Jezebel Koko Brown (best books to read non fiction txt) đ
- Author: Koko Brown
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Both Delilahand Mollygasped. Tookie tookthe dancerâs confession in stride. In this line of business,tales of woe came with the territory.
Celeste started up anothercombination, her feet scuffingout a solemnrhythm whichrivaled her sob story. âIn all honesty,â she continued.âIâm mad at myself for running away all these years. AndIâm mad I never toldthat Holier than thou son of a bitch to go to hell.â
âEverything happensfor a reason,â Mollycountered.
âAnd thereâsalways a rainbow at the end of a storm,â Delilahchimed in.
Tookie rolled her eyes. Sheâd fallen into a sappy melodrama.
Celeste paused in the middleof a riff, landing on the ball of her foot. âI do have a reasonto be happy,â she acquiesced. âIâm finally goinghome.â
The way she worded âgoinghomeâ lifted the hairs on the back of Tookieâsneck. On one hand, she welcomed the news. On the other, the dancerâsdeparture would leave Tookiewith only one star attraction for the rest of the season. And theyâdonly completed thefirst leg of atwenty-two city tour!
Tookiegroaned. No amount of coaching would turn Wilma into a headlinerovernight. Feeling the noose tightening around her throatTookie asked,âSo,youâreleaving the Follies?â
Not knowing she held theshowâs future in her hands, Celeste shrugged.âI donât know what tomorrow brings.â She held herhands out to Mollie and Delilah. Tweedledum and Tweedledee fell inline like sycophants. âOne thing I am certain of is the bottleof Jack in my hotel room and how it should be savored with goodfriends.â
Tookie let them go.
With her leverage nowdeceased, she could no more stop Celeste intent on a bender than shecould stop a runaway locomotive.
CHAPTER TWO
Two days later and shortlyafter midnight, Celeste Newsomearrived atPenn Station via B&Oâs Capital Limited. No longer havingroots in New York, she settled in with her cousin Trudy whomaintained a flat in the same Brooklyn neighborhoodtheyâd grown up inas kids.
If left up to her, Celestewouldâve dug a hole in an empty lot, thrown her father in anole pine box and be done with it. Butasa respected pillar of the community, she guessed her father deservedbetter than that. Thankfully, herfatherâs attorney had taken care of all the arrangements. Allthat was required of her was payingher respects.
Considering she had littlerespect for Cecil âThe Reverendâ Newsome, Celeste arrivedat Fridayâs wake a couple of hours late and thirty minutes shyof closing. Despite having a liver of steel, a testament to the pintof gin she guzzled down beforehand, Celeste couldnât stomach athrong of well-wishers, heralding her with stories of her fatherâsgenerosity and compassion.
She already knew everywinter he bought shoes for the homeless. That he helped open acommunity soup kitchen shortly after the stock market crashed. AndeveryChristmas Eve he allowedthe neighborhoodchildren to take as much candy as they could carry.
Over the years, she remainedapprised of all his saintly exploits from her cousin Trudy. Aself-avowed drag king,they co-shared her fatherâs condemnation. So it was a greatrelief, the very same cousin walkedbeside her.
Per her fatherâsrequest, his wake was held at Kelly Funeral Home, while the actualfuneral was scheduled the following morning at Abyssinian BaptistChurch.
Nestled in the small bedroomcommunity of Bedford-Stuyvesant, Kellyâs was unique in that itwas the only mortuary in the entire borough that performed burialsfor coloreds.
In spite of the presenteconomy, business kept chugging away. So much, her fatherâswake had been the fourth one held today.
âIâm fully awarethis wasnât a coincidence,â Trudy whispered as theywalked down the aisle,each footfallechoingthroughthe viewing room.
âCanât getanything pastâŠâ
Celeste steps slowed.
Framedby a pair of stainedglass windows and more flowers than she could count, herfatherâs casket loomed large and solitary like an island on toitself. Celeste lingered at the first pew.
âHeâŠhelâlâlooks like heâs sleeping,âshewhispered taking in his charcoal suitand theBible restingin his hands. Despite appearing two shades darker and abaldingpate, herdaddy looked exactly the same.
Celestesqueezed her eyes shut. Sheâdswore shewouldnât break down.Her resolvemissed the telegram and essentially felllike a stack of dominoes. Her vision blurred with tears and eachsubsequent breath became more and more difficult. Accepting Trudyâssupporting arm, Celeste slidinto thepew.
âI feel so stupid,âCeleste hiccupped through a watershed of tears.
âWhy?Because youârebeing human and not some hard-hearted Hannah?â Trudy reachedinto her suit jacket, pulled out a handkerchief and handed it to her.âHe might have been an ornery cuss, but heâs still yourdaddy.â
âToo bad he forgot.â Celeste dabbed at the tear rolling down her cheek. âWhat kindof father nicknames his only child Jezebel?â
Trudy opened her mouth. Herexpression clouded and she abandonedher pep talk. Celeste mentally shrugged. Hardarguing with the cold, hard truth.
Celeste wiped away her tearsand moved to the edge of her seat. She almost stood up when apetite, nattily dressed man with a gold âSTAFFâ pinfastened to his lapel suddenly appeared in front of her.
âOn behalf of theowner, welcome to Kelly Funeral Home. Are you family, friends oracquaintances of Mr. Cecil Newsome?â
âFamily,â Trudyreplied. âIâm his niece and this is his daughterCeleste.â
At the mention of Celesteâsname, the manâs bushy eyebrows jumped skyward. Smiling, hereached inside his suit jacket and retrieved a white calling card.
âWeâre so gladhis family finally showed up. Iâve only seen friends andacquaintances thus far.â Helookedat the card anda pang of guilt sliced through her.
âMr. EarlyPercy, your fatherâs solicitor, was here. He waited around anhour or so, but he leftfor another engagement. Beforeleaving, he left his contactinformation.âHe held out the card. âYourfatherâs estate has taken care of all the funeral arraignments. However, there are some final details of your fatherâs will,whichneed ironingout.â
In an act of politeness,Celeste took the calling card from him and slipped it into herclutch. Even from the grave, her father wasnât finished withher.
âIf you ladies wouldexcuse me, we have another well-wisher.â Celeste followed theundertakerâs gaze to the bullet sheâd almost dodged.
âObviouslylost and lookingfor directions.â
Celeste silentlyagreed with her cousinâs observation asher gazetraveledover the egg
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