In
Honor Of International Women’s Day- A
Loud Voice Of One’s Own
From
The Pen Of Frank Jackman
She was not sure exactly how she was going to raise
the rent money now that she had exhausted her unemployment benefits after
having been laid off from the Excelsior Company as a line operator where for
two good years she had made enough money to keep herself and her boys above
water. Yes she was not sure at all. All she knew was that with three young
boys, hungry young boys, nine, seven and six, that she was going to make sure
they were fed, properly fed, and she was equally sure that she and they were
not going back out on the streets, the homeless streets not the whore streets
if that is what you were thinking (although as a runaway teenager she had tried
that, tried that for about two days before giving that idea the wind). She,
they, had had enough of that, trying to stay here one night, there another,
someplace else the third and the boys, her precious boys, missing their
schooling, schooling that she swore that they would get, take advantage of ,
unlike her own sorry school-less story. Yes, Alma Larkin, was fresh out of ideas,
apparently fresh of luck and not exactly
sure where she would turn to, hopefully not to the Sally’s (Salvation Army)
again bless them like the last time.
Just that minute, and really for the first time in over
two years Alma had to take stock of her situation, and she didn’t like it but
the boys’ fate demanded such reflection. Alma knew two things though, come hell
or high water, first, she was not going back to Harlan, Harlan down in deep
coal country Kentucky where she was brought up, brought up kind of
helter-skelter, kind of like some
mountain wind coming down the hills and hollows. She would be just too
shamed-faced to face her kin after all these years and after all the big deal
she made about putting nothing but distance between herself and the
“hillbillies” (hell, she had called them, including her Pa, nothing but white
trash more than once) when wild man hot-rod king walking daddy whiskey, corn
whiskey if anybody is asking, runner Lance Lane swept her off her fifteen year
old feet. Never to look back, that was the way she put it. And then Lance
abandoning her in Lexington for some dishy big busted blonde and leaving her to
fend for herself (and that is where that
experience of couple of days of street tricks came in, came in lonesome old
Lexington).
Second, even if she could find him, Alma was not
going to call on Lennie Small, the father of her three boys, to do the right
thing and take care of his own. Hell, she, they, they including Lennie had
tried that, tried it a couple of times but it only left her homeless in the
end. See Lennie was what he himself called a rolling stone (come to think of it
so did Lance, except Lance at least had sense enough not to get her pregnant as
part of his rolling stone act) and he refused in the end to gather any moss.
That moss thing being some red-headed waitress who took a fancy to him when
they moved to Springfield and had enough dough to make it stick, for a while.
The last postcard she had received from him (no letters, so no hope of child
support money enclosed) he was out in California with some cocktail waitress
from Reno trying to “find” himself, and still not working. So Lennie was out,
out for good this time.
Then Alma got an idea, got an idea that if she
pressed the issue hard enough she would get something, get another job. So she
went down to the Illinois State Department of Unemployment office and did her
thing. That thing included, after waiting for a couple of hours for her
interview and filling out a scad of paperwork, yelling to high heaven to the
intake worker that she needed a job, needed it bad, was not going to go back on
the streets (implying a little those whore streets for effect), and what was
the great state of Illinois going to do about it. She figured that when the
office manager came to the intake worker’s desk she had blown it, that she
would be arrested and that was that. Instead that office manager, who had three children of her own, called up the
Republic Manufacturing Company and told them that she had right in front of her
just the line operator they were looking for.
And so who knows what will happen next week, or next month, but Alma’
Larkin’s three boys will had food and a roof over their heads for a while …
And hence this honor to one righteous woman on this
International Women’s Day.
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