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WARDADDY

 

 

by

James Anthony Allen

 

 


Welcome to Willie’s World
 





 


 

 

CHAPTER
ONE


 

 


Unrelenting, albeit subtle, the odor invading the space where Olivia now sat was pitiless. Having traveled many miles to Jasper Williams nursing home, she was hoping at long last to discover the truth about her father. Before her, sitting gracious and benevolent in a tattered rocking chair, Olivia's beloved 82-year-old Grandmother Mabel swayed gently back and forth, back and forth; the creaking noise of the rocker as persistent as Olivia's urgency. Glancing out the single window gracing this modest room, Olivia's soulful eyes observed the North Carolina landscape hinting at the promise of autumn. She also found the closed-in atmosphere, the trace of strong disinfectant, the lazy horsefly sluggishly climbing the fraying lace curtain, all conspiring to relay untold tales of numerous souls passing through—each leaving a small residual of a very unambiguous scent: The smell of waiting, the promise of deliverance, the peculiar patience of embracing an absolute finality: Death. She shivered turning her focus back to Mabel. And without a doubt in her unsettled heart, Olivia realized time was no longer on her side…

     Sitting rigidly in the high-backed, heavily lacquered chair Olivia finally mustered the courage to simply come out and ask Mabel to tell her what really happened that tumultuous day, during those stormy times; unspeakable times which Olivia never knew the full details. Something inside of her yearned to know what actually happened to her father, what went on inside his head, inside his mind. Frustrated, Olivia had previously spoken with her father's doctors whom had instantly evoked doctor-patient privilege.
His mother, Olivia's Grandmother, would know... Mabel was the only one who might truly grasp the mystery, the only one best qualified to tell the tale properly. Would she allow Olivia to venture into that dark, shadowy world? Would she tell her the secrets of her father's lifetime? Or would Mabel take them to her silent grave, the guardian of a family shame too deep, too dark to reveal? Olivia needed to know.

     Olivia's siblings didn't want to talk about her father. And when they did speak, they singularly or collectively danced around what Olivia assumed to be the genuine issues. Could she extract the horrifying details before her Grandmother was too old too remember, before embracing the inevitable end? Before passing into the next realm?
     What lashed-out without mercy at her father's once razor-sharp wits? Olivia agonized. Was it something real, or otherwise? Had her father imagined, or worse, fully experienced some ill-conceived pain? And how was Grandmamma coping with the pain of loss? Could Daddy have possibly known what was happening to him, to his family? Or was it something so darkly malevolent Olivia's Grandmother never wanted to acknowledge out loud? Was she now about to break an inexplicable barrier within herself at this late age?
Mabel Jones, eighty-two, a touchingly frail frame of a woman with a strong, steadfast soul, sat up straight in the rocking chair staring at her aching wrinkled hands. These ghoulish, now-twisted instruments once nurtured her son so tenderly, but also witnessed and abetted a heinous crime. Haunted, Mabel's gray head shook from the gentle onslaught of Parkinson’s disease.
     Francesca, Mabel’s great grand-daughter, and Olivia's little girl, looked out the small window at the stirring wind. A lone bird feeder swung forlornly in the growing gust. The whirling sand and the first flying leaves on the other side of the pane mesmerized the vibrant four-year-old.
     She was bored by the grown-up talk. Her Great Grandmother’s suffering was of little interest to her. She found more appeal in the mixture of dust, wind, and leaves in the abandoned acre behind the nursing home. Francesca had flattened her Kente-clothed doll against the window to share the view. Quickly snapping her head from the window Francesca heard the determined shrill of her mother’s voice.
     “Grandmamma, Grandmamma!” Olivia said, tenderly shaking her Mabel's shoulder.
She startled Mabel out of her daydream. Mabel struggled fitfully to escape the overwhelming pull of memory, to remain in the present, having been momentarily caught between the two.


