She was stil mopping her face with a dishrag when the telephone mounted on the kitchen wal rang. Startled, I looked at my mother. “Answer it,” she said. Although what happened that afternoon had made it clear to both of us that we didn’t know anything at al about our own lives, we stil had enough intuition to know that my father was on the other end of that jangling phone. “T-t-tel you m-m-mama that I understand that she doesn’t want to talk to me. Tel her that I’m sleeping at Raleigh’s. And t-tel her I love her.”
I said, “Yes, sir. I wil deliver that message.”
“Chaur-r-rise,” he said. “How can you be so cold? I’m stil your daddy. This is between your mama and me.”
“This is between al of us,” I said, winding my fingers in the spiral cord, thinking of how many people made up the us. Gwen had left in our mailbox a fat envelope stuffed with al kinds of paperwork, including Dana’s birth certificate. Negro female born alive four months before I was born and nearly died in the very same hospital. Raleigh’s signature skimmed the line beside the word father. (Clipped to it was a ruled index card that said, Do not be misled by this. ) And what about Dana and me? There was no scrap of paper making an official connection between us. I am not the one to believe that our shared blood made us sisters, but having shared a father gave us something in common that looped around our ankles and pul ed tight around our wrists. This was between al of us. The six of us were hog-tied, fastened in place by different knots.
“Bye, Daddy,” I said, so he couldn’t say that I hung up on him.
It went on like this for two weeks, going on three. Mama refused to answer the telephone but also refused to take it off the hook. Phones back then were built with bel s inside, so the ringing was like a fire alarm until I final y picked up. “Just put your mama on the phone,” Daddy said, his voice unstable like an eighth-grade boy’s. “Tel her I’m at Raleigh’s. She can cal back at Raleigh’s number if she don’t believe me.”
Right before Johnny Carson’s monologue, Raleigh would cal himself. “My mama doesn’t want to talk to you, either,” I told him before I even said hel o.
“What about you, Chaurisse?” Uncle Raleigh said. “Can you find it in your heart to talk to ole Raleigh?”
I wasn’t sure what was in my heart. I went to school every day as usual. I scored C’s on my tests, performed passable arpeggios on my flute, as average and as invisible as before Dana Yarboro bul ed our china shop. For the first time in years, I was grateful that my father encouraged me to attend Northside, so far from my neighborhood — the ride to school was about twenty-five minutes by car and forty-five if I took MARTA. Dana was over at Mays High, just down the street. The word had no doubt trickled down a generation from Mrs. Grant to Ruth Nicole Elizabeth and outward from there. Even if she never heard the whispers, Dana was likely on edge like Mama and me as we kept on working in relaxers, scrunching in finger waves, and sewing in weaves. There was no way to know for sure who had heard what, so al you could do was live your life like no one knew anything while being scared that everyone knew everything.
During the seventeen days and eighteen nights of my father’s absence, my mother slept beside me in my canopy bed. It wasn’t my idea, but on the second night she tapped on the door frame, boozy-peachy and pleading. I rol ed over until my backside bumped the wal . The bed sank a little under her weight. “You awake, Chaurisse? I can’t sleep.” She rol ed over on her side, arranging herself around me. My mother’s body was soft and warm, smel ing of schnapps and the oily silk wrap wound around her head. “You’re al I have now,” she said.
“No,” I said. “That can’t be right. You stil have the Pink Fox.”
“Maybe. If I divorce your father, al of our stuff wil be split up. He could buy me out. Him and Raleigh could together, and then they could move that lady and her daughter right in here.”
“Daddy and Raleigh wouldn’t do that.”
“There’s no tel ing what they might do, Chaurisse. Don’t you get it? Anybody could be doing anything at any time.”
I couldn’t picture Daddy and Raleigh kicking my mama out of her own home, closing the Pink Fox and sending her back to renting a chair in another woman’s shop. But then again, two weeks ago, I wouldn’t have pictured them enjoying a whole second family, eating dinner twice on Wednesdays. When I didn’t work hard to keep my mind on its chain, I could picture my daddy, naked but for his glasses, draped in a chenil e bedspread, a churning mound over Dana’s pretty mother, her hair spread over a satin pil owcase.
I GAVE MY MOTHER ten days for her hard mourning. My thinking was that people general y got a week off of work when someone actual y died.
During this set-aside time, I comforted her as she mooned over old photo albums. I knelt beside her as she turned out my father’s top dresser drawer, sending change, matchbooks, prophylactics, and even a tiny jar containing my baby teeth crashing to the carpet. When her nervous stomach stole her appetite, I didn’t force her to eat the meals I prepared. When her appetite returned, I didn’t stop her from eating cans of cake icing, one buttery spoonful at a time. I figured it was her right. On the tenth night, I started what they used to cal “tough love.” At the first sound of her sniffling, I hardened myself and said, “Don’t be so sad. You need to be angry, pissed off. If I was you, I’d be in the kitchen boiling up a pan of grits.”
Mama tightened her arm around me under the sheet. “Don’t play like that.”
I was kidding, but then again, I wasn’t. It seemed that there should be some sort of consequences for what my father had done.
“Even if he threw me out of this house,” Mama said, “I wouldn’t do what Mary done.”
“At least Mary’s famous. Everybody in the whole world knows what she did. And besides, we are not going to get thrown out of this house,” I said.
“Let’s say I file for divorce and we get a good judge that says I can stay in this house. You know James is going to just move in with them. When I was coming up, people used to say ‘It’s a mighty poor rat ain’t got but one hole.’”
Crowding me in my own bed, my mother talked her greatest fears aloud. Did I think that Miss Bunny knew al along? I said that Daddy was probably the one who gave Gwendolyn the brooch, not Miss Bunny herself. Mama said then she was glad that Miss Bunny was gone to glory before she could see al of us shamed like this. I said that yes, that was probably a blessing. In a drowsy voice, Mama pointed out that ful -time students could finish beauty school in a year. Dana and her mama could get certified and take over the Pink Fox. I said, “Dana doesn’t want to do hair; she’s going to Mount Holyoke. She is going to be a doctor.” My mother turned herself over and caught me again in a tight spoon. “Your father’s going to pay for that. There won’t be anything left.”
She gave her little sigh that signaled that the schnapps and Tylenol had final y gotten the best of her and she was drifting to sleep. The clock on my bed table glowed 2:13 a.m. “Good night, Mama.”
“Chaurisse?” she said.
“Ma’am?”
“Do you think he did it because I’m not pretty? You know, I wasn’t yet fifteen when we got married. Gwen, she probably knows how to do things that I never heard of. She probably reads Cosmo magazine. And look how she keeps herself up. She looks like a dark-skinned Lena Horne.”