Read The Scandalous Summer of Sissy LeBlanc Online
Authors: Loraine Despres
Tags: #Loraine Despres - Scandalous Summer of Sissy LeBlanc 356p 9780060505882 0060505885, #ISBN 0-688-17389-6, #ISBN 0-06-050588-5 (pbk.)
fully tended gardens made dark silhouettes against the star-lit sky.
Here and there a porch lamp shone upon rosebushes, a child’s tri-
cycle left in the yard, a pink wrought-iron flamingo.
Inside those silent houses people slept or prepared to sleep. Peo-
ple who voted in the elections, ran businesses, paid their taxes, and
thought they owned the town.
Suddenly Sissy had a revelation. The real owners of these houses
never paid taxes. They didn’t care who was elected or whether busi-
ness failed. And they numbered in the millions. They came out on
hot, muggy nights like this. They were the cockroaches that
swarmed over summer sidewalks wiggling their antennae and slip-
ping through tiny cracks in the floorboards to march across silent
rooms into kitchens, where they ate the grease above the stove and
invaded the cereal in open boxes. They shared their dominion with
the snakes slithering up from the damp earth through knotholes,
crawling around the bedposts into carefully laid-out slippers. But
the majority was held by the termites who built whole colonies
inside the walls themselves, excavating chambers for their queen,
producing thirty thousand eggs a day, every day, hatching nymphs
and warriors to undermine the antebellum mansions and simple
three-room shacks that held their sleeping humans.
Sissy didn’t turn back into her own street. She couldn’t face the
thought of putting the children to bed, kissing her husband.
T h e S c a n d a l o u s S u m m e r o f S i s s y L e B l a n c 8 5
She turned right on New Century Boulevard and crossed the
tracks on Grand. The stores in the business district were dark and
empty. Only Buster Rubinstein’s office was lit up. She caught a
glimpse of Bourrée and Uncle Tibor and some other men playing
poker. She pulled up next to the tracks. The light was shining on
Bourrée’s back, darkening his already dark and cynical features. He
cast a giant shadow as he pulled in the pot and finished up a joke at
the same time. She heard some raunchy laughter followed by cries
of “Pass the damn whiskey!”
There was life in that bright room. Sissy longed to join them. She
saw herself sashaying right up to the table, pulling up a chair, and
saying in a deep, rich voice, “Deal me in, boys.” That would knock
the Southern Belle’s Handbook all to hell. It wasn’t fair that men
could go out and drink and gamble and raise all kinds of hell with-
out hurting their reputations, and the only place a woman could go
at night was to church or the PTA and listen to Amy Lou Hopper
and Carmalina Sangebina honk their horns. Of course that was
Rule Number Fifty-one:
Life’s always harder for a woman. That’s
why we have to give it a bunch of little shoves and shakes, always
taking care the buzzer doesn’t ring and the lights don’t come on
screaming Tilt!
She saw Bourrée get up and stretch. Tibor’s voice came through
the window. “Did you all hear the one about the nigger who
wanted to be President.” A chorus erupted: “That’s an old one.”
“Well, I haven’t heard it.” “It’s as old as Methuselah.” “Why don’t
you just shut up and let the man tell his story?” Bourrée peered into
the darkness and looked in Sissy’s direction. She couldn’t tell if he
recognized her or not, but she stepped on the gas and lit out of
there anyway.
She really should go on home. She had responsibilities.
But some
nights your responsibilities are the last things you want to face
. She
decided to make that Rule Number Fifty-seven.
She’d cross the tracks and go on over to Vista Drive, not that
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L o r a i n e D e s p r e s
there was anything to look at, but it was a little higher and the air
was scented with pine trees. She’d only sit for a minute, just until
she caught her breath.
And that’s how she found herself putting on her lipstick in the
starlight, across the street from Parker Davidson’s.
She switched off the engine. Fireflies flickered and danced in front
of her windshield. The piping of the cicadas filled the night. When
she was a child she thought their shrill call was the stars singing.
