Book Read Free

Miss Julia Hits the Road

Page 3

by Ann B. Ross


  Maybe I should let her read some of that pitiful poetry he’d sent, and if that wouldn’t make her think twice about consulting him, I didn’t know what would.

  Chapter 4

  I didn’t want to be too obvious about delving into Lillian’s business. She had every right to keep her own counsel if she wanted to. But of course, that didn’t mean I had to like it if she did.

  The thing to do was to come at it sideways, so she wouldn’t think I was being meddlesome. Still, I couldn’t imagine why she hadn’t confided in me before now.

  And that disturbed me all over again. Why was she keeping something from me? Didn’t she trust me? And if she didn’t, what did that say about all we’d been through together for, lo, these many years?

  So I walked into the kitchen and, before I could help myself, just came right out and said, “Lillian, I want to know what kind of trouble you’re having. I want you to sit right down here and tell me. I declare, to have to learn that you have a problem from somebody else is more than I can stand.”

  “Miss Julia,” she said, drying her hands on a dish towel as she stared out the window. “They ain’t nothin’ you can do. Ain’t nothin’ nobody can do, look like. So no need to worry you with it.”

  “Listen to me, Lillian,” I said, pulling out a chair for her at the table. “Anything that worries you, worries me. Whether I know what it is or not. So I might as well know about it. Now, you’ve been moping around here for I don’t know how long, and I thought it was because you were missing Little Lloyd.”

  “Well, I was, an’ I still do. But you been doin’ some mopin’ yo’self ’bout the same thing.”

  “I know it, but that’s not all that’s been bothering me, as you well know because I told you how concerned I am about Sam. Now I find out that missing Little Lloyd is not all that’s bothering you, either. Tell me, Lillian, and even if I can’t do anything to help, at least you’ll have somebody who can still think straight to talk to.”

  “Might as well, I guess,” she said as she sank into a chair with a heaving sigh. Then she started up again. “Lemme get us some coffee.”

  “Just as long as you’re not trying to put me off. I tell you, Lillian, I’m not going to give up until I get to the bottom of this.”

  She didn’t reply because she knew I meant it and she might as well resign herself to it. She brought the coffeepot that we kept replenished throughout the day while I got down two cups and saucers.

  When we were both settled at the table again, I said, “All right, let’s hear it.”

  “Well, it’s like this, Miss Julia.” She stopped, added more sugar to her cup, and stirred her coffee a considerably longer time than it needed.

  “I’m waiting.”

  “Well, it’s that Mr. Clarence Gibbs,” she said, as if it hurt her to say his name. Then, in a rush, she got it all out. “An’ I know he a friend of yours, which is why I didn’t want to tell you, an’ I don’ want to say nothin’ ’gainst him, but he bringin’ down a peck of trouble on us.”

  “Clarence Gibbs!” I cried. “He’s no friend of mine. Where in the world did you get that idea?”

  “Well, I know he a member of the Presbyterium Church over there, an’ I know he had some proppity dealin’s with Mr. Springer ’fore he passed, so I figgered you still doin’ bus’ness with him.”

  “You figured wrong, then,” I said. But I had to stop and study the matter. I declare, when you have a husband suddenly expire on you and leave you with a theretofore unknown number of acquisitions, both real and personal, it’s a wonder if you know who you’re doing business with. I’d have to talk with Little Lloyd about it, too. The child had taken a precocious interest in real estate recently, which I’d encouraged. The reason being that he would come into a goodly number of properties when he grew up, and even more when I passed on. Which I didn’t intend to do anytime soon.

  “I’ll have to check some of Mr. Springer’s holdings,” I went on, “but I know I’ve had no personal contact with Clarence Gibbs. Oh, I see him at church occasionally, but just to nod to. He is a deacon, you know.”

  “Yessum, I know. An’ he known ’round town, too. But, Miss Julia, that deacon fixin’ to put us out.” She leaned her head on her hand and covered her eyes.

  I leaned closer, not fully understanding what she was telling me. “Put who out? And from where?”