     “Girl... I remember that day... like it was yesta’dy.” She said, solemnly. “I could’a died.”
“It like’ta killed me, her voice now croaking with what sounded as an endless and timeless sorrow. I would’ve died for him, ya know.”
     Mabel looked at Olivia with tender, world-worn eyes. The look of a mother holding a newborn baby after being informed that the baby had a terminal illness.
     “Sonny was a planner—knew what he wanted. When his life didn’t turn out like he ‘spected... he just unraveled.”
     She looked fiercely past Olivia, over to the window, seemingly right through Francesca. It was a long hard stare, as if she could see a storm which neither Olivia nor Francesca could perceive. Indeed she saw something larger, more deadly than the actual storm approaching. Mabel was visualizing something that had already been: The lives of her past loved ones. And one more life in the tussle, her life perhaps; no, not her life but the life of her dearest—her most prized.
     “I never suspected it... never saw it comin’.” Mabel’s gaze shifted from the window to her hands. She strummed her fingers on their tips. “Everybody thought he was mean like his Daddy… like your papa, ya know.”
     “I still can’t believe it,” Olivia said in a slow quiet voice. “No one ever explained to me what really happened.”
     “Papa always said, ‘The old man said, that if you didn’t plan to go nowhere, you’d be surprised how fast you got there.’” She paused to think. “That’s one thing about my Sonny... he knew that planning was the key.”
     Just then a uniformed nurse barged into the room where Olivia and Mabel were speaking. She was harried, angry because Mabel no longer in her bed, but sitting in the rocking chair instead.
     “Mrs. Jones, you know you shouldn’t be sitting up like that.”
     “I know, darling,” Mabel said patiently.
     “Please let your bed do its work, Mrs. Jones,” the nurse said as she led the fragile Mabel to the inclined the bed and fluffing the pillows before Mabel lay back, sinking deeply into the all-too-familiar comfort.
     “Grandmamma?” said Olivia.
     She hesitated the prompting of getting her Grandmother started on a subject she had evidently avoided for so many years. She had noted Mabel’s unusually harsh response to the mere mention of the circumstances surrounding her father’s death. Olivia, however, operated out of a sense of necessity. Now desperate for information, she forced back the feeling she might already be too late.
     “Would you tell me the whole story from the beginning?”
     “The beginning,” Mabel stopped to think. “Too doting, they said.” “Too doting…”
     Mabel looked slowly, deeply, painfully into Olivia’s chocolatey grey-green eyes. Speaking softly she whispered, “What do you think?” Mabel was afraid to answer the question herself, fearful of the inexpressible truth, unwilling to fight the remorseless demons.
     This was one of those recurring, haunting questions with which we often live. Olivia's was a grave question—one that, if not handled properly, nor even discussed, would haunt us to the tomb. Oftentimes such questions follow us into the very ground where we are laid to rest. Mabel now listened for an answer from deep within—coursing through her very bloodline; within the spirit of God’s nature that lived inside of her.
     Olivia pondered the question. She wondered where she was heading with such (dangerous?) probing. How could this have anything to do with the events which she now needed to know? Was Mabel going to a place she didn’t expect or even want to visit, or was this her attempt to throw Olivia off course? Either way, she thought, I must get her to talk; she must tell me the truth before it’s too late.
     “Classic text book, they said...” Mabel trailed off.
     Now Olivia’s eyes had a puzzled, questioning look, a sincere desire to comprehend Mabel. Her preoccupation, she hoped, was about to be pacified. Olivia didn’t know what to think about the issues to which Grandmamma had alluded, or the questions she herself was asking. Still, Olivia was solely hopeful that her trip was not in vain.
     I’m not quite with her, Olivia thought. I’m not up-to-speed with where Grandmama's going… or where she’s coming from… and perhaps that's a remnant of Mabel's generation. But, here I am right now, today… and I have nothing to lose.

     Mabel reached back into her memory then, suddenly, called to mind. “Your Daddy built his own house before he was thirty. Did you know that?”
     “No ma’am, I did not,” answered Olivia, awestruck.
     “Your parents did without for a long time until they moved. They stayed with Willie Sr. and me for quite some time. They made do. But you wouldn’t know nothin’ ‘bout doing without,” Mabel said disdainfully. “Your Daddy took good care of y’all!”

