Read an Excerpt
  SILVER SPARROW 
 a novel  
 By Tayari Jones 
 Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill 
 Copyright © 2011   Tayari Jones 
All right reserved.
 ISBN: 978-1-56512-990-0 
    Chapter One 
                       The Secret    
  My father, James Witherspoon, is a bigamist. He was  already married ten years when he first clamped eyes on my  mother. In 1968, she was working at the gift- wrap counter at  Davison's downtown when my father asked her to wrap the  carving knife he had bought his wife for their wedding anniversary.  Mother said she knew that something wasn't right  between a man and a woman when the gift was a blade. I said  that maybe it means there was a kind of trust between them. I  love my mother, but we tend to see things a little bit differently.  The point is that James's marriage was never hidden from us.  James is what I call him. His other daughter, Chaurisse, the  one who grew up in the house with him, she calls him Daddy,  even now.  
     When most people think of bigamy, if they think of it at  all, they imagine some primitive practice taking place on the  pages of National Geographic. In Atlanta, we remember one  sect of the back-to-Africa movement that used to run bakeries  in the West End. Some people said it was a cult, others called  it a cultural movement. Whatever it was, it involved four wives  for each husband. The bakeries have since closed down, but  sometimes we still see the women, resplendent in white, trailing  six humble paces behind their mutual husband. Even in Baptist  churches, ushers keep smelling salts on the ready for the new  widow confronted at the wake by the other grieving widow and  her stair-step kids. Undertakers and judges know that it happens  all the time, and not just between religious fanatics, traveling  salesmen, handsome sociopaths, and desperate women.  
     It's a shame that there isn't a true name for a woman like my  mother, Gwendolyn. My father, James, is a bigamist. That is what  he is. Laverne is his wife. She found him first and my mother  has always respected the other woman's squatter's rights. But  was my mother his wife, too? She has legal documents and even  a single Polaroid proving that she stood with James Alexander  Witherspoon Junior in front of a judge just over the state line  in Alabama. However, to call her only his "wife" doesn't really  explain the full complexity of her position.  
     There are other terms, I know, and when she is tipsy, angry,  or sad, Mother uses them to describe herself: concubine, whore,  mistress, consort. There are just so many, and none are fair. And  there are nasty words, too, for a person like me, the child of a  person like her, but these words were not allowed in the air of  our home. "You are his daughter. End of story." If this was ever  true it was in the first four months of my life, before Chaurisse,  his legitimate daughter, was born. My mother would curse at  hearing me use that word, legitimate, but if she could hear the  other word that formed in my head, she would close herself  in her bedroom and cry. In my mind, Chaurisse is his real  daughter. With wives, it only matters who gets there first. With  daughters, the situation is a bit more complicated.  
  
        It matters what you called things. Surveil was my  mother's word. If he knew, James would probably say spy, but  that is too sinister. We didn't do damage to anyone but ourselves  as we trailed Chaurisse and Laverne while they wound their way  through their easy lives. I had always imagined that we would  eventually be asked to explain ourselves, to press words forward in  our own defense. On that day, my mother would be called upon  to do the talking. She is gifted with language and is able to layer  difficult details in such a way that the result is smooth as water.  She is a magician who can make the whole world feel like a dizzy  illusion. The truth is a coin she pulls from behind your ear.  
     Maybe mine was not a blissful girlhood. But is anyone's?  Even people whose parents are happily married to each other  and no one else, even these people have their share of unhappiness.  They spend plenty of time nursing old slights, rehashing  squabbles. So you see, I have something in common with the  whole world.  
     Mother didn't ruin my childhood or anyone's marriage. She  is a good person. She prepared me. Life, you see, is all about  knowing things. That is why my mother and I shouldn't be  pitied. Yes, we have suffered, but we never doubted that we  enjoyed at least one peculiar advantage when it came to what  really mattered: I knew about Chaurisse; she didn't know about  me. My mother knew about Laverne, but Laverne was under  the impression that hers was an ordinary life. We never lost  track of that basic and fundamental fact.  
  
