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AFTER THE People Will Talk People Will Talk show, I grab the s.p.a.ce Command and punch the "Off " b.u.t.ton. My stories are about to come on, but I don't even care. Doctor Strong and Miss Julia will just have to turn the world without me today. show, I grab the s.p.a.ce Command and punch the "Off " b.u.t.ton. My stories are about to come on, but I don't even care. Doctor Strong and Miss Julia will just have to turn the world without me today.
I've a mind to call that Dennis James on the phone and say, Who do you think you are, spreading lies like that? Who do you think you are, spreading lies like that? You can't tell the whole metro area our book is about Jackson! You don't know what town we've written our book about! You can't tell the whole metro area our book is about Jackson! You don't know what town we've written our book about!
I'll tell you what that fool's doing. He's wishing wishing it was about Jackson. He's wishing Jackson, Mississippi, was interesting enough to write a whole book on and even though it is Jackson . . . well, it was about Jackson. He's wishing Jackson, Mississippi, was interesting enough to write a whole book on and even though it is Jackson . . . well, he he doesn't know that. doesn't know that.
I rush to the kitchen and call Aibileen, but after two tries the line's still busy. I hang up. In the living room, I flip on the iron, yank Mister Johnny's white shirt out of the basket. I wonder for the millionth time what's going to happen when Miss Hilly reads the last chapter. She better get to work soon, telling people it's not our town. And she can tell Miss Celia to fire me all afternoon and Miss Celia won't. Hating Miss Hilly's the only thing that crazy woman and I have in common. But what Hilly'll do once that fails, I don't know. That'll be our own war, between me and Miss Hilly. That won't affect the others.
Oh, now I'm in a bad mood. From where I'm ironing, I can see Miss Celia in the backyard in a pair of hoochie pink satin pants and black plastic gloves. She's got dirt all over her knees. I've asked her a hundred times to quit digging dirt in her dress-up clothes. But that lady never listens.
The gra.s.s in front of the pool is covered in yard rakes and hand tools. All Miss Celia does now is hoe up the yard and plant more fancy flowers. Never mind that Mister Johnny hired a full-time yardman a few months ago, name of John Willis. He was hoping he'd be some kind of protection after the naked man showed up, but he's so old he's bent up like a paper clip. Skinny as one too. I feel like I have to check on him just to make sure he hasn't stroked in the bushes. I guess Mister Johnny didn't have the heart to send him home for somebody younger.
I spray more starch on Mister Johnny's collar. I hear Miss Celia hollering instructions on how to plant a bush. "Those hydrangeas, let's get us some more iron in the dirt. Okay, John Willis?"
"Yes'm," John Willis hollers back.
"Shut up, lady," I say. The way she hollers at him, he thinks she's the deaf one.
The phone rings and I run for it.
"OH MINNY," Aibileen says on the phone. "They figure out the town, ain't no time fore they figure out the people. people."
"He a fool is what he is."
"How we know Miss Hilly even gone read it?" Aibileen says, her voice turning high. I hope Miss Leefolt can't hear her. "Law, we should a thought this through, Minny."
I've never heard Aibileen like this. It's like she's me and I'm her. "Listen," I say because something's starting to make sense here. "Since Mister James done made such a stink about it, we know know she gone read it. Everbody in town gone read it now." Even as I'm saying it, I'm starting to realize it's true. "Don't cry yet, cause maybe things is happening just the way they should." she gone read it. Everbody in town gone read it now." Even as I'm saying it, I'm starting to realize it's true. "Don't cry yet, cause maybe things is happening just the way they should."
Five minutes after I hang it up, Miss Celia's phone rings. "Miss Celia res--"
"I just talk to Louvenia," Aibileen whisper. "Miss Lou Anne just come home with a copy for herself and a copy for her best friend, Hilly Holbrook."
Here we go.
All NIGHT LONG, I swear, I can feel Miss Hilly reading our book. I can hear the words she's reading whispering in my head, in her cool, white voice. At two a.m. I get up from the bed and open my own copy and try to guess what chapter she's on. Is it one or two or ten? Finally I just stare at the blue cover. I've never seen a book such a nice color. I wipe a smudge off the front.
Then I hide it back in the pocket of my winter coat I've never worn, since I've read zero books after I married Leroy and I don't want to make him suspicious with this one. I finally go back to bed, telling myself there's no way I can guess how far Miss Hilly's read. I do know, though, she hasn't gotten to her part at the end. I know because I haven't heard the screaming in my head yet.
By morning, I swear, I'm glad to be going to work. It's floor-scrubbing day and I want to just get my mind off it all. I heave myself into the car and drive out to Madison County. Miss Celia went to see another doctor yesterday afternoon to find out about having kids and I about told her, you can have this one, lady. I'm sure she'll tell me every last detail about it today. At least the fool had the sense to quit that Doctor Tate.
I pull up to the house. I get to park in front now since Miss Celia finally dropped the ruse and told Mister Johnny what he already knew. The first thing I see is Mister Johnny's truck's still home. I wait in my car. He's never once been here when I come in.
I step into the kitchen. I stand in the middle and look. Somebody already made coffee. I hear a man's voice in the dining room. Something's going on here.