  “Our whole street, that’s who. He own all the houses on it, an’ now he say he need that proppity, an’ he not renewin’ any rents, an’ we all got to move.”

  “You mean,” I said, leaning back in my chair, “he just all of a sudden told everybody they have to move without giving any reason whatsoever?”

  “Well, he say the town council done voted us out ’cause them houses too far gone for anybody to be livin’ in ’em, which can’t be no news to any of us. An’ the sheriff, he say the same thing ’cause the Reverend Mr. Abernathy, he went down an’ talk to him for us. An’ the sheriff say he sorry but he got a ’viction order he got to carry out.”

  “Well, I say,” I said, stunned that Clarence Gibbs had been able to get the town council to condemn those houses, and not a word in the newspaper about it that I’d seen. He was fairly tight with a couple of the councilmen, so he could pretty much push through anything he wanted. “How long have you lived there?”

  “All us been livin’ there a long time,” she said, wiping her face with her hand. “Some of our people livin’ there ’fore even the courthouse got built, but they all dead now. An’ used to be all them houses was owned by whoever lived in ’em. But Mr. Gibbs, he always knowed when folks havin’ troubles, an’ he come ’round offerin’ to take them houses offa folkses’ hands. He handin’ out money to buy ’em, then he rent ’em back to whoever owned ’em.” She reached for a napkin to do a better job of drying her face. “So now he own ’em all, ’cept maybe one or two, an’ he want them, too. He say they all have to sell or they be settin’ in the middle of something they don’t like.”

  “Like what?” I asked. “What’s he planning to do with that land?”

  “We don’t know. Don’t nobody tell us nothin’ but get up and move.” Tears welled up in her eyes again and she covered them with the napkin. “Miss Julia, we got a graveyard back up there by that ridge. Nobody use it now, but they’s folks buried there a hundred years ago.”

  “Well, he certainly can’t put anything on that spot,” I said. “There are laws protecting cemeteries.” At least I thought there were.

  I couldn’t stand the thought of Lillian being taken advantage of, and the idea of the likes of stoop-shouldered, hooded-eyed Clarence Gibbs being the one to do it just tore me up.

  “Seems to me,” I said, throwing out a few terms that I didn’t know the meaning of, “that you and your neighbors would have eminent domain or squatters’ rights or something. How can he just move everybody out, lock, stock and barrel?”

  “I don’ know, but look like he can. That ’viction notice come a few weeks ago, an’ we s’posed to be out this week.”

  “This week! Lillian! Why didn’t you tell me? I might’ve done something, at least I’d have tried to.”

  She bowed her head, mumbling, “We was hopin’ Mr. Gibbs have a change of heart, but don’t look like it gonna happen.”

  I frowned, trying to think what Clarence Gibbs might have in mind. With his reputation for slick business practices, there’d be money to be made somewhere.

  “What about your leases?” I asked. “Surely, as permanent as that street is, you all have long-term leases.”

  “No’m, it always been week to week. He send somebody ever’ Friday to pick up the rent money.”

  I thought for a minute, picturing in my mind the street where Lillian lived. It was an unpaved offshoot of a road right outside the town limits, no more than a lane where a few grandchildren played hopscotch and jumped rope in the thick dust of summer. As I recalled, there was an empty field, what might have been a pasture at one time, where the lane ended
in a dirt turn-around. The field ran some distance beyond the houses, ending in a wooded ridge that didn’t seem suitable for any kind of development to me. But then, developers see possibilities where most folks see cliffs and gullies and sheer mountainsides.

  Willow Lane, I thought, and not a willow in sight. Large oak trees lined the street, their branches forming a shady canopy overhead. The small houses, no more than four or five on each side, were all alike: shotgun style with small banistered porches. They were made of weathered clap-boards, many of them listing to one side or the other on foundations of stacked rocks. I’d often driven Lillian home, so I knew the place well. Her house, at least from the outside, was well cared for. Flowers blooming in pots and cans on her front porch testified to that, as did the dirt yard that was kept raked in neat lines, reminding me of a Japanese garden I’d once seen. And, knowing her, it would be just as well-kept on the inside.

