Mama Black Widow (25 page)

Read Mama Black Widow Online

Authors: Iceberg Slim

A moment later a powerfully built regal-looking girl with velvety, ebony skin and a shining cloud of blue black hair swirling about her shoulders, floated in and sat on the stool next to me.

She ordered a Coke. She was pure class in a rich black silk dress and short white gloves on hands shaped startlingly liked Carol's. She was the most elegant girl I'd ever been so close to.

I felt untidy and sweaty in my limp clothes. Several times I stole quick glances at her in the mirror behind the counter. I almost fainted because each time her big black luminous eyes seemed to be staring hypnotically into mine.

She fascinated me and I wanted to get acquainted, but I couldn't think of one thing to say.

A husky old black guy about forty, in sharp clothes, peered through the window. He came in and walked past. He came back and leaned over to whisper something to the girl.

She jerked her head away and ignored him. He turned and glared at me. I stood up and glared at him and went to the jukebox at the end of the counter. I punched Billy Eckstein's “Cottage For Sale” and went toward my stool.

I stopped cold. The dapper nuisance was sitting sideways on my stool flapping his mouth to the girl who was still ignoring him.

And I saw a pulpy growth behind an ear—a prizefighter's
cauliflower! I stood angry and frustrated. I thought,
I'm quick and strong, but what can I do with even an old prizefighter? Maybe I'll just walk out and forget the whole thing.

Billy Eckstein started singing, and the girl turned her head and smiled at me. I walked slowly past several people eating at the counter. I was looking for a knife or an equalizer of some kind for the nuisance on my stool.

I had to show that classy girl I had some kind of manhood. The waitress stooped down behind the counter for something.

I scooped a red pepper shaker off the counter and screwed the top off. I palmed the shaker and walked up to the pug. I stood beside him. He glanced at me and went on with his monologue.

I said, “I want my stool.”

He sighed wearily and said, “G'wan shitass, before I put some knots on your bead.”

He put a knobby hand on the girl's arm, and she pulled away. She looked up at me and started to get up. I was excited and scared.

I said loudly, “Leave her alone. Get off my stool.”

He stood up grinning and looking down the counter like he had forgotten about me. I jumped back when his grin faded and I saw his jacket twitch at the bicep.

I felt a zephyr as the roundhouse went by. He was off balance with his head down when almost in one motion I hurled the contents of the shaker up into his face and kicked him between the legs.

He fell to the floor rolling and howling and alternately clutching at his crotch and eyes. The waitress screamed and rushed toward the phone booth.

My legs almost gave way as I went out the door behind the chic Amazon. I saw her big shapely legs flashing down Fifty-fifth Street toward a red car parked at the curb. I started toward her but changed my mind and went up Prairie Avenue with the intention of catching an El train at Fifty-eighth Street.

I was at Fifty-sixth Street when the Amazon pulled up in a '41
maroon Mercury sedan and pushed open the passenger door. I got in.

She pulled down Prairie Avenue and said, “I'm Dorcas Reed. You were wonderful. Who are you?”

I just sat there and stared at her. I was thunderstruck. The voice! Her voice, like her hands, was so much like Carol's.

She snapped her fingers playfully before my eyes and said, “Wake up, pretty. I like you. Who are you?”

I mumbled, “Swee . . I mean Otis, Otis Tilson. Your voice reminded me of someone.”

She laughed and said, “Uh-oh! That's my luck. I run myself ragged to save you from the cops, and your heart is bleeding for someone else.”

I noticed she was passing Fifty-eighth Street, but I had lost interest in the El station.

I said, “I'm not in misery. You reminded me of my sister. She's dead.”

She said softly, “I am so sorry.”

She reached Sixtieth Street and turned left toward South Parkway.

She said, “I thought you were behind me when I went to the car. I was really upset when I didn't see you, and I thought I wasn't going to be given a chance to help you after what you did.”

I said, “I'm sorry that crazy guy forced me to do what I did. But I'm glad you came looking for me.”

She crossed the boulevard and parked inside cool Washington Park. She closed her eyes and rested the back of her head on the top of the seat.

