Terminus
by Embe Charpentier
Brookhaven, an Atlanta suburb, June, 1970
“Never set foot in this house again!” The satisfying slam of an oak door
and the shudder of stained glass ended the eviction of Dr. Mason Philips.
“I’m in the right,” Ivy whispered.
After she heard his oxfords pound the last step, she sunk into the wing
chair. Twins Andrew and Abigail wailed like fire engines. Their howling
forced Ivy into the formal dining room. She noticed the small tears in the
wallpaper that Mason had made when he had hammered the crown molding in place.
She picked Mason’s bourbon bottle from the sideboard and poured the contents of
the bottle into the kitchen sink.
Andrew skidded across the kitchen floor.
His shoes were wedged over his hands. He pounded her legs with their hard
soles.
Ivy ignored him.
“Pawpaw’s never coming home!” Abigail stomped her feet. “If you go, he can come
back. Go, Mommy. Go get him, and he can get Jewel, and then it’ll be alright
again!”
“It’ll be just fine, you’ll see.” Ivy pointed to the oven. “And look,
dinner’s almost done.”
Andrew stood up. “I don’t wanna eat! Pawpaw didn’t do anything wrong! He tells
the truth, all the time. And you’re mean.”
Ivy scooped one twin under each arm and brought them to the living room. She
commanded Andrew to sit in the corner. “Stay there until you calm down. You’re
almost six. Act your age.”
Abigail pulled on her honey-colored braids as her face reddened. She sat next
to Andrew, huffing and snuffling until snot ran onto her top lip. “I love
you, Andrew.” She patted her brother’s back as his chest heaved. “Pawpaw
has no home. Why? You slapped him! I heard you do it. You be in the corner.”
“That was disrespectful, Abigail. And, as for you, Andrew, when I allow you out
of the corner, you will not hit me again.” Ivy directed her slit-eyes stare at
Andrew’s hands.
She returned to her white kitchen and placed the kettle on the stove. In the
oven, pork chops dried into shoe leather. When the kettle whistled, she forgot
to slip on an oven mitt, grasped the handle of the kettle, and branded her
hand. She screamed in pain.
The truth was not for children.
May, 1970
“Sir, may I speak to you?” Jewel, their maid, asked Mason after tucking the
children into bed. Ivy could not hear the question over the pastor’s wife’s
prattling on the phone, but witnessed Jewel’s proximity to her husband’s
ear. She ended their conversation as she saw the furtive way he
scrutinized the kitchen before leaving by the back door. To obtain the right
vantage point, Ivy ran up the stairs.
Out in the yard, partially hidden by the azaleas and the arbor’s arch, Mason
and Jewel spoke. From her surveillance post in their bedroom, Ivy heard only
the barest whisper. She saw her husband embrace the young housekeeper. She
gasped. Down the stairs she tumbled reckless as a blind cyclist.
When he returned to the living room, he turned on the TV just in time for Marcus Welby, M.D. Ivy stood in his path, right in front
of his recliner. “What’s the matter, honey?”
“Why were you outside with that Negro?” Ivy planted her feet, hands on her
hips.
“She just needed money, that’s all.” Mason walked by, almost bumping her as he
sat down. “Now I want to watch this fake doctor pretend to be me. I suppose the
writers must have surgeons and general practitioners advising them…”
Ivy marched to the TV and turned it off. “We pay her. She’s plenty well-fed.
Did you give her anything?”
“No. Now I want to watch my show. Remember Ephesians
5:22 – wives, obey your husbands, etcetera.” He wagged his finger and a
smile slipped across his lips. He got up from his chair, but before he arrived
at the dial, Ivy turned the TV back on.
“I’m going to listen to the revival preacher on my radio.” Ivy retreated
upstairs.
As Ivy took off her clothes, she looked for flaws in her petite figure, but
found none. She turned on the radio, then brushed out her hair. The preacher
spoke for some time before his sermon about David’s sins drew her attention.
