A Right Worthy Woman: A Novel - Hardcover

Watson, Ruth P.

 
9781668003022: A Right Worthy Woman: A Novel

Inhaltsangabe

In the vein of The Personal Librarian and The House of Eve, a “remarkable and stirring novel” (Patti Callahan Henry, New York Times bestselling author) based on the inspiring true story of Virginia’s Black Wall Street and the indomitable Maggie Lena Walker, the daughter of a formerly enslaved woman who became the first Black woman to establish and preside over a bank in the United States.

Maggie Lena Walker was ambitious and unafraid. Her childhood in 19th-century Virginia helping her mother with her laundry service opened her eyes to the overwhelming discrepancy between the Black residents and her mother’s affluent white clients. She vowed to not only secure the same kind of home and finery for herself, but she would also help others in her community achieve the same.

With her single-minded determination, Maggie buckled down and went from schoolteacher to secretary-treasurer of the Independent Order of St. Luke, founder of a newspaper, a bank, and a department store where Black customers were treated with respect. With the help of influential friends like W.E.B. DuBois and Mary McLeod, she revolutionized Richmond in ways that are still felt today. Now, “with rich period detail and emotional impact” (Tracey Enerson Wood, author of The Engineer’s Wife), her riveting full story is finally revealed in this stirring and intimate novel.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Ruth P. Watson is the author of Blackberry Days of Summer, An Elderberry Fall, Cranberry Winter, and Strawberry Spring. A musical stage play, Blackberry Daze, is based on her debut novel. She is the recipient of the Caversham Fellowship, an artist and writer’s residency in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, where she published her first children’s book in Zulu, Our Secret Bond. She is a freelance writer and member of Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators, and has written for Upscale, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and other publications. She is an adjunct professor and project manager, who lives with family in Atlanta, Georgia.

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Chapter 1 CHAPTER 1

RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 1876


AT TWELVE YEARS OLD, my childhood immediately ended. On a chilly February day, Daddy’s body was found floating facedown in the raging, icy James River. I was forced to forget about playing outside after school and instead focus on helping my mother, who afterward would stare hopelessly at the sky, searching for God, and crying herself to sleep at night. Nothing was ever easy again.

The night Daddy died, Momma kept glancing at the old wooden clock on our kitchen wall.

I remembered the worry in Momma’s eyes when the clock read 6:45 p.m. Daddy always arrived home by half past five each evening. She had tried to stay calm, but none of it was normal. She’d paced the rough floorboards that she always kept shined to a high gloss, tracing and retracing her steps across the kitchen.

Daddy had left home early that morning before daylight to work for the St. Charles Hotel. He loved his work and would stand ramrod-straight whenever he’d speak of his job. And each morning, Momma would watch him from the front door in the murky darkness before dawn as he moved swiftly along, with his lunch tucked tightly under his arm, until he was out of sight. His shift at the hotel started at 6:00 a.m. and ended at 5:00 p.m., and Daddy never complained.

That night, the hard knock on the door had made us all shudder. I rushed to open it.

“Oh no, child, you let me get it,” Momma had said, right behind me.

She looked around and laid her eyes on the rifle beside the front door. She hadn’t picked it up, but I’d gone and stood close to it in case there was a problem. Bracing herself, Momma opened the door cautiously. A white Richmond police officer stood there, and immediately she knew something was terribly wrong.

“Mrs. Mitchell?” the officer had asked. She nodded in affirmation. “Can I come in?”

“Yes, sir, come on in,” she’d said, her voice trembling, hesitantly glancing over her shoulder to find me beside the rifle, my eyes on her, curious about this interruption in our routine. The policeman had entered, looking like a Confederate soldier in his navy-blue swallow-tailed coat with a raised leather collar and faded blue trousers. A truncheon at his side, he had his hand on it, ready to use it, even though only Momma, Johnnie, and me were at home.

Momma turned to me and said brusquely, “Get back, child.” Fear exuding from her wide eyes.

