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Authors: J. California Cooper

BOOK: The Matter Is Life
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Chile, It’s somethin bout life, just somethin, will come along. You just got to make the right choice when it do. I musta missed mine.

Now … some of them men, truck drivers and such as come through town, is awful lonely in they real life … and need a woman. One day, one of them who always came back to Lovedora really fell in love with her! He talked to her everytime he made love to her, WHILE he was makin love, cause he read her heart. He made love reallllll slow. It ain’t nobody’s business how I know!

Like I say, he talked to her whilst he makin love to her.

He wait awhile til it get good to him. He say, “In the bottom of your heart, you really my woman.”

“I’m the one loves you. Gonna take care of you.”

“I be … good to you.”

“You KNOW … you blongs to me!”

“When you gonna ………… seethetruth?”

“You my woman, Lovedora.”

“Always.      ALWAYS.”

“MINE.      All mine.”

“Be GOOD      to you.”

“Lovedora … I … am … your … trueman.”

“Always      always      ALWAYS.”

“Gonna … love you … love you … love you. … Always, baby.”

“I’m … yours.”

“Say you mine. Say it. Say it. SAY it. Tell me.”

“Cause … I … I … I … I …….… loveyouuuu.”

Like that, he talk like that … and many more things too. My man talk like that to me sometime, but I was gettin tired of it, cause it always make me another baby.

Basil was his name. Basil bring her little presents. Treat her gentle, tell her stop goin with all them other men, givin his love away, sellin his love away. For what? He ask her that. And you know she didn’t have no answer. She sure couldn’t say it was for no Zero.

For the first time, Lovedora got pregnant, and she knew it was Basil’s. And she wanted that baby … and her own man.

Soon after that, Lovedora woke that mornin after her mama had been down there again and Basil was back. She packed a bag again … in the middle of that night, and left. This time in a eighteen-wheeler truck. They stopped in front of Dora’s place so she could tell her mama her life had changed, leave her some money and say good-by right.

Dora said, “Thank God. Thank God!”

Windora grunted genteelly in her pretty robe. She was gettin ready to leave for Chicago at that time.

Endora smiled, nobody knew why, cause you never knew what Endora was thinkin.

Splendora just hugged Lovedora and Basil til they left.

All their lives had been movin on, too.

Anyway, Lovedora left with her man. Got married and stayed with him and had four more babies with him. The first girl, she wanted to name so she could remember what she had gone through to get to her new happiness, so she
thought of pain. Didn’t want to name her
pain
, so she took the
i
out and named her Pandora. See, she had done found out she had TB by then. She had care, but she couldn’t never get rid of that TB. See, a real housewife have a real job to do, and with four kids, it’s a hard job. His love and care, her love and some medicine kept her well enough to be happy enough.

Basil was good as his word, he was good to her, he loved her. He gave her a home and fixed it nice for her and the children. She was always able to send a little money home to help Dora with the dreams.

They would be together now if he was still livin. He dead now. They was married a long time. Kids most grown. That Lovedora just had to have some love in her life. I wonder what she gonna do now? I blive she coming back home soon. See, he was sick a long time and it cleared out their savings and I blive she losin the house. So … she comin home.

Me? Well, round that time, soon after Lovedora had left, one of my own daughters went down to the street to sportin life. I went down there with my gun. I waited for the man who had put her out there, I found him and told him, “You better leave my daughter alone! If you got some sense.”

He a smart aleck, said, “Ole lady, you can’t tell me what to do with my woman!”

I’m smart too, said, “I can sure stop you!”

He dumb too, said, “Can’t nobody take apart nothin I put together. Can’t nobody take her away from me! Nothin can stop me doin what I want to do! And I wants her in the street.” He turned to his friends and laughed.

I said, “I can stop you. I can put a bullet in your ass!”
Then I pulled out my .45 and pulled the trigger. Didn’t care where I hit, I shot him.

He didn’t laugh no more.