“David, though he
was God’s chosen, stole Uriah’s wife… and then David took Uriah’s life for he
craved Bathsheba for himself. And we know that he sinned! But God’s favor rested on
David nonetheless. Yea, brothers and sisters, God knows who he has called! David’s son
Absalom turned upon his father and was slain. If David had not taken Uriah’s
wife to his bed, Solomon the wise, who controlled the demons themselves, would
not have been born. Such are the Lord’s mysterious ways.”
Ivy had asked Pastor Mark a question in Sunday school. “Why do some sinners
dwell in God’s favor?”
She hadn’t received an answer, just a
platitude. “The rain falls on the just and the unjust,” he’d said, then turned
to answer a simpler question from a snooty high school principal.
After Marcus Welby dispensed his weekly wisdom, Mason strolled into the bedroom.
By then, Ivy had decided the excessive size of Solomon’s harem made him nearly
as sinful as David.
As Mason undressed, Ivy spread her hair
across the pillow.
“Do you think all men want more than one woman?” Her eyelashes fluttered.
Mason gave her a look reserved for his more peculiar diagnoses and pulled his
tie over his head. “Why do you ask that, darlin’? I can’t speak for every man.”
Ivy luxuriated on pink satin. “Come to bed, honey,” she cooed.
And
after the most cursory encounter, lacking in intimacy, with no “I love you” at
its conclusion, Ivy laid awake. Did Mason
think of her or the harem?
The next day, Ivy observed Jewel readying Andrew for school. “C’mon, l’il man.”
Jewel knelt down to tie Andrew’s shiny shoe. He giggled when she tied it in a
double knot.
“Hurry him along.” Ivy said. “You’ve got cleaning to do.”
That day, Jewel took down the winter curtains. She hand-washed each curtain in
a washtub before putting it on the line. After a few hours, Ivy observed the
young woman’s movements slow. Jewel’s molasses-toned skin glistened with water
and sweat. Ivy wondered how much money Mason had given her.
As she finished the last of the curtains,
a fine, cool sprinkle, little more than dew, grew into a spittle of alligator
tears. General Hospital held
Ivy’s attention until the commercial break. The annoying tones of the
“emergency broadcast system” drove Ivy into the kitchen. She supervised Jewel
from the window above the sink.
Ivy looked on as Jewel dragged two wet curtains onto the screened-in back
porch. As water droplets trickled through the screen, Abigail rested her baby
doll into her carriage; Andrew ran his fire truck against the wooden wall. The
children both stopped to help Jewel lay the drapes atop the benches.
“You don’t need to do that, babies,” Jewel said. “I’d hug y’all, but I’d get
you wet. You want some lemonade?”
Both children nodded.
“Get you some soon as I’m dry.”
The screen door slammed as Jewel entered the kitchen.
“Why didn’t you pick the first ones you washed to bring in?” Ivy’s glare
burned its way from the tiny pearls of water that lay on Jewel’s short hair to those
that decorated her breasts.
“Sorry, Miss Philips. None of’em was dry anyways.”
“Get a towel. I can see the edges of your brassiere, and that won’t do.”
After Jewel skittered off, Ivy brought the children their lemonade. Andrew
bumped his truck along the floorboards until it banged into the base of the
baby doll’s bassinet.
“Wah-wah. Oops, baby’s cryin,” Abigail said. “Gotta go pick’er up.”
“She’ll go back to sleep. You don’t pick babies up the minute they cry. Finish your
drink.” Ivy observed Andrew as he created a multi-car collision with his Hot
Wheels. His foot knocked his half- glass of lemonade over. The liquid spilled
across the porch. Andrew sat in the puddle, then stood up. He bent over and
pointed to the stain.
“I peed my pants!” Andrew pointed to his bottom. Abigail laughed as she patted
her doll’s back.
“That’s not funny!” Ivy’s face burned red. “Bad boys wet their pants. You wanna
be a bad boy?”
Andrew shook his head. “No, Mommy.”
“Well then, you better act your age.” Ivy picked up the glasses as Abigail
again made the crying noise.
“You woke li’l baby Jewel up.” Abigail alternated between crying and a lullaby
as she bounced the baby. She stopped Little Jewel’s crying altogether to finish
singing.