She took a deep breath and the clean scent of pine filled her head.
She was beginning to feel better. She lit a cigarette. As long as she
was here, she might as well return Parker’s key. She wasn’t going to
use it.
But the house was dark and closed up. Where was he? She laid
her head on the back of the seat and tried to blow smoke rings. He
might be over at the Paradise, but she couldn’t exactly go looking
for him there. Not to give him back his key.
She got out of the convertible and threw her cigarette down on
the cement, grinding it under her high-heeled sandal. The fireflies
took off and danced across the street to Parker’s. She drummed her
long fingers on the side of the car. Maybe she should go on home.
The PTA meeting would be breaking up soon, if Amy Lou had any
compassion on those afflicted with a sense of civic duty, an afflic-
tion Sissy felt fortunate not to share.
An old Chevy with HOPPER’S DRUGS painted on the door wheezed
around the corner under the streetlight. Oh, holy flaming shit!
She’d forgotten Amy Lou’s parents lived on Vista Drive. That’s all
she needed was for one of them to find her standing across from
Parker’s house, like some hormone-crazed teenager.
Sissy stepped onto the curb and ducked down behind the car. The
old Chevy wheezed right by. She started to stand up when a porch
light went on.
“Hello? Who’s there?” Betty Ruth Bodine stumbled onto her
front porch in a fuzzy robe, her hair in big curlers. “Get away from
me, you hear?” Her words were slurred.
T h e S c a n d a l o u s S u m m e r o f S i s s y L e B l a n c 8 7
Sissy remembered how Betty Ruth had loved her whiskey in high
school. But she’d taken the pledge when she married Brother Junior
Bodine. Brother Junior was dead set against drinking, dancing, and
going to the picture show on Sundays.
But Amy Lou Hopper—who, besides being president of the PTA,
helped out in her father’s drugstore—had let it be known that Sister
Bodine was partial to the calming effects of a new kind of pill some
doctor in Baton Rouge prescribed to rid her of her anxiety attacks.
From the look of the way she was stumbling around, Sissy guessed
Betty Ruth was real partial to those pills.
“Get going, you hear. Get out of here,” Betty Ruth called, hold-
ing on to the porch rail to keep from falling down the stairs.
Sissy didn’t know which was worse: she could stand up, identify
herself, and kiss the last shred of her already shredded reputation
good-bye, or she could remain crouched next to the car and risk
Betty Ruth confusing her with a prowler and calling the sheriff.
But it wasn’t prowlers that worried Betty Ruth. It was Satan.
She’d worried about him ever since that hot afternoon when
Brother Junior had led her, dressed in white, into the river to save
her immortal soul. In her heart, Sister Betty Ruth had never been
convinced the baptism had taken. And recently, as Brother Bodine’s
ministry had thrown them in the limelight—a radio show was in
the offing, where she’d have to sing—she’d become convinced that
Satan could read her heart, knew about her fake conversion, and
lay in wait for her day and night.
Anxiety staged sneak attacks at Betty Ruth from every corner
and rooftop and she needed more and more of those bitter white
pills to fend them off. For Betty Ruth the price of eternal vigilance
had become exhaustion.
Suddenly Betty Ruth dropped to her knees. “Lord have mercy on
me!” she cried into the night, before starting a rousing chorus of
“Onward Christian Soldiers.”
The next day she would proudly tell everyone who would listen
about her personal encounter with Satan, and how calling out the
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L o r a i n e D e s p r e s
Lord’s name had sent him scurrying across the street. It was true
she hadn’t gotten a good look at him, but she’d distinctly heard his
cloven hooves going clickety click against the pavement.
A SMART GIRL can’t just sit on the porch and wait for her life to
start,
Sissy thought as she ran through the fireflies in Parker’s yard.
