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CHAPTER 2 SINS OF THE FATHER “ I have to protect this innocent child from this foolish boy, but how?I wonder if Ida is still … Why would she help me? Lord‚ please helpme. I have to find a way to save this child.” He attempted to upright the over-turned furniture but was only able to move it a couple of inches off the ground. He hollered out to Gussie, their cook, and told her to straighten the room before Jane returned home from her afternoon bridge game. He pulled several bills from his pocket, shoved them in her direction, walked out to his shiny red 1960 Cadillac, and started to get in. He looked over at his pickup and decided it was better suited for the drive out to Ida’s place. He closed the car door, walked over to the old blue Chevy, hopped in, and started the engine. He took the scenic route to his forgotten sister’s farm, searching his mind to find the right words to persuade Ida to help him but drew a blank. He knew she was still angry with him—with just reason—but he hoped her love for a good cause would soften her heart to the seriousness of his present plight. As he pulled into her driveway, he spotted her piddling around the vegetable garden, and his heart began to race. Alfred took a deep breath, hopped out of the truck, and slowly walked toward her. Ida had watched him pull up and recognized him immediately, wondering what he could want after all these years. Ida was hoeing the weeds out of her prized tomatoes and stopped for a second to catch her breath. Jo Ann Johnson 30 She leaned on the wooden handle and hollered out, “Howdy Alfred, you certainly are a sight for sore eyes. What brings you out this way?” He waved to her and tried to smile, but she quickly saw through it. “Oh no, I don’t like that look in your eyes man. What’s wrong now?” He mustered all the strength he could and asked, “Ida can we go inside and talk? It is a private family matter, and I do not want any loose lips listening to our conversation.” Ida loved to make things grow, and it was evident in the simple beauty of the garden. She always had several of the neighborhood kids hanging around wanting to learn some of her many skills. She constantly looked for ways to give them necessary tools to better their lives. She handed the hoe to one of the Smith boys and gave him a quick set of instructions as she and Alfred walked toward the house. Ida stopped at the well that was just outside the back door of her home and lowered the rope until she heard the bucket splash into the water. She pulled the pail up from the water and sat it in the windowsill. Ida grabbed the screen door and held it open inviting him in. They walked through the house and into the small living room where she offered him a seat. Alfred thought of the cool well water that she had just drawn and asked, “Ida could I have a glass of that water?” He needed a minute to gather his thoughts as his mind raced with memories of their last meeting. Ida walked over to the china cabinet, pulled out a glass and went to get the refreshing liquid. She walked back to the utility room, filled the glass with the water, and wondered what this visit would cost her. She went back into the living room and handed him the glass. He took it, thanked her, and quickly swallowed it down. He looked in her direction, drew a deep breath, and began to break the news to her. “Ida, I know I have no right to come here and definitely not to ask you for anything, but I’m desperate and have nowhere else to turn. Please, you have to help me.” Ida immediately became impatient with him and asked, “What in the Sam Hill can I do for you? You are the richest man in town. What could I possibly do to help you? Anyway, you never wanted anything to do with me before.” The Muscadine Vine 31 Alfred looked at the floor and sighed. “I know. I know and I’m sorry! Can we please just let bygones be bygones? Give me another chance Ida, and I’ll make it all up to you.” Ida’s demeanor quickly changed and she screamed, “You can’t make anything up unless you done figured out how to raise the dead!” Alfred began to get nervous and lose his usual cool manor. He stuttered, “Look Ida‚ you have to listen to me. There’s not much time. My son Cane is madder than I’ve ever seen him, and I don’t know what he will do!” “Well, spit it out man,” said Ida becoming impatient with her brother’s speech impediment. She muttered a quick prayer, realizing she was becoming angry, and calmed down. She mustered a smile, patted him on the shoulder, and said, “Let’s not let our emotions take control. I’ll fix us some coffee while you gather your thoughts.” Alfred got up from his seat and removed his hat from his rapidly balding head. He nervously placed it on the coffee table. He was showing his frustration by losing his cool. He picked up the picture of Fred and quickly put it down, knowing any mention of her ill-fated brother would infuriate her thoroughly. Ida had been watching him from the doorway and sighed as she walked back into the parlor carrying the cups of coffee. She realized that he was about to place her in a compromising situation and began to silently pray as she placed the cups on the glass-covered table. “ Lord,I ask you to protect my heart and mind against this foolish man and his shenanigans.” She looked at him and said, “All right Alfred, what is it?” He reached for his coffee cup and said, “I really messed up Ida. I don’t know where to turn. She isn’t to blame. She’s just an innocent baby!” Ida sat down on the sofa across from him and her mind raced as his words registered and asked, “Baby, what baby? What are you talking about man?” He sat the cup back on the table without taking a sip and said in a worried voice, “She’s my child Ida and your niece. She cannot stay Jo Ann Johnson 32 in the hospital another day. People are already talking, and rumors are flying. The child’s mine and I love her.” Alfred pulled his pipe from his pocket and continued to explain. “Sally will never forgive me if something happens to her.” Ida sighed and looked down at the floor as she looked for the right words to use. “Alfred Fitzgerald, I heard you were sleeping with your