I lean close to the door and hear Mister Johnny, home on a weekday at 8:30 in the morning, and a voice in my head says run right back out the door. Miss Hilly called and told him I was a thief. He found out about the pie. He knows about the book. "Minny?" I hear Miss Celia call.
Real careful, I push the swinging door, peek out. There's Miss Celia setting at the head of the table with Mister Johnny setting next to her. They both look up at me.
Mister Johnny looks whiter than that old albino man that lives behind Miss Walters.
"Minny, bring me a gla.s.s of water, please?" he says and I get a real bad feeling.
I get him the water and take it to him. When I set the gla.s.s down on the napkin, Mister Johnny stands up. He gives me a long, heavy look. Lord, here it comes.
"I told him about the baby," Miss Celia whispers. "All the babies."
"Minny, I would've lost her if it hadn't of been for you," he says, grabbing hold of my hands. "Thank G.o.d you were here."
I look over at Miss Celia and she looks dead in the eyes. I already know what that doctor told her. I can see it, that there won't ever be any babies born alive. Mister Johnny squeezes my hands, then he goes to her. He gets down on his kneecaps and lays his head down in her lap. She smoothes his hair over and over.
"Don't leave. Don't ever leave me, Celia," he cries.
"Tell her, Johnny. Tell Minny what you said to me."
Mister Johnny lifts his head. His hair's all mussed and he looks up at me. "You'll always have a job here with us, Minny. For the rest of your life, if you want."
"Thank you, sir," I say and I mean it. Those are the best words I could hear today.
I reach for the door, but Miss Celia says, real soft, "Stay in here awhile. Will you, Minny?"
So I lean my hand on the sideboard because the baby's getting heavy on me. And I wonder how it is that I have so much when she doesn't have any. He's crying. She's crying. We are three fools in the dining room crying.
"I'm TELLING YOU," I tell Leroy in the kitchen, two days later. "You punch the b.u.t.ton and the channel change and you don't even have to get up from your chair."
Leroy's eyes don't move from his paper. "That don't make no sense, Minny."
"Miss Celia got it, called s.p.a.ce Command. A box bout half the size of a bread loaf."
Leroy shakes his head. "Lazy white people. Can't even get up to turn a k.n.o.b."
"I reckon people gone be flying to the moon pretty soon," I say. I'm not even listening to what's coming out of my mouth. I'm listening for the scream again. When is that lady going to finish?
"What's for supper?" Leroy says.
"Yeah, Mama, when we gone eat?" Kindra says.
I hear a car pull in the driveway. I listen and the spoon slips down into the pot of beans. "Cream-a-Wheat."
"I ain't eating no Cream-a-Wheat for supper!" Leroy says.
"I had that for breakfast!" Kindra cries.
"I mean--ham. And beans." I go slam the back door and turn the latch. I look out the window again. The car is backing out. It was just turning around.
Leroy gets up and flings the back door open again. "It's hot as h.e.l.l in here!" He comes to the stove where I'm standing. "What's wrong with you?" he asks, about an inch from my face.
"Nothing," I say and move back a little. Usually, he doesn't mess with me when I'm pregnant. But he moves closer. He squeezes my arm hard.
"What'd you do this time?"
"I--I didn't do nothing," I say. "I'm just tired."
He tightens his grip on my arm. It's starting to burn. "You don't get tired. Not till the tenth month."
"I didn't do nothing, Leroy. Just go set and lemme get to supper."
He lets go, giving me a long look. I can't meet his eyes.
AIBILEEN.
chapter 31.
EVER TIME Miss Leefolt go out shopping or in the yard or even to the bathroom, I check her bedside table where she put the book. I act like I'm dusting, but what I really be doing is checking to see if that First Presbyterian Bible bookmark's moved any deeper in the pages. She's been reading it for five days now and I flip it open today and she still on Chapter One, page fourteen. fourteen. She got two hundred and thirty-five pages left. Law, she read slow. She got two hundred and thirty-five pages left. Law, she read slow.
Still, I want to tell her, you reading about Miss Skeeter, don't you know? About her growing up with Constantine. And I'm scared to death, but I want to tell her, keep reading, lady, cause Chapter Two gone be about you. you.
I am nervous as a cat seeing that book in her house. All week long I been tiptoeing around. One time Li'l Man come up from behind and touch me on the leg and I near bout jump out a my workshoes. Especially on Thursday, when Miss Hilly come over. They set at the dining room table and work on the Benefit. Ever once in a while they look up and smile, ask me to fetch a mayonnaise sandwich or some ice tea.
Twice Miss Hilly come in the kitchen and call her maid, Ernestine. "Are you done soaking Heather's smock dress like I told you to? Uh-huh, and have you dusted the half-tester canopy? Oh you haven't, well go on and do that right away."
I go in to collect they plates and I hear Miss Hilly say, "I'm up to Chapter Seven," and I freeze, the plates in my hand clattering. Miss Leefolt look up and wrinkle her nose at me.
But Miss Hilly, she shaking her finger at Miss Leefolt. "And I think they're right, it just feels feels like Jackson." like Jackson."
"You do?" Miss Leefolt ask.