She said dreamily, “I have loved this park since I was a toddler. Mother was alive then and brought me here to escape the tumult and ugliness of the Southside.

“I am sure thousands of black kids would never see a flower in bloom or see a robin if there were no Washington Park.”

I scrutinized every plane in her magnificently strong face. And I gazed at the long shapely, almost boyish leanness of her thighs against the dress silk. I had never before been so excited by a girl . . . or a boy.

I slid across the seat toward her. She smiled and kept her eyes closed. I gently caressed her temple and throat with my fingertips.

She crooned, “Ooeee, pretty fella. You have a touch. But then I'll bet your steady little sweetie thinks so too.”

I whispered in her ear, “I don't have one. But I bet you have a steady guy.”

She opened her eyes and said, “I have been engaged to a fella since I was ten years old. He's in the army overseas.”

My heart fell.

I said, “So you're the one in misery?”

She said, “I am not. I miss him and worry about him because we've been such dear friends and he's in a combat zone. I might even love him in a mild low-voltage way.”

She paused, frowned thoughtfully, then smiled wickedly and said, “But a girl like me wants to feel carnal about her fella.”

She shivered in mock ecstasy and said, “You get what I mean?”

I nodded.

Then she said, “Our families always have been extremely close for as long as I can remember. It has always been unthinkable to them that Ralph and I would marry anyone except each other. Dad idolizes Ralph.”

I said, “What is Ralph like? How does he look?”

She opened her bag and took out a billfold. She handed me a color snapshot. The guy was gorgeous! He was stripped to brief swim trunks and had apparently just emerged from the sun-dappled water behind him.

He was more than six feet of sleek muscled café-au-lait toned, beautiful brute. Suddenly I felt so scrawny and weak, and the photograph shook in my hand as I dropped it in her lap

I looked away at a gang of kids having a water fight and said, “He's a big handsome guy. He's got fabulous muscles and everything.”

She said, “I can't imagine any girl with my handicaps who wouldn't be frothing at the mouth with anxiety to marry him.”

I turned toward her and said, “What handicaps? I think you're beautiful!”

She moved her serious face close and looked at me intently.

I gazed into her enormous black liquid eyes and said, “You're beautiful, Dorcas. I wish I had met you a long time ago.”

She threw an arm around my shoulder and drew me close. I lay my head on the plush hot pillow of her bosom.

Her voice broke with emotion as she crooned huskily, “You are the tenderest, sweetest, prettiest doll fella alive.”

We talked and clung to each other until hoodlum night blackjacked day away. I remember that she wanted to drive me home. But I refused because I was afraid for her to pass through the treacherous Westside alone on her way back home.

She took me to the Fifty-eighth Street El station and stood on the platform with me until my train came. The scent of her Channel No. 5 lingered on my clothes and skin. My brain spun on a wild, fragrant, merry-go-round all the way home.

The moment I put my foot in the flat Mama led me into the living room that was done up in sparkling white and gold to impress her clients.

Mama had a palm pressed over her heart. She caught her breath and said, “Some girl—or woman—named Dorcas Reed called a minute ago for you, and I almost had a heart attack. She sounded like Carol. Where did you meet her?”

I lied, “At the party, Mama. At the party.”

Mama rolled her eyes at me and said, “Sweet Pea, don't you dare be impatient with me. I've been on this tricky earth much longer than you, and I'm going to protect you. How old is she?”

I struggled to keep my irritation from showing.

I said, “She's nineteen and statuesque.”

Mama frowned and said, “She's what?”

I said, “She's tall like Bessie was except her feet are small and her hands are delicately tapered and shaped like Carol's were. And Mama, her face is fiercely beautiful. Her nostrils flare, and her eyes glow like she could murder someone—or make love to him. The strange thing about her is that she thinks she's ugly.”

Mama said, “She's probably right about that. Sweet Pea, that girl is older and more experienced than you are. How does she live? Is she kept by a jealous man that would put you in the grave?”

I laughed and said, “Mama, she's a big shot. At least her father is. He owns a funeral home on upper State Street, and she helps him with everything from embalming to conducting a funeral. Mama, she's smart and classy.”

