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    Landry 05 Tarnished Gold

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      This close to the floor, I could hear the commotion below: footsteps followed by shouts and exclamations, Octavious's voice, the voices of servants, guests, and then Gladys Tate's moans. With her bedroom right below, I was able to hear her screams. I heard her scream, "Blood! Contractions!"

      My own contraction subsided again. I struggled to sit up and then I crawled and pulled myself back to the bed. During my moments of relief, I prayed for Mama's imminent arrival and I asked God to forgive me for any sin I might have committed.

      "Don't punish the baby," I pleaded.

      When my next contraction came, I muffled my cries by putting my closed fist in my mouth and biting down on my own knuckles and fingers. I couldn't let the people below hear me, not that they would have with all the noise Gladys Tate was making. It was strangely like an echo of my own inner screams and shouts of agony. It was as if my pain did travel through the floor and ceiling below until it settled in her so she could sense when to cry out and when to be silent.

      I never found out how Henry located Mama, but he did so. To me it seemed like hours and hours before she came, but later I realized it had been less than an hour. I heard her voice below first and then I heard doors slam and the landing grow very quiet. Soon after, the door below was opened and Mama came bounding up the stairs. I was never so happy to see her face.

      I told her what had been happening. She examined me and looked at the bloodstained sheets.

      "What's it all mean, Mama?"

      "The baby's been stirring a lot. He wants to be born sooner, honey."

      "Is it going to happen right now?"

      "It's hard to say exactly when, but maybe very soon," she replied. "Maybe very soon."

      She sat back and held my hand.

      "I think I passed out from one of the

      contractions, Mama. I can't remember how long ago the last one occurred."

      She noddedaid looked around, seeing the crushed dollhouse. "You fell on that?"

      "Yes, Mama."

      "You can't be alone anymore, honey, and I don't want you up here any longer. That woman wants you in her bedroom, now anyway," she added with a smirk. "I don't know what she did to herself, but she had blood on her thigh when I was brought up to see her

      "Who was that boy you sent?"

      "His name's Henry. He works here. I didn't want Gladys Tate to find out that he knows I'm here, but I was desperate, Mama."

      "Let's not worry about what she thinks anymore, honey. I want to bring you downstairs where you'll be more comfortable and things will be easier."

      I saw in her eyes that she was more worried than she wanted me to believe.

      "Will the baby die, Mama?"

      "Babies can be born early and be strong, honey."

      "But it's usually the other way, isn't it? It's my fault," I moaned. "I wanted to be out of here so much, I forced the baby to hurry."

      "Nonsense," she said.

      "It doesn't deserve this. It's not the baby's fault. It didn't ask to be born this way," I wailed.

      "Gabriel, stop this right now," Mama commanded. Her face was firm, her eyes blazing with authority. "If you're going to lie there and worry about everything, you'll make it harder and more dangerous for both you and the baby, honey. Trust in God now. It will be what He wants, and we will do what we can. This is not the time to be weak."

      I swallowed back my tears and nodded.

      "I'm sorry, Mama."

      "Okay, honey."

      "Where's Daddy?"

      "Your father is downstairs with Octavious Tate. He jumped for joy when he heard you might be giving birth."

      "Why?"

      "Another opportunity to ask for more money. He's been sitting on this like a fat hen on a fat egg, just waiting for the chance to put the squeeze on the man. I don't know who to dislike more for it, your father for his greed or Octavious Tate for what he's done to you. The man deserves to have your father on his back, but your father ain't doing this to get justice for you. I'm sure he's gambled away most of what he took from the Tates and got himself into new debt."

      "It just gets worse and worse, Mama. Maybe it was all my fault."

      "Nonsense, and don't you even think it," she snapped. "Oui, it's hard, but like any storm, it will come to an end and the sun will shine again for you, Gabriel." She wiped away the strands of hair dampened with my sweat. "Can you stand or should I go get those scoundrels to help carry you down?"

      "Let me try first," I said.

      "Good girl."

      She helped me to my feet.

      "Suddenly my stomach feels ten pounds heavier, Mama, and my legs feel like two sticks of lard."

      Mama laughed. I breathed easier. With her at my side now, I wasn't afraid..

      Of course, I was still like someone poling in the canal for the first time. I was excited and anxious to do well, but I didn't know what was around the next bend.

      8

      Mine for a Moment

      .

      In anticipation of my arrival, Gladys Tate had

      Octavious move a second bed into her room and place it beside her bed. Mama said she heard Gladys tell Octavious to tell the servants it was for Mama because she would have to be at Gladys Tate's side continually now. Neither Mama nor I understood why Gladys didn't just move to another room for the time being or put me into one of the guest rooms, but the bed had been prepared and was waiting. After I entered the room, the door was kept locked and only Octavious and Mama were to be permitted into the room. Gladys insisted the curtains be kept closed, and of course, she ordered us to keep our voices down.

      Gladys was impressed with how difficult it was for me to come down the stairs to her room and the effort it took to get me comfortably situated in the bed.