They took me to jail, but they didn’t give me no time. They let me go. Dora came down to get me. Said, “Girl, you shot that man! You told me NOT to shoot the one had my daughter out there! Now, you got a big sin on your hands.”

I told her, “Well … now I understand better what you was feelin. I might have the sin, but he ain’t got my daughter no more!” And that was the end of that! My daughter came on home like she had some sense. Didn’t nobody else on that street want her after that noway!

My husband, when he came home, told me, “You sure was a fool to go down there to that place and tangle with them mens! Who you think you is? A man!? You gon let these kids get you killed, woman! Don’t look to me to make no fool of myself! Eh! Eh! Lord, look what I done got me! A fool for a wife!” He wiped his chin from the food I had just paid for and fixed him. “Gimme some money, woman. Let me get outa this crazy house.”

For the first time, I didn’t split what I had with him. I told him, “Get it where you slept last night!” And went on bout my business cleanin my house I paid the rent on.

Then, our lives moved on.

WINDORA

Windora started out and was workin out real well at the dress shop. She got to the place she was only there part-time
cause she was designin and makin her own things for other people. Some was even put in the shop she worked for. She was makin and savin money for her own shop one day, in a big city. She helped her mama and sisters too. She taught Endora and Splendora things to do for her work, so they learned too. Endora was still lazy. Her mama, Dora, told her she better keep her eye out for a man. “A man with his own business,” she said. But Endora wasn’t studyin no men.

Now! Windora had made some long plans for her life. Had been makin them for a long time. Some of em might have started when she was in school. It truly hurt her when she was in school and the other children laughed at her clothes. Called her “Poverty.” But some of them wasn’t much better off. Some of them was, cause it was only one grammer and junior high school here, mixed together. Some of em’s parents had money tho.

She took to stayin to herself. Always standin by some window, lookin off into space dreamin of what she wanted to have. She read early, and a lot. Head always stuck in some book. She learned early to sew her own clothes and she always looked better than her sisters. She never dreamed of havin a husband, she dreamed of havin all the money she wanted. And she was a very clean child, bathed without bein told. I knew, without knowin how I knew, that Windora hated bein poor more than the others, and that hate she had spread out to people and things. Oh, she loved too, her mama, for instance. Maybe her sisters. Money, for sure. But she was pushed into herself, into life, into plannin and dreamin, by hate as well as love. Even so, I wished I had a daughter like her.

She made doll clothes, and doin that, she made a friend
mongst one of the little white girls whose parents had money. That friend used to invite Windora over to play with the dolls she made clothes for. Windora liked to be in that house. Used to ask for things, politely, of course, just to get a chance to see the servant do them. Liked the thick, satin drapes, the rich, soft carpets, the fires glowin warmly in the huge fireplaces, feelin the pretty material of the dresses in her friend’s closet. She never woulda come home if Dora didn’t send after her. She finally took to leavin early just to keep from havin them to see her poor-lookin sisters.

She liked music too. She fought her mama bout takin violin lessons. Dora didn’t want to spend that money on no violin. Said they could all take the piano, then she didn’t need to get no credit and debt cept for one instrument. But Windora helped her mama so much, she demanded and cried and wouldn’t eat, til Dora got her that violin from the pawnshop. But Windora had to pay for her own lessons with the money she made from makin doll clothes for other kids.

She was glad when Lovedora got married and didn’t keep that job at the dress shop. She was dreamin of that job. Like I said, she did well at it, even to startin to make her own money from her own clothes. The owner really liked Windora and her work. But Windora didn’t plan on stoppin there any longer than she had to. She saved her money. She got in them contests for designin. She wrote them designin schools for scholarships and loans so she could go to their schools. She finally won somethin in Chicago and they was to help her get a job in a dressmakin factory. They didn’t call it that, but that’s what I call it.