I, stubborn as usual, hadn’t budged, moving closer to Daddy’s rifle. Though still young, I was old enough to know how mean the Richmond police officers could be to colored folks, and I had known, even at that age, that I should not and would not move.

“I’ve got some bad news,” the officer had said, stepping into the hallway, kicking dirt off his boots onto Momma’s spotless floor. He’d continued into the kitchen, Momma following.

“What is it, sir?” Momma had asked, wiping her hands on her apron.

He told Momma that Daddy had been found floating in the James River. “Drowned,” she mumbled. Momma stood stock-still.

Then she asked, “How did it happen, sir?”

The officer narrowed his eyes and said, “We think it was suicide.”

Momma started to tremble. Her hands shivered like a leaf as she tried to maintain her posture.

“Thank you,” she said quietly and went to the front door to open it for him, all the while keeping her composure. When the officer walked out the door, she closed it cautiously behind him.

The instant he was gone, she turned around, glanced at us, and slumped down to the floor. We rushed over to her and held her in our arms, tears sliding down Johnnie’s and my cheeks. Momma didn’t believe a word the officer said. And she knew no one would even care.

“He didn’t drown, and he didn’t commit suicide,” she murmured.

Now, every night she is lonesome and tired, mourning for Daddy while worrying herself to the bone for us.

Since then, all I do is think about Momma. Will she be all right without Daddy? Will we ever be able to afford a full meal? Only one slab of bacon remained hanging in the small smokehouse in the back. When my brother Johnnie, only six, whined about being hungry, there was not much I could do. The flour was running low in the kitchen and the lard was just about gone, too—everything had to be rationed. A half a biscuit with a little apple butter would do.

Momma’s eyes were red from crying silently. All I wanted to do was comfort her. But there’s no rest or comfort when you’re suddenly the only parent and support for two children.

Before Daddy died, Momma had already been laundering rich white folks’ clothes for some time, to add to what Daddy brought home from his job. When it became our only way to survive, Momma needed Johnnie’s and my help to not only grow her business but keep our family afloat. And I worried I would have to leave school and work full-time as other poor colored children had to do.

So, we worked. My puny, pruned fingers dried up, and my skin cracked from being in boiling-hot water. The rose water and fatback grease Momma told me to rub on them had little effect, and my brother cried because his hands ached. The potash soap was rough on the skin. My knuckles blistered from rubbing stains out of Momma’s customers’ fine clothes on a washboard.

Momma kneaded each garment like a loaf of bread on the tin washboard. Her wrinkled hands immersed in steaming-hot water, she’d press and roll the clothes until all the stains were gone. And she taught me how to do the same thing.

It was like a supply-chain line—all of us had a responsibility. Johnnie’s job was to keep the fire going under the pots, so that when the clothing was transferred from the soapy pot into the rinsing pot there’d be no wasted time.

Momma was proud of her children—with few complaints, we had become a part of her laundry production line. She was proud of all that we accomplished, and constantly told us so. “I know it is hard, and every day I thank the Lord for my children.”

One of the secrets of Momma’s well-earned reputation for outstandingly fresh laundry was the addition of a dash of water scented with rose petals and lavender to the final rinse. It gave the clean clothing an inviting smell and a crispness that lasted.

Our day always started before daybreak. With our eyes half-shut, we got the clothes done in the early morning chill and left them hanging on the clothesline, swinging in the wind. So, after a breakfast of grits, which kept us full all day, together Johnnie and I would walk swiftly through the dense trees and onto the cobblestone road, hoping to reach school before our teacher rang the late bell.

Each day after school, Johnnie and I would rush home to help Momma deliver the day’s laundry. She would have the clothes ready by midafternoon, having ironed and starched them while we were in school.

Momma had four main customers, each of them snobbish in different ways, and all of them so wealthy they practically owned the town. Mrs. Thalhimer, the wife of the man who owned the biggest and most popular department store in Richmond, was the richest. She had a house full of servants, yet she hired my mother, Lizzie Mitchell, to do her...

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ISBN 10:  1668003031 ISBN 13:  9781668003039
Verlag: Atria Books, 2024
Softcover