![]() litahooper.com _______ | ![]() Lita Hooper HerStory He cameto me withdreams that stretched beyond daddy’sinfinite acres, my dutymanifested. Evenoffered up promise as if itwere a little gift only arural gal could love. When Isaid yes we bothturned, behindus thetrain to Memphis it tooon its way. Thencame the new life: too-highrents too manybabies. Justfour. But howcould I believe insilence after a chorus ofhungry cries or lookpast those frightful eyes as theydiminished each evening into thelonesome dark. Whocould ignore their swelling bellies tellingthe world of our failure. Orbelieve a black child has needs theworld can’t measure. So weworked fellinto this life. Did whatwe could. And whatyou are is whatwe learned to sell and take. HisStory I workedthe night shift as arailroad man. I tookmy tips, teased the air withsmiles, nods, thank you ma’ams. I placedbets when whisky snakedmy veins but Iwent home to Mississippi— to pinetrees stretching tall asprayer. Somenights I danced. She saysI gambled life to tasteeasy feasts, butthere was also this: mestanding at the front door– my moneyin one hand mydreams buried years since. TheHouse of Dangerous Surprise Suburbanbarbeques, late-night bid whist parties, laughterand frying fish crackling the air, I comefrom Chicago, broughtup on blues and beer by menand women who worked the hard shift. Descendantsof the northern migration, theystaked their claim in the Midwest— urban-drawnfolk who gave up back porch tales for fastpromises of a greedy city. Theybuilt churches and taverns side by side and Iwas baptized in both. I comefrom kitchens filled with cousinsauntsgodsistersplaybrothers, livingrooms where halos of smoke crowned steppers who madelove to Sam Cooke whileothers nodded and snapped jeweled fingers, tappedpolyester knees. I grewup with Bobby Blue Bland, Donnie Hathaway, Stevie Wonder singingme into fantasy, blocking out the hardclamor of parental love. I comefrom chronic rage raised up by whiskied glances, mymother’s cries piercing my sleep as the dogshits in the corner, too frightened by it all. Mysisters pretend to sleep, not smell thesting of cigarettes and wine nudging the air separatingthe white officer and my father whosefist, a glistening cannonball, silences my mother. And allthe while B.B. King repeats himself, urging themback to the blues of their youth. I comefrom a house of dangerous surprise, peoplemade mad by desire and dream. Factoryworkers, truckers, mechanics whoshowed frightening love, made holidays and birthdays divinespectacles. Then, thetimely blow. Still, I grewstraight, found peace in the inbetween. And whatof this? I comefrom a people flawed and bruised wholoved me while tryingto love each other. ![]() | ||