1920
by
DC Diamondopolous
A ray of sun struck the copper’s badge and bounced off, lighting up the voting
box inside H. L. Drugstore in me South Bronx Neighborhood.
Now washed and mended, I wore the same blood-splattered
dress, patched at the cuff, tattered ‘round the collar, mud stains on the hem.
It showed the scars from when we marched down Broadway, I holding a sign, The
Vote For Equal Pay For Equal Work.
It had started a glorious spring day, fresh from a night of
rain, splendid with the radiance of blooming cherry blossoms. Little sister
Annie pestered to come along. I told her, “Stay home with the youngins. You’re
too small and there might be trouble.” She says, “I’m big enough and I’m a
comin.” And so she did, running along the sidewalk, keeping step with the
march. Annie inherited the stubbornness that we McPhersons shared.
Hundreds marched. Me arms feeling the ache from holding the
poster high above me head. Women clutched banners that stretched the Avenue.
Coppers on horseback, coppers on foot, looking for agitation—someone stirrin’
the pot.
It did me heart good to protest among me own, knowing our
numbers was a force to reckon with. Still an’ all, we had to keep going, every
day, every spare moment spent on the vote.
A man outside Woolworth’s shouted, “Only vote I give you is
a kick in the knickers.” Someone threw a rock. Glass shattered. Horses reared.
Men broke through the lines. Big oaf of a bloke grabbed me sign, slammed it
hard on me head, he did. I fell to the ground. “Lucy!” Annie’s voice had the
shock in it. I sprawled in the street until I forced meself up. I looked ‘round
for me hat. I got to me feet and when I did something hit the back of me neck,
and I tumbled. Slumped on Broadway, staring at the buildings, the raging men,
determined women, the world and all its unfairness swirling then dimmed.
Sirens, distant on the rim of me twilight, wailed, coming
as a call to get meself up. On hands and knees, I was, when a copper kicked me
in the chest. With great pain, I grabbed his ankle and raked short broken nails
into his flesh. He shrieked. I rolled a ways over. Stood. For the sake of me
sisters, I held up me fists like Jack Dempsey, but before I could sock ‘em in
the kisser two other coppers pulled at me shoulders, squeezed meaty hands
around me breasts. I kicked. Sunk me teeth into their fingers. Their red Irish
faces flushed with the memory of booze, their breath foul as the steerage our
family sailed in across the sea.
They threw me into the paddy.
Father brought us here after mum died, for a new start, a
better life. Working in a factory twelve hours a day, no windows, low pay,
bosses forcing themselves on me. If I’d a had no father or brothers, I might a
hated all men. But I and me family could eat. Back home, how can you march with
an empty belly? So I wrap hopes and dreams and those of me family in the red,
white, and blue.
From inside the paddy, I looked over me shoulder for Annie.
The riot swallowed her whole. “Lucy!” But I heard her voice shrill as a
whistlin’ tea kettle.
Across the aisle from where I was sittin’ a woman with a
gash on her cheek bled something fierce. I ripped off me sleeve, dropped to me
knees, and pressed it against the stunned woman’s cheek. Through her tears, I
saw eyes that kindled rebellion. The woman beside her began to sing, “Let Us
all Speak Our Minds.” The others, meself included, joined in the anthem. A
copper in the front of the paddy banged his billy club on the grill and yelled,
“Shut-up!” With no mind to the brute, we continued to sing. Louder. On the
floor, a poster encouraged us with the words, Never Give Up. Our voices
united, overpowered our fears, until he unlocked the gate and struck the
nearest woman with his wooden stick.
Annie appeared, her thin arms waving as she ran alongside
the wagon. I yelled through the bars, “Go home.” I, the eldest of six to me
parents’ brood, demanded a say in their raising and sending me brothers off to
war.
Head aching, chest hurting, hair falling ‘round me
shoulders, me hat trampled somewhere in the fight. To jail I’d go. A criminal.
A dangerous woman. I smiled at the notion and the girl who held me cuff to her
head nodded as if reading me mind.
The wagon’s siren split traffic with a blaring fright as we
drove down Broadway and turned a corner. The Harlem River glimpsed between
outdoor markets, shops, and eateries. Fear starting to get the best ‘o me.
The jail full of suffragettes, it had no where to lock us
up. So they let us go.
A year passed since the brawl as I wait to vote. I look
into the face of the women around me. Pride. A quiet jubilance. The change in
our lives happening in this tiny drab storefront.
I think of the women who fought before us not having the
chance to live this day. Do they know? I reckon they do.
I want to believe in something bigger now. That brotherhood
will find the compassion to form a union for all of mankind.
I’m next.
A copper stands beside the ballot box, protecting the case
with a scowl and a gun on his hip.
He motions me forward.
I keep me head high as I stride to the glass box. I write
me vote in big letters and slip the paper into the slat as if planting
something that one day will bloom.
I thank the good Lord for this day. Knowing that so shall
life get better for me, it will get better for all.
* * * * *
"1920" was first published by Alpha Female
Society.
DC Diamondopolous's
website: http://www.dcdiamondopolous.com/
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