      "How soon could it be?" she asked Mama, and Mama told her it could be hours or could be days. "There's a strong possibility it's false labor and

      it'll take the remaining weeks it was meant to take.

      We'll have to wait and see," Mama said.

      Nevertheless, Gladys told Octavious to go out

      and forbid the servants to come up the stairs. "In fact," she decided after a moment's thought,

      "discharge them, all of them, immediately;"

      "Discharge them?"

      "Give them all a week's holiday," she insisted. "But what am I to say is the reason?"

      "You don't have to give them a reason,

      Octavious," she replied haughtily., "They work for us.

      We give the orders. Just do it," she snapped, and

      waved her hand at him as if he were one of her

      servants, too. If there were any doubts as to which of

      them ran the house and their lives,, those doubts. died. "But . ." Octavious looked to Mama.

      "I told you the bleeding doesn't always, mean

      the birthing's coming shortly,' Mama explained.. "A

      week, two weeks, who knows?"

      "I don't care," she told Mama, and turned back

      to, Octavious. "Just have everyone out of the house. I

      don't want anyone to suspect anything. I've come all

      this way convincing people it is I who is giving birth.

      I don't want to risk any mistakes, any accidental

      discoveries," Gladys insisted.

      "Which reminds me," she said, turning her

      steely eyes to me. "How did your mother know to come? How did you send for her?" she demanded.

      "And don't tell me you told some bird to go fetch her." Fearful, I looked at Mama. Would Gladys Tate

      cast us out now, and with us all the effort, the

      suffering and loneliness, I endured for the sake of the

      baby and my family?

      "Better tell her everything, honey," Mama said. "There was this boy," I began..

      "Boy? What boy?" she pounced, her eyes

      widening.

      "I saw him doing handstands on the lawn

      behind the house, and he saw me in the window. But

      he won't tell anyone I'm here. He promised
    ," I added

      quickly.

      "What boy is this?" she asked Octavious.

      "Whom is she babbling about?" He shrugged. "What's his name?" she asked me.

      "Henry," I said.

      "The deaf-mute," Octavious said, realizing.

      "Porter's son."

      "Get rid of them," Gladys snapped. "Today. I

      want the whole family off the property."

      "But, Madame Tate," I cried. "He's harmless.

      He won't tell anyone anything, and he did help by

      getting Mama. Don't punish his family because of

      me." "I want them off my property before the sun

      goes down, Octavious. Do you understand?" she said,

      ignoring my pleas. He nodded.

      "Don't worry. I'll take care of them," he assured

      her, but she didn't look calmed.

      "You were not supposed to let anyone know

      you were here," she flared at me, looking red and very

      angry. "That was our bargain. Why do you think I've

      been going through all this discomfort and pain?" "Pain? What pain?" Mama asked.

      "Pain! Pain! I'm supposed to be the one giving

      birth. I can't be without aches and pains, can I? When

      you pretend as well and as accurately as I have

      pretended, you actually feel it. No one knows how

      much I've endured," she cried, her face in an ugly

      grimace. "I'm the one who's making all the sacrifices

      here just to make everything look right." She put her

      hands through her hair, looking as though she might

      tug out strands of it, and turned on Octavious, who

      stood by, watching with fear and amazement on his

      face, too. "Why are you still here? Get rid of them!

      Now! All of this is your fault. All of it!"

      "All right, all right," he said, holding up his

      hands. "Calm down. I'll do it."

      He ran from the room. I turned away so no one

      would see my tear-filled eyes. I shouldn't have looked

      out that window and I shouldn't have laughed and

      shown myself to Henry. Because of me, Henry and his

      family would be thrown out and have to go searching

      for a new place to live and work.

      It seemed like anything and everything I did

      now would hurt someone. Was it because I had been

      touched by evil, deeply stained in my very soul?

      Perhaps no act, no matter how unselfish, could

      cleanse me of the pollution. Maybe I was better off

      staying away from the people I loved, I thought sadly.

      Look at what I had done to this innocent, handicapped

      boy. If I hadn't panicked, if I had waited for Gladys

      Tate instead of sending Henry for Mama, Henry's

      family wouldn't be destitute. I deserve to be

      miserable, I thought. Somehow, I make everyone else

      more miserable.

      Mama saw the regret and guilt in my face and

      knew I was suffering remorse. "If she said the boy

      wouldn't tell anyone, he won't," she told Gladys.

      "Becoming hysterical over everything isn't going to

      help the situation right now."

      "I am not hysterical," Gladys insisted in a raspy

      whisper, but her eyes still looked like two hot coals. Mania shook her head. "I don't want Gabriel

      upset at this juncture. I want her to have a clear mind

      and concentrate. If indeed the baby's coming, we ain't

      out of the woods. Not by a long shot," she said, and

      for the first time, Gladys considered the baby's wellbeing rather than her own.

      "Something can happen to my baby?" she asked

      anxiously.

      "A baby crosses from one world into another.