     Mabel’s face transitioned to a distant place, to a weary, exhausting time. She remembered her tiresome, dusty days as a sharecropper’s daughter. Working in the steamy, unforgiving cotton fields in Franklin County, North Carolina, slopping the massive “special occasion” hogs (that’s what she used to call them, anyway). She conjured the backbreaking task of hoeing the garden—with its assortment of multicolored, seasonal vegetables—from sun-up to sun-down. Upon finishing tilling and weeding, Mabel would then head to the big house to perform domestic chores. One thing was for certain though; Mabel couldn’t wait to get out of there.
      There never was any time for Mabel Jones herself. And, as is the case with most young ladies of her stance in America, not having any time is what prompted her to leave home for marriage at an all too early age. But, oh my, that Willie Sr. was such a lady’s man. He’d come over to the house to call upon Mabel with a confident, swagger; dishing up nothing but well-seasoned, irresistible flattery for Mabel and, of course, Mabel's mama. Always, Willie, Sr. was forever dressed sharp as a carpenter’s tack complete with his Dobb’s straw hat jauntily cocked to one side as was his special fashion of the day. She never saw him without a suit on until she married him. Fine. Just fine, she mused, Willie Sr. and his friends.
     “‘Buddy’,” Mabel murmured, reminiscing out loud. “They used to call him ‘Buddy,’” she said, giggling sheepishly as if she had long lost such a talent.
     “Who, Daddy?, Asked Olivia. They used to call Daddy ‘Buddy’?”
     Mabel didn’t hear her.
     “Grandmamma, did folks used to call Daddy ‘Buddy’?” Olivia inquired once more, breaking Mabel’s concentration.
     “No, darling,” Mabel said gruffly, “yo’ papa, they used to call yo’ papa ‘Buddy’.”

     Mabel then remembered Willie Sr.’s tendency to quickly demonstrate his violent streak. She pondered how odd it seemed for her son Willie, Jr. to occasionally display similar inclinations, though for the most part, her son had such a pleasant disposition.
     Quivering lips, moist with the beat of events neither too current nor too distant for Mabel, her mind’s eye flowed freely with the long forgotten emotions of her loving heart. The difficult events of which she would no doubt speak of with her granddaughter were as real to her now as they were when they happened. Olivia wondered if Mabel would have the strength to carry her back to those horrific events and return safely. However, Olivia did not know her Grandmother as well as she thought.
     “Papa was too rigid, and Willie too soft,” she forged ahead taking her time, “That’s what they said, you know. What do you think, honey?”
     Olivia didn’t know what to think. She only shrugged her shoulders with resolve. After all, this is why she was here. Mabel’s granddaughter wanted to know more about what happened to her father while she was away in college. She never could get anything out of anybody. No, she didn’t know what to think; that’s why she listened so attentively.
     “I don’t know,” Olivia mumbled through pursed lips.
     Mabel suddenly became very animated. “Seems like yesta’dy Willie became a master mason. I’d tell him, ‘You can’t wait ‘til you' 40-years-old to be a promising young man. What you think of most of the time is what you will be.’” She turned from Olivia to her great granddaughter Francesca, “And that goes for you too, young lady.”
     Francesca wasn’t really paying attention. Olivia was surprised how all of a sudden Mabel was bubbly, full of energy, almost vibrant. Mabel leaned forward to put more heartiness in her voice.
     “Girlie! Francesca! Listen to your Great-Grandmma Mabel.”
     Francesca turned on her heels, not knowing whether she was in trouble for something or not. “Yes, Grandma. Uh-huh, Great-Grandmama.” She said distractedly.
     “Girlie, you’re not too young to start planting those thought seeds in your head. You can be a doctor, you know.” Mabel mused.
     “Yes ma’am.”
     Mabel leaned back to relax again, now secure in the fact that Francesca was paying full attention.

     Planning what one wanted to be was something which Olivia could relate. Her plan had always included becoming a lawyer. Not just any lawyer, but a corporate lawyer. She had planned, studied and worked very hard in law school. And her hard work and planning had finally paid-off.
     Practicing law with the largest corporate firm in New York City, Olivia was part of a firm responsible for some of the largest takeovers, mergers, and acquisitions in the United States She oft-times marveled at her good fortune—being a young black woman entrusted with such responsibility. The money was good, as well. Her Fifth Avenue apartment and garaged Mercedes were testament to such luck.
     But despite Olivia’s success, the great gaping hole left by her father’s untimely and violent departure seem to perpetually gnaw her gut. She wondered whether her father's plight played a role in the string of bad relationships she had weathered. There was the powerful firm partner, who attempted, unsuccessfully, to get her fired when she finally broke things off; the young judge, whose scandalized wife denied him sex upon learning of the affair, (and it was the Judge's wife who left Olivia vitriolic voice-mails to the salutation of “black heifer”). Plus there were several sweet gentlemen with whom the flame burned warmly at first… but, despite eligibility and even compatibility, that very same flame would somehow inexplicable flicker and die—as a candle unattended in a drafty, open window.
     Mabel settled down into a more solemn demeanor. “He knew what he wanted, my boy, he did,” she shrugged, “now this...” An uncomfortable drain of energy caused her shoulders to droop.
     “Maybe Willie Sr. was too hard. Maybe I was too soft. Maybe Willie Jr. was sick. I don’t know what to think. People at church seem to think it was a demon. Still, there was trouble from the start. And it only got worse.”
     Mabel’s thoughts faded as she did, into the yesterday’s world. She sighed despondently as her head weighed heavily upon the pillows.