        When did I first discover that although I was an only  child, my father was not my father and mine alone? I really can't  say. It's something that I've known for as long as I've known  that I had a father. I can only say for sure when I learned that  this type of double-duty daddy wasn't ordinary.  
     I was about five years old, in kindergarten, when the art  teacher, Miss Russell, asked us to draw pictures of our families.  While all the other children scribbled with their crayons  or soft-leaded pencils, I used a blue-ink pen and drew  James, Chaurisse, and Laverne. In the background was  Raleigh, my father's best friend, the only person we knew from  his other life. I drew him with the crayon labeled "Flesh" because  he is really light- skinned. This was years and years ago,  but I still remember. I hung a necklace around the wife's neck.  I gave the girl a big smile, stuffed with square teeth. Near the  left margin, I drew my mother and me standing by ourselves.  With a marker, I blacked in Mother's long hair and curving  lashes. On my own face, I drew only a pair of wide eyes. Above,  a friendly sun winked at all six of us.  
     The art teacher approached me from behind. "Now, who are  these people you've drawn so beautifully?"  
     Charmed, I smiled up at her. "My family. My daddy has two  wifes and two girls."  
     Cocking her head, she said, "I see."  
     I didn't think much more about it. I was still enjoying the  memory of the way she pronounced beautifully. To this day,  when I hear anyone say that word, I feel loved. At the end of  the month, I brought all of my drawings home in a cardboard  folder. James opened up his wallet, which he kept plump with  two-dollar bills to reward me for my schoolwork. I saved the  portrait, my masterpiece, for last, being as it was so beautifully  drawn and everything.  
     My father picked the page up from the table and held it close  to his face like he was looking for a coded message. Mother  stood behind me, crossed her arms over my chest, and bent to  place a kiss on the top of my head. "It's okay," she said.  
     "Did you tell your teacher who was in the picture?" James  said.  
     I nodded slowly, the whole time thinking that I probably  should lie, although I wasn't quite sure why.  
     "James," Mother said, "let's not make a molehill into a mountain.  She's just a child."  
     "Gwen," he said, "this is important. Don't look so scared.  I'm not going to take her out behind the woodshed." Then he  chuckled, but my mother didn't laugh.  
     "All she did was draw a picture. Kids draw pictures."  
     "Go on in the kitchen, Gwen," James said. "Let me talk to  my daughter."  
     My mother said, "Why can't I stay in here? She's my daughter,  too."  
     "You are with her all the time. You tell me I don't spend  enough time talking to her. So now let me talk."  
     Mother hesitated and then released me. "She's just a little  kid, James. She doesn't even know the ins and outs yet."  
     "Trust me," James said.  
     She left the room, but I don't know that she trusted him not  to say something that would leave me wounded and broken-winged  for life. I could see it in her face. When she was upset  she moved her jaw around invisible gum. At night, I could hear  her in her room, grinding her teeth in her sleep. The sound was  like gravel under car wheels.  
     "Dana, come here." James was wearing a navy chauffeur's  uniform. His hat must have been in the car, but I could see  the ridged mark across his forehead where the hatband usually  rested. "Come closer," he said.  
     I hesitated, looking to the space in the doorway where  Mother had disappeared.  
     "Dana," he said, "you're not afraid of me, are you? you're not  scared of your own father, are you?"  
     His voice sounded mournful, but I took it as a dare. "No,  sir," I said, taking a bold step forward.  
     "Don't call me sir, Dana. I'm not your boss. When you say  that, it makes me feel like an overseer."  
     I shrugged. Mother told me that I should always call him  sir. With a sudden motion, he reached out for me and lifted me  up on his lap. He spoke to me with both of our faces looking  outward, so I couldn't see his expression.  
     "Dana, I can't have you making drawings like the one you  made for your art class. I can't have you doing things like that.  What goes on in this house between your mother and me is  grown people's business. I love you. You are my baby girl, and I  love you, and I love your mama. But what we do in this house  has to be a secret, okay?"  
     "I didn't even draw this house."  
     James sighed and bounced me on his lap a little bit. "What  happens in my life, in my world, doesn't have anything to  do with you. You can't tell your teacher that your daddy has  another wife. You can't tell your teacher that my name is James  Witherspoon. Atlanta ain't nothing but a country town, and  everyone knows everybody."  
     "Your other wife and your other girl is a secret?" I asked  him.  
     He put me down from his lap, so we could look each other in  the face. "No. You've got it the wrong way around. Dana, you  are the one that's a secret."  
     Then he patted me on the head and tugged one of my braids.  With a wink he pulled out his billfold and separated three two-dollar  bills from the stack. He handed them over to me and I  clamped them in my palm.  
     "Aren't you going to put them in your pocket?"  
     "Yes, sir."  
     And for once, he didn't tell me not to call him that.  
     James took me by the hand and we walked down the hallway  to the kitchen for dinner. I closed my eyes on the short walk  because I didn't like the wallpaper in the hallway. It was beige  with a burgundy pattern. When it had started peeling at the  edges, I was accused of picking at the seams. I denied it over  and over again, but Mother reported me to James on his weekly  visit. He took off his belt and swatted me around the legs and  up on my backside, which seemed to satisfy something in  my mother.  
     In the kitchen my mother placed the bowls and plates on the  glass table in silence. She wore her favorite apron that James  brought back from New Orleans. On the front was a drawing  of a crawfish holding a spatula aloft and a caption: DON'T  MAKE ME POISON YOUR FOOD! James took his place at the head  of the table and polished the water spots from his fork with  his napkin. "I didn't lay a hand on her; I didn't even raise my  voice. Did I?"  
     "No, sir." And this was entirely the truth, but I felt different  than I had just a few minutes before when I'd pulled my drawing  out of its sleeve. My skin stayed the same while this difference  snuck in through a pore and attached itself to whatever  brittle part forms my center. You are the secret. He'd said it with  a smile, touching the tip of my nose with the pad of his finger.  
     My mother came around and picked me up under my arms  and sat me on the stack of phone books in my chair. She kissed  my cheek and fixed a plate with salmon croquettes, a spoon of  green beans, and corn.  
     "Are you okay?"  
     I nodded.  
     James ate his meal, spooning honey onto a dinner roll when  my mother said there would be no dessert. He drank a big glass  of Coke.  
     "Don't eat too much," my mother said. "You'll have to eat  again in a little while."  
     "I'm always happy to eat your food, Gwen. I'm always happy  to sit at your table."  
  
