…They called her Magnolia May(although
he later found out, after he had gone to hell and back with her, had done every
hellish thing to and with her, and had gone to heaven with her too he wanted everybody to
know, her real name was Anna Sue Barkin),
the highest yella gal in Ma Stover’s negro whorehouse over on Blanchard Street
(although Ma kept a few off-hand just off farm white girls, all corn-fed and dewy,
dope-heads by the time Ma got them , just to mix things up but you had to know
Ma, or special request those girls, and Ma kept them on a separate floor, a
separate floor from the high yella girls that Ma was known far and wide for),
the girl every guy, especially those foolish college boys from over at State University
craved when their monthly daddy checks came in. And Jackson Barr, Junior was no
different, no different once one of his frat brothers clued him in to Ma’s, to
high yella girls, and to the best way to spent that daddy check walking daddy
right over to Ma’s. Right over to Ma’s after stopping at Mr. Henry’s in town for
some fine old whiskey, scotch and rye, store bought, and some, uh, cocaine, not
store bought, although legal, not store bought since other drugstore establishments
insisted on a genuine prescription from a genuine doctor. Mr. Henry had no such
scruples.
And so Jackson Barr headed (with
other frat brothers but they don’t count in this story so we will move on) over
to Ma’s one hot Saturday night in early June just before the semester was over at
State, entered her establishment, took out some walking daddy money, all green
and pure, handed his liquors to the man servant and declared to Ma, declared calmly
but forthrightly, that he wanted the highest yella girl in her fine establishment.
Hence Magnolia May.
And hence seven kinds of hell and heaven once
they had gone up to her room for the very first thing she did was to drop down
her dress to show off her high yella
fine wares, all curves and cuddles in the right places, and boldly, not whore
boldly although that was her professional, but hey daddy you are in for a treat
boldly, asked Jackson Barr, Junior just exactly how did he want his rolling
done (what kind of sex, no rough stuff to mar her body, did he want for the
clueless). After a finger of scotch and two fingers of coke which he invited
her to share with him they jumped on her big fluffy bed and she gave him some
head, spitting his jimson into her handkerchief after he exploded in her mouth.
Two weeks and five hundred miles
later Jackson Barr, Senior, Ma Stover, seventeen officials from State, the
Texas Rangers, and who knows what else, found Jackson Barr, Junior and Magnolia
May in the Imperial Hotel in Austin, Texas after about a million odd-ball incidents,
a million liquor drinks, many bindles of dope, and after about twenty pages
from the Karma Sutra the ways that Jackson Barr, Junior wanted his rolling done.
They hushed it all up by agreement, and gave Magnolia May a one- way ticket to
Chicago, or else. But always after, even with his wife, all curves and cuddles,
all white curves and cuddles, sleeping right beside and willing to do some
rolling of her own, he kept thinking of that June time, and about maybe heading
to Chicago on business some time.
Blind Willie McTell Rollin' Mama Blues Lyrics
Now tell me baby
How do you want your rollin' done?
Now tell me baby
How do you want your rollin' done?
I want you to start in the mornin' baby
And roll me with the settin' of the sun
Oh, roll me on my belly baby
Feed me with your chocolate drop
Oh, roll me on my belly baby
Feed me with your chocolate drop
I want you to keep it all for your daddy
And don't give nobody none
Want you to roll me baby
Like the baker rolls his dough
Want you to roll me baby
Like the baker rolls his dough
And if you get some of my lovin'
You won't want your rider no more
Oh, reel and rock me baby
Honey, if it's all night long
Oh, reel and rock me baby
Honey, if it's all night long
You don't have to worry about your lovin'
I'm a deep sea diver and I don't go wrong
Won't you come back baby?
You got me all confused
Won't you come back baby?
You got me all confused
That's why I'm singin'
These barrel house woman blues
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