***

 

 




CHAPTER
TWO


 


 I t was daybreak and the North Carolina temperature was steadily rising. A finely-tuned ear could almost hear evaporation teasing the moisture from the dampened surfaces of the nearby grasses. The sun seared the lingering dew that rest lazily on the gnarly, tangled kudzu weeds dotting the landscape. Dawn’s moisture turned into minuscule waifs of steam that rose dutifully towards heaven. The construction site continually fought a courageous battle to keep the exponential kudzu growth from any available soil. Soon it wouldn’t matter. In six months the project would be complete.
     Two pairs of boots walked through one of the many mud puddles. The worn work trousers of Willie Jr. and Bubba Johnson—Willie’s friend and co-worker— flapped in near unison, spreading flecks of wet dirt forward and backward as they moved. Bubba and Willie walked briskly to their section of the construction site. Each one greeted assorted assemblies of younger African-American brick masons and apprentices as they passed.
     “Good morning,” Bubba said.
     “How y’all doin’ today?” Willie asked, with the confident assurance of a man radiating great pride.

     Willie Thomas Jones, Jr. knew he had gained the respect and admiration of most of the brick masons on the job site; and this included that of both whites and African-Americans. He was among the best in the State. Efficient as he was as fast with his tools; Willie was bright too. A handsome man cutting a dash with the ladies, his work ethic was exemplary. It was never an issue to stay late if necessary, and he had no problem going the extra mile whenever required.
     Willie had no desire to stop at day’s end if his section of the wall or structure was not yet complete. It was rumored that if the lights stay on all night, and there was someone to mix the cement, Willie Thomas Jones Jr. would remain at the site until the job was finished. That’s the sort of guy Willie was—some would figure him a "hard working fool."
     Willie's co-workers found it hard to comprehend why a man with such a beautiful wife and adoring family would want to work so long and hard, at such a difficult job. This little gem of common knowledge was notorious because Willie so often left for work so early in the morning.
     And on larger construction sites, which were often pressed for time, Willie would work ceaselessly, taking no days off, for weeks on end.
     Most of the other masons had concluded that work was just that: a job, nothing but a whole lot of labor. But it was exactly his unusual work ethic that stood Willie out from the rest of the crowd, what made him special. To Willie, his chosen occupation was a chance to create something concrete, a masterpiece, an object of beauty, a solid, tangible something. It was a way to leave a legacy. Something people could never discount. His confidence was often boosted when he drove by a building on which he had worked; one which he knew his sweat, his labor, his hands had assisted in constructing. It was both a satisfying and grounding experience for him. Seeing these buildings of which he contributed made him feel as if he was a genuine part of the world, not like a second class citizen, but a member of the community in a way that would outlast his short stay on Earth.
     “Good morning,” said the younger guys aching for a moment of Willie’s attention, “how y’all doing?”
“Jus’ fine, jus’ fine,” Willie would smile.

