Flash Fiction Musical Selection|Erykah Badu: Orange Moon
Me and her pops had a big fight. Iβm talkinββββthe kind that makes a brotha take a step back and think about whatβs about to go down before it goes downβββthat kinda fight. I respect my eldersβββI got manners, you know. My folks raised me right, but I was just so damn tired of him puttinβ thoughts into Ruthannβs head about meβββhow she can do better than me.
I meanβ¦ Ruthann loves me. She ainβt tryinβ to hear what her pops is sayinβ, but I hear him. I see the look on his face when I walk through their door. He hates meβββliterally hates a brotha.
And listen, I donβt normally feel that intensely about what other folks think of meβββbut this means something to me. I canβt put my finger on it just yet. But having her popβs approval is at the top of my list.
Ruthann looks at her pops like he made the damn world. He is the sun, moon, and starsβββhell, the entire universe to her. He has her heart and for three years; I cracked at the wall around it and I finally got in. I canβt have him reversing that shit, you know. Iβm in there now, and I plan to stay there.
I ainβt stupid. I have my wits about me, and I got plenty of sense. Her folks donβt want her settlinβ down with meβββdonβt want us intermingling. My peopleβββher people.
They can all pass. You know what I mean, right? Theyβre light as hell. They are the lightest Black folks I know. Ruthann is sugarcane coloredβββgently kissed by the morning sunlight. Her eyes are emerald green. Her lips are two finely sliced pieces of sweet flesh added to her face for effect.
When I first met her folks, her mother didnβt even say hello to me. She said, βBoy, you are the color of burnt molasses,β sucked her teeth, and walked off. Her pops looked me up and downβββmeasurinβ me with his eyes. Dude ainβt need no ruler. I knew exactly what he was thinkinβ.
I looked around their homeβββnoticed the fine china, the furniture that didnβt come from IKEA, the barely walked-on floors, and the chandelier that dangled above our heads.
Somebodyβs blood was royal, and it wasnβt mine.
I never thought Iβd fall in love with a girl whose folks hated other Black folks. How much do you have to dislike yourself to look at people of your race like you want to sic the county dogs on them and skin them later just for fun?
Ruthann memorized this quote from Toni Morrison, she tells me sometimes. She tries to get my mind off the drama of her family, but I canβt stop thinkinβ about that shit. It consumes me. Sheβll just say it as smooth as her lovely mouth can form the words, and I kid you notβββI feel better.
βThe function, the very serious function of racism is distraction. It keeps you from doing your work. It keeps you explaining, over and over again, your reason for being. Somebody says you have no language and you spend twenty years proving that you do. Somebody says your head isnβt shaped properly so you have scientists working on the fact that it is. Somebody says you have no art, so you dredge that up. Somebody says you have no kingdoms, so you dredge that up. None of this is necessary. There will always be one more thing.β
And sheβll go on further, βBaby, it ainβt racism in our case, itβs colorism. And I donβt give a damn about whoβs lighter than who or whoβs darker than who. You know what I give a damn about?β And I play into this every single time, like the man in love that I am. βWhat, Ruthann? What?β
βI care about you. I care about us.β
The anger leaves me just as quickly as it seeped its uninvited self into my bones. I sink into the tightness of her embrace, and I allow her to be my peace.
She is my peace.
The fight started because I asked Ruthannβs pops for her hand in marriage. Ha! Listen, I was scared shitless! I sat down in their βmain roomβ, across from the old man, and rubbed my sweaty hands together. My breathinβ was off. My heart was racinβ at the speed of light. I kept stutterinβ.
He just sat back in his chair, chest all puffed out like he was some damn washed-up Avenger waitinβ for the call back into action.
βThe Shield Family is cut from a different cloth, boy. Ruthann will not marry into one as simple as yours. We have standards. I want whatβs best for my daughter, and Cleveland Mabry, you are not it.β
I donβt know what happenedβββI just saw red. And before I could stop myself, I raised up out of that chair, charged toward her pops, and lunged at him with an anger I couldnβt pull back.
He jumped up, took three steps away from me, and looked like the last days were pouncinβ on his heart. I thought the old man had seen a ghost the way he removed himself from my line of sight.
Ruthann had been standinβ on the other side of the roomβββjust outside the doorway. She heard everything. She had tears in her eyes that were streaminβ down, lininβ her dimpled cheeks.
I hated to see her cry. I told her when we first met that I would never do anything to make her cryβββnot intentionally. The last thing I wanted to do was make her so mad that tears left those beautiful gem-colored eyes.
I walked over to her, placed my hand within her personal space, and she stopped me. She held up one hand, looked at her pops, then looked back at me. What she said next⦠floored me.
βDaddy, you do not decide who I will marry. You donβt get to approve or disapprove. You donβt get to design your life around mine to further infiltrate your beliefs into what I deem beautiful within this one life I have to live. If Cleveland wants to marry me. Then we will be married.β
Thereβs something about a woman standinβ up for you without your consentβββwithout your awareness before it takes place. That night, I fell even more in love with Ruthann.
What the hell were two twenty-three-year-olds going to do on their own without her familyβs financial support?
We were going to survive.
She moved out of her folksβ place and we carried everything we could to my house. Iβd called my mom on the way over. She wasnβt happy, but she wasnβt mad, either.
We have a spacious, fully furnished basement. It was nothinβ to turn the area into Ruthannβs room.
My pops looked at me like the world had landed itself on his shoulders when I got outta the car. It was like he was tellinβ me something without sayinβ nothinβ. And after the day Iβd had, I just couldnβt play mind reader.
I walked past Pops and into the livinβ room, placed Ruthannβs bags on the floor, and led her downstairs to the basement where she could get herself ready for dinner.
When I came back upstairs, Pops was standinβ right thereβββarms foldedβββbody language sayinβ a firm, βThereβs only one man in this house, boy,β and I heard him loud and clear.
This wasnβt gonna be our home, either.
After dinner, I walked Ruthann down to the basement. I told her exactly what I knew I needed to. I watched her dancinβ eyes, her radiant smile, and her regal presence lean in to give me her full attention. The room smelled like herβββlike jasmine and fresh rainβββlike sage and Nag Champa. I choked on my words.
βWeβ¦ we canβt stay here. Ainβt nobody said anythinβ yet, but itβs cominβ. And Ruthann, Iβd just rather not be here when it does. Iβm tired of runninβ into storms because we love each other. Iβm so damn tired. Tomorrow, Iβm gonβ pick up an extra shift at work for however long itβs gonna take to save up and get outta here.β
βSo, you think you have to do this on your own? You donβt. We are a team, Cleveland. Iβll pick up a few more hours at the library, and Iβll make a significant withdrawal from my savings account. We are going to be okay.β
At that moment, I knew Iβd made the right decision. I knew the woman who stared back at me with eyes of emerald green and skin matched by the glimmer of first light would be with me forever.
Because it felt like the right time, I slid the ring from my pocket and got down on one knee. I looked up at herβββa lump formed in my throatβββmy hands got sweaty. I took a deep breath in and said, βRuthann, I would like it very much if you chose to stay with me for life. Would you marry me, please?β
I could feel a smile growinβ on my faceβββone that settled there longer than it probably should have. I was safe. She said, βYes.β Actually, she said, βCome here, silly! Hell, yes!β
And every time I wonder what will happen to usβββwho will try to separate us because of where we each come from β¦
I sink into the tightness of her embrace, and I allow her to be my peace.
She is my peace.
Originally published in Lit Up Magazine via Medium.
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