Paint
and Bay,
Sorrel and gray,
All the pretty little ponies.
So hush-a-by, don't you cry,
Go to sleep, little baby.
Sorrel and gray,
All the pretty little ponies.
So hush-a-by, don't you cry,
Go to sleep, little baby.
As Abigail placed her little Jewel doll back down, Ivy patted her daughter’s
head. “You’re a good mama. Now tell me why you named that white baby Jewel?”
“Cause I love her like I love Jewel,” Abigail trilled. “Andrew and Daddy love
her, too. Don’t you?”
Ivy nodded and returned to watch the end of her soap opera. As nurse Gail
Brewer cried over her cheating husband, a tear trickled down Ivy’s face.
Jewel fried catfish for dinner and put the children to bed before leaving at
eight. At five past eight, Mason rose, cigarette in hand. He ambled out the
front door, but didn’t stay on the porch. Ivy peered out the window to watch
him make his way south toward Dresden Drive. He didn’t return until after
nine.
In the fifty-five minute interim, Ivy breathed a thousand times. She tidied the
already-neat kitchen, vacuumed the clean carpet, and finally went upstairs to
listen to the preacher again.
Tonight, he spoke of the Beatitudes. “And
I tell you, brothers and sisters, they are be-attitudes! Do you understand that the meek and the peacemakers are to be blessed? And that those who hunger for justice will receive it?”
Ivy’s hands shook as she turned the radio off. She picked up the Ladies Home Journal from the nightstand.
The magazine fell open to the end of the “Can this marriage be saved?” feature.
She read the scandalous story of a woman who had confronted her philandering
husband in a motel. The couple had gone to marriage counseling. “Phyllis has
become a more loving wife, and has learned to trust Harvey again,” the author
claimed.
No,
Mason wasn’t cheating. She wouldn’t allow it.
Ivy pinned up her hair, then bathed in bubbles and rosewater. Though the water
grew tepid, she remained in the bath. Mason entered the master bath to find her
laying back against the wall of the claw foot tub. She laid barely submerged
among the suds.
Mason leaned his lanky frame in the doorway. “Is my lovely mermaid ready to
emerge from the sea foam?”
Jewel’s clothing had still been damp when she left. Ivy checked Mason’s
cream-colored shirt for moist stains between the chest and navel, but found
none.
His head pulled back slightly and his smile drifted away. “You’re starin’ at my
shirt. Why? Is it dirty?”
“Maybe. Somebody might be getting lazy with the laundry.” Ivy emerged from the
tub, stretching her body before his eyes to reach for a towel. His hands nearly
spanned her slim waist.
“Let me dry your back.” After he toweled her off, Mason massaged her warm
muscles. She turned toward him and unbuttoned his shirt with a playful giggle.
Mason struggled to smile. “Ivy, I’m a
little worried about something tonight. Mind giving me a rain check?”
“Sure, honey.” She laid awake for over an hour, watching him breathe. Finally,
she took a Valium and found dreamless sleep.
On Saturday, Mason had no surgeries scheduled; he left late for his nine
o’clock tee time. After he came back from the golf course, he took the twins to
the park for hours. Ivy phoned other doctors’ wives and agreed to host a
luncheon. From her damask-covered fainting couch in the master bedroom, she
heard Mason counsel Abigail.
“Now, don’t bother your mother. I have a call to make… for work. Go watch your
brother, honey.”
Abigail ran off to the back porch. Ivy’s silent tiptoe down the front stairs
got her as close to the living room phone as she could without being
discovered.
“Yes, Wednesday morning. Thank you for delivering the message.”
Ivy’s wild imaginings flourished.
Their day of rest began with Sunday school and dire warnings. The heat built,
but by the afternoon, the sheer curtains breezed in on a west wind to fan the
formal dining room. The Bartlett pear tree bent with the force of the gusts
before the first flash of lightning. Andrew ran upstairs to hide under his bed.
Mason coaxed his son to come out by squeezing into the cramped space beside
him.
Ivy looked down upon them both. “Mason,
you’re a good father.”