     As Bubba and Willie approached their destination, they spotted Jimmy Bugg, known as the "Bug Man” in Jimmy's circle. He received this moniker because he was always "buggin." Jimmy, for some reason or another harbored a tasteless disdain for Willie. Not reserved for Willie alone, but for everything Jimmy Bugg believed Willie represented. Jimmy held Willie’s entire world in contempt.
     Jimmy Bugg wasn’t married and the guys at work assumed this was why he had such a nasty attitude—because he wasn’t getting any, shall we say, female companionship. Bug Man was a dark-skinned and husky and not much liked by his supervisors. But they all had to admit that Jimmy was without doubt one hell of a brick mason. This well-seasoned reputation allowed Jimmy Bugg to strut his stuff around the job site virtually unchallenged. He knew he wasn’t the best African-American mason of the construction site, but he most certainly wanted to be.
     Jimmy believed Willie to be a mama’s boy, too soft—not the rugged "ladies’ man" he considered himself to be. The soft dark curls on Willie’s head (that he tended so carefully) coupled with the tight swirls of hair covering his thick chest and washboard stomach were, to Bugg anyway, a sign that perhaps Willie wasn’t all man. Bugg thought any man who took too much care of himself was probably suspect, vain… maybe even gay. And Bugg couldn’t stomach such a thought.
     A strapping six feet two inches tall, Willie was a formidable figure. Years of hard, grueling labor had gifted him with a taut, powerful body complete with bulging muscles. Ripples strained against Willie's clothes as he worked, not unlike the dignified efficiency of a racing stallion, bred and trained by the best of the best. Bugg, on the other hand, was sloppy in appearance, tending minimally to his physical form, as well as his overall grooming habits.
     Willie’s hands indeed revealed his hard work; but he kept the severe nature of his labor secret by using lotion on them. They were large with square palms, like the long, strong fingers of a surgeon. He paid particular attention to his fingernails; frequently filing away broken edges while keeping them clean underneath. Unlike most masons, his hands were surprisingly supple and free from scars. He kept his hands in this manner for loving his sweet wife, Jackie.
     Bugg believed many things about Willie which were not true. He believed many things about himself which were not true as well. Jimmy’s allies were equally envious and resentful of Willie. They looked on in disgust.
     Willie ignored the bunch as he and Bubba got closer.
     “How you boys doing?” Bubba said anticipating some type of antagonizing comment or body movement.
     “Just fine,” said Jimmy’s cohorts.
     “If it’s any yo’ bid'ness,” Jimmy retorted.
     “Can it Jimmy!” Bubba knew he had to curb any confrontation. “Nobody wants it or needs it from you this early in the morning.”
     “‘Cept maybe you, huh, Willie boy?” Jimmy taunted. “Don’t you want it, Willie?” Jimmy asked, holding his crouch.
     A few guys chuckled but most were silent in respect for Willie.
     “I know you sweet Willie. I’m sweet too. I’m sweet for the honeys—sweet for yo' Jackie. You’re sweet ‘cause you a weak mama’s boy.”
     “I said can it Jimmy!” Bubba repeated rushing to get in Jimmy’s face.
     Bubba knew that the best way to handle these guys was to go for the Jimmy's jugular—or that of whomever was commanding negative attention at any particular time—and shoot him down like a World War II Fighter.  Willie and Bubba moved steadfastly towards their work area.
     "Toothless Mitchell," an apprentice, his crooked smile revealing a large space where his front teeth should've been, brought up the rear. “M-m-m-morning y’all!”
     “Good morning, ‘T’,” Bubba said, noting that Willie had copped an attitude from the encounter with Bugg.
It was time for an attitude adjustment. Bubba knew that Willie had a short fuse connected to a soft spot. And Jimmy had laid fire to it already this morning. Now it was up to Bubba, as had always been the case since he had grown to know and respect Willie, to either wisely lengthen the fuse, or put out the sparks.
     “Hey, Willie,” Bubba said, “How you liking the new room you added on?”
     “Y-y-yeah!” added Toothless, “d-d-didn’t take you long to b-b-build it.”
     “Jackie’s decorating it and I love it,” Willie said, with a gratifying light entering his eyes. “Oh, I tell you man, life couldn’t be better... mighty fine, things are mighty fine.”
     That was enough to get his mind off the pain inflicted by Jimmy's tactless jibe and onto something more pleasant. Bubba also knew every day he came to a job site where Jimmy was also working; there would surely be a malicious, conscious effort to stir up trouble from the “Bugg Man”.
     “Well she sure is a beauty,” Bubba said, stroking Willie’s ego.
     If Willie didn’t know Bubba better, he would have thought that he was making reference to Jackie, his wife, but this was his loyal friend, Bubba. If it had been Bugg, he would have to come to the defense of his family by confronting him. Willie shot Bubba a curious little glance, a peculiar look which Bubba had seen before, but one directed to others and not himself.
     “W-W-Willie, you c-c-could of built a house,” Toothless said oblivious to any tension in the air, “in a m-m-month if you’d wanted t-t-to, couldn’t you?”