  The more I thought about it, the madder I got. From the looks of those houses, Clarence Gibbs had not put a nickel into their upkeep, letting them deteriorate year after year. No wonder he was able to get the town council to condemn them.

  “I just wish I knew why he suddenly needs that property,” I said, trying to figure out what scheme Clarence Gibbs had in mind.

  “They no tellin’, Miss Julia, but we seen him walkin’ ’round up on that ridge back of us, goin’ in an’ out the trees. He bring some men one time with him, look like they measurin’ something.”

  “Surveying, sounds like,” I said.

  I thought about that for a minute, bringing my newly realized—as of Wesley Lloyd’s passing—business sense to bear. “It’s got to be something commercial,” I said. “Nothing else would be worth more than residential rentals.”

  “I don’ know, Miss Julia,” she said, looking as unsettled as I’d ever seen her. “All I know’s we got to move, an’ the time comin’ up on us fast. But they’s nowhere to go, ’cept places that cost more’n anybody got the money to pay.”

  “Oh,” I said, taken aback at the reminder that not everybody could just write a check for whatever they wanted. Of course, I knew what Lillian had to live on because I knew what I paid her. I’d been proud of myself for raising her salary after Wesley Lloyd’s demise, and I’d given her bonuses and raises every year since. Yet when I mentally compared her income to my own, it didn’t amount to a hill of beans.

  Because of my late husband’s estate, I could do whatever I wanted, and I was often brought up short when I realized that that wasn’t the case for everybody.

  Still, not everybody’d had to put up with Wesley Lloyd Springer and the shame he’d left me with, so I considered his estate a just compensation.

  “Well, you certainly have a place to go. I want you to move in here, right up there in Coleman’s rooms which he no longer needs, and you can stay as long as you want.”

  “That’s real nice of you, Miss Julia, an’ I thank you for it. But I don’t know what ever’body else’s gonna do, an’ you know I want my own place.”

  “I understand that, but at least you have somewhere to come to until you find something. Oh, Lord, Lillian,” I said, overwhelmed with what she’d been holding inside. “I am just so sorry this is happening. But, now listen, all is not lost. There may still be some legal avenues to look into. Still, though, if you only have a day or two, we need to get you packed up and moved. Then we’ll see what can be done.”

  She just shook her head. “I think it too late, Miss Julia. Coleman, he been comin’ by, an’ he all tore up ’cause the sheriff sent him to serve that notice.”

  “My Lord,” I said, realizing that I’d been doing an awful lot of calling on the Deity lately. But I certainly needed to call on somebody, since no one had had the decency to let me know what was going on. “Well, what’s done is done. Now we have to think about your furniture and all your things.”

  “Coleman been helpin’ me,” she said, wiping her face again with the napkin. “I been packin’ an’ tho’win’ out an’ givin’ away all kinds a stuff. Hardly nothin’ left but my bed an’ all them boxes.” She heaved a heavy sigh. “I tell you the truth, Miss Julia, it make me happy to move outta that ramshackle house if there be a decent place to go to.”

  I sat and stared at her, torn between pity and anger. Anger won out. “I still can’t believe that you’ve let things come to such a pass and not told me a word about it. I declare, Lillian, I am hurt, hurt, that you’d keep this from me.”

  She wrung her hands, looking at them instead of at me. “I know you got yo’ hands full, an’ I thought somethin’ might turn up or Mr. Gibbs change his mind or somethin’. Coleman, he been helpin’ me look for a place to move to, but all them others what live there, they in the same fix.”

  “Thay Lord,” I said, just about done in for going on my merry way while Lillian’d been losing her home. “How many others are there?”

  “They nine houses on that street. Used to be ten, but the roof of one give way. Some people live by theyselves, like me, now my grands is grown an’ gone. Some’re married folks, an’ Mr. William an’ his wife, they have her ole daddy livin’ with ’em. Lot of ’em have they chil’ren come stay when they lose a job. Nobody have a place to move to, ’cept the Whitleys, who already gone to Durham. They daughter, she got a good job workin’ at the Duke Hospital.”