maid, but I didn’t believe it. I thought you learned from your father’s mistakes.” “Ida, you know that’s not fair. You know my father loved you and your mother.” She shook her head from side to side, as she tried to reason with him. “A man’s so-called love doesn’t make sinful ways okay. Do you have any idea how hard it was on me growing up hated by all because of the color of my skin? It’s not right,” cried Ida. “It’s not right at all. You have a curse and it’s started all over again. It is a generational curse! God help us all!” Ida threw up her hands in exasperation and walked over to the picture window as her mind raced back to her own childhood. She had put up with so much cruelty as a young black child growing up in a white body. She had been abused more times than she could count. She hated her so-called father for standing back and allowing it. Now, Alfred was starting the cursed tradition all over again. Tears ran down her face as she realized the grief the child would have to endure. She shuddered at the thought of it. Alfred followed her, seeing how upset she was. He searched for the right words to comfort her. He placed his hand on her shoulder and turned her to face him. She could see he also had tears in his eyes and was more desperate than she had ever known him to be. “Ida I promise, if you help us, no harm will come to either of you. She needs you. You have to take her. No one else will understand.” “Look Alfred Fitzgerald, I’m almost seventy years old. I can’t do it again, and I’m much too old to care for an infant.” Alfred pleaded, “She’s your blood Ida, and you can’t turn her away. Please, you have to help her.” Ida took a deep breath and blew the air out. “I’ll help you, Alfred, but only until you find a permanent home for The Muscadine Vine 33 her. I will give you three months and not one day longer. Do you understand me? She needs much more care than I can give her.” He nodded his head in agreement and a flood of relief came over him as he processed her words and hurried to the door. “I’ll be back as soon as I can.” He stopped, turned around, and walked back to her, grabbed her around the waist and swung her around. She felt a moment of happiness as she looked back to the short time when they had been carefree kids growing up as brother and sister, sheltered from the turmoil of the racist south. Alfred walked over to the coffee table, grabbed his forgotten Texas size cowboy hat, and hurried out the door to his truck. She walked to the door, watched him as he drove away, and wondered how she would ever manage to care for a tiny infant at her old age. She let her mind wander back to her dear husband Julius and a time when the house was filled with laughter and a time of thankfulness. Ida was so grateful for where God had taken her. She had been at such a low point in her life when she cried out to him. She was not raised in a Christian home and didn’t have a reason or desire for a relationship with him. Her mother had talked her into marrying a local minister named Julius Caesar Carter. He was a tall eloquent man of dark complexion and a quiet demeanor. Julius loved Ida the first moment he laid eyes on her. The Lord had described his future wife to him in a dream almost a decade before they met and he had waited patiently for God to send her to him. He was ten years her senior and a much older man than Ida had expected to marry but Julius was relentless in his pursuit of her. He would drop by her family home every Sunday afternoon with a special gift for her. He would find Ida and her sisters sitting on the front porch eagerly waiting for their latest gift. He would slowly walk up the front porch with his hand behind his back concealing the latest treat. The front porch was the focal point of the small home and it covered the entire front of the house. If you squatted down you could look between the floor boards and see the bare dirt underneath the house. Jo Ann Johnson 34 It stood on gray brick blocks that were stacked around the house. In the summertime you could climb between the bricks and play made up games. When the sun was brightly shining you could even play tic-tactoe in the loose earth. Julius had found out from her family and friends all of her favorite treats and would surprise her with homemade candy apples, black licorice, or coconut kisses that she would share with the rest. Ida thought he was very sweet but she did not love him before their marriage but through many trials and tribulations had grown to love him dearly. Julius and Ida tilled the soil and became very successful farmers amassing several hundred acres of farm land. Life seemed pleasant and Ida flourished in her life with Julius. They cleared out several acres of land and planted crops of cotton, wheat, corn, peas, and many types of melons. Year after year their crops grew and prospered. Their melons were plump and as sweet as sugar. The early spring rains nourished the tender stalks of corn as they grew and stretched their magnificent shoots toward the heavens. The couple opened a small grocery store where they sold most of the produce that was harvested. At a time when most of the country was experiencing a depression, they were blessed beyond their dreams or expectations. Ida smiled as she thought of her dear husband. He had been such a wonderful father to their three children. She knew he would welcome the child into their home with open arms if he were still alive. Somehow she found strength as she relived the memory of him and knew she was being called to a new mission. She would have to lean on her sister who thankfully lived next door to her with her family. She shrugged her shoulders and closed the door hoping she could handle dealing with her brother, since it was for such a short time. She would not allow him to hurt her again no matter what the cost, but she would do whatever it took to protect her niece. As Alfred drove back to the hospital, he devised his impromptu plan to save his baby girl’s life. Ida would be the major contributor to 35 his schemes whether she liked it or not, for he was a big man and always got what he wanted.
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