She been doin all that while Lovedora was out on the streets. She hated her sister bein out on them streets and
when she see her anywhere, she wouldn’t speak to her, just pass Lovedora by like she had never done seen her in life! When Lovedora was leavin with Basil, Windora was glad. Now that part of her would not be in everybody’s face. She thought Lovedora was a big failure. Anyway she soon left too, goin to Chicago! Splendora took over the job at the dress shop, but still kept some of her baby-sittin jobs. Endora said she was sick.

Windora got started in school and on her new job. She was serious bout both of em. They found her a place to live what they called safe. Windora was, also, a good-lookin, classy, reserved kinda woman. Kept to herself. Was still a virgin, even. Her boss, a nice gentlman, watched her work for two, three months. Watched who she went out with … nobody! At the end of that time, he started lookin at her designs she had never been to school for. He liked em. He started takin her to lunch so they could talk about her work. He knew she wasn’t eatin too good either.

That man liked Windora. Windora thought she needed him. Now, he didn’t plan it zackly, she did plan it zackly. They finally slept together, made love. Windora, bein a virgin, got his respect and some kinda love soon followed. She made love bout eight times with that man, tryin to get pregnant. She didn’t zackly want no baby, just wanted a hold on somebody who could help her. After all, that virgin stuff had to be worth somethin, you just didn’t throw it away! She got pregnant. Told him. Asked him at the same time for a special favor so she could take care herself better, without too much of his help, she said.

Windora wanted a corner in the buildin all to herself, to design her clothes, a place to make them and a showroom to
show them. She got em! Plus, he added seamstresses to help her, save her time. Windora worked as hard as anybody could slicin out a place in the world for herself. She still kept livin in that safe room all the time she was pregnant. And she wouldn’t make no more love. “Because I don’t want to hurt the baby,” she said.

When that baby was almost here, she made love one more time. She asked, then, for a nice apartment to bring their baby home to. She was doin fine with her work, just needed help gettin started, findin and furnishin a place. She never gave him no trouble with his family and things, so he helped her again. I make it sound so easy, but it took plenty plannin on her part, actin, workin, watchin, learnin to do the thing right. You know, still keep her business, have a future, live now and keep him too! Cause she wanted her own salon someday. She didn’t mean to be workin for nobody long.

When her baby was born, yes, it was another girl. She named it Goldora. Dora came up to be with her awhile. She was soooo proud of one of her daughters makin it! Windora was goin SOMEWHERE! She was makin and followin her dream and, in the doin, her mama’s dream. Dora came home glowin! She loved havin another “Dora” for a grandchild, too.

Round bout that time, my first daughter, who had been on the street for that man, was married and settlin down. But I had another daughter who was school-smart and wanted to go to college. We needed some money! That man of mine still wasn’t always bringin his money home. I had done stopped chasin him for his love and finally for his money too. Got so I just couldn’t find him, so I stopped lookin!

What made me so mad was, even when me and my kids work at things to make money for us to live and put some aside, he would find it and take it out the house too! We coulda helped my daughter get to college cause she had worked hard enough for a scholarship! But he didn’t give a damn. So, I pulled my .45 out on him and told him to “Get your ass out of my life cause your ass is all that’s in it. You take everything else somewhere else, so just take that empty-pocket ass of yours there too! We ain’t needed you in a longggg time!” You know, that man cried?! Didn’t want to go! Then I knew, Dora was right, I had married a fool. And he had to go!

After he left, all my kids and me worked hard, day and night, til my daughter was able to get on way from here to that college for to be a dentist. We all had a paper route, me too. Up at 4:30
A.M
. rollin papers, then gettin out deliverin em. We sold everything we could get our hands on, door to door. We mowed lawns, we cut trees, we cleaned houses and garages. EVERYTHING! She is a dentist now. Smile, smile, smile. And she done sent her younger brother to college for to be a veterary what works with animals! All us at home got beautiful teeth. When she first graduated, I didn’t have but eight or nine teeth left in my mouth! Now, I got a mouth full. When I look in the mirror and smile at myself, which I do all day, I love my teeth. Cause my daughter made em, chile!

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