She’d make that Rule Number Forty-four. The scent of jasmine was
everywhere. As the pungent white flowers swayed in the breeze, she
began to think maybe she wouldn’t give Parker back his key
tonight. There was something so ungrateful about returning a gift.
She started up the old wooden stairs when suddenly a large dog
exploded through a dog door onto the screen porch growling and
barking. Sissy jumped down into the front yard and began backing
out until she realized that the dog making all that racket was a big
orange and white Brittany spaniel. She had never seen a killer
spaniel. “Good boy, come on, that’s a good dog,” she said, clapping
her hands. He calmed right down and started beating his tail, which
seemed like a real good sign, until she tried to go up the steps again,
which set off another chorus of snarls and much gnashing of teeth.
Sissy had come too far to let a spaniel stop her.
She picked up a big stick, swung open the screen door, and yelled,
“Fetch!”
The big dog pointed at the stick sailing out toward the street. He
bounded off the screen porch and scooped it up. Proud of his enor-
mous accomplishment, he returned and leaped at Sissy, who
slammed the screen door in his face. The dog pressed his nose
against the screen and let out a little moan, wagging his tail like
crazy. “Okay, okay, come on.” Sissy opened the door and scratched
his head. They entered the house together.
She’d never been in any man’s house alone before. A delicious
sense of sin surged through her body. She walked around the living
room, looking at the haphazard collection of rented furniture, feel-
ing her skin move under her silky nylon dress.
T h e S c a n d a l o u s S u m m e r o f S i s s y L e B l a n c 8 9
She searched for pictures of women, but found none. In fact
Parker had no pictures at all, except of his mama and daddy. There
were no knickknacks from his travels, no profusion of possessions
that marked a house a home. Except for his dog, Parker traveled
light. Wild and free. Sissy experienced a sinking feeling. He was all
set to drift away. “Good,” she said and was surprised she’d said it
out loud. She didn’t want anything permanent anyway. She just
wanted an adventure. God knows she needed one.
She wandered into his bedroom with its manly decor of wall-to-
wall mess and sat down on the bed. Maybe she’d wait for him
under the covers. Just imagining the look on his face made her
giddy with excitement. She pulled back the spread, but the sheets
were so gray and disgusting Sissy didn’t want to venture into them,
at least not alone.
She went back into the living room and flopped down on his
brown Naugahyde lounger. The pungent odor of creosote sur-
rounded her, bringing back memories that made her skin damp in
her hot little nylon dress. She fanned herself with her skirt, but the
sleeves were sticking to her arms. And then Sissy was possessed
with a wonderfully wicked idea. Don’t you do it, said her sensible
voice. But even as the voice played in her head, a naughty smile
drifted over her lips. She unzipped a navy blue zipper and pulled
her little PTA dress over her head and threw it in back of her on the
green pile carpet.
The dog was making such a racket, she didn’t hear Parker’s car
door slam, but she heard him making crunching sounds in the
gravel driveway. The Naugahyde against her bare skin felt like a
great big sticky hand. She couldn’t believe she was doing this. She
was actually going to have an adventure after all these years. She
arranged herself in her black lace push-up bra and slung one leg
decorously over the arm of the chair, so her black garter belt would
peek through the slit in her half slip.
She looked up at the door as he entered, sort of over her shoulder.
She was gratified to see the surprise on his face.
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“My God, Sissy!” But the delight she’d expected to accompany
his surprise didn’t materialize.
And then she saw why.
Following him through the door, actually holding his hand, was a
redheaded mulatto whore.
The two women stared at each other.
The mulatto snatched her hand away and said, “I don’t know
what you had in your mind, Parker Davidson, but I don’t do things
like this!” Her voice was filled with the fury of betrayal.
Southern Belle Handbook Rule Number Seven:
When humiliated
a lady should always fall back on her pretensions
. “You all don’t
have to worry about me,” Sissy said, pulling herself up with the dig-
nity of a great lady. “I don’t want any part of your . . .” she paused,