Over sixteen years ago, I made one of those haphazard, following one’s desires versus common sense, maneuvers. I walked away from the world of full-time employment, full-benefits, great office, etc and wandered with rose-colored glasses into a world of mostly self-employment, cobbling together different gigs, and sometimes having no benefits at all, done so that I could indulge in the world of creativity. I’d grown up in a family of storytellers and for a variety of reasons I reached a point in my life where I wanted to spend time writing. I thought I would write a great fantasy masterpiece but what flowed most naturally were stories of the people around me, and occasionally, stories about myself. This was long before I picked up a camera but I have always been visual and so I wielded the pen like a paintbrush, sketching the world around me. I had no idea what I was doing and so every little bit of encouragement was pivotal in keeping me from giving up. As I began to submit my work, one of the first magazines to accept a short piece was the New York-based magazine African Voices. The editors were so encouraging and so supportive, and as I watched videos on its current GoFundMe page, I hear writers and artists expressing that same sentiment today. As Giving Tuesday approaches, please consider giving to an organization like African Voices. You don’t have to wait until tomorrow morning. As you can see on the GoFundMe page, every little bit helps. And meanwhile … it’s dusty … could use some revision perhaps … but here is a variation of what I wrote so long ago …

my parents in the 1950s
Wait Until Morning
She sits on the edge of the bed, gazing into a large bureau mirror. She smokes a Pall Mall or perhaps a Winston Salem. She’s not sure. She can’t remember if she pulled the cigarette from her purse or his coat pocket. She can usually taste the difference but not tonight. In her mind’s eye, she sees her youngest son frowning and wrinkling his nose at the smoke. She shakes her head at his face, then sighs as the image fades to be replaced by the items on the bureau top. Pictures mostly and pill bottles and knick knacks from her children. Most of the pictures and their frames are fuzzy with dust. She is too tired to clean proper. Only one picture shines clear in the dim light of the lamp – her mother.
The woman looks at the picture and then at herself in the mirror. She glances quickly away – she never liked her face – but the image remains. Hair gray like her mother’s now, wide-rimmed glasses, skin weathered and dry no matter how much lotion she rubs on. The bed is also reflected. She stares at the crisp clean covers. For the first time in 40 years, only on one side are they folded back. She squeezes her eyes shut and clutches her stomach. He is gone.
He bought her the scanner that sits near the bed. Fifteen years ago? Maybe more. She saw it on “Let’s Make a Deal.” She wanted one and he bought it for her birthday. He always did his best to get her what she wanted. A female police dispatcher’s voice barks from the scanner. Somewhere downtown a tall black male is being chased by the police. Her stomach knots and the breath catches in her thin chest. All her sons are tall black males. She breaths again as she remembers that her sons are at work or with their girlfriends.
Wind blows and the old house creaks. A draft kisses her bare ankles. “A small wood frame house” was how the reporter from the local paper described the house in his article about her daughter, on her way to college, the first one. Her stomach clenches again at the thought of her daughter so many miles away, unreachable if she gets into trouble.
She sighs and puffs more deeply on the cigarette. The house creaks again, and she smiles. A junk heap, yes it was. Their junk heap for 45 years. Raised four children in it. Would’ve been five if times had been better. Two girls instead of the one.
More creaking. She thinks of grabbing the iron poker by her chair in the living room. The poker went with the coal stove they had in the 1950’s. Back then, it was only used to nudge glowing coals. Now … the neighborhood’s getting bad. But, as she always told her children, a person might get in, but he sure wouldn’t leave in the same condition. Hands clench at that thought, hands that have wrung chicken necks on the farm, picked tobacco, cradled babies and caressed the skin of just one man.
She glances at the phone and then the digital clock on the bureau. Twelve hours until the hospital allows phone calls. Then she can hear his voice. Patient, calming, distracted if the TV is on. She rises briefly from the bed, unaware of the hollow that she’s worn into the mattress over the years. She turns down the light to a warm glow and then puts out the cigarette. Sliding into bed, she draws the covers up to her chin and closes her eyes to wait for morning.
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That’s a beautiful story. You really can paint a picture with your words.