     Toothless was as serious as a blood clot talking to a heart attack; and dumber than the dullest pair of scissors in the drawer. He really truly loved and respected Willie. Willie was as honest as he was quick with his tools. It was hard for him to listen to Toothless and his nonsense sometimes. Bubba had taught Willie to take what ‘T’ said with a grain of salt, because it wasn’t Toothless’ fault that he was slower than tree sap in the freezer.
     Willie shook his head at Toothless’ admiring idiocy. “Come on, let’s get to work!”

     The sun baked the arms and necks of the brick masons as they toiled in the brutality of its fire. These summer days were cruel and unsympathetic. But a roasting brick mason had only to imagine those cold winter days ahead (when work was scarce if available at all), to appreciate such merciless boiling where money was hard earned. There was plenty of work now. Willie Jr. and Jimmy Bugg were progressing towards the middle on the same wall. They moved dangerously closer... and closer still.
     “Willie, my boy,” Jimmy said contemptuously, “you think you’re so good,” Jimmy taunted, “I’m a better man than you’ll ever be.” And with that provoking crack he chuckled, brimming over with confidence. Jimmy continued, “Better man than you ever dreamed of.”
     “Come off it Bugg. Don’t start nothin’,” Willie said. “You buggin’!”
     The younger masons laughed at Willie Jr.’s comment.
     Toothless laughed, “B-b-buggin’!? Buggin’!”
     Winny, a brick mason neutral to all causes except his own, joined in the laughter. He laughed hysterically,   “Did you hear what Willie said, “buggin’?! Bugg’s buggin’!”
     Toothless continued to laugh, pointing to Bugg. “Yeah, J-J-Jimmy the bug man, b-b-buggin’!”
     “That sounds like a dance!” Winny said.
     Winny did a comical jig. Wiggling his butt, he jumped around like a chicken with its head cut off. This irritated Jimmy to no end.
     Bugg voiced more loudly, “You think you’re better than the rest of us. You’re tryin’ to be like the Man, ain’t you Willie boy?”
     “I ain’t got time for this,” Willie Jr. barked. “What you tryin’ to prove Bugg?”
     “I’m tryin’ to prove that a mama’s boy can’t do a man’s job!”
     The younger masons in the background groaned “Uuuhhhh”.

     Willie could never figure out just what he had done to Jimmy Bugg that caused him to be so confrontational. It must be jealousy. If that wasn’t the cause, Willie thought, or the root of a larger problem, then Jimmy wanted a challenge. Jimmy’s testosterone level was high, as always. He just REALLY needs to get laid. Willie giggled to himself strangely. Realistically, Willie thought, it must be the by-product of Continental Tribalism. Willie believed a great deal of the black-on-black violence was due to ancient tribal rivalries which long ago had been imbedded into African genetic codes. Willie, however, had not discounted the pressures of American society. He believed societal pressures acted as a catalyst for discord in a contrary world. Jimmy was from the wrong tribe… The slave trader’s tribe.
     It was a long standing belief which Willie held closely; the tribal conflicts which existed hundreds of years ago in Africa persisted through the generations in the subtle and brutal way people of color fought amongst themselves. Instead of fighting the thorn in their sides, plucking it out carefully, they chose instead to scratch at it, and pull at one another like cats in heat, expelling screams in the middle of a hot summer night. And so it was with the people of color who were in America. Willie believed his culture and people was destined to struggle with its genetic composition to overcome the ugliness until their vision became unimpeded and focused.

     Profoundly deep within his psyche, Willie actually admired Bugg. He had a genuine appreciation of Bugg's strength; and the way he spoke his mind about circumstances which seemed relevant to him. Sometimes, though, it didn't matter what the other person thought about him, or how deeply Jimmy's sharp tongue could injure feelings, Bugg would just let it fly. Jimmy would tell folks exactly what he thought—as if what he believed in fact mattered.
     How many a time has Bugg stepped on my toes and got away clean? Willie’s thoughts were focused, but intent on keeping the peace. No abuse, no hassle—I’m trying to do the right thing and all. The more Willie considered this, the angrier he became. Angry with Jimmy, angry with anyone who tried to bring him down—to hunt, er... hurt him or his family, Willie thought. And Willie’s eyes became fixed.