*
On Tuesday, Ivy busied herself by reminding Jewel how to properly clean the
kitchen. After Jewel scrubbed the stove top with steel wool for fifteen
minutes, she asked Ivy for Wednesday off.
“My momma needs me.” Jewel stood stock-still, eyes lowered, fingers red and
throbbing.
“Well, I suppose that’s alright.” Ivy ripped off her rubber gloves.
That night at dinner, Ivy’s suspicions left her with little to say. When the
hospital called Mason to perform an emergency surgery, he left right away. He
didn’t return until after ten.
On Wednesday morning, Mason woke early and left. Every hour, the
grandfather clock chimed later and later. When Mason returned home, Ivy held
her tongue, obeying the biblical admonition to be subject to her husband. She
served him baked chicken, spoke to him little, and went to bed as he read the
children “Little Red Riding Hood”.
Ivy suspected the wolf wasn’t the only one
who hid in plain sight.
*
On Thursday, Jewel
returned to work, but didn’t pick the children up when they whined. By
mid-afternoon, a blood stain grew on the back of her dress. “Oh, you are on the
cotton?” Ivy left, returned with a menstrual pad, but Jewel had never used one.
“We
use a piece of rag, ma’am.” Jewel retreated after accepting the pad. “But thank
you so much.”
“This bleeding… it’s extreme, isn’t it?”
Jewel
gave a tiny nod and thanked Ivy again as she ran to the restroom.
Mason
joined Jewel as she put the children to bed. He patted the young woman on the
back and thanked her. He told her he would walk her to the bus stop. Ivy turned
her radio not to the preacher, but to music. Though Elvis Presley’s gyrations
were crude, his version of Anything that’s Part of You
forced a knot to rise within Ivy’s throat.
*
Ivy’s
melancholia lasted days. Finally, Mason knelt beside her bed and took her hand.
“What
has you feelin’ so blue, Sugar?” he asked.
Yet
the words did not come. While she lay in bed alone, dark thoughts held sway.
She was sorely tempted to speak her mind despite the wifely obedience the Bible
demanded.
The
next morning, she rose, then dressed in her bed jacket. For the first time, she
saw that her house neither looked nor smelled clean. She had taken what few
meals she could in the confines of her bedroom. Fried chicken grease spattered
the stove top. The carpet had not been vacuumed. The children had brought their
toys in from the back porch. Andrew rolled his muddy Matchbox car under the
couch. Abigail stood on a stool, searching for a snack within the butler’s
pantry.
“Jewel!”
Ivy shouted.
Jewel
emerged from the bathroom, her body bent over, her face contorted in agony. Yet
Ivy’s anger exploded. “What has become of my house?”
“Sorry,
ma’am.” Jewel rubbed her forehead with her fingers. “I’m doin’ the best I can.
I know I must keep my eye upon the children. But I’m not well. I couldn’t stay
home to care for myself, especially while you’re sick and all.”
The
corners of Ivy’s mouth fell. “Tell me what happened to you a week ago
Wednesday, or I swear I will fire you this very moment.”
“I
can’t say, ma’am. It’s personal to me,” she whispered.
“But
you’re caring for my babies!” Ivy protested.
“You’re bleeding like a stuck pig, and won’t say why.”
Jewel’s hand covered her heart. “I lost a child. I can say no more than that.”
Ivy’s hands balled into fists as the children cringed. “You have
no husband. God took your child because you acted against His law.” Ivy’s words
grew still louder. “1 Thessalonians 4:3!
I cannot allow my children to hear the words, but you know them! You know what
the Bible says!”
A
tear ran down Jewel’s face. “I know what the Bible says. I can say no more than
what I have said, Miss Ivy. Now please…”
Ivy
grabbed Jewel’s forearm. “You will come with
me.” After commanding the children to go to their rooms, she took her out onto
the back porch.
“You
don’t want to speak because… you seduced Mason. My husband fell into your
wicked trap, didn’t he?” She grasped Jewel by the shoulders. “You, competing
with a lady like me. Did you teach him your disgusting ways, you homewrecker?”
