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Authors: Lee Smith

Tags: #Historical, #Adult

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BOOK: Fair and Tender Ladies
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You ought to see Joli, she is so beautiful! I hate to go off and leave her of a day. In fact I would not leave her if it was just Beulah here, because Beulah is too quick to get mad, and all these babies are a handful. I am the one that keeps them mostly, now. But Curtis has just gotten a raise and Beulah has hired a colored woman, Earl Porter's wife Tessie, to come in of a day and help out. So I will have to go out to work, and I am trying to switch Joli over to a little cup.
She does not look a thing like me or like Lonnie either one, she only looks like herself, although I guess you can tell she is a Rowe by the red hair. And hers is all curls, just like yours! She is smarter and bigger than Curtis Junior. When she sucks at my titty I know it is nearly the last time, nearly the end. Silvaney, there is something about nursing a baby that is like having a sweetie, you feel the same way I mean. And it feels so good and I hate to stop it, to stop nursing Joli or to leave her at home, I hate to leave her at all.
I want to tell you how it was when she was born. I will write it down plain for I want to remember it always, and I can tell I am forgetting it already, the way I am afraid I am forgetting some things about Sugar Fork and even Majestic. I think this is one reason I write so many letters to you, Silvaney, to hold onto what is passing. Because the days seem to go faster and faster, especially now that I have got Joli, the days whirl along like the leaves blowing down off the mountain right now. I remember Geneva saying that the older you get, the faster time goes by. Well, I want to stop it! I want to hold up its flight like you would hold up a train, and steal what I can from each day. But it is awfully hard to remember having a baby because your body wants to forget it right away, it hurts too bad, and if you remembered it all, you would never have another, Granny says. So you forget. You have to.
Here is what I
do
remember, though—first the water splashing on my feet and the great pushing opening tearing feeling, but it was like somebody pressing something heavy on my legs. My thighs hurt the worst, they hurt
awful,
and this went on for a long time and then right before she came out I could
hear
it, Silvaney, I swear I could
hear
my bones parting and hear myself opening up with a huge horrible screeching noise, and all the splashing down my legs felt cold, not hot. Beulah says I screamed so much I embarassed them all, but Granny says I did real good considering it was my first. So may be what I heard was me screaming, but I don't think so. I think it was my screeching bones.
And then Joli was out dripping blood and gore and making a funny little snuffly noise and Granny cut the cord with the kitchen knife and bound her with the strippy cloths and handed her over to me. She was big! And she grabbed onto my finger and held on for dear life, and squnched up her mouth and started crying. And all the poems I ever knew raced through my head, for she was the prettiest thing I have ever seen. Then Granny wrapped her up good and laid her in the dresser drawer propped up between two chairs, for we did not have another cradle yet, she was early.
Granny said,
You will be fine, Ivy. For once you have had an easy time of something.
She stroked my hair, pushing it back off my face. She smelled like tobacco, like woodsmoke, like snuff, like something old and tough I couldnt name you. The wrinkles in her face are so deep they are like cuts right down to the bone. In fact Granny looks like one of those dried-apple dolls now in the face—except for her eyes which are bright blue and twinkling and not filmed over in white like so many old peoples.
Granny poured me a drink of white liquor and then took some out on the porch for the rest of them. I heard Beulah say
No thank you,
and
Curtis will have only one glass, Granny.
But Granny said, Them that tries to rule the roost will find the cock has flown. And so Beulah said, Well pour me some then, and before long she was giggling as much as Tenessee. I think she will soften up on Ethel before long, too.
As for me I laid in the bed and watched the moonlight come across the quilt star by star—it was in the Heavenly Star pattern—coming toward me, and I could hear my baby snuffling in the dresser drawer, and then bye and bye Granny came and gave me some more liquor and took the rag packing out from between my legs and got some more. The blood smell was not so bad. It was sweet some way, it was not like anything else in the world, and now it will always be mixed up in my mind somehow with the moonlight and my baby, for then Granny handed her to me. I held her close by my side and looked at the moonlight on the closest star, red and blue and pink and purple, it seemed to glow out like the cathedral windows in Mrs. Brown's book.
After a while I could hear the rest of them coming in from the porch, and making up extra pallets and shifting people around, and then it got quiet, the quietest night in the world. Granny slept sitting bolt upright in a straight-back chair beside me. But I was all wrought up, I was far too excited to sleep, I would not have dozed off for the world. I kept thinking,
This is important, I want to remember this, it is all so important, this is happening to me.
And I am so glad to write it down lest I forget. I lay there real still while the moonlight slowly crossed my quilt, and listened to a hoot owl off in the woods, and little Joli breathing, and—come morning—the long sweet whistle of the train.
When we got up Granny fixed the baby a sweet tit, and by afternoon she was sucking on it, and then the next day she wanted some titty too, and Granny and Tenessee went on home and we began, Joli and me, and the rest of our days have been marked by when she eats and when she sleeps. She doesn't hardly cry at all. But now Silvaney, winter is coming on, and the war is over thank god, but these days are passing so fast. Big Curtis just came home and said I am to start at the soda-fountain on Monday, and so I will. But I remain your loving sister,
 