Miss Hilly lean down and whisper. "I bet we even know some of these Nigra maids."
"You really think so?" Miss Leefolt ask and my body go cold. I can barely move a foot toward the kitchen. "I've only read a little . . ."
"I do. And you know what?" Miss Hilly smile real sneaky-like. "I'm going to figure out every last one of these people."
THE NEXT MORNING, I'm near about hyperventilating at the bus stop thinking about what Miss Hilly gone do when she get to her part, wondering if Miss Leefolt done read Chapter Two yet. And when I walk in her house, there Miss Leefolt is reading my book at the kitchen table. She hand me Li'l Man from her lap without even taking her eyes off the page. Then she wander off to the back reading and walking at the same time. All a sudden, she can't get enough of it now that Miss Hilly done taken a interest in it.
Few minutes later, I go back to her bedroom to get the dirty clothes. Miss Leefolt's in the bathroom, so I open the book at the bookmark. She already on Chapter Six, Six, Winnie's chapter. This where the white lady get the old-timer disease and call the police department ever morning cause a colored woman just walked in her house. That means Miss Leefolt read her part and just Winnie's chapter. This where the white lady get the old-timer disease and call the police department ever morning cause a colored woman just walked in her house. That means Miss Leefolt read her part and just kept on going. kept on going.
I'm scared but I can't help but roll my eyes. I bet Miss Leefolt ain't got no idea it be about herself. I mean, thank the Lord, but still. She probably shaking her head in bed last night, reading bout this awful woman who don't know how to love her own child.
Soon as Miss Leefolt go to her hair appointment, I call Minny. All we do lately is run up our white lady's phone bill.
"You heard anything?" I ask.
"No, nothing. Miss Leefolt finish yet?" she ask.
"No, but she made it to Winnie last night. Miss Celia still ain't bought a copy?"
"That lady don't look at nothing but trash. I'm coming I'm coming," Minny holler. "The fool's stuck in the hair dryer hood again. I told her not to put her head in there when she got them big rollers in."
"Call me if you hear anything," I say. "I do the same."
"Something's gone happen soon, Aibileen. It's got to."
THAT AFTERNOON, I stomp up to the Jitney to pick up some fruit and cottage cheese for Mae Mobley. That Miss Taylor done it again. Baby Girl get out the carpool today, walked straight to her room and throwed herself on her bed. "What's wrong, Baby? What happen?"
"I colored myself black," she cried.
"What you mean?" I asked. "With the markers you did?" I picked up her hand but she didn't have no ink on her skin.
"Miss Taylor said to draw what we like about ourselves best." I saw then a wrinkled, sad-looking paper in her hand. I turned it over and sure enough, there's my baby white girl done colored herself black.
"She said black means I got a dirty, bad face." She plant her face in her pillow and cried something awful.
Miss Taylor. After all the time I spent teaching Mae Mobley how to love all people, not judge by color. I feel a hard fist in my chest because what person out there don't remember they first-grade teacher? Maybe they don't remember what they learn, but I'm telling you, I done raised enough kids to know, they After all the time I spent teaching Mae Mobley how to love all people, not judge by color. I feel a hard fist in my chest because what person out there don't remember they first-grade teacher? Maybe they don't remember what they learn, but I'm telling you, I done raised enough kids to know, they matter. matter.
At least the Jitney's cool. I feel bad I forgot to buy Mae Mobley's snack this morning. I hurry so she won't have to set with her mama for too long. She done hid her paper under her bed so her mama wouldn't see it.
In the can food section, I get two cans a tunafish. I walk over to find the green Jell-O powder and there's sweet Louvenia in her white uniform looking at peanut b.u.t.ter. I'll think a Louvenia as Chapter Seven for the rest a my life.
"How's Robert doing?" I ask, patting her arm. Louvenia work all day for Miss Lou Anne and then come home ever afternoon and take Robert to blind school so he can learn to read with his fingers. And I have never heard Louvenia complain once.
"Learning to get around." She nod. "You alright? Feel okay?"
"Just nervous. You heard anything at all?"
She shake her head. "My boss been reading it, though." Miss Lou Anne's in Miss Leefolt's bridge club. Miss Lou Anne was real good to Louvenia when Robert got hurt.
We walk down the aisle with our handbaskets. There be two white ladies talking by the graham crackers. They kind a familiar looking, but I don't know they names. Soon as we get close, they hush up and look at us. Funny how they ain't smiling.
"Scuse me," I say and move on past. When we not but a foot away, I hear one say, "That's the Nigra waits on Elizabeth . . ." A cart rattles past us, blocking the words.
"I bet you're right," the other one say. "I bet that's her . . ."
Me and Louvenia keep walking real quiet, looking dead ahead. I feel p.r.i.c.kles up my neck, hearing the ladies' heels clack away. I know Louvenia heard better than I did, cause her ears is ten years younger than mine. At the end a the aisle we start to go in different directions, but then we both turn to look at each other.
Did I hear right? I say with my eyes. I say with my eyes.
You heard right, Louvenia's say back. Louvenia's say back.
Please, Miss Hilly, read. read. Read like the wind. Read like the wind.