“No,
ma’am! Not at all. The doctor’s been kind to me. I wouldn’t even think of such
a thing!” Jewel’s hands tented into a prayerful clasp.
Ivy’s command boomed loud enough for the children, poised on the
steps, to hear. “Then tell me who fathered your child. You will give me a
name.”
“Why?”
Jewel cried. “The name will mean nothin’ to you. I know much about your life,
but you know little about mine. That’s how it should be for a hired woman…”
Ivy
pushed Jewel back a step. “Say his name!”
“Esau West." Jewel gestured, palms open. "I didn’t want
him! I went dancin’ at a joint in Bedford Pine, so maybe I was wrong to be
doin’ such a thing. But he took me outside. I can’t say exactly what happened
‘cause I don’t recall. But he just got outta the prison farm, ma’am. How could
I want a child from such a man?”
“So
you did not want this child?”
“No,
Miss Ivy.”
“And
so God took it from you? How fortunate-” and Ivy’s mind began to spin a worse tale,
one she was afraid to entertain. “Why did you discuss this with my husband?”
“Cause
the crampin’ started and I didn’t know what to do. Please ma’am. God has chastised
me. I’m never goin’ to the joint again!” She shuddered. “I need my job.”
“But
you are a liar,” Ivy said. She crossed her arms over her chest. “The day before
this bleedin’ began, you said you were caring for your mama. But that was a
deception, wasn’t it?”
“Yes,
ma’am. I want to keep my business private. I’m sorry I lied. Please forgive
me.”
“I
am through discussing this.” Ivy closed her eyes and turned her face from
Jewel’s. “I will speak to my husband about this tonight. And I swear upon the
soul of my grandparents that I will fire you if you have lied to me even once
more. Go home. Get out of my sight.”
As
Jewel shut the door on her way out, the children scampered upstairs. Ivy turned
on the television to the national news. A woman named Gloria Steinem was
speaking about the right of a woman to speak her mind and choose if and when to
have a child. Ivy considered Mason’s betrayal of her trust and the teachings of
the Bible about adulterers over a glass of sweet tea.
“My
silence has given him power,” she muttered as she cooked ham steaks and
potatoes. Mason arrived and kissed her as she sweated over the hot stove. She
didn’t speak to him until she’d put Abigail and Andrew to bed.
“Say
your prayers, honey.” The pretty child knelt, and spoke the words of the
petition by heart.
Now
I lay me down to sleep, I pray
the Lord my soul to keep:
If
I die before I wake I pray thee, Lord, my soul to take. Amen.
After
coming down the stairs, Mason asked her to go outside on the back porch. “Why
is Jewel absent? And why didn’t you speak to me tonight?” he whispered.
“You
know why.” She paused for effect. “That trollop was expecting a child, but you
said nothing to me. Why?”
Mason’s
voice came soft and slow. “She asked me to keep it to myself.”
The
stammered question stumbled and fell. “Have you slept with her?”
“No!
Absolutely not!” Mason’s eyes met her own. He stood stiff and tall. “She needed
understanding, and I provided it.”
As voices grew louder, the children crept down the stairs. Abigail
covered her face with her hands. Andrew stuck his fingers in his ears.
But
the news broadcast had created new questions within her heart. “You provided
more than understanding, didn’t you?”
“I
have no idea what you’re talking about.” Mason pulled at the knot of his tie.
“You…
you aborted her baby. You cut it from her womb, you murderer.” Ivy began to
cry. Her face burned crimson.
Mason
hesitated between words. “She didn’t want it. She said she could
never love it. She couldn’t afford to care for it.”
Ivy’s
hand struck her husband with the force of a judge’s gavel. His head snapped
backward. Though her palm stung, she hit him a second time.
He
grabbed her wrist. “Stop it! Do not hit me a
third time, Ivy.”
Abigail
wretched, then tiptoed up the stairs to the bathroom. Andrew followed, tears
dripping down his chin.
“You
butcher! You criminal! By tomorrow, you will leave this house. I’m going to
file for divorce.” Ragged pulls of breath shook her.
His face fell and his eyes filled with tears. “You can’t take my home
and my children from me. Not now, not ever. My family is my whole life.”