IVY ROWE.
Dear Victor,
 
I am so happy to hear you are back from the war safe and sound and a hero, I am sorry about your leg though. Are you going to look for a place of your own now? Or stay on at Geneva's for a while? I know you are looking for work. It is a shame the Frank Ritter Lumber Company busted, they thought so highly of you I know.
Coal is the only thing over here, but the coal business is slacking off now and it looks like hard times on the way. Money has been so easy during the war that no body knows how to act without it. There is a big increase in drinking and fighting and spreeing around, since so many have been laid off. They dont know what to do with themselves. And Oakley says the company is shorting men on weight now up at the mine, but Big Curtis says it is not true. Curtis wont hear one bad word about the company! So I dont know for sure. But folks are mad about everything. My own job at the store gets me real tired but I am lucky to have it, I see that now. Everybody comes in spending that scrip, and then on payday there is no pay. Some of them owe so much to the store it looks like they will never pay it off. So this place is not paradise by a long shot. I used to think it was.
But the worst thing going on around here is the flu, and speaking of heros, you ought to see Oakley Fox and his little brother Ray! Dont you remember them, from down on Home Creek? Little Ray weighs about 300 pounds now. But he is just as nice as Oakley. And lately with so many folks dying right and left, Oakley and Ray and their daddy—who came over here a purpose to do it—has been working night and day laying folks out. Wont nobody else touch them, so the Foxes have got to wait on the whole town. Oakley says the company is paying them for their time. Everybody else is scared they'll catch the flu. Oakley says him and Ray wont catch it because they take a big bottle of horse temperature medicine and rub it across their lips. It is thick yellow-looking stuff which has made Oakley's whiskers yellow for good, I think. They are waiting on people day and night—they will wash them, dress them out, lay them out, put them in the casket and dig them a grave. Most families are making their own caskets since they cost $35 down at the store, where we have got a whole stack of them in the corner. They look awful, but you cant quit looking at them once you start.
Somebody will come in the store buying lipstick one day, then the next day they'll be dead. This is true. It happened last week to Trula Bond who bought Fire and Ice, I sold it to her. And the Fox boys laid her out, the way they are laying out everybody.
Only that time I happened to see it. They are burying them now in the company burying ground up on the mountain, not too far from the mine, and I walked up there yesterday evening with my neighbor Violet Gayheart and her two kids, to wait for her husband Rush to get off his shift. Violet goes up there every day and a lot of times I go too, I like to give Joli a breath of fresh air. Usually I look away from the burying ground because it looks so awful, with those new red mounds of dirt against the snow. So many have died.
But this time, it was right at sunset, there were the Foxes burying Trula Bond with that rickety wagon Mister Fox has had forever it seems, I believe it is the same one we used to ride in when we were kids. There was Oakley Fox and Ray Fox with yellow whiskers and yellow hands, and Trula Bond's family crying. Violet and me stood by the roadside and watched. Nobody sang or anything, they done it all real quick.
Then Oakley saw us and came over to me and I said,
Oakley, how can you stand to do this?
and he said,
Ivy, somebody has got to,
and then he walked me home. Oakley is real big and good to lean on. The sky was red and the mountains and the limbs of the trees were black against it. Sometimes I think a winter sunset is the prettiest kind.
Have you got any snow over there? We have got a lot here now, but it gets so dirty from the coaldust, you cant even make snowcream. Do you remember the snowcream Momma used to make up on Sugar Fork? I used to think it was so good. I want to make Joli some.
Victor, I know I go on and on sometimes in my letters, it is a great failing too. But I am trying to work around to what I want to say. Big Curtis has heard that you are drinking a lot these days, please stop, you know it runs in the family. Remember Babe and Revel. And I am sure you will find something real good to go into, bye and bye. Why dont you come over here and see us? Do not worry about us not having room, you can stay down at the bunkhouse with Oakley and Ray. It is not a palace, but I bet it beats the war. And I want you to see my baby.
 
Love from your little (Ha!) sister,
 
IVY ROWE.
July 9, 1919
 
 
Dear Ethel,
 
I have had it with people trying to marry me off! Now it is Beulah and Curtis. This is what happened.
Every year on the Fourth of July, the company throws a big party, with a couple of bands, and dancing, and ice cream and fireworks. It is the only time all year, and the only place except the movie house, where the people from Silk Stocking Hill will mingle freely with them that goes down in the mines.
Now it soon became clear that this Fourth of July celebration was a big deal to Beulah, and you will see why in a minute!
But first—you should have heard her! She went on and on, she like to have dogged me to death. Now Ivy, what are you going to wear to the picnic? Now Ivy, you cant wear
that
for heaven's sake, here why dont you try on this old polka dot thing of mine! Oh of course you can, we'll take it up in the waist. No, dont go with Oakley, go with us. You can see Oakley when you get there. Now that is just silly Ivy, the fireworks wouldnt do a thing but scare those babies, and Tessie is perfectly willing to come. No, Tessie wouldnt be going to the fireworks anyway, none of the colored people go, dont be silly. Why, they dont even
want
to! Ivy, have you ever thought of bobbing your hair?—Which I would
not
let her do, Ethel, although she has bobbed her own hair and I guess it is right in style.
BOOK: Fair and Tender Ladies
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