Authors: Grace Carol
My mouth hung open. “What?”
He held his hands up. “Let me finish. I feel like I'm trying, Ron. Really trying. And I feel like you're always looking for a way out of this while I'm trying hard to stay in this thing with you. I feel like you're ashamed of me, sometimes. I feel like you, not other folks, think I'm not good enough. I know you like what you're looking at whenever you put your eyes on me, but that's something else from really wanting to be with me.”
“Earlâ”
“Still not done,” Earl said, putting his hands up again. “I have come all the way here to this.” Earl gestured around the room. “I don't know what all kind of placeâ¦I'm so far away from home. And I'd move again. But what makes me sad is that sometimes I don't believe you'd ask me again. I believe you'd just as soon have me be back in Langsdale where I started out.”
I sat there. My heart was beating so hard. I had no idea that he had been thinking all of this. But I let what he said settle in and decided that he was right. I'd just never admitted it to anyone, not even myself. Another part of it, a part that Earl was still a long ways from understanding, was that on some level, I was feeling like I wasn't good enough for him. In grad school, for the first time I learned about structuralism, the ways in which a culture is ordered. We read Franz Fanon's
Black Skin, White Masks,
an exploration of how colonized blacks internalized the ideas of their colonizers, namely that the binary structure of black versus white is fraught with connotations having to do with the notion that blackness is inferior to whiteness. I'd read all the stuff in a book, but didn't have to, not really. When I looked at Katie, I'd let that voice get in my head that told me,
Pssst. You know that Earl would like her so much better. After all, who's canonically pretty, you or her? And anyway, you and Earl, you're binaries! You're binaries!
I patted the side of the bed again, and this time Earl sat down next to me. I thought of the Katies, looking me up and down whenever I kissed him, the Ians who smirked at Earl, at the way he dressed, the way he talked, and me, who didn't want him at the hip-hop show with us because he wouldn't fit. But in that moment, I realized I was more afraid of losing him, and that was worse than all the bullshit I was letting get to me. I grabbed his hand.
“I'm scared, Earl. And I don't ever want to make you sad. I don't want you in Langsdale. I want you here, with me. We have to work. I want to work at this.” I squeezed him. “We've got to trust each other, Earl. I'm not going to run off with every black man who looks at me, and I have to trust that Katie and any other bitch like her is never, ever going to get into those Wranglers of yours, especially if you're going to be a big star.”
“I don't know about that,” Earl said, stroking my hand. “I don't even want to be in no movie.”
“Not even if it pays a few bucks?”
“We'd have to see about what kind of bucks they're talkin'.”
“Big bucks!” I yelled. I'd forgotten about Doris out there on the couch. Earl shushed me.
“Enough for you to get yourself a proper car, one that don't quit on you every time you turn around.”
“Amen, brother.”
Earl stood up and slid out of his jeans. “How was your night?”
“Ooohhh,” I said, scrunching up my face, thinking of Jake, the show, Ian. “That's a conversation for tomorrow. Let Doris tell you about the show. She's guaranteed to give you colorful commentary.”
Earl shook his head and grinned. “Hey,” he said, stretching out on the bed, “Did we talk enough? Are we all right?”
“Yesâ¦but we'll always have to keep checking in.”
“Okay,” Earl said. “Will do that. No question.” Then he smiled at me. “Ain't you hot with all them clothes on?”
“Know something?” I raised an eyebrow. “I
am.
I am
hot.
” I stood up in bed, took off my shirt, twirled it around my head, and threw it so that it landed on Earl's face. And then I got out of my skirt and kicked it to the floor.
“You sure are, darling.” Earl whistled softly, a long, low whistle. “Come on over here.”
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In less than the two hours since I've landed in Atlanta, I've had biscuits, meat loaf, macaroni and cheese and key-lime pie. “You're trying to kill me with food,” I say to Doris as we're handed the check.
“I've got this,” blurts Doris, slapping her credit card on the table. “I've got an actual job, as crazy-making as it is. Not a bad way to go, by the way, death by food.”
I look around the café. “Everybody here is so coiffed. Like really put together. Pearl necklaces and all that.”
“And in L.A. they're not?” Doris is gathering her things. “I will never forget how folks dressed for the
supermarket,
for God's sake. Miniskirts and thigh-high boots to get your cereal and milk in the morning?”
“
I
don't dress that way, and I'm a native.”
“Yeah, but that's just because you got brainwashed by Indianaâand that big, hot man you got living with you. You wore fishnets, you taught in fishnets when you first got to Langsdale. Classic L.A. fashion, apparently. And now look at you. Cowboy boots. Who'd a thunk it?”
“I love those boots. By the way, where are your space shoes?”
“Two words for you. Good Will.”
“It's actually one word.”
“Do you want a ride to Burning Spear or not?” Doris asks, getting up from the table.
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“This is exciting,” she singsongs as we drive to Burning Spear. “I don't care what you say. This book could be your big Terry McMillan moment.”
I stare out the window at the scenery. Atlanta
is
a cool city. It feels citylike, but dignified in ways that L.A. won't ever be. I tell Doris this and she tells me not to get all romantic about the place.
“Here in Atlanta, a particular brand of woman reads too much Margaret Mitchell, spends all her daddy's money, and gets paid more money to tell the world her demented views on marriage and feminity, so don't talk to me about dignity.”
I settle in my seat. “Well, I still think it's very nice.”