“I
haven’t called the police on you. But I could if I wanted to. Tonight, you will
sleep on the couch. Leave by the end of the day tomorrow.”
As
Ivy stormed up the stairs, she thought she heard Abigail sniffle. She closed
and locked her door. Mason had ripped God’s protection from their
family. They had dwelled beneath the security of angel wings. Ivy cried on
the feather pillow.
By
the mandate of her church, the only grounds for divorce was adultery. Such a
lie was better than the truth.
When Ivy fired Jewel, she told her that begging would never excuse
her lie. “You started my husband along this path. Now he’s going to Hell. If you
hadn’t gone to a juke joint, my marriage wouldn’t be over.”
“Please
don’t hurt Mason. He loves his babies, just like I do.”
Ivy
gave Jewel Green five minutes to bid the children goodbye.
Mason’s departure for the Country Club was marked by chaos and the children’s
hate. By Thursday, Ivy had spoken to a lawyer for a divorce. Her parents agreed
that adultery with a Negro was sufficient grounds according to God's law.
*
On the Sunday after Mason’s departure, Ivy and the children
sat in their usual pew. She recognized him from across the church. After the rest
of the congregation left, Mason still knelt on the cold tile
floor. Pastor Mark rushed to Ivy’s side as she asked a member of the
Ladies’ Guild for a ride home.
“You
must seek counseling, Mrs. Philips. What God has joined let no man put
asunder.” Pastor Mark’s soft tone sought her understanding.
“My
husband deserves his fate,” she answered. She dragged both children from the
church as they begged her to allow them to stay.
She
found a new nanny through recommendations. Marla Parks, a thick-bodied,
light-skinned black woman, cooked well. The first few weeks went uneventfully;
the forty year-old did her job in a slow, competent fashion. Yet the children
dissolved into tears at the slightest provocation.
“Marla’s not like Jewel.” Abigail clutched
baby doll Jewel to her chest.
"Just a trip to the park, Mama. I need to see Pawpaw," Andrew
pled.
“Not
today. But it’s all going to be alright.” Every night, Ivy planned a future
like a gambler played gin rummy - not seeing the next card, believing life
random.
*
Weeks
passed. Finally, Ivy agreed to a counseling session. The pastor took them to
his office. Mason’s cowed body slumped into an armchair. As she faced his
haggard countenance, she took the divorce papers from her purse and laid them
upon his lap.
“I
agreed to this counseling session for one reason.” She paused and extended her
hand toward him. He grasped it as a drowning man holds a life preserver. “I’m
expecting your child, Mason.”
Mason
sobbed from deep within his chest. “Do you forgive me, Ivy?”
“Do you think I should?” Ivy bristled. But
then, she was not alone. “Pastor Mark, I’d like to talk to my husband alone.”
They compromised in the quiet of the
priory, until all that was left was discretion.
They would protect the children.
*
A week later, Jewel Green returned to the Philips
residence. Abigail ran to her side with a delighted yelp. Andrew grabbed her
leg. “Don’t leave us again!”
Jewel’s eyes remained lowered, her voice
silenced.
“The children certainly are glad to see
you.” Ivy struggled to control the bile that rose in her throat.
“Mama’s going to have a baby.” Abigail held
up her baby Jewel doll. “You can help us take care of her.”
“Go to the porch,” Ivy told the children.
“We’ll be there soon.”
As the children ran off, Ivy handed Jewel
a list of chores. Her throat tightened with every word she spoke. “This is what
needs to be done today.”
She didn’t wait for a reply. She walked
past Jewel, into the front hall, where just weeks before, she’d commanded Mason
to leave. During their negotiations, she’d promised she’d try to forgive him.
They both knew the implication of her words. Ivy stared at the red stained
glass panel in the door. Mason deserved nothing. Jewel deserved the same.
“I’ll always be in the right,” Ivy
whispered.
* * * * *
Embe Charpentier has two novellas published by Kellan books in
2015 and 2016. Thirty of her short stories have been featured in diverse
literary magazines such as The Quotable
and Polychrome Ink. www.embecharpentier.com
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