      Nature pushes him out of the safe, happy one and into

      this turmoil. The road's always fraught with some

      danger. We don't need to add any of our own to it." Suddenly Gladys Tate's eyes became two slits.

      The blood rushed to the surface of her cheeks and her

      shoulders lifted. She looked from Mama to me and

      then to Mama again, shaking her head very slowly as

      she took a step back. Then her smile came crooked

      and mean, her cold brown eyes shooting devilish

      electric sparks.

      "You want the baby to die, don't you?" she said,

      nodding to validate her own suspicions. "Sure. You

      made this happen too soon with one of your secret

      herbal concoctions. You backward Cajun faith healers

      believe in all sorts of superstitions. You probably

      think the baby will curse you or something. Isn't that true? The baby's death would solve the problem for

      you, wouldn't it?"

      "What? Of course not," Mama said. "What a

      terrible and ridiculous thing to say. If anyone is

      thinking like a backwards Cajun, it's you!" Mama

      retorted.

      But Gladys continued to nod, convinced of her

      own suspicions. "I heard stories about traiteur ladies

      killing babies because they thought the babies were

      born with evil souls. When they wash them off,, they

      deliberately drown them or they suffocate them when

      no one's looking."

      "Those are stupid lies. No traiteur would take a

      life. We are here to ease pain and suffering and drive

      away bad things?'

      You said it There. You said it," she accused,

      pointing her right forefinger at Mama. "Drive away

      bad things. If you think a baby's bad . . "

      "A baby can't be bad," Mama insisted. "The

      baby can't be blamed for its own birth," she explained,

      "especially if the mother was raped," she added

      pointedly, but Gladys didn't look convinced. "I'll be right here, every minute," she said,

      "watching your every move."

      "Fine," Mama said. "You do that."

      Gladys folded her arms across her chest and

      dropped herself into the pink cushion chair across

      from me.

      "You can make yourself useful if you're going

      to stay here all the time," Mama told her. "Get me a

      basin of warm water and some clean washcloths. I

      want to bathe Gabriel."

      Gladys Tate stared at us as if she hadn't heard a

      word. In fact, it was more like she was looking

      through us. Her eyes had turned glassy and she didn't

      move a muscle. There was just a slight twitch under

      her right eye. Mama studied her for a moment and

      then looked at me and lifted her eyebrows. She patted

      my hand and went to the bathroom. herself to get what

      she wanted. I threw a glance at Gladys and saw she

      hadn't moved, hadn't shifted her eyes. They looked

      like they had turned to glass. It added chills to my

      already tense and shuddering body.

      Mama washed me down and made me as

      comfortable as she could. All the while Gladys glared

      silently at us. She didn't change expression or move

      until Octavious returned. When he did, she spun on

      him as he approached.

      "Well?" she said.

      "They're all packed and gone. I gave them an extra week's wages so they wouldn't complain." He turned to Mama. "Your husband said to tell you he

      had to go," Octavious said.

      "To play bourre for sure," she whispered to me.

      "The new money's burning a hole in his pocket.

      Couldn't even wait to see how you were," she added,

      choking back her anger. "Probably better he's not here

     
    anyway. He'd only drive us all mad," she added, more

      to calm herself than me.

      I nodded, smiling. A small pain had begun in

      my groin and traveled into my stomach and around to

      my back, but I didn't say anything about it because it

      wasn't as bad as the early ones were yet.

      "Well," Octavious said, looking from Gladys to

      Mama, "maybe I should bring something up for you to

      eat and drink. This may take a while, eh?"

      "Bring some ice tea," Gladys ordered, "and

      make sure the front door is locked. Draw all the

      curtains closed, too. And don't answer any phone calls

      or make any."

      Octavious closed his eyes as if he had a terrible

      headache and then opened them and turned to Mama. "What can I get you?" he asked.

      "Just cold water," Mama told him. She had

      brought along what she wanted for herself and for me. He nodded and left, and soon after, the pain

      began to build.

      "Mama," I said, "it's starting again."

      "Okay, honey. Just squeeze my hand when you

      hurt. I want to know how bad it really is."

      She pulled Grandmere Landry's silver pocket

      watch out of her bag and put it beside me on the bed. "What's that?" Gladys demanded, looking over

      Mama's shoulder.

      "Just a watch to tell me how long her

      contractions last and how much time between them.

      That's how I know how close we are to the birth." "Oh," Gladys said, and placed her palms over

      her fake stomach. "It tightens, doesn't it? It gets as

      tight and as hard as a rock."

      Mama just looked at her, nonplussed, which

      caused something in Gladys Tate's eyes to snap. A

      crimson tint came into the crests of her cheeks. "I've got to know every detail, don't I? People

      ask questions. I want to be able to describe the birth as

      if I really did have the baby."

      "Yes, it gets hard," Mama said. "In the

      beginning for a very short time and then longer and

      longer as you get closer to delivering the baby." "Yes," Gladys said, and grimaced as if she

      really did suffer a contraction.

      Mama sighed and turned back to me with a

      small smile on her lips. She rolled her eyes. I wanted

     


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