A
NOV E L
TODD JOHN SON
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todd johnson
To Mabel Barnes Langdon and Mozelle Woodall Johnson,
my grandmothers
H
e who binds to himself a joy Does the winged life destroy;
But he who kisses the joy as it f lies Lives in eternity’s sun rise.
—william blake,
Eternity
Contents
Epigraph
iii
Chapter One
Lorraine 1
Chapter Two
Margaret 7
Chapter Three
Rhonda 21
Chapter Four
Margaret 31
Chapter Five
Lorraine 43
Chapter Six
Margaret 51
Chapter Seven
April 57
Chapter Eight
Rhonda 65
Chapter Nine
Margaret 71
Chapter Ten
Rhonda 83
Chapter Eleven
Lorraine 93
Chapter Twelve | 99 |
Chapter Thirteen | 115 |
Chapter Fourteen | 125 |
Chapter Fifteen | 135 |
Chapter Sixteen | 141 |
Chapter Seventeen | 145 |
Chapter Eighteen | 155 |
Chapter Nineteen | 163 |
Chapter Twenty | 171 |
Chapter Twenty-One | 177 |
Chapter Twenty-Two | 195 |
Chapter Twenty-Three | 203 |
Chapter Twenty-Four | 215 |
Chapter Twenty-Five
Lorraine 225
Chapter Twenty-Six
April 229
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Margaret 241
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Lorraine 245
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Margaret 249
Chapter Thirty
Lorraine 253
Chapter Thirty-One
Margaret 259
Chapter Thirty-Two
April 261
Chapter Thirty-Three
Rhonda 267
Chapter Thirty-Four
Lorraine 271
Chapter Thirty-Five
April 277
Chapter Thirty-Six
Rhonda 285
Chapter Thirty-Seven
April 289
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Lorraine 293
Acknowledgments About the Author Credits
Cover Copyright
About the Publisher
ch a p t e r on e
Lorraine
I
barely have got in the door good and it’s already three thirty in the afternoon. Church seemed like it lasted too long this morning and I didn’t come straight home like I usually do. Althea was determined to take me over to her house cause she had fixed collards and was bound for me to have some with her cornbread and dumplings, so now I’m ’bout to pop wide-open. She said she might not go to church so much if it wasn’t for me, it takes so much time out of a Sunday. I told her, “Don’t be puttin the burden of your soul on me, girl. You’re too hardheaded to
change, and I’m too smart to try and make you.”
Althea used to decorate cakes for a livin out of her own kitchen ’til it ’bout killed her it got to be so much work. She did birthdays, anniversaries, weddings of course, retirements, and a couple times she even made a cake for a funeral, but I don’t think there was much decoration on those. Now she works in an insur- ance office, mostly houses and cars is what they do. She picks me up on Sunday mornings for church sometimes, I think she likes to have some company ridin, and there ain’t no way her husband is gon go unless a meal is bein served. She is one drivin woman, I tell you that. Wants to go, go, go every minute. This morning we had time to drink a cup of coffee cause she got to my house so fast. I pulled out the cups and put four big spoons of sugar in hers or else she woulda asked me if I was tryin to put her on a diet.
“Well,” Althea said, raising her eyebrows when she took the hot coffee from me. “Lorraine, I’ve had a revelation.”
“Was it the Ten Commandments?” I asked. “Cause I ain’t so sure you got em the first time around.”
She ignored me. “I had a dream last night. I woke up sweatin to death, and I remember every bit of it. There was a circle of candles and me sittin in the middle of em.”
“Is this voodoo, Althea, cause if it is . . . ?”
“You’re bad for interruptin somebody, you know that?” “I’ll hush.” I took too big a sip and burned my tongue.