  Well, my goodness, I thought, running my mind over the housing possibilities for that many people. There wasn’t much in the way of affordable housing in Abbotsville, especially for the financially handicapped.

  I leaned toward her. “What did Sam say about this?”

  “He say he gonna look into it, an’ talk to Mr. Gibbs, see he can work something out. But he say since we don’t have no leases, Mr. Gibbs might can do whatever he want.”

  “Well, we’ll just see about that,” I said, ready to get on my high horse. “Lillian, far be it from me to undermine Sam and his advice, but I’ve already told you that I’m worried about his mental state. You need to take whatever he tells you with a grain of salt.”

  Lord, I hated to tell her that, it seemed so hurtful to Sam. But I couldn’t just let her be evicted from her home while Sam piddled around, looking into it.

  “We gonna have a meetin’ tonight,” Lillian told me, pushing away her cup of cold coffee. “The Reverend Mr. Morris Abernathy, he gettin’ all us what live on the street together to talk about what we can do. He ast Mr. Gibbs to come to the meetin’, too, but Mr. Gibbs say he don’ think he can make it. He got bus’ness to tend to, an’ can’t be ’spected to come to no meetin’ that can’t change nothin’, no way.”

  “Well,” I said, standing up and pacing around the table. “He’s got a nerve. Lillian, you can’t just give up. If there’s anything that can be done, you’ve got to do it.”

  “I tole Mr. Sam ’bout the meetin’, an’ he say he be there an’ tell us what he find out. Maybe somethin’ come up outta that, ’cause he gonna be lookin’ into it today. Proppity records and such like, down at the courthouse. Mr. Sam put a stop to it, if anybody can. We countin’ on him.”

  “Good,” I said, wanting to encourage her, but hoping that Sam was up to the job. From what I’d witnessed of him lately, though, I wouldn’t want to depend on him, as Lillian clearly was doing. “I think I’d better be there, too. That be all right with you?”

  “Yessum,” she said, smiling at me. “You more’n welcome, ’cause we gonna need all the help we can get. I don’ know what some a them folks gonna do; they gonna be out on the street without no place to lay they heads.”

  “We’ll figure something out,” I assured her, wondering where in the world we could find housing for that many evicted families. “In the meantime, you tell Coleman to bring all your things over here and store them in the garage. There’s plenty of room, and my car can sit in the driveway. And,” I went on, pointing my finger at her, “you are moving in right upstairs, and I don’t want to hear another word about it.”

  Chapter 5

  I s
ent Lillian home early that afternoon, knowing that she had a lot on her mind and needed to get ready for the meeting. There were some, she’d told me, who weren’t sure they wanted to go, fearing that Clarence Gibbs wouldn’t like it.

  “Lord, what else can he do to them?” I’d asked her. “And who cares whether he likes it or not? I hope you can get them all there, Lillian. This needs to be a team effort, maybe a class-action lawsuit or something.” I didn’t know what I was talking about, but it seemed to me that if they were all being evicted, then they all needed to hold together. “You want me to pick you up?”

  “No’m, I thank you, though. I’m goin’ with Miz Causey, she live next door, an’ we gonna take some a them what might not go ’less we get ’em there. I’ll wait for you in front a the church, an’ we can go in together.”

  Telling her that I’d be there a little before seven, I locked up behind her and fixed an early supper for myself. Since night fell so quickly this time of year, it didn’t seem all that early to be eating. After I finished, I went upstairs to put my feet up before getting ready for the meeting to save Lillian’s home.

  The sound of a car pulling into the driveway startled me, and I got up to look out the window.

  “Why, what in the world?” I asked myself, watching as Hazel Marie climbed out of the car and slammed the door with such force that her feet almost slid from under her. She stomped across the yard to the front porch, Little Lloyd tagging along behind her.

  I hurried downstairs and opened the door as she rang the bell. She stood there, her face flushed with more than the amount of makeup she usually wore, huffing like she could hardly get her breath. Little Lloyd moved slowly up the steps, his head lowered and turned away.

 

‹ Prev