                            * * *  
  
  I don't know how I decided that my missing teeth were the  problem, but I devised a plan to slide a folded piece of paper behind  my top teeth to camouflage the pink space in the center of  my smile. I was inspired by James, actually, who once told me  how he put cardboard in his shoes when he was little to make  up for the holes in the soles. The paper was soggy and the blue  lines ran with my saliva.  
     Mother caught me in the middle of this process. She walked  into my room and lay across my twin bed with its purple checked  spread. She liked to do this, just lie across my bed while I played  with my toys or colored in my notebooks, watching me like I  was a television show. She always smelled good, like flowery  perfume, and sometimes like my father's cigarettes.  
     "What are you doing, Petunia?"  
     "Don't call me Petunia," I said, partially because I didn't like  the name and partially because I wanted to see if I could talk  with the paper in my mouth. "Petunia is the name of a pig."  
     "Petunia is a flower," my mother said. "A pretty one."  
     "It's Porky Pig's girlfriend."  
     "That's meant to be a joke, a pretty name for a pig, you see?"  
     "A joke is supposed to be funny."  
     "It is funny. You are just in a bad mood. What're you doing  with the paper?"  
     "I'm trying to put my teeth back," I said, while trying to  rearrange the sodden wad.  
     "How come?"  
     This seemed obvious as I took in my own reflection along  with my mother's in the narrow mirror attached to the top of  my chest of drawers. Of course James wanted to keep me a  secret. Who would love a girl with a gaping pink hole in the  middle of her mouth? none of the other children in my kindergarten  reading circle looked like I did. Surely my mother could  understand this. She spent half an hour each night squinting at  her skin before a magnifying mirror, applying swipes of heavy  creams from Mary Kay. When I asked her what she was doing,  she said, "I am improving my appearance. Wives can afford to  let themselves go. Concubines must be vigilant."  
     Recalling it now, I know that she must have been drinking.  Although I can't remember the moment so well, I know that  just outside the frame was her glass of Asti Spumante, golden  and busy with bubbles.  
     "I am improving my appearance." I hoped she would smile.  
     "Your appearance is perfect, Dana. You're five; you have  beautiful skin, shiny eyes, and pretty hair."  
     "But no teeth," I said.  
     "You're a little girl. You don't need teeth."  
     "Yes, I do," I said quietly. "Yes, I do."  
     "Why? To eat corn on the cob? your teeth will grow back.  There is lots of corn in your future, I promise."  
     "I want to be like that other girl," I said finally.  
     Mother had been lying across my bed, like a goddess on a  chaise lounge, but when I said that she snapped up. "What  other girl?"  
     "James's other girl."  
     "You can say her name," Mother said.  
     I shook my head. "Can't."  
     "Yes, you can. Just say it. Her name is Chaurisse."  
     "Stop it," I said, afraid that just saying my sister's name would  unleash some terrible magic the way that saying "Bloody Mary"  while staring into a pan of water would turn the liquid red and  thick.  
     Mother rose from the bed and got down on her knees so we  were the same height. As she pressed her hands down on my  shoulders, traces of cigarette smoke lingered in her tumbly hair.  I reached out for it.  
     "Her name is Chaurisse," my mother said again. "She's a  little girl, just like you are."  
     "Please stop saying it," I begged her. "Stop it before something  happens."  
     My mother hugged me to her chest. "What did your daddy  say to you the other day? Tell me what he said."  
     "Nothing," I whispered.  
     "Dana, you can't lie to me, okay? I tell you everything and  you tell me everything. That's the only way we can pull this off,  baby. We have to keep the information moving between us."  She shook me a little bit. Not enough to scare me, just enough  to get my attention.  
     "He said I was a secret."  
     My mother pulled me into a close hug, crisscrossing her arms  across my back and letting her hair hang around me like a  magic curtain. I will never forget the smell of her hugs.  
     "That motherfucker," she said. "I love him, but I might have  to kill him one day."  
  (Continues...)  
  
     
 
 Excerpted from SILVER SPARROW by Tayari Jones  Copyright © 2011   by Tayari Jones.   Excerpted by permission of Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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