Read an Excerpt
  Glorious 
 a novel 
 By Bernice L. McFadden 
 Akashic Books 
 Copyright © 2010   Bernice L. McFadden 
All right reserved.
 ISBN: 978-1-936070-11-4 
    Prologue 
   If Jack Johnson had let James Jeffries beat him on  July 4, 1910, which would have proven once and for  all that a white man was ten times better than a Negro,  then black folk wouldn't have been walking around  with their backs straight and chests puffed out, smiling  like Cheshire cats, upsetting good, God-fearing white  folk who didn't mind seeing their Negroes happy, but  didn't like seeing them proud.  
     If Jack Johnson had given up and allowed James  Jeffries to clip him on the chin, which would have sent  him hurling down to the floor where he could have  pretended to be knocked out cold, then maybe Easter  Bartlett's father wouldn't have twirled his wife and  daughters around the house by their pinky fingers and  his son John Bartlett Jr. wouldn't have felt for the first  time in his life pleased and glad to be a black man.  And if Jack Johnson had let the shouts of "Kill that nigger"  that rang out from the crowd unravel him or the  Nevada heat irritate him, maybe then he would have  lost the fight and things would have remained as they  were.  
     Things could have gone a different way if Jack Johnson  hadn't gotten the notion some years earlier to cap  his teeth in gold, so his smile added insult to injury  when he was announced the victor of the "The Fight of  the Century," and that glittering grin slapped white folk  hard across their faces.  
     And if John Bartlett Sr. hadn't bet on Jack Johnson to  win, then he wouldn't have had the extra money to buy  his wife and two daughters new dresses from the most  expensive dress shop in town, and the older of the two  girls called Rlizbeth wouldn't have let her hair down  and donned that brand-new yellow dress that made her  look like an angel, so those white boys wouldn't have  noticed her, wouldn't have called out to her from across  the road, wouldn't have followed her and jumped her  just as she reached the bend and dragged her into the  brush, where they raped and beat her.  
     If all of that hadn't happened, then Easter wouldn't  have looked up to see her sister crawling home on all  fours like a dog, with a bloodstain shaped like the state  of Texas on the backside of Rlizbeth's dress. Easter  wouldn't have bore witness to the bite marks on Rlizbeth's  breasts, and wouldn't have heard the silence that  streamed out of Rlizbeth's mouth when she opened it to  scream.  
     No sound at all.  
     Because after the first boy rammed his dick inside of  Rlizbeth, her voice floated up into the sky never to be heard  from again. And Easter wouldn't have had to accompany  John Sr. down to the sheriff's office because her mother  wouldn't let him go alone and wouldn't-couldn't-send  John Jr. because that boy hadn't unclenched his fists or  his jaw since it happened, and besides blood was swimming  in his irises and he claimed to hear it thumping  in his ears, so Easter went and then watched her father  change from a man to boy right before her very eyes.  
     And if Sheriff Wiley had not forced Easter and her  father to stare at the filthy soles of his boots, because  it had not suited him to remove his feet from atop the  wooden desk, and if Wiley had looked them straight  in the eye like he would have his own kind instead of  watching them from beneath the shade of the wide-brim  hat he wore, and maybe if he'd believed John Sr. when  he said, "I knows it was white boys cause we found tufts  of blond and red hair clutched in Rlizbeth's hands," and  Wiley had just gone out and found those boys and arrested  them instead of suggesting that Rlizbeth had torn  her own dress, bit her own breasts, and broke her own hymen  all in order to cover up the somewhere or someone  she had no place being or seeing-then maybe life for  Easter would have been different.  
     But Wiley didn't do the right thing, and Easter  looked up at her father who sat next to her with his  head bowed and she heard his timid voice say, "Yes suh,  I suppose you could be right, but how do you explain  the hair? The red and blond hair?"  
     Wiley said he couldn't explain it and then dismissed  them by tugging the brim of his hat down over his face  and bid them a good day. If he hadn't done that and  Easter hadn't seen the tears welling up in her father's  eyes, she wouldn't have turned into the snarling howling  thing and her father wouldn't have caught her by the  waist just as she leapt across the desk intent on tearing  out Wiley's throat.  
     If Jack Johnson hadn't been quite so dark and hadn't  pumped his fists in the air like the champion he was  then maybe ...  
     If Rlizbeth had just put on one of the old, worn  dresses she owned and kept her hair pulled back in a  tight bun, Easter probably never would have written  the word HATE on a piece of paper, crumpled it into  a ball, dropped it in a hole in the ground, and covered  it with dirt, and her mother wouldn't have tried to go  back to living as if that awful day hadn't happened and  those boys weren't walking around as free as birds, and  she never would have had the strain of pretending that  everything was normal even though Rlizbeth had lost  her voice and John Jr. had taken to staring down every  white man in the town and John Sr. was intent on trying  to make himself grow big again and thought that taking  refuge in the arms of another woman would help him  do that.  
     And if Zelda hadn't found the love letters pressed  into the pages of her husband's Bible, letters written on  fine onionskin paper that smelled of rose water, then  John Jr. wouldn't have caught her crying, wouldn't have  seen the letters scattered on the floor, and wouldn't  have hit his father so hard that it knocked the wind out  of both men. If all of that hadn't happened, then John  Jr. wouldn't have had to leave the house, the town, and  the state, and Easter might have gone on loving and respecting  her father. But it did and Zelda's heart snapped  under the strain, pain, and betrayal, and she died.  
     If there had not been a funeral, there would not have  been a repast, so there would have been no need for Easter's  father to wait patiently for the last mourner to leave  the house before he changed his clothes, mounted his  horse, and galloped off into the night leaving the scent  of his pipe tobacco hanging in the air. And if he hadn't  left, then he couldn't have returned with the wide-eyed,   milky-brown woman who smelled of rose water  and wasn't much older than Rlizbeth. He couldn't have  brought her into their home, told Easter and Rlizbeth  her name-which was Truda-and then informed them  that she was his new wife and their new mother.  
     If Jack Johnson had just thrown the fight and Rlizbeth  had maybe walked down a different road and not  have been so pretty, everything would have remained  the same in their small home and Easter would not have  known the aching sadness of a dead mother, gone brother,  and mute and ruined sister. And if there were no ache  and no sadness then Easter would not have taken the  gown that her mother died in, laid it across the dining  room table, and arranged the china, crystal, and the silverware  with the scrolled handles on top of it as if it was  a special holiday and the family was expecting dinner  guests. And she would not have placed bunches of flowers  at the neckline, hemline, and sleeves-but she did,  and when Truda walked into the dining room the next  morning she forgot to breathe.  
     And if Truda hadn't forgotten to breathe, then maybe  she wouldn't have screamed, which of course brought  John Sr. into the room to see what was the matter. After  that he kicked in the door to Easter's bedroom and  found her sitting at the edge of the bed staring at her  palms. He charged in and loomed over her like a great  black hawk and hollered that he should have drowned  her at birth. And if he hadn't said those hurtful words,  Easter would have stayed in Waycross, Georgia, married,  had children, grown old, and died.  
     But on that summer day in 1910, Jack Johnson did  beat James Jeffries and Rlizbeth did put on that yellow  dress that made her look like an angel and nothing and  nobody was ever the same again.  
  (Continues...)  
  
     
 
 Excerpted from Glorious by Bernice L. McFadden  Copyright © 2010   by Bernice L. McFadden.   Excerpted by permission.
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