I think about what Doris said about my McMillan moment and I don't know about that. The problem with Burning Spear Press is that they're trying to make us all Terry McMillans. That's cool, nothing against Ms. McMillan. It's impossible not to feel appreciation for her success and what it's meant to black women writers. But I'm a black woman writer who wants to do something a little different. I had made as many of the changes in
F: The Academy
that they wanted me to. I made Doris black, which, I have to say, was really, really hilarious. I made Dottie's and Wanda's circle of friends almost exclusively black, no other ethnicities, which seems, inexplicably, the norm in a lot of contemporary fiction. It's one or the other kind of folk, nothing in between. I even threw in a couple of “girlfriends” and “sho nuffs” to make it more “friendly toward their market,” is what they told me.
I also added all this relationship bullshit because the first draft was seen as too much of a character studyâwhat we used to call good writing in graduate school. But after all that, it's not the book I envisioned I'd write, not by a long shot. And yet there's no denying that a writer is lucky to get published these days, ever since everybody started relying on Harry Potter to save the literary day.
“I'm going to be in that café across the street,” Doris says, pulling up to the curb. “I'm going to have a coffee and read
People
magazine and pretend that I have a glamorous life.”
“Make sure you have condoms.”
“Ew.” Doris gives me the thumbs-up. “Good luck. I hope you hit it off with everybody.” And then she pulls away.
Just like all the publishing houses on TV, the building is one of those slick, modern types, but inside, it's still going for the velvety, antique, curly-furniture thing. Very schizophrenic, and very
Gone With the Wind,
in fact. I'm on time for my appointment, on the dot, so I wait outside Arianna Covington's office until I hear her secretary announce that I'm waiting. When the door opens, a tiny woman in sleek charcoal slacks and a white silk shirt pokes her head out and turns first to the left and then to the right looking for me. This is something that I'd get on Ian about, making assumptions about people and all of that, but for some reason I had assumed that Arianna Covington was black. I mean, since she was running a black imprint and everything. Instead, she was a pixieish redhead, with blue catlike eyes and freckles across her face. Young, too, of course.
“Veronica Williams?” She extends her hand and gives me a big smile. “Please. Step inside my office.”
Her office is well-appointed, as they say. Elegant fixtures and silver-framed photographs of what must be her family. There's a picture of Arianna with a handsome, grey-haired man and a red-headed toddler on a bookshelf to the right of where I'm sitting.
“Cute,” I say, pointing to the picture. “How old is he or she?”
Arianna laughs. “You can never tell what they are at that age. She. But she's much older now. Three years old. Little Jocelyn.”
“Your husband, he's handsome.” I stare at the picture. Really, they look like the perfect family.
“Ah, well,” Arianna says. “Ex. We've been divorced for about three years.”
“Oh.” Damn. Somebody must have really acted up for one or both of them to jump ship
immediately
after the baby was born. I think about Bita and the choices she's making, and all of it seems hard.
“So,” Arianna says, clasping her delicate hands and getting down to business. “I do have to say how happy I am to meet you, since we rarely meet the authors we edit. We are very excited about the book and think it's going to do very well.”
“I'm excited, too⦔ I pick at a hangnail on my not-so-delicate hands. “I'm worried, though, about all the changes I've made.”
“Oh?” Arianna frowns and tips back in her seat. “What are your concerns?”
How long did she have? “Well, I've made an awful lot of changes to make it more reader friendly, or whatever, and, well, I'm afraid it might be too bland or something.” And will totally suck. “Too much like everything else that is already out there. Not brave enough. Not interesting enough. Not smart enough. And there's already so many of those types of books out there. The McMillan clones.”
“Yes,” she says, smiling amiably. “But your book is different. It's set in academia, and that's something we've never quite seen so far with this press. That's a good thing.”
“Really?” I cock my head just a tiny bit in that do-not-bullshit me tilt.
“Really. Don't forget. You cover many topics in this book, the ivory tower, how women are treated in the academic setting. And it's funny, too. It's a good combination. A winner.”
I'd read some sections to Doris over the phone, a section with Dottie, and we laughed, mainly because it was too funny imagining Doris black, but also because I had fun with the dialogue. My character, Wanda, was supposed to be the nerdy, bourgeois black girl from Washington, D.C., and Dottie was supposed to be “from the streets,” at the university on scholarship. The whole thing was absurd, so I just decided to go with it. Dottie had lines like,
“Mothafucka, I will cut you.”
And
“hell, naw.”
And
“Bitch, do you think I'm playin' with yo silly ass?”
Doris and I almost hurt ourselves, we were laughing so hard.
Still, Arianna makes me feel better. She may be young, but she knows what she's doing it seems. She even shows me reviews from some of the press's more successful titles. We talk some and laugh some and I leave the office promising her the final manuscript within the next month. And after that, nothing to do but wait.
When I leave the building, I can see Doris sitting in the window of the café across the street. When I get closer, I see that she's talking to someone, someone handsome.
“Ronnie,” Doris says, putting her coffee down. “This is Maxwell.”
“Hello.”
I grin at him like an idiot. “I've heard a lot about you. Good stuff,” I add, a little too late, guessing from Doris's
what in the hell is the matter with you?
“And,”
she says, narrowing her eyes at me. “This is Ronnie, Maxwell. The soon-to-be-published author. Her very first book.”
“Wow. Congrats,” Maxwell says, shaking my hand, strong and sturdy. He has nice ones.
“Did Doris tell you she's black?”
Doris and Maxwell stare at me openmouthed.
“What?”
they say.
Maxwell gives Doris a good long look. “You're black? You never said anything about being black.”