     Willie had everything spelled-out for himself and his world. He had the lot planned to a ‘T’. He knew what he wanted in life and nobody was going to interfere with it. Becoming a supervisor, then a foreman, and finally becoming a contractor with his own crew were his goals. He had two beautiful children and wanted no more. He had a lovely wife, Jackie, who attracted attention as a fine Arabian mare on parade, muscles lean and firm, head held high and proud.
     And proud Jackie was; proud regardless of her lack of college education or her impoverished upbringing. She was filled with pride, though she and Willie lived with his parents for the first years of their marriage. Yet struggling everyday, with pride as her ally, Jackie was kept quite busy keeping Willie’s parents from choking her, from smothering him, and from strangling their relationship. Pride exalted her lovely face, perfectly made up at all times, even at home. She changed clothes obsessively because as a child she had but a few. She acted as if what she wore in the morning would be old and soiled by afternoon.
      Jackie chose her jewelry—although costume jewels at best—with exacting care. Each piece of jewelry, each dress, skirt or blouse she wore, flattered her chiseled features, perfectly complimenting her fine-boned frame. And it was this very pride that would betray her in time; causing her to ignore the signs which signaled her perfect world was in serious trouble.
     Willie refused to let her work; not even in a department store where she would have fit in divinely. She diligently, lovingly cared for the children, the house, and Willie, whom she adored. She was as happy as she thought any individual could be. Until Nicholas.

     Willie built his house before he was thirty years old. This fact alone required a great deal of sacrifice. He and Jackie lived with his parents until the house was complete. And he was just grateful to the Almighty for allowing Jackie the patience to endure the constant pampering received from his mother. This fussing-over and its hellish nature grieved Jackie. She never wanted anyone, much less another woman, to lay hands on her Willie’s face. She wished to be the only person to take care of her man, and to do everything for him. Mabel was in the way of Jackie’s compulsive desire to totally spoil her husband. Jackie so often clashed with Mabel’s uncontrollable need to indulge Willie. She had done so his entire life… that is until Willie met Jackie. Jackie did not want anyone, not even Willie's own mother to do anything for him that Jackie could do.
     Jackie wanted to spoil him with her cooking. And found she was unable do so while they stayed with Willie’s parents. She wanted to lavish him with her lovemaking rendering him breathless. She wanted to share her body with Willie tenderly, sweetly, rough and hard, at all times and in all places. She wanted Willie to receive her womanhood in every room at all hours. She longed to pull off and toss her clothes aside with abandon, have him take her when he was home sweaty and dirty; and when he was fresh from the bath.
She wanted to step naked from the shower, display her perfect body showing-off firm, well-rounded buttocks and perky breasts that stood at attention at the mere thought of her husband. And she harbored this unabashed passion for him alone. She wanted to lie on the sofa in the after-glow of their lovemaking and feel his sweat on her. She desired most of all, the freedom to love her man at any time in any way.
     Jackie loathed having to cover up from the bath, having to stifle her cries of ecstasy and subdue their excitement. She disliked Mabel’s knowing looks, Willie Sr.’s leering eyes. She knew, or at least imagined, Willie's parents listening to them while they made love. The thought of which was a bitterness which no words or time could heal. It alarmed Jackie to think that a perhaps drop of this bitterness manifested as resentment towards her darling Willie.
     Jackie yearned to have her own house, to make it a home in her own fashion. She wished to make it the best place a young family such as hers could have. When she and Willie finally moved out, they did so hastily. The shifting of households meant the breaking free of Mabel’s tethering to Jackie, and Willie Sr.’s bonds to Willie Jr. It meant moving into a cozy, welcoming place—their paradise. And so it was. After the move, Willie and Jackie felt as though they had walked out of a cave into the sunlight. Although the bitterness Jackie felt towards Mabel and Willie Sr. never quite left her completely, her resentment towards Willie was at least safely buried, if not forgotten … For now …

