I just knew this wasn't going to go well. I was
sitting at the table shelling peas, when I looked up at my mother of fourteen
years, and said, “Mama, I’m going to be a writer.” She stood there a moment, took off her
glasses and wiped her specs with a new Kleenex.
Looking up on the shelf for her big stir spoon, she reached up, grabbed
it while whirling around to face me and the blows commenced to land hither and
yon. Mostly yon, as I didn’t get to be
fourteen by moving slow in mama’s house.
Once she wound down and came up for air, she put the Big Spoon on the
table, then sat down and looked me in the eye.
She said,
“Boy, don’t
you ever mention writing in my house
again. I’ll have none of that
foolishness. It starts out innocent
enough. Just want to write your name so you
can cash a check. Next thing it’s
numbers and complex fractions. No good
will come of this Boy.” Mama looked down
at the table and then her red and raw hands.
It seemed Mama’s hands were always red from working. Looking back up at me she shook her head and
said, “Okay, how long have you been writing?”
I could
never pull one on Mama when she had me in her eye like that. Looking sideways at the big spoon, I decided
truth was better than making up stories.
Although I think I can make up good ones, now wasn’t the time.
“Well Mama,
I’ve been making up stories for forever and…”
In a sudden
move the Big Spoon was back in her hand and she got me soundly before I could jump
back (which I did, but a bit too late) and sit back down and face her
“Jesse Lane,
you have always been a precocious child.
I’ve known all along that you are nothing but a story teller. Now,” she looked me dead in the eye again and
said, “tell me you haven’t been writing these stories down.”
This was not
going well. I’d been writing since I was
nine, and had taught myself the alphabet and stuff like punctuation from Jimmy’s
books. Looking at Mama, but more at the Big
Spoon, I tried to swallow but my tongue was like sandpaper and my mouth dry as desert
dust.
“Well.. “ I croaked. “I’ve been writing for awhile.” Mamma arched her brow and continued to give
me the eye. Giving me no help, I was
forced to continue. “Uh, the last four
or five years?”
Studying her forgotten kettles, she turned back to me and said, “Are you asking me if
you’ve been writing for four or five years?
Why even bother asking me? Of
course you have. Just like your
Father. He never left me for another
woman. No, he’s living in a fleabag walk
up in New York City and tells people he’s a writer. A Writer. And what kind of writer do you suppose Mister
all High and Mighty, ‘I’m a writer!’ is?
The very worst kind. A Science
Fiction Writer. Now tell me Jesse Lane ‘I’m
going to be a Writer!’ just what
kind of writer do you plan on being?”
I knew
this wasn’t going to go well...
3 comments:
Huck, Well my friend, You're a writer, a darn good one.
Nice job, Huck. I encourage everyone to write; everyone except Mama, that is
That was fun. More, please.
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