Mama rose abruptly from the white satin sofa and stood for a moment with her eyes closed as she pressed her palms against her temples like she was treating a bad headache. Then she opened her eyes and stared at me with an expression of extreme commiseration on her face.

She said softly, “Sweet Pea, don't you get your heart broken. A slum fellow like you don't have a chance with a girl like that. Her father will see to it. If anyone despises poor niggers more than the dirty white folks, it's so-called high class niggers like him. Sweet Pea, please promise Mama you will forget her so they can't hurt you.”

I said passionately, “Mama, I read that a young guy my age should be in training to become a man. Mama, stop putting pressure on me and protecting me.

“Mama, I wish I had gotten a bloody nose or a bust in the mouth at least once when I was a kid. Give me a break, Mama, and a little air.

“Listen to me, Mama, and if you love me, please understand what I'm trying to say. Mama, help me! I'm hurting and I'm scared. I'm running as fast as I can. But Mama, I can't escape because something like a bitch dog is hot inside me, filthy, freakish and itching for guys.

“Mama, sometimes I get so scared and my chest fills and hurts until I feel like I'm going to explode. I went to that party today to get away from you and your pressure and protection.

“My other reason was I had a queer passion for the guy who gave the party. Mama, I'm sitting here hurting because I know that if he had played me right and not gotten stupid drunk, he could have used me like a whore.

“Mama, don't tell me to leave Dorcas alone. She's the only girl I ever met that could be important to me. I need her, Mama! If it doesn't work out maybe it will be like a bust in the mouth I've needed to prove to myself I can take it like a man.”

Mama said, “You hurt me, Sweet Pea, when you said you left me to get away from me and that you needed her . . . a stranger. But Sweet Pea, I forgive you because I love you.

“Sweet Pea, love, honor and appreciate your mama and make me happy like a man would and you will never be a man lover. I won't tell you to drop that girl anymore. But it can't work with her, Honey Pie. You'll find out, middle-class niggers are snakes.”

Mama kissed me on the forehead and went to bed. I sat looking out the front window and thinking about Dorcas and her father and what she had said about Ralph.

Then I remembered a word unfamiliar to me that she had used to describe how she desired to feel toward her man. I got a dictionary and because I only knew the word phonetically it took a while to locate “carnal.”

I read the lengthy definition and sank back weakly on the sofa. I thought,
Dorcas is fuckish as hell. She wants to fuck me! But I didn't even get a little hard when we were together.

I spent all that time with a big beautiful sexy female, and I never had a thought that she might have had something marvelous between her legs.

Maybe I have already changed into a goddamn cock-sucking faggot
. Then I thought,
Perhaps I was bombed numb in my crotch by the first
sight of her in the drugstore. I guess I had the kind of awed adoration for her that an old rich kook has for a precious one-of-a-kind work of art.

I'll be all right. I'm out of the trance now. I don't have any reason to doubt myself. She called me. She's crazy about my face.

I wish I could screw my head onto a body like that gorgeous sonuvabitch Ralph has. He's probably fucked Dorcas a thousand times since they were kids.

I wonder why she lost that carnal feeling for him? And if she never had it, was it because his dick was too big or too small or he stank or picked his nose?

Then she could be lying about the way she feels about him to string stray guys like me along while she's waiting for Ralph to come back.

I know one thing for sure, if I can't get hard for her, then I can't get hard for girls, period. I'll be in terrible trouble, because I feel my chest aching just thinking that I might fail.

Suppose she's got an odd cunt, and her main thrill spot is not on top, but six inches deeper than my tiny dick can reach. I wish there was no sex pressure with her. I could just gaze at her and caress her and worship her forever.

But, I'll be great with her in bed. I'm certain I will. A real tiger, that's what I'll be. Too bad I've got that bitch Sally still inside me to make things tricky. Maybe I better stall off sex with Dorcas as long as I can.

Other books

Abattoir Blues by Peter Robinson
Wild Moose Chase by Siobhan Rowden
Little Altars Everywhere by Rebecca Wells
Swords From the East by Harold Lamb
Midnight in Austenland by Shannon Hale
The Hammer of Eden by Ken Follett
Wand of the Witch by Arenson, Daniel