     Back at the construction site, back to the reality of Jimmy Bugg's unsolicited anger, Willie felt an inordinate amount of negative emotion surrounding thoughts of his parents that, without warning and quite suddenly, became a focus on the situation at hand.
     Turn the other cheek, don’t start trouble at work; after all, I got a wife and two children to feed now. Willie tried to convince himself not to get involved, but his emotions were getting the best of him—or was it emotion? He had never before felt this new rush of strength, of mental energy. It was different. It was strong, not easily controlled. Jimmy Bugg was bringing it forth in Willie—the rage, the exasperation.
And here that clown comes, bringing trouble. But am I squirming too much under Bugg’s thumb? Am I really a mama’s boy?
     Bugg had indeed gotten under Willie’s skin. And Willie had to do something. Pride was demanding he stand up, be a man... and fight.
     This has to stop. I’m starting to look appear a lot like the person Bugg was always ridiculing—but I know I’m not that person—or am I?
     Willie pulled his trowel across a brick with a zing! His eyes darkened and cut into Bugg. “What’ll it be, Buggman?”
     Bubba shrewdly stepped in between the men. “Three rows, starting at opposite ends. The first man to hit the middle the second time down is the winner,” he said anticipating the suggestion.
     Willie Jr. and Bugg became locked in hateful stares. They fixed angrily into each others eyes, not turning to acknowledge Bubba’s diplomacy. Just staring defiantly at one another. If anger had a charge, both men would have been electrocuted.
     “Right!” said both Willie and Bugg in unison.
     The job site was in pandemonium. Willie and Bugg marched off to the end of the wall. The younger masons made bets on who was going to win. Not that anyone really cared, but this somehow took them away from the difficult labor at hand. And it broke up yet another monotonous day. Besides, there was money to be made from this foray.
     Money and cigarettes exchanged hands. White workers in the distance looked on with curious indifference towards the excitement. The younger masons held their crotches, laughed, and slapped each other on the back.
     Willie and Bugg squared off.
     Toothless, filled with the exhilaration of the moment said, “On your m-m-mark...”
     Willie, tense and nervous, prepared to begin.
     “Get s-s-set,”
     Bugg was furious because he couldn’t believe this wimp had dared to challenge him. He was also delighted because he could finally realize his foreseen destiny; to show everybody how much better he was than Willie. He sneered fiendishly.
     Toothless faked as if he was going to say "Go!" … hesitated … then shouted, “G-G-Go!”

     Their trowels zinged as Willie and Bugg slapped cement onto the waiting bricks. The black masons rooted, cheered, and smacked hands with both low and high fives. They hit hard hats together which heightened not only the immediate tension on the job site, but also affected the performance of their respective leaders. For the masons witnessing the spectacle, it was entertainment. For the participants, it was war.
     Willie Jr.’s hands and eyes concentrated with rapt attention on the bricks as he laid one after the other. Bugg’s hands and eyes were filled with malice. He turned around to glower at Willie.
     Bugg worked to the middle first. Bugg’s alliance of masons laughed, cheering with loud exuberance, slapped each other on the back. Profuse sweat poured into Willie Jr.’s eyes as he reached the middle and had to cut a brick in half with his trowel to fit it into space left by Bugg. The wall had to be perfect and functional; after all, they were at work. Willie’s alliance showed concern for their hero who had dropped a number of bricks and scrambled frantically to retrieve them as he craned his neck to see Jimmy.

     On the second row Bugg was ahead, but not by much. Willie had suitably regained his composure. By the end of the second row, Willie Jr. had caught up to Bugg. Willie’s camp of masons slapped each other on their backs as the excitement rose. Willie Jr.’s eyes remained fixed firmly on the bricks.
     Bugg kept sneaking peeks at Willie. On the third and final row, the cheering increased. Willie kept slamming the bricks onto the mortar, scooping additional mortar with the trowel, slinging and spreading the mixture on the growing wall and smacking the even more bricks onto the mortar.
     Jimmy shot nervous glances towards Willie and his superior skills. Ultimately those highly-seasoned masonry talents gave Willie the lead in this rivalry. Bugg noticed Willie Jr. was seven bricks ahead of him. He tapped his last brick into place with his trowel, crushing Jimmy with a powerless defeat. But Jimmy Bugg was tough. It would only take a short while for him to bounce back from this trouncing with more vitriolic lip-service.

     The job site erupted in thunderous jubilation. Bubba rushed over to congratulate Willie Jr. Willie turned to Bubba who stood with his trowel in the air. They smack trowels ceremoniously. The younger masons whooped and hollered and, once again, cigarettes and money changed hands in a redistribution of wealth and alliances.
     Bugg’s men were sullen, yet underneath most knew Willie to be the better mason. It was Willie's seemingly superior attitude and high-brow demeanor they detested the most—his confidence and self-assuredness. On that basis alone, they allied with Bugg. Bugg was fairly defeated, but only for the moment. In Bugg’s eyes blazed the cool calm of one giving birth to